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Authors: Richard Meade

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BOOK: The Sword of Morning Star
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The figure moved forward, into the candle-glow. This was a giant of a man, far taller than two meters and in his early twenties. Blond hair the color of hammered gold fell down to his shoulders, and a thick, silky beard of the same color masked most of his face; but Sandivar could make out the strong, hawklike nose, the wide, firm lips, and the eyes—most of all, the eyes. As Sandivar saw the eyes, he thought:
May the Gods forgive me…

Beneath craggy bone and heavy brows, they were the color of steel, and they were terrible. Something in them made even Sandivar turn his head away, as they beheld him steadily. For these eyes had looked upon things that had left a record in them and on the wide, grim mouth—such things that a living man could not even imagine and retain sanity, though there was no lack of this in the cold, steel-colored eyes of Helmut. For an instant, Sandivar almost felt pity for Albrecht.

“Yes,” Helmut said. “It is I.” His voice was deep and steady, tinged with melancholy, yet also somehow ringing with steel. “And it was as you said. Beowulf, Siegfried, Arthur, Charlemagne, and—well, I have the skill of arms now. When shall we leave for Boorn?”

Sandivar rubbed his face wearily. “We do not leave for Boorn immediately. First we have business in the Lands of Light.”

“I have no business there,” Helmut said. “I need only weapons. Then all my business is in the court at Marmorburg.”

Sandivar drew in a deep breath. “Aye,” he said. “But you are to return to lay about you with Rage, on galloping Vengeance, with Death and Destruction at your stirrup-irons. And for these reasons, we must go to the Lands of Light.”

Helmut nodded. “Then give me something of clothing,” he said, and there was command in his voice. “And as soon as I have dressed, let us depart.”

“Yes,” said Sandivar. “Yes. As you desire, Helmut, Emperor of the Gray Lands.” The deference in his voice was real.

“I am not emperor yet,” said Helmut. “But ere Albrecht comes in sword blade reach, I warrant I shall be. Now, make haste, Sandivar.”

“One moment,” Sandivar said. “Before—” He gestured toward the pentacle. “Before you went, we embraced.” A question rang in his voice.

“Aye,” Helmut said. “I loved you then. That was when I could still love. But you were right, Sandivar. It is a freezing of the soul. All laughter is frozen, and all love. What remains is death; but for my purposes, death is enough. Shall we go?”

Feeling cold all over, Sandivar turned away. “At once,” he said.

 

The throne room of the great hall in the huge palace at Marmorburg was columned with soaring shafts of iridescent marble, and its ceiling was so high that the frescoes which adorned it were on an enormous scale. Through the arched windows set in walls of alabaster white, sunlight poured in golden shafts, striking brilliant gleams from the rich garb of the group of lords and their retainers gathered at one end of the hall, awaiting audience. Contrasting with all this splendor was the black of Wolfsheim in which the King’s Guard was arrayed, lined up in double row to the throne—half-wolves all, their rankness filling the palace with the smell of an animal’s covert.

Albrecht, enthroned on the white marble dais at one end of the hall, was so accustomed to the smell that he hardly noticed it; or if he did, it was perfume, of a kind, in his nostrils. The weight of the crown of empire was heavy on his head; but his neck was more than strong enough to bear it; and the broadsword which lay across his lap was the Great Sword of Boorn, richly jeweled and filigreed with gold, yet perfectly balanced and with an invisible edge of keenness beyond belief. He had, deliberately, eschewed the bright, colorful garments of the royalty of Sigrieth’s line; his robes were of black sable and gray wolfskin, but beautifully made and very rich. Gauntlets and boots alike were of black leather, to match those of his guard.

From where he sat, the lords awaiting audience were so far away that they appeared small and inconsequential; but he frowned as his eyes appraised them. Hagen, the cursed Hagen of Markau, old lieutenant and fighting comrade of Sigrieth—he was the troublemaker, the questioner, and the fly in the ointment. Yet, he could not be dealt with summarily, not until the throne on which Albrecht sat was steadier than now it felt. Some diplomacy would be required; if it failed, the force could come afterward.

