"Indeed, I am, and I must say it is is a great honor to be part of your undertaking. I"ve been important in countless others, but this is especially satisfying. Not to casually dismiss those that came before, but..." a great honor to be part of your undertaking. I"ve been important in countless others, but this is especially satisfying. Not to casually dismiss those that came before, but..."
I interrupted the River again. Fortunately, he never took offense.
"What is it about my vengeance that makes it so important?"
"Something to do with the shape of things to come. Like myself, you"ll carve a great pa.s.sage in the record of time. Or perhaps you"ll simply dry out unnoticed as I"ve done on occasion."
I stooped lower, placing my ear near the water. "How so?"
"Alas, I don"t know. That knowledge must lay farther downstream, and your tomorrow awaits upstream, where I can only know less than I do now. But no matter. I"ve done my part.
"Thank you, River."
"You"re quite welcome, and good luck to you, witch. I envy you in a way. I must always travel onward, never looking back, never stopping. Sometimes I think I"d like to stop, even if only for a little while. Or perhaps even go back and see the things I might have missed. Could you do me a favor, witch? There"s a lemon tree upstream with dangling branches. It hardly ever drops a lemon. Just teases me, that tree. Could you perhaps take the time to pitch a lemon or two into me? Won"t take you but a moment."
"Certainly."
"Thank you. I do so enjoy a fresh lemon. Not so much as I enjoy apricots. But there aren"t any apricot trees where you"re headed, and I wouldn"t dream of asking ..."
The River kept talking, but I stopped listening. I informed Wyst and Gwurm that we would be following this stream and waited for someone to point out that we would be going a southwesterly angle after two weeks of traveling north. Neither made the observation, and Newt was still lost. And the brook"s babbling was of no great importance.
Not far upstream, the lemon tree waited. A robin, a crow, and a vulture perched in its branches.
"Keep away," said the tree. "These are my lemons and I"ll give them to the brook when I wish."
"Just a few, if you don"t mind." I tapped the tree thrice with my knuckles, and two lemons fell into the River.
"Thank you," said the River.
"Well, you won"t get any more from me," groused the tree.
I glanced up into the branches again. The robin and the crow remained, but a falcon perched where the vulture had been. All three jumped and soared overhead in wide circles.
It was then that I was struck by a sudden premonition. This was my very first premonition. I"d read the future in omens, but that was easy when one knew how. A true premonition was to know something without aid of signs or portents. It wasn"t quite the same as having the magic talk to you. It was more like catching a whispered snippet the magic didn"t mind you overhearing. Of course, like most premonitions, this was vague and mysterious information.
"Those birds have been sent to kill me," I said as I climbed on Gwurm"s shoulders.
Wyst raised a hand to shade his eyes and looked upon the two ravens and a sizable albatross. Birds hardly posed a threat to me. Or Gwurm or Wyst either. Perhaps the albatross might s.n.a.t.c.h up Penelope and carry her away, but even my broom was no easy target. Wyst didn"t sound skeptical as he asked, "By who?"
"By the sorcerer we seek, most likely."
"More illusions of flesh?" Gwurm asked.
Wyst replied, "Not quite. They"re chimera. Shape-shifting creatures, beasts of the dream planes employed by sorcerers. Dangerous as anything alive because they can become anything that has lived and a thousand things that never have."
As I watched, the albatross became a small winged lizard, and a raven transformed into a yellow pelican.
Wyst spurred his horse onward. He didn"t seem afraid, but he never did. He tutored us on what to expect while the creatures, in various winged forms, trailed from the air.
"The most important thing to remember is that chimera are compulsive shape-shifters. They can"t hold any particular form for long, and that unpredictability can work against as much as for them. Their minds, like their bodies, are fluid, in capable of keeping to any strategy. One moment, you"ll be facing a dragon-headed lion and the next, it will be a puppy or a weasel or perhaps a ba.s.s. Strike at these vulnerable moments."
A glance showed the chimera flying lower and closer.
"They"ll warn before they attack."
