Blood of Amber

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Authors: Roger Zelazny

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BLOOD OF AMBER

THE AMBER CHRONICLES - BOOK SEVEN

Roger Zelazny

 

 

REFLECTIONS IN A CRYSTAL CAVE

My life had been relatively peaceful for eight years-not counting April thirtieths, when someone invariably tried to kill me.
 
Outside of that, my academic career with its concentration on computer science went well enough and my four years employment at Grand Design proved a rewarding experience, letting me use what I’d learned in a situation I liked while I labored on a project of my own on the side.
 
I had a good friend in Luke Raynard, who worked for the same company, in sales.
 
I sailed my little boat, I jogged regularly.

It all fell apart this past April 30, just when I thought things were about to come together.
 
My pet project, Ghostwheel, was built; I’d quit my job, packed my gear and was ready to move on to greener shadows.
 
I’d stayed in town this long only because that morbidly fascinating day was near, and this time I intended to discover who was behind the attempts on my life and why.

At breakfast that morning Luke appeared with a message from my former girlfriend, Julia.
 
Her note said that she wanted to see me again.
 
So I stopped by her place, where I found her dead, apparently killed by the same doglike beast which then attacked me.
 
I succeeded in destroying the creature.
 
A quick search of the apartment before I fled the scene fumed up a slim packet of strange playing cards, which I took along with me.

They were too much like the magical Tarots of Amber and Chaos for a sorcerer such as myself not to be interested in them.

Yes.I am a sorcerer.
 
I am Merlin, son of Corwin of Amber and Dara of the Courts of Chaos, known to local friends and acquaintances as Merle Corey: bright, charming, witty, athletic.
 
.
 
.
 
.
 
Go read Castiglione and Lord Byron for particulars, as I’m modest, aloof and reticent, as well.

The cards proved to be genuine magical objects, which seemed appropriate once I learned that Julia had been keeping company with an occultist named Victor Melman after we had broken up.
 
A visit to this gentleman’s studio resulted in his attempting to kill me in a ritual fashion.
 
I was able to free myself from the constraints of the ceremony and question him somewhat, before local conditions and my enthusiasm resulted in his death.
 
So much for rituals.

I’d learned enough from him to realize that he’d been but a cat’s-paw.
 
Someone else had apparently put him up to the sacrifice bit-and it seemed quite possible that the other person was the one responsible for Julia’s death and my collection of memorable April thirtieths.

I had small time to reflect upon these matters, though, because I was bitten (yes, bitten) shortly thereafter by an attractive red-haired woman who materialized in Melman’s apartment, following my brief telephone conversation with her in which I’d tried to pose as Melman.
 
Her bite paralyzed me, but I was able to depart before it took full effect by employing one of the magical cards I’d found at Julia’s place.
 
It bore me into the presence of a sphinx, which permitted me to recover so that it could play that silly riddle game sphinxes love so well because they get to eat you when you lose.
 
All I can say about it is that this particular sphinx was a bad sport.

Anyhow, I returned to the shadow Earth where I’d been making my home to discover that Melman’s place had burned down during my absence.
 
I tried phoning Luke, because I wanted to have dinner with him, and learned that he had checked out of his motel, leaving me a message indicating that he had gone to New Mexico on business and telling me where he’d be staying.
 
The desk clerk also gave me a blue-stone ring Luke had left behind, and I took it with me to return when I saw him.

I Sew to New Mexico, finally catching up with Luke in Santa Fe.
 
While I waited in the bar for him to get ready for dinner, a man named Dan Martinez questioned me, giving the impression that Luke had proposed some business deal and that he wanted to be assured Luke was reliable and could deliver.
 
After dinner, Luke and I went for a drive in the mountains.

Martinez followed us and started shooting as we stood admiring the night.
 
Perhaps he’d decided Luke was not reliable or couldn’t deliver.
 
Luke surprised me by drawing a weapon of his own and shooting Martinez.
 
Then an even stranger thing happened.
 
Luke called me by name-my real name, which I’d never told him-and cited my parentage and told me to get into the car and get the hell out.
 
He emphasized his point by placing a shot in the ground near my feet.
 
The matter did not seem open to discussion so I departed.
 
He also told me to destroy those strange Trumps that had saved my life once already.
 
And I’d learned on the way up that he’d known Victor Melman.
 
.
 
.
 
.

I didn’t go far.
 
I parked downhill and returned on foot.
 
Luke was gone.
 
So was Martinei s body.
 
Luke did not return to the hotel, that night or the next day, so I checked out and departed.
 
The only person I was sure I could trust, and who actually might have some good advice for me, was Bill Roth.
 
Bill was an attorney who lived in upstate New York, and he had been my father’s best friend.
 
I went to visit him, and I told him my story.

Bill got me to wondering even morc about Luke.
 
Luke, by the way, is a big, smart, red-haired natural athlete of uncanny prowess-and though we’d been friends for many years I knew next to nothing (as Bill pointed out) concerning his background.

A neighboring lad named George Hansen began hanging out near Bill’s place, asking strange questions.
 
I received an odd phone call, asking similar questions.
 
Both interrogators seemed curious as to my mother’s name.
 
Naturally, I lied.
 
The fact that my mother is a member of the dark aristocracy of the Courts of Chaos was none of their business.
 