Beside the throne, Eero, also in leather and black satin, though it, too, was now trimmed with sable, awaited orders, red tongue lolling. Well, Albrecht told himself, naught to be gained by delay. “Good Eero,” he said, “bid the lords come forward.”

“Aye, your majesty.” With clawed hand on sword, Eero swaggered down the aisle between the rigid, drawn-up lines of the troops he commanded. Albrecht’s first move had been to replace the Palace Guard of Marmorburg with half-wolves. Nor had that depleted his strength at Wolfsheim. He smiled faintly. Probably that had something to do with yonder fighting-cock stance of Hagen, which bespoke outrage.

Now, swords swinging and gear jingling, helmets in hand, the lords with their retinues strode down the aisle between the half-wolves to approach the throne. Albrecht sat upright, waiting, and his mouth curled faintly beneath his heavy mustache as each lord made a knee and bowed his head before the throne.

Hagen, though the leader of the group, was the last to bow, nor was it very deep. Then he straightened, and his dark eyes met those of Albrecht. “Have I permission to speak, Your Majesty?”

“Good Hagen knows how well loved he is by us and that he always has our ear.”

“Then,” said Hagen, “come we for redress of grievances. Certain petitions have we—” He turned to a retainer, who handed him a parchment scroll.

“One moment,” said Albrecht, raising a hand. “Not many weeks ere we mounted throne of empire. So early have you grievance for which you assign us responsibility? Perhaps more seemly, far, to wait ere our rule is truly under way and its results seen.”

Hagen’s face, topped by short, gray hair like a badger’s fur, was weathered to the color and texture of leather, deeply lined. His mouth thinned, chin jutted, and his eyes glinted. “As Regent have you ruled since the death of Sigrieth. Where responsibility is to be assigned presents no question.”

“That we let pass for this moment,” Albrecht said, eyes slitting. “Have your say. Only, be careful that you not o’er-speak yourself.”

“Nor underspeak,” said Hagen without flinching. “My own service to the crown and those of my companions would add to more than a century, and our scars gained in battle on its behalf to at least a hundred, too. We neither o’er nor underspeak, but speak directly and to the matter.” He glanced at the scroll. “By your leave, several points have we.”

“Then say them,” Albrecht rasped, the anger breaking naked into his voice.

“First, the death of our late, beloved King, Gustav… Certain matters of this death, so greatly mourned, we find obscure. Our request be now that a commission be appointed, of disinterested lords and thanes, to inquire into its manner, so that all facts be fully known.”

“All facts pertaining to the tragedy have been made public.” Albrecht’s eyes met those of Hagen and held them.

“The broken boar-spear. When certain of us sought to examine it, it seemed the fatal weapon had been lost.” Hagen’s voice was dry and full of irony.

“When a king dies, the confusion is great,” said Albrecht. “Request not granted. Go on.”

“No relief, then, on this matter? Very well: to the next.” Hagen let the scroll snap shut. “Of more moment, now, perhaps is this. Your Majesty is aware, perhaps, that the population of half-wolves in the Gray Lands swells daily; that they flock to Boorn and Marmorburg from all over the world, finding here sanctuary and preferred treatment.”

Albrecht’s lips curled with amusement. “Aye, well aware am I.”

Hagen’s gaze went to Eero, standing next the throne. “More. As they come, these outcasts with warm welcome are received and are formed now into new divisions of the Army of the Emperor. And already appointments have been made elevating half-wolves far above men within the Army, the Palace Guard, the court, and civil functions. Now, say we, this is plague not to be borne. Wolves enough already are there in Boorn without allowing it to become infested with half-wolves, too!”

Eero made a growling sound, put one foot forward and a clawed hand on his sword, but Albrecht gestured him back. “You are troubled with wolves, brave Hagen?” he asked with feigned innocence.

“Troubled? Little more and they become catastrophe. Like the half-wolves, they, too, have flocked to the kingdom ruled by…” his lips curled as he said the words, “the Duke of the Wolves’ Home, their coverts throughout the Frorwald, their daily sustenance our flocks, aye, sometimes even our shepherds! And yet the King claims all the Frorwald as his own hunting ground, and expeditions to reduce their number have not been permitted…”

“And your request is—?”

“That strict limits be imposed on the number of half-wolves coming into Boorn. That we lords be allowed to hunt to ground the wolves of the Frorwald and exterminate them. And that the kingdom, armies, courts, and land of Boorn be ruled by men and not by wolves or half-wolves!” Angrily echoed his voice throughout the hall.

Albrecht’s face darkened. A full minute he sat there, staring at Hagen, who met his gaze unflinchingly. There was the shuffle of feet, meanwhile, and the half-wolves, at some unobserved signal, closed ranks; then came the creak of sword belts and the whisper of loosened blades in scabbards as they formed an enormous, reeking circle around the handful of men who confronted the King.

Then Albrecht arose, the Great Sword of Boorn in his hand. “I rule Boorn,” he said harshly, “and no other rules. By this sword rule I, and the crown I wear. And hear me, Hagen. By sword and crown alike, I warn you all that he who speaks treason shall suffer for it.”

“We speak no treason, sire,” replied Hagen thinly. “But as free lords of Boorn, we may present frankly and unhampered our petitions.”

“Which are,” rasped Albrecht, “in their entirety denied, being insolent and insulting. And lest you feel the weight of our displeasure, full apology will I have for the impertinence I have heard this morning.” He nodded to Eero, subtly, and now the ring around the lords closed more tightly. Some of them looked around apprehensively, but Hagen, coolly, said in a low voice, “No swords drawn.” His own hands, blunt-fingered and scarred, were raised high, well away from the jeweled hilt of his own blade. Albrecht felt a fierce hatred for this man—the others were frightened and intimidated, fearful of lese majesty and of the wolfmen. Without Hagen, they would dissolve like salted garden slugs. But Hagen was like oak.

“Should we have insulted the Crown of the Gray Lands or the Sword of Boorn this morning,” the lord said with a courtesy so exquisite that it was mockery, “full apology, Your Majesty, do we make.”

“And is accepted,” Albrecht said, all at once anxious to be rid of this group. “But all petitions denied.”

Hagen bowed his head. “So be it. Perhaps Your Majesty will be in mood to reconsider later, should we hit on more forceful argument for our cause. By your leave, sire, now go we all to our separate lands.”

“Then go,” said Albrecht, and he nodded once more to Eero. A lane opened in the mob of black-clad wolfmen, and the lords wheeled, led by Hagen, stiff-backed and proud in bearing, and then stalked out. Eero barked orders: the Palace Guard rearranged itself in ranks.

Albrecht seated himself again on the throne, breathing hard with suppressed rage. Then he said, “Good Eero,” and beckoned the half-wolf to him.

“Your Majesty—” Eero bent close to listen.

“You have seen Hagen…”

“Aye,” Eero said, and growled in his throat.

“The man cannot be tolerated. Besides, it is o’ertime to prove the trustiness of our new comrades. Do you now send this message to the Black Wolf herself in the Frorwald… and tell her that her reward for services shall be great; aye, she shall gorge herself and all her followers on flesh of the sort she loves best.”

Eero’s tongue lolled as he nodded. “But will not this reflect back against Your Majesty?”

“The fate of Markau, ghastly as it must be, shall be good insurance against other insurrection. Then we are secure and free to carry out our plans that run beyond this moment—But for now, a messenger to the Black Wolf.”

“Aye,” said Eero, and he bowed and scraped, and then hurried from the throne, while Albrecht stroked the Great Sword of Boorn with his hand and smiled thoughtfully and darkly.

CHAPTER V

 

With his art, Sandivar had called from the far forests another huge bear, a she this time, whom he called Rowl, and who was also broken to saddle and rein. The tower was carefully locked, and the sorcerer then traced a circle in the sand about it, muttering as he did so words meaningless to Helmut, who watched impatiently. At last, Sandivar was done. “Now, should one with evil intent cross the protective boundary I’ve laid down, woe to him! Still, an honest traveler need have no fear.” Sandivar gathered up the reins of the she-bear. “Let us go.”

