Arrayed there now, he saw, was a line of mounted knights, some two dozen or more in number.
As he watched, they urged their horses down the steep slope. Though they moved at a walk, they brandished lances and swords.
Musings of the Harpist
19
Slowly Deirdre opened her eyes. At first she saw nothing but dark, foreboding clouds, hanging so low in the sky that they seemed to press downward against Caer Callidyrr. Then she realized that she stared at them through her bedroom window, and finally the memory of the true Malawar came flooding back to her, and she wished that unconsciousness would claim her again.
Instead, the opposite occurred. Malawar himself-or the thing that had disguised itself as Malawar-approached Deirdre's slumping form. His withered face crinkled into an expression of amusement, an effect resembling a grotesquely grinning skull.
'You have flattered this old priest with your affections,' he chortled, drool flecking from his narrow lips. ' 'Tis not often that one as old as I samples the pleasures of such a temptling!'
The princess gagged in horror and struck out at him, but his veined hand easily caught her wrist and held it in a tense and wiry grip.
'Come,' Malawar hissed in a voice like the dry rasp of a file against coarse wood. 'Our master summons us!'
'No!' she moaned, turning her head to the side, away from the horrible visage. But there was no escape to be found there, save perhaps a desperate and fatal leap from the high window. Even in her anguish, Deirdre gave that possibility no consideration.
'You have no choice.' The withered creature spoke, his voice deep and rumbling. 'You have taken the vow.' A sneer curled the tight lips, and the hellishly dark eyes flared with an eagerness that Deirdre knew was hunger.
She tried to resist but felt her muscles drawn by a summons that came from beyond her mind. Unwillingly she turned back to the hideous priest. She wanted to struggle and pull away from him, but her own mind would not respond.
'Now,' Malawar snapped, obviously losing patience with his recalcitrant recruit, 'you will perform the magic that will remove us from here.'
'Me? How?' Deirdre asked. She felt her willpower return to her own control.
'That's better,' crooned the superannuated priest. 'You will find that Talos bends you to his will only when you yourself are reluctant to meet the terms of your vow.'
Deirdre remained silent.
'You will take us to Caer Blackstone,' continued Malawar. 'There the earl will join us as we proceed to our final destination.'
'Which is where?' she asked sullenly. Now she regarded the priest in a different light. She knew that she did have power-perhaps not as great nor as subtle as Malawar's, but true might nevertheless. The use of her power, she began to understand, would not be only his to control.
'The Fairheight Moonwell, of course,' he said with a bare-gummed grin. 'Where this resurgence of the Ffolk's goddess shall be destroyed for once and all!'
The goddess of the Ffolk? Deirdre winced at the phrase, for she was of the Ffolk, and the Mother had once been her goddess as well. But then a grim rage possessed her. She knew that she had chosen a different path, a different god. As fury gnawed at her soul, she understood one of the names of Talos-the Raging One.
That is how I shall know you, she vowed, a silent statement between herself and her god. And that is how my enemies shall know me!
'Hurry!' growled the priest, scowling at her like a glowering mask of death.
'What makes you think I have the power to take us there?' she asked.
'I
'Why don't you perform the magic?' demanded the princess.
'There is the difference between us, my child. I am a cleric of Talos, and my powers are those of the priesthood. You, however, have demonstrated an astounding aptitude for sorcery, a prodigy such as I have never encountered.'
'I don't know how to do this magic-I don't understand!' she protested.
But he took her soft hands in his own bony claws and stared into her liquid eyes, and she understood.
The baying hounds, led by Warlock, raced to meet the armored riders coming down the slope, but the dogs couldn't slow the progress of the dark knights. Snarling, the pack attacked savagely, only to meet the swords and lances of the riders and the sharp hooves of the war-horses. Many of the moorhounds fell, mortally wounded, and the others backed away, licking their wounds.
The men of Gwyeth's company, leaderless and demoralized, stood in a group near the trail. The horsemen turned toward them, trampling through the few dogs foolish enough to continue the harassment, pressing their steeds into a lumbering charge.
'This isn't my fight!' growled Backar, the unfortunate sergeant who had led the first expedition and had witnessed the problems of the second in all their unnatural horror. Now he faced a charging company of horsemen with his supply of fortitude exhausted. 'It's back to the cantrev for me!'
The hefty axemen ran for the trail leading from the Moonwell. The rest of the band needed only this example of leadership before they were quick to follow.
The horsemen looked for other foes. Hanrald and Danrak stood at the shore of the well, while the pilgrims had retreated to the crest of the valley. The knight raised his sword and started along the shore of the pond, the druid beside him. The two of them, on foot, stood before the steady advance of twenty-five heavily armored riders. The horsemen came at a walk, straight toward the pair.
'Hey-here's
'Indeed I do,' Hanrald remarked wryly. He stopped and raised his sword, staring at the leading rider, a huge black-armored man with a longsword and great metal shield. 'Halt!' cried the third son of Blackstone.
Ignoring the command, the rider spurred his horse to a trot. His company followed, and the ground in the vale rumbled under the heavy impact of hooves.
'He said
As the dragon spoke, a massive chasm appeared in the earth before the startled riders. Horses screamed and kicked, rearing back in the moment before their forehooves plunged into blackness.
'Sorcery!' cried one of the mounted warriors.