The chimera followed for another hour. I mostly ignored them, only occasionally allowing myself a curious glimpse. The a.s.sortment of shapes was always different. First, three owls of different colors. Then a mallard, a goose, and a hummingbird. Then a condor, a larger hummingbird, and a flying chicken. Then a bat, a winged serpent, and an eight-legged turtle treading the air with its churning legs.
The chimera swooped just over our heads and screeched with warbling voices. They landed just ahead.
Wyst drew his sword. "They"re ready."
Gwurm knelt to allow me to climb off his shoulders. He set aside my sack and cracked his knuckles. An odd act for a troll, given their lack of fleshly joints.
The chimera moved closer. Each took on a different form. There was a liquid grace to their shifting. Heads and limbs sprouted and shrank away and changed. Fur became scales became skin became feathers. Yet no matter what they became, whether natural beast or strange amalgamation, they always seemed to be wearing the right form. My witchly instincts told me the chimera"s shapes weren"t dictated by chance. There was a pattern at work, albeit the indecipherable pattern of living dreams. Understanding what cannot be understood is a witch"s trade.
The first chimera became a great, hairy bear. The head shrank into the body and grew out of its chest. Its forearms became insectlike, ending in bladed hooks. The second chimera became a very traditional ogre. The third took on a serpentine form with a moose"s head and a row of deadly spikes running down its spine.
We paired off. Penelope and I faced the bear-thing. Gwurm stood before the ogre. Wyst readied himself to battle the moose-headed serpent.
I knew what I must do to defeat my chimera, but I wasn"t a talented enough witch to decipher three dreams at once. I trusted Gwurm and Wyst to overcome their own.
I whispered instructions to Penelope. She twitched her understanding, and then the trial began.
The ogre chimera charged Gwurm, but trolls are twice as strong as ogres. Gwurm hefted his opponent high in the air and slammed it to the ground. The chimera shifted into a monstrous bull. Gwurm held tight to the bucking beast.
Wyst and the serpent circled each other warily. The chimera snapped and snarled. The White Knight stabbed at it. Neither had drawn blood yet.
I was able to watch all this because my own magic had reduced the earth to sucking mud beneath the bear-thing"s feet. It sank into the ground, screeching and howling. One bladed arm was the last to disappear. It wasn"t defeated. I was merely guiding it into a more acceptable form.
The earth rumbled, and a giant centipede burst forth at my feet. It towered over me, clicking its mandibles and hissing. It s.n.a.t.c.hed me up in its blades, whipping me from side to side, and sliced me in two at the waist. My lower half fell away, but the centipede grabbed me in a dozen short arms. It changed colors, from bright green to dull orange. Mucus dripped from its wriggling mouth. Then it hacked into my neck. There was the gush of blood, the pain of tearing flesh, and my head bounced to the ground where it came to a rolling stop.
The chimera, unable to hold its centipede form, melted and shifted once again. It became a large, two-legged toad with a face that was all mouth. It opened its jaws, showing rows of jagged teeth.
I could feel my body, but it was as if my neck was a thousand miles long. Giving direction to my limbs was a distant, deliberate affair. I was largely helpless. Penelope was not.
The toad pounced at my head only to be swatted down by my broom. The chimera shook its head clear and screeched at her. She moved in small circles before striking again in a full, wide arc. The force cracked her handle and sent the chimera tumbling away. It jumped to its feet, already shifting again. It sprouted feathers and a single enormous eye. Penelope shot forward and speared it in that eye. The chimera collapsed, very dead.
My broom wasted no time. She tugged free of her opponent and floated to my side. She swept my head back to my torso. It took a few moments for me to get my hands to shove my head back into place. The flesh of my neck knit back together, but even my powers of regeneration were limited so that it was a loose fit. A hard nod or a sudden jerk and it would fall off again.
I pushed myself up and studied the fight. Gwurm"s chimera was now a thing with dozens of tentacles. The troll struggled, but he was wrapped in its smothering coils. He gasped just before his body surrendered to the pressure and fell apart. The troll pieces slipped from the chimera"s hold. The beast became a badger with a peac.o.c.k tail and kicked around Gwurm"s parts, looking for a vulnerable portion.