Helmut swung aboard Waddle, who bore his weight with ease. The two animals waded out into the marsh, then began to swim. Helmut liked the strong, rhythmic driving motion of the bear, the feeling of power. It was nearly as good as a war-horse…

While the two great animals bore them across the marsh, Helmut, Sigrieth’s bastard, looked at the world he now inhabited with a kind of amazement. In his ten years in another, he had forgotten that there was aught but cold and drear, fog and grayness; now he rode in sweet sunshine, beneath arching blue, toward a line of bright, beckoning green that was the mainland. He should, it occurred to him, feel exaltation and freedom at his release from that land of horror to which Sandivar had sent him; but he did not. Indeed, he felt nothing except the determination which had allowed Sandivar to dispatch him to that place in the beginning: to kill Albrecht and revenge the deaths of Sigrieth and Gustav. After that, of course, he would become King of Boorn and Emperor of the Gray Lands, but the thought of reigning stirred no enthusiasm within him.

These ten years that he had spent in that other world, the decade that had brought him to manhood and had tutored him in all the hard arts of warfare—indeed, he thought, they had left him scarred. It was strange not to be able to respond to beauty, strange not to feel mirth at the spectacle of Sandivar ducked by a sudden maneuver of the she-bear, startled by a watersnake. Strange not to feel anything human except hatred of Albrecht and the need to obliterate him. Sandivar had not exaggerated the price—indeed, if he remained like this, dead within, once Albrecht died it mattered not to him if he himself were slain. There was no love of life left within him.

But whatever he had to do, he could; of that he was now certain. His left arm was an almost frightening mass of muscle: single-handed, he could be terrible with the great broadsword that normal men must use two hands to wield. Many times, in rawest, bloodiest combat, had that been proved. With the short sword was he also expert; and with the crossbow. But next to the broadsword, his favorite weapon was the chain-mace, the great iron ball studded with long, sharp spikes, called sardonically by warriors since the days of Siegfried and the Walsungs the “morning star.” For a mounted man with strength of arm, it was a brutal, efficient weapon; had he not lacked a hand, had he been able to use broadsword with his right and the morning star with his left, he would have been the equal—nay, the master—of any warrior in that hell-Valhalla to which he had been sent—and to which someday he must in all probability return.

But for now, no thought of that. Ahead lay Rage and Vengeance, Death and Destruction, as Sandivar had promised; and, oddly, he was to acquire these extensions of himself in the Lands of Light, that sweet and gentle place of learning which Boorn and the Gray Lands sheltered as a she-bear her cub. But that was Sandivar’s arranging; only let him be armed and armored, mounted on a war-horse of strong, long leg, and then he would take the lead. But for now, he was content to let Sandivar take him, as the old man had insisted on doing, to Neoroma, capital of the Lands of Light.

 

Presently the water shallowed, and the bears, fur plastered and dripping, emerged; and they were on the mainland. Here was a forest, not dark and tangled like the Frorwald, but open and clear, its pleasant floor dappled with checkers of sunlight shifting drowsily with the movement of the heavy foliage of the giant oaks and beeches that comprised the woods. They struck a path, and the bears loped along tirelessly with a rolling gait. The air was warm and fragrant, perfumed, but it stirred no response of pleasure in Helmut; by habit, his eyes watched for ambush.

Long were they in the mossy, misty darkness of the forest; then they emerged into meadows green with grass, bright and riotous with flowers, and murmurous with the hum of insects. Sometimes, as they crested an occasional ridge, they saw villages: pretty little places of whitewashed stone, without walls, surrounded by groves of citrus and of olives. They steered clear of these, continuing across country.

That evening, they slept in a grove, their cloaks for cover, bread, cheese, and wine from Sandivar’s saddlebags their dinner. The bears rummaged and foraged in the woods, and then, hunger sated by whatever they had found, came back and made soft pillows of themselves for their riders.

At daybreak they were off again. Now they came to a road; and it was paved in a fashion new to Helmut, neither so hard as stone nor graveled, nor only dust, but of some material that seemed to speed the hurrying feet of the bears. This road was wide and spacious and glittered like the finest marble, yet never was hot or dazzling.

