'Shut up, Starmor. I never want to hear my grandfather's name sullied by your foul lips again. I refuse to believe anything you say.'

Grimm turned his back on the demon. He knew what he must do; he must use his last reserves of powers to destroy himself before his emotional ward fell. Starmor must remain trapped at all costs, and Grimm would not allow himself to relax his vigilance.

'And now, my dear brethren, let us pray.' From some unseen corner of the chapel rose discordant, dissonant organ music to which Starmor swung and swayed with a look of pure ecstasy on his face. Grimm gritted his teeth and sat cross-legged on the flagstone floor. His strength was beginning to fade, and he knew it would only be a matter of time before his shield failed. He swore again he would kill himself before that happened.

Chapter 12: Discord and Destruction

Harvel and Crest expressed the greatest appreciation at Mayor Chod's generous offer of fine new clothes, and they spent the afternoon at a large Crarian tailors' establishment, trying on various outfits. The swordsman now wore a short-sleeved bottle-green leather jerkin, black, metal-studded wristbands, loose-fitting yellow trousers and long, thin leather shoes. His gleaming rapier, carefully dressed and polished, was ready for action in a green leather scabbard on a blue silk hanger. This garish outfit might appear quite impracticable for combat, but Harvel assured Crest it was the absolute acme of fashion.

The thief adopted a more sober outfit, befitting his more restrained dress sense, but his simple, black outfit was made of crushed velvet; the brown slippers of finest kidskin. His deadly throwing-knives lay in a slanted row across his chest on a leather baldric, ready for instant use.

'Well, well, well; look at the twin birds of paradise!' Dalquist said, with an appreciative whistle.

'Will you listen to the man there, Crest?' Harvel drawled, adjusting his scabbard. 'He must be under the impression that those silk robes he's wearing are some sort of monastic habit. Perhaps the poor fellow is colour- blind.'

Dalquist wore scarlet silk, with a gold cowl; no shrinking violet, he!

'Colour-blind I may be,' laughed the mage, 'but I am blessed with a good sense of the passage of time. Has either of you seen Questor Grimm anywhere? We ought to be thinking of leaving for the Council chambers.'

'He had his outfit made first,' declared Harvel. 'He took the whole lot back up to the tower. He's probably been staring at himself in the mirror for the last ten minutes, so do you want me to go and fetch him?'

Dalquist shook his head. 'I need to talk to him about a few things myself. I'll see you in the Town Square in ten minutes.' With that, he was off to the Baronial tower.

****

'Grimm, come on! It's high time we were moving. Stop preening yourself! Remember, there's a Council meeting, and you're supposed to be the guest of honour.'

No answer came from the bedchamber. Stepping inside, Dalquist noted the unopened pouch of drugs on the carpet, and wondered if Grimm had gone for a walk in an attempt to clear his head after being tempted by the herbs.

Twenty minutes later, he had searched the tower from top to bottom with no sign of the young Questor, and he was beginning to worry that something was amiss. Harvel and Crest joined in the search, having come to the tower when Dalquist had not returned. When it was plain that Grimm was not secreted anywhere in the tower, the group split up and scouted Crar separately, trying every shop, hostelry and alleyway to no avail.

After an hour, they met back at the bedchamber of Starmor's former domicile. Dalquist had to admit that it appeared that Grimm could not be hiding, and that he must have absconded. It all seemed so unlikely, since Grimm would know that he would be hunted down by the Guild; the organisation did not like the idea of unlicensed renegade Questors on the loose; he surely could not expect to evade the combined resources of the Guild forever. Nonetheless, Dalquist had to consider a distasteful possibility: that Grimm had flouted his duty to the House.

'He's a game lad, but he's been through an awful lot in the last few days,' Crest said, frowning. 'I wonder if his nerve deserted him; who could blame him, after all that? Perhaps the prospect of all that responsibility was too much for him, and he just ran off.'

'It doesn't make sense, Crest,' Harvel declared shaking his head. 'He seemed so keen at the prospect of his new clothes, and he told me he wanted to look his very best tonight. He looked a little flustered, but he didn't seem scared at all.'

'I don't think for a moment Grimm has forgotten his Guild vows,' Dalquist growled, 'but it's not up to me. We were intending to return to the House tomorrow to complete the Quest. If he's not there by the time I arrive, Lord Thorn will have to assume that he is in breach of his oath of fealty. That is a far more serious consideration. We've got to find him.'

He sighed and sat down on the bed in despair. Grimm would surely have notified him if his absence was unavoidable. The young mage had seemed so excited about the whole thing, and such an unexplained absence was out of character for him.

But where was he?

'He's left his new clothes behind,' Harvel pointed out. 'He was so eager to wear them; he must be around here somewhere! He'd never have left them behind. Perhaps he had a celebratory drink or two and got a little tipsy.'

'We searched the bar and the jakes,' Dalquist sighed, 'and he'd just take hold of Redeemer whenever…'

A metallic glint caught his eye from within the rumpled bedclothes. Dalquist leapt to his feet and threw back the sheets to uncover a polished black wood and brass staff.

'He's left Redeemer behind!' Dalquist cried. 'He would never have done that by choice!'

'It's just a piece of wood and metal,' Harvel said mildly. 'Perhaps he just forgot it. It doesn't tell us anything, Lord Mage.'

Dalquist rounded on the swordsman. 'You have no idea what the staff means to a mage, Harvel! None! It is a part of him, as my staff, Shakhmat, is a part of me. Even if he forgot the staff, he could call it to hand with a mere word from anywhere in the world. No man who has been through a Questor's Ordeal, as we both have, would ever leave his Mage Staff! Questor Grimm is not in this world.'

Crest looked alarmed. 'Do you mean he is dead?'

Dalquist dismissed the suggestion. 'A true Mage Staff reverts to simple wood and metal on its owner's death unless he has, of his own volition, passed it to another mage. Grimm is not dead, but he is on another plane.'

The Questor composed himself for a potent spell, a search for the life-essence of his young friend. He found nothing, and declared solemnly, 'Grimm Afelnor is nowhere on this world: I am sure of that.'

Crest said, 'Questor Grimm said he had not the energy to pass into the demon plane, and he was no convalescent when he declared that. He is surely too weak to attempt such a feat now.'

'Not the demon world,' Dalquist said, with a decisive stab of his right forefinger. 'Starmor's punishment pillar, as well as the various prisons to which we were all sent, were in an alternative three-dimensional reality to our own, displaced by a fourth linear dimension. He may be in that frame. Perhaps Grimm went to confront Starmor for some reason.'

'Why would he wish to risk facing Starmor again, Lord Mage? He left his herbs here, so he can't shield his emotions from that monster. It doesn't make any sense.'

'I don't know, Harvel. I am sure, however, that if Grimm had faced Starmor again with his emotions unmasked, our banished friend would have returned here, to his centre of power, and we would now be in no doubt of the fact. It could be that Starmor has powers we mortals can't imagine; perhaps he tricked Grimm.'

Dalquist pounded Shakhmat on the floor. 'We must find Shakkar. I need to find the location of this pillar from his mind, without delay. Grimm's very soul may be in peril.'

'With the greatest respect, Questor Dalquist,' Crest said, 'your own emotions might provide Starmor with all the energy he needs for his return to this world. You aren't considering the risk of using those damned herbs to protect you, are you?'

Вы читаете Weapon of the Guild
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату