'Please, Majesty!' Tabusir begged, feeling his carefully built world suddenly crumble beneath him. 'I only dealt with your mother as she would have dealt with you. I only did what you commanded!'
'Damn you!' Rhodes roared. 'How dare you turn my own words against me? I am the king!'
And with one blow he cut off Tabusir's head.
Then he raced to his mother's litter, his men leaping away when the saw the agony in their king's eyes and the bloody sword in his hand.
Clayre was all alone in her litter. Her slaves had already fled, taking with them every valuable they could find in their haste to escape the king's wrath when he learned that his mother had been murdered.
Her silk robes were gone, rent from her frozen body, and she was half naked. Her purse and jewelry were absent. And her magical table was shattered, the gold-tiled pentagram having been ripped from the very wood it had been fixed into.
Even the litter itself hadn't gone unscathed-gilded decorations and jewels had been torn from their settings.
Falling on her and embracing her, Rhodes cried, 'I'm so sorry, mother! So sorry! I slew the villain who harmed you!'
But when he felt her stone-like flesh he leaped back, as if she were a leper.
And he shouted: 'I need you, mother, more than I have ever needed you before! Please, please help me!'
But the only answer was the startled look frozen upon Clayre's face. And the poisoned dart sticking out of her chest.
Rhodes fell to his knees, weeping.
Inside him, Kalasariz sniffed the blood of failure and rose from his nest like a great white shark shooting out of the sea's cold, dark depths to seek his moment of gory opportunity.
He had the demons, Luka and Fari, crying in his belly, but he was hungry. Oh, so hungry.
And the Lady Lottyr whispered from someplace close:
The spymaster said nothing in reply, but only ghosted toward the throbbing souls she was offering him, like pearls set in sweet oyster flesh.
First he gulped down Clayre and, oh, she was good and, oh, she was tasty. He felt the fires in his belly explode with increased power and energy. Then he found the soul of Rhodes, which was still weeping for his mother. And that soul was even more delicious and more power-giving than Clayre's.
He felt strong, so strong. And his mind, which he'd always prized above all things, became all-seeing.
Kalasariz/Rhodes whirled around, bellowing to his men. They fell to their knees before his awful majesty.
And Kalasariz thought,
Coming up the hill he saw Coralean riding a huge horse. The caravan master was so immense that his feet dragged along the ground. He had a small woman in his arms. And she held a bundle that Kalasariz couldn't make out.
Marching on either side of Coralean were Leiria and Jooli, their armor sheening under the Demon Moon.
Their troops behind them-Kyranian troops. Eager for the final kill.
And beyond them, hovering over the cone of volcano, Kalasariz could see the fabulous airship floating free. Ready to move in at a moment's notice and bombard King Rhodesa€™ positions.
Kalasariz felt a flicker of disappointment. He'd come so far. Dared so much. But now, on the eve on his ultimate victory, had he already been defeated?
And the Lady Lottyr whispered,
Kalasariz felt hope rise like a mighty spear in his fist. And, already knowing the answer, he asked
And the Lady Lottyr replied,
The spymaster's hunger burned brighter at this prospect. And he said,
But at that moment he heard a cry, coming from far away. It was like that of a newborn infant demanding new life.
He asked,
The Goddess Lottyr replied,
But he was worried. And as the whole world shimmered about him, slowly dissolving, he heard the child cry once again.
Then he found himself striding along a broad beach, sword in hand. He heard drums throb and horns blow, then the voices of singing people.
Kalasariz found them dancing naked under towering palm trees, singing praises to a beautiful queen who led them in their dance. Beyond he saw the volcano, black smoke and angry sparks sputtering into the skies.
He knew he was still in Hadin, but it was a different Hadin. The armies and the ships didn't exist here.
Just these dancing people and the volcano that looked as if it were about to blow.
The Lady Lottyr whispered to him,
And so he waited, leaning on his sword and watching the people dance. Feeling strong and confident in King Rhodesa€™ body. Powerfully cloaked in the magic radiating from his belly, where his enemies danced a quite different dance than the one that seemed to please the island people.
Kalasariz also didn't need to ask the goddess who they were waiting for.
He knew damned well it was Safar Timura and Iraj Protarus. The spymaster laughed aloud at the prospect.
When Jooli came up the hill, trotting beside Coralean's horse, she was only mildly surprised when her father's soldiers stepped out of the way, bowing to her respectfully.
These men knew her-she'd once been their queen. And if her father finally admitted defeat she'd be their queen once again.
Then she smelled the stink of magic and quickened her pace, moving ahead of Coralean toward a knot of officers gathered around what she knew to be her grandmother's litter.
They were pale and trembling when they saw Jooli, but not out of fear of her. The men parted as she strode forward, Leiria close behind-sword drawn to protect her friend's back.
When Jooli saw what had happened she froze in her tracks. Both her father and her grandmother were dead. Clayre was sprawled in her litter, while Rhodes was slumped on the ground.
One of the officers said, voice trembling, 'It wasn't us, Majesty! They did not die at our hands!'
Jooli said nothing, but only shook her head. She knew quite well no mortal had slain this pair.
And then, while she was struggling for an answer, the corpses started to fade and to shimmer with a strange light.
'Get back!' she shouted to the men.
They didn't need her warning and were already scrambling away.
Then the light grew brighter and the corpses became fainter still.
There was a double crack as magical forces split the air-and the bodies were gone!
Jooli turned to Leiria. 'It was the Goddess Lottyr who did this,' she said, almost in a whisper.
She was keeping a heavy check on her emotions. It was no time to test her feelings about her father and grandmother.
And she added, 'But they aren't really dead. Well, not as you and I know death.'
'Where are they, then?' Leiria asked.
The ground rumbled beneath them and several soldiers shouted. 'The volcano! The volcano!'
Jooli slowly turned, then pointed at the cone-shaped mountain. Thick smoke was boiling forth and lava was flowing down its sides.