I found a stone and threw it at the beast. It whirled, s...o...b..ring, teeth bared, and scrambled in my direction. The badger shape grew roughly human as it seized me in clawed hands. It expanded to tremendous size and parted its jaws to swallow me whole. At which point, I shoved an arm down its gullet. My curse gives me a knack for tearing flesh, and the malleable flesh of the chimera proved vulnerable. I punched through the back of its mouth and wrapped my fingers around something squishy and warm and hopefully vital. Although with chimera, this was mostly a matter of chance. The monster bit off my arm just as I squeezed. The chimera gurgled, staggered, and fell over. I was buried beneath its enormous form.
With only one arm and no way of freeing myself, I lay beneath the chimera and listened as Wyst battled the last one. There was a lot of grunting and shrieking, and this went on for some time. Finally, there was one last bubbling screech.
Then silence.
The beast atop me swayed. I thought it might still be alive, but then it rolled over. Wyst of the West knelt beside me. Multicolored blood coated his shirt. Sweat glimmered on his dark skin. He wrapped tender arms around me and leaned me against the chimera"s corpse.
"Are you hurt?"
"Hurt, but not harmed," I replied. "How is Gwurm?"
"I"m fine, but I lost an eye. Watch for it."
Wyst fetched my legs, and by the way he was walking, I could see he was injured. His White Knight invulnerability must have failed him in some way. Some of the blood on his side was his own.
As I fished around the monster"s slackened jaws to retrieve my arm, Wyst retrieved my sack. I reached in for some needle and thread to st.i.tch myself together and instead found Newt. Like all lost things, he was in the last and most obvious place I looked.
CHAPTER 19
Our first triat behind us, and none of us being in traveling condition, we camped beside the chimera corpses. Only Newt had escaped injury, and that was only because he"d missed the battle. This annoyed him. He would have rather taken part and been killed than lose an opportunity to fight. He sulked as the rest of us tended our wounds. us, and none of us being in traveling condition, we camped beside the chimera corpses. Only Newt had escaped injury, and that was only because he"d missed the battle. This annoyed him. He would have rather taken part and been killed than lose an opportunity to fight. He sulked as the rest of us tended our wounds.
My injuries were the least pressing. I"d st.i.tched myself together and within a few hours, I was restored. I liked the way the thick thread felt around my neck, and I imagined I looked quite horrible. But such was my curse that my flesh rejected the intrusive st.i.tching. I was disappointed when it fell out.
Gwurm wasn"t hurt much either, but after he"d been rea.s.sembled, we"d discovered some missing parts. An ear and a finger were nowhere to be found. He was fortunate enough to have a surplus of fingers in his pouch, but there was no replacement ear. He accepted the loss with his usual good nature, noting that while two ears were better, one would do fine.
Both Penelope and Wyst of the West required my attentions. My broom was very much a living thing now, and her handle would mend itself in time, providing she got enough dust to eat. I merely bound her with some torn cloth so she would heal straight.
Wyst"s wound was the most serious. He"d suffered a deep slash to his side by the chimera"s tusks. If I"d been able to use magic, it would have been easily treated. But my magics slid off the White Knight, and I had to rely on mundane methods. I wrapped the wound in a poultice to prevent infection. That he had to remove his shirt for treatment proved less distracting than I"d expected. Ghastly Edna had trained me well. Wyst was not a man. He was a patient. Touching his firm flesh, running my fingers across his lean, muscled body meant nothing to me.
Well, perhaps it meant something. But I concentrated on the wound and finished the task without surrendering to carnal impulses. Only after, did I realize the heat built up within me, especially warm in my lips, breast, loins, and, oddly, ears. I limped to the other side of our small camp to clear my head, pretending to study the dead chimera.