But the caller spoke my language, Thari, which made me curious enough to propose a meeting and a trade-off of information that evening in the bar of the local country club.

But my Uncle Random, King of Amber, called me home before that, while Bill and I were out hiking.
 
George Hansen, it turned out, was following us and wanted to come along as we shifted away across the shadows of reality.
 
Tough; he wasn’t invited.
 
I took Bill along because I didn’t want to leave him with anyone acting that peculiar.

I learned from Random that my Uncle Caine was dead, of an assassin’s bullet, and that someone had also tried to kill my Uncle Bleys but only succeeded in wounding him.
 
The funeral service for Caine would be the following day.

I kept my date at the country club that evening, but my mysterious interrogator was nowhere in sight.
 
All was not lost, however, as I made the acquaintance of a pretty lady named Meg Devlin-and, one thing leading to another, I saw her home and we got to know each other a lot better.
 
Then, at a moment when I would have judged her thoughts to be anywhere but there, she asked me my mother’s name.
 
So, what the hell, I told her.
 
It did not come to me until later that she might really have been the person I’d gone to the bar to meet.

Our liaison was terminated prematurely by a call from the lobby-from a man purportedly Meg’s husband.
 
I did what any gentleman would do.
 
I got the hell out fast.

My Aunt Fiona, who is a sorceress (of a different style from my own), had not approved of my date.
 
And apparently she approved even less of Luke, because she asked me whether I had a picture of him after I’d told her somewhat concerning him.
 
I showed her a photo I had in my wallet, which included Luke in the group.
 
I’d have sworn she recognized him from somewhere, though she wouldn’t admit it.
 
But the fact that she and her brother Bleys both disappeared from Amber that night would seem more than coincidental.

The pace of events was accelerated even more after that.
 
A crude attempt at knocking off most of the family with a thrown bomb was made the next day, following Caine’s funeral.
 
The would-be assassin escaped.
 
Later, Random was upset at a brief demonstration on my part of the power of the Ghostwheel, my pet project, my hobby, my avocation during those years at Grand Design.
 
Ghostwheel is a-well, it started out as a computer that required a different set of physical laws to operate than those I’d learned in school.
 
It involved what might be called magic.
 
But I found a place where it could be built and operated, and I’d constructed it there.
 
It was still programming itself when I’d left it.
 
It seemed to have gone sentient, and I think it scared Random.
 
He ordered me to go and turn it off.
 
I didn’t much like the idea, but I departed.

I was followed in my passage through Shadow; I was harassed, threatened and even attacked.
 
I was rescued from a fire by a strange lady who later died in a lake.
 
I was protected from vicious beasts by a mysterious individual and saved from a bizarre earthquake by the same person-who turned out to be Luke.
 
He accompanied me to the final barrier, for a confrontation with Ghostwheel.
 
My creation was a bit irritated with me and banished us by means of a shadow-storm-a thing it is not fun to be caught in, with or without an umbrella.
 
I delivered us from the vicissitudes by means of one of the Trumps of Doom, as I’d dubbed the odd pasteboards from Julia’s apartment.

We wound up outside a blue crystal cave, and Luke took me in.
 
Good old Luke.
 
After seeing to my needs he proceeded to imprison me.
 
When he told me who he was, I realized that it was a resemblance to his father which had upset Fiona when she’d seen his photo.
 
For Luke was the son of Brand, assassin and arch traitor, who had damn near destroyed the kingdom and the rest of the universe along with it some years back.
 
Fortunately, Caine had killed him before he’d accomplished his designs.
 
Luke, I learned then, was the one who’d killed Caine, to avenge his father.
 
(And it turned out he’d gotten the news of his father’s death on an April thirtieth and had had a peculiar way of observing its anniversary over the years.) Like Random, he too had been impressed by my Ghostwheel, and he told me that I was to remain his prisoner, as I might become necessary in his eforts to gain control of the machine, which he felt would be the perfect weapon for destroying the rest of the family.

He departed to pursue the matter, and I quickly discovered that my powers were canceled by some peculiar property of the cave, leaving me with no one to talk to but you, Frakir, and no one here for you to strangle.
 
.
 
.

 

Would you care to hear a few bars of “Over the Rainbow”?

 

1

I threw the hilt away after the blade had shattered.
 
The weapon had done me no good against that blue sea of a wall in what I had taken to be its thinnest section.
 
A few small chips of stone lay at my feet.
 
I picked them up and rubbed them together.
 
This was not the way out for me.
 
The only way out seemed to be the way I had come in, and it wasn’t working.

I walked back to my quarters, meaning that section of the caves where I had cast my sleeping bag.
 
I sat down on the bag, a heavy brown one, uncorked a wine bottle and took a drink.
 
I had worked up a sweat hacking away at the wall.

Frakir stirred upon my wrist then, unwound herself partway and slithered into the palm of my left hand, to coil around the two blue chips I still held.
 
She knotted herself about them, then dropped to hang and swing pendulum-like.
 
I put the bottle aside and watched.
 
The arc of her swing paralleled the lengthwise direction of the tunnel I now called home.
 
The swinging continued for perhaps a full minute.
 
Then she withdrew upward, halting when she came to the back of my hand.
 
She released the chips at the base of my third linger and returned to her normal hidden position about my wrist.

I stared.
 
I raised the flickering oil lamp and studied the stones.

Their color.
 
.
 
.
 
.

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