Like a serpent it wound across the beautiful country, where cattle and horses grazed between the little towns; where children herded swine and geese and sheep; and where, from time to time, the minor notes of a shepherd’s pipe floated drowsily over the tranquil landscape.

“Surely,” said Helmut, “this road is a marvel.”

“There are many more marvels in Neoroma, where a good mind and craftsman’s hands are more valued than a strong stroke with a broadsword,” said Sandivar.

“I am sorry,” Helmut said. “My trade is the broadsword.”

“Aye, and without it all this—” Sandivar swept put an arm, “would perish. We are near to Neoroma now; it lies just over yon hill.” And he pointed toward a ridge several miles away. “It is, as you know, a very ancient place, ancient long before the Worldfire. There ruin lies upon ruin, and ruin upon that; and then a civilization upon it all—”

“Which in turn will someday be ruin?”

“Unless Boorn lends protection until the New Learning is complete, aye.” They rode in silence then, up the ridge; and then they topped it, and Sandivar drew rein.

“There,” he said. “There is Neoroma. There is the capital of the Lands of Light.”

Helmut stared. “By the Gods,” he whispered.

Unwalled, it spread itself over the verdant hills below them, on the banks of a river clear and shining. White spires gleamed, and bronze statues, and pink marble and veined travertine, and nothing that took the eye jarred it or was unwholesome. Here, it seemed, had been laid down a city out of Paradise, huge and swarming, yet no detail neglected for the pleasure of the senses or the convenience of its citizens. Between the temples, palaces, gardens, bright apartments and the pleasant little homes of workers, orderly traffic moved on huge and uncrowded streets. Overarching the river were bridges of incredible gemlike delicacy that yet bore great burdens of laden wagons without a tremble. This was a city without rot or ugliness; and that was something not even Marmorburg, in all its splendor, could boast.

And yet, Helmut found himself thinking only:
that is where we shall get our weapons.
This beauty did not move him, once his surprise had died. “They have no wall,” he said.

“Nor needed any until now. Boorn was their wall, and its king their shield. Let us hurry. We are awaited at the palace.”

Close up, the city was as pleasant as at a distance. Many beautiful women inhabited it, in costumes that displayed their charms, and their eyes, half-lidded and inquisitive or beckoning, did not miss the tall, wild-looking man clad only in leather. Helmut, in his turn, spared them barely a glance. Women, he had learned in his servitude in that warrior’s half-world, had their place; but it was after the battle; and his battle had not yet been fought. Time enough to use them when Albrecht’s corpse was cold…

“So many temples,” he said, riding knee to knee with Sandivar. “All to different gods?”

“Nay,” the sorcerer said. “All to one—and that one, learning. Not that humanity shall sleep warmer or eat better or have more entertainment and luxury, but that humanity shall know its purpose, what the Gods have put it here for and how it may be fulfilled. For look: a bear requires this and no more—food, mating, a little play, a winter’s sleep. Given so much, he is content and seeks not more, for he has no dreams. But man is not a bear: always restless, striving, daring, risking, seeking the unknowable, and all this only to learn his own purpose among the stars. And when he knows it, perhaps then he too will be at last at home on the earth as a bear is, and among the stars, too. Here they seek the answer: what will fulfill man, appease him, and give him rest this side of death; in short, answer what the Gods require of him; and though all that is tall order enough, yet it is not so far from fulfillment. When the knowledge is fully revealed, codified, disseminated, made general and interpreted, when the New Learning is complete and spread around the earth, then man will at last be home from his long journey, and broadswords may rust away…”

“Have they no warriors here? Must they depend entirely on the goodwill of Boorn?”

“And until now, the goodwill of Boorn has not faltered.” Sandivar smiled. “Aye, they have warriors here, but they have not armies. For the warrior is like muscle in the flesh, he gives society its strength; yet, too much muscle and one can hardly bend the arm; moreover, muscle draws nourishment from the brain. So these people will have no battalions and no divisions; when their homes are threatened, they will fight, and with a right goodwill. But they are not fighters born, like you of the Gray Lands. You have learned by now that when an army exists, it must always find something for itself to do—something which it must defend against or something which it must attack. Great mischief lies in such forces—which, indeed, are the forces Albrecht now gathers ’round him to the north. But here’s the palace.”