Death had merely slowed their shape-shifting pace. The corpses a.s.sumed various deceased forms every ten minutes or so, each smaller than the last. I expected them to eventually become dead bugs, then things too small to be seen, then nothing altogether. It seemed a perfectly natural state of decay for such creatures. Presently, the corpses were that of a hare, a wolf with antlers, and a three-armed man.
Newt beheaded the hare with a kick. "They weren"t so dangerous. None of you were killed."
"We"re all very hard to kill," I replied.
There was truth to Newt"s observation. The chimera, terrible monsters in their own right, had never been a serious threat. The sorcerer who"d sent them must have known that. Their purpose had been to delay us, perhaps even kill one of us with some luck, and to take our measure.
"How did they know where to find you anyway?" Newt asked.
"No doubt, the sorcerer told them."
"How did he know?"
"Most likely, the magic told him. Just as it tells me where to find him."
"I thought the magic was on our side."
"Magic doesn"t take sides. It mostly watches and waits for something interesting to happen and sometimes, especially when witches and sorcerers find themselves at cross-purposes, it encourages the most interesting things."
"Sounds as if the magic should find itself a hobby."
"Perhaps that is what we are."
Dusk approached. Gwurm went gathering wood, and Newt went hunting for dinner. Though Wyst and I had been gradually drawing closer over our quest, I sat far from him this evening for reasons I couldn"t fathom. I often acted in ways I didn"t understand when it came to Wyst. I suspected this was normal, and a good witch doesn"t need to understand everything. Nor does she expect to.
Wyst squirmed. His pain was obvious, try as he might to hide it. Every shallow breath carried a soft wheeze. Few would have noticed, but I knew Wyst as few did. His pain distressed me more than even being eaten alive by goblings.
Silence crept between us. For the first time in a long while, I felt uneasy with Wyst.
He pressed his fingers to his wound and winced.
"Don"t do that," I said.
"It itches."
"It"s supposed to."
His hand hovered over the bandage.
"Leave it alone."
He sneered.
It was nice to see the boy beneath the man beneath the White Knight. I smiled for reasons yet again not entirely clear to me.
Wyst scowled. "We can"t all be fortunate enough to be accursed."
"Fortune can be fickle," I agreed. "Much like a White Knight"s legendary invulnerability."
"A popular exaggeration," he said.
"So I gathered."
It was then that Wyst shared the limits of his enchanted invincibility. I was honored to be entrusted with the secret, but we"d shared many secrets. Our physical vulnerabilities seemed almost trivial beside secret desires and mortal admissions.
White Knights could be harmed in four ways: magic, drowning, honorable combat, and corruption. None of these were particularly easy. Greater magic can always overcome lesser magic, but magic greater than Wyst"s enchantment was a very rare thing. While Wyst could suffocate, his enchantment allowed him to hold his breath for an hour. Honorable combat was a more general weakness. Even Wyst admitted he couldn"t know what was honorable and what wasn"t until he was actually harmed. Apparently, the chimera had met the magic"s qualifications.
The idea of corruption was of special interest to me. A White Knight"s virtue fueled his enchantment. When robbed of it, they were as vulnerable as any man. When captured, a White Knight was usually thrown into a dungeon for a month or a year or however long it took for him to fall to a moment of weakness. Even the most chaste soul would succ.u.mb to a piece of fresh fruit or a beautiful virgin"s kiss. Then it was off to the chopping block or gallows. This method was far from fool proof. Often as not, the Knight lasted long enough to be rescued or escape.
"Wouldn"t drowning be easier?" I asked.
"It would, but most a.s.sume that if you haven"t drowned in ten minutes that you aren"t going to." He lay on his back and breathed as little as possible. "And how exactly do undead witches meet death? Or do they?"
"I"m ageless. Not immortal."
I knew of four certain ways I might perish only through Ghastly Edna and her conversations with the magic. First, there was magic itself, but magic greater than my curse came only once every century or so. Fire, as both servant of life and death, could kill me. Except that as a witch, fire and I were very good friends. Only the most enraged flame posed any sort of danger. Being hacked into three or four pieces was perhaps the most effective, providing steps were taken to keep my parts from rejoining for long enough.