'Sure.'
He passed it to me. I took it in my hand and studied it, I pushed it into my arm and drew it along for perhaps threequarters of an inch. Blood oozed.
'I'll be damned,' Luke said. 'What's going on?'
'I'd say it's a spell I picked up when I spent a night in the Dancing Mountains recently,' I replied.
'Hm,' Luke mused, 'I've never had the pleasure, but I've heard stories of the place. I don't know any simple ways to break its spells. My room's off toward the front.' He gestured southward. 'If you'd care to stop by, I'll see what I can figure out about it. I studied Chaos magic with my dad, and with my mother, Jasra.'
I shrugged.
'This is my room right here,' I said, 'and I've a chicken and a bottle of wine on the way up. Let's do the diagnosis in here, and I'll split the meal with you.'
He smiled.
'Best offer I've had all day,' he said. 'But let me stop back at my room for some tools of the trade.'
'All right. I'll walk you back, so I'll know the way in case I need it.'
He nodded and turned. We headed up the hall.
Turning the corner, we moved from west to east, passing Flora's apartments and moving in the direction of some of the better visitors' quarters. Luke halted before one room and reached into his pocket, presumably after the key. Then he halted.
'Uh, Corwin?' he said.
'What?' I responded.
'Those two big cobrashaped candle holders,' he said, gesturing up the hall. 'Bronze, I believe.'
'Most likely. What of them?'
'I thought they were just hall decorations.'
'That's what they are.'
'The last time I looked at them, they kind of bracketed a small painting or tapestry,' he said.
'My recollection, too,' I said.
'Well, there seems to be a corridor between them now.'
'No, that can't be. There's a proper hallway just a little beyond--' I began.
Then I shut up because I knew. I began walking toward it.
'What's going on?' Luke asked.
'It's calling me,' I said. 'I've got to go and see what it wants.'
'What is it?'
'The Hall of Mirrors. It comes and goes. It brings sometimes useful, sometimes ambiguous messages to the one it calls.'
'Is it calling us both, or just you?' Luke said.
'Dunno,' I replied. 'I feel it calling me, as it has in the past. You're welcome to come with me. Maybe it has some goodies for you, too.'
'You ever hear of two people taking it at once?'
'No, but there's a first time for everything,' I said.
Luke nodded slowly.
'What the hell,' he said, 'I'm game.'
He followed me to the place of the snakes, and we peered up it. Candles flared along its walls, at either hand. And the walls glittered from the countless mirrors which hung upon them. I stepped forward. Luke followed, at my left.
The mirror frames were of every shape imaginable. I walked very slowly, observing the contents of each one. I told Luke to do the same. For several paces, the mirrors seemed simply to be giving back what was before them. Then Luke stiffened and halted, head turning to the left.
'Mom!' he said explosively.
The reflection of an attractive red-haired woman occupied a mirror framed in green-tinged copper in the shape of an Ouroboros serpent.
She smiled.
'So glad you did the right thing, taking the throne,' she said.
'You really mean that?' he asked.
'Of course,' she replied.
'Thought you might be mad. Thought you wanted it,' he said.
'I did once, but those damned Kashfans never appreciated me. I've got the Keep now, though, and I feel like doing a few years' research here--and it's full of sentimental values as well. So as long as Kashfa stays in the family, I wanted you to know I was pleased.'
'Why--uh--glad to hear that, Mom. Very glad. I'll hang onto it.'
'Do,' she said, and vanished.
He turned to me, a small ironic smile flickering across his lips.
'That's one of the rare times in my life when she's approved of something I've done,' he said. 'Doubtless for all the wrong reasons, but still... How real are these things? What exactly did we see? Was that a conscious communication on her part? Was--'
'They're real,' I said. 'I don't know how or why or what part of the other is actually present. They may be stylized, surreal, may even suck you in. But in some way they're really real. That's all I know. Holy cow!'
From the huge gold-framed mirror, ahead and to my right, the grim visage of my father Oberon peered forth. I advanced a pace.
'Corwin,' he said. 'You were my chosen, but you always had a way of disappointing me.'
'That's the breaks,' I said.
'True. And one should not speak of you as a child after all these years. You've made your choices. Of some I have been proud. You have been valiant.'
'Why, thank you--sir.'
'I bid you do something immediately.'
'What?'
'Draw your dagger and stab Luke.'
I stared.
'No,' I said.
'Corwin,' Luke said. 'It could be something like your proving you're not a Pattern ghost.'
'But I don't give a damn whether you're a Pattern ghost,' I said. 'It's nothing to me.'
'Not that,' Oberon interjected. 'This is of a different order.'
'What, then?' I asked.
'Easier to show than to tell,' Oberon replied.
Luke shrugged.
'So nick my arm,' he said. 'Big deal.'
'All right. Let's see how the show beats the tell.'
I drew a stiletto from my boot sheath. He pulled back his sleeve and extended his arm. I stabbed lightly.
My blade passed through his arm as if the limb were made of smoke.
'Shit,' Luke said. 'It's contagious.'
'No,' Oberon responded. 'It is a thing of very special scope.'
'That is to say?' Luke asked.
'Would you draw your sword, please?'
Luke nodded and drew a familiar-looking golden blade. It emitted a high keening sound, causing all of the candle flames in the vicinity to flicker. Then I knew it for what it was--my brother Brand's blade, Werewindle.
'Haven't seen that in a long while,' I said, as the keening continued.
'Luke, would you cut Corwin with your blade, please?'
Luke raised his eyes, met my gaze. I nodded. He moved the blade, scored my arm with its point. I bled.