It towered over them, with a great winding spiral of pure white steps leading upward toward the enormous columns, many meters thick, yet so delicately designed and made that their soaring height seemed slender and graceful; this palace, the seat of the King of the Lands of Light, only began there, at that great portico; and then it wandered and bent and towered and esplanaded. There were colonnades and arcades and hanging gardens; vast halls that yet seemed not vast, so careful was their proportioning; and finally there was the throne room, the splendor of it as great as that at Marmorburg and yet, devoid of guards, thus somehow greater. Nor, recognizing them from afar, did the King, whose name was Carus, await their coming; when the herald had informed him, he strode toward them, a handsome, sturdy man of middle age, eyes flashing bright with intelligence, smile warm. He wore no crown, only a golden chaplet or wreath; and his robes were not robes at all, but only a simple tunic of white linen, artfully embroidered. “Sandivar!” He and the sorcerer embraced like brothers.

Then he turned to Helmut. “And this is—?”

“Helmut, bastard son of Sigrieth, now heir to the Great Sword of Boorn and the Crown of the Gray Lands.”

“Your Majesty,” said Helmut, bowing to Carus.

“Greater than mine your own empire,” Carus said. He frowned at Sandivar as if suddenly remembering. “But I thought Sigrieth’s last remaining son was but a child.”

“Look at him,” Sandivar said. “If you see aught of child left in him, let me know.”

Carus met Helmut’s gaze. His face paled, and he turned away, “Aye,” he said as if he understood. “A bitter price to pay.”

“No,” said Helmut. “Not too bitter. My vengeance shall make it worth the while. Only that the Gods do not send lightning or plague to take Albrecht to untimely death, no more than that do I ask. We need weapons, and I must hurry to Boorn; Sandivar has said that we may obtain them here.”

Carus nodded. “Indeed. All the facilities of our best artisans are at your disposal. Still, can you not stay one night? There is much needs discussion; and certain entertainment have we prepared for you as well.”

“Of course we stay,” Sandivar said. “We shall remain here for some time…” He bowed. “With your permission, sire.” A gesture silenced Helmut’s protest.

“Granted ere you ever asked.” Now Carus’ face was serious. “The coronation in Marmorburg disturbs us greatly, and there is later news as well, but no more savory. When you have been shown your chambers and have refreshed yourself, if you would be so good as to dine with us…”

“The royal wish commands us,” said Sandivar.

“You, perhaps. But for the Emperor of the Gray Lands?” King Carus looked sharply at Helmut.

“Not emperor yet, nor king either,” Helmut said. “But your servant, sire.”

“Well, then. In the great hall at the twentieth hour?” And when they consented, he bade servants take them to their chambers.

 

There was a splendid feast, with many roast meats, fowl, and the wonderful shellfish for which the Lands of Light were famous. There was music, played by massed instruments and swelling to such volume in the great hall, so full, too, of purity and sweetness and death and sadness and all the other emotions of life, that for a moment Helmut almost felt response to it. But not quite; nothing really stirred within him; his soul remained dead, though his appetites did not. The most beautiful women of the court danced naked before them, celebrating the joyfulness of sex, and to that he responded; but, as he had told himself, there was no time at the moment. Indeed, after the dancing and the fantastical finale of that great orchestra and a hundred voices joined in chorus, Helmut, Sandivar, and Carus retired to the simple privacy of the King’s chambers. Here they were joined by Dravidio, the King’s first minister, a man of middle age, possessed both of honesty and guile and well aware when to use either to best advantage.

“From all over the world they flock to Boorn,” Dravidio told them. “Wolves and half-wolves alike. Outlawed everywhere else, now, in the Gray Lands, they have at last a land of their own. Each day, new recruits arrive to flesh out the vast divisions of Albrecht’s half-wolf army.”

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