Incarnadine’s face split into a grin. “Tell my doppelganger not to do anything I wouldn’t do. I’ll try to keep in touch. See you later.”
Incarnadine’s hand came up in front of his face, and his image faded.
Jeremy and Isis sat staring at the darkened screen.
“He’s such a great man,” Isis said:
“Yeah.” After a moment, Jeremy yanked open a drawer, rummaged through it, and came up with a package of Hostess Twinkies. Linda kept him supplied. He ripped open the cellophane and stuffed one golden loaf-shaped cake into his mouth. “Excuse me,” he said with a full mouth, “but I’m starved.”
Isis smiled. “Go right ahead. Would you like some coffee with that?”
Jeremy nodded. He sat and chewed while his “assistant” got him coffee. Jeremy knew she was more than that. In fact, he couldn’t have accomplished anything without her. He should be getting her coffee.
His gaze drifted to the
Sixteen
The Mountains of Marnass
He lifted his hand from the rippling water and watched his image waver in it. The faces of Jeremy and Isis were gone. He watched the surface of the melt pond until it grew still again. His image confronted him with a questioning stare.
“Don’t really know, my friend.”
He went to his horse, which he had tethered to an evergreen bush. The animal had cooled off enough for him to allow it to take water. He led it to the rock-rimmed pond and let it drink of melted snows.
A bracing wind blew across the peaks and down, whistling through stands of pine and fir. The scenery reminded him of the Rocky Mountains, western Colorado specifically. The hellwind had blown him across half a continent and deposited him on these slopes. It had been a strange sensation watching the ground drop away and feeling the horse beat its hooves against nothing but air. But beat it did, as on some invisible highway in the sky. The storm had lashed around him, lightning forking perilously close.
Too forking close for comfort, he thought.
Riding a hellwind took a lot out of you. His mount was completely worn out. He needed to stop and rest, but time was short. What he really needed was a fresh mount. He had no idea where he could get one.
He led his horse downward. Clouds bunched at the peak above. The cry of a mountain bird came to his ears as the trail wound through trees and boulders.
After an hour’s descent he stopped, standing on a flat boulder and surveying the slope ahead. There was something unusual below. A huge bronze statue reclined on a base of stone set into the hillside. The figure was winged, and from the back looked very unusual. Leading his tired mount once more, he went down to get a better look. On the way a possible plan of action occurred to him.
He stood before a stone altar and looked up at the thing. It was a creature with the head and bust of a woman, great feathered wings, and a powerful leonine body. The bronze was tinted with the blue-green of verdigris. The statue was probably ages old.
“Hello, there,” he said to it. “Now, aren’t you a riddle.”
The woman’s face was broad-browed and severely beautiful, the breasts full and out-thrusting. Long hair fell over the shoulders. The eyes looked out across the valley below, staring into the mists of the peaks beyond. There was character in the face; a spirit somehow radiated from the cold bronze. Such had been the skill of the artificer. The great wings were lifted as if the creature were poised on the brink of flight.
“Must be cold and lonely on this mountainside,” he mused. “Maybe we can work something out.”
He went back to the trail and searched among the shards of stone along its edge. He found what he needed and came back to the flagstone platform in front of the statue. He knelt and began to draw, his stylus a bit of limestone.
A complex figure took shape under his hand. It was partly geometrical, partly free-form. Intricate tracery flowered to one side, a column of arcane symbols running opposite.
When he was done he looked it over and nodded. He tossed the stone aside and stood in the center of the device. He held out his arms and began a chant.
The words were of some sibilant tongue, the phrases long and involuted. In the sky above, dark clouds gathered and hid the sun. A flash exploded out of their midst and a crack of thunder sounded. Another.
The chant went on. Dust whipped up from the trail, and the tops of the pines bent in the sudden winds. A spattering of rain fell. Thunder and lightning continued for several minutes.
At last the chant ended. The clouds slowly moved off, the sun peeking out from the dispersing haze. The wind stopped. He let his arms fall and opened his eyes.
The eyes of the statue were regarding him curiously.
“What are you?” the thing said, its voice deep yet still sounding like a woman’s voice.
“I am a man,” he answered. “How do you feel?”
The wings moved up and down, then lowered and folded.
“Strange,” the creature said. Its eyes moved across the length of its body. “I do not know what I am, yet my form seems familiar to me.”
“It’s a fine form. You are you. You must be used to being you after all this time.”
The human eyes narrowed. “Yes, I seem to remember the past. Many of your kind have been here. They sent up offerings.”
“Yes, they did. Did such doings please you?”
“It was neither pleasing nor displeasing to me. Are you going to offer me something?”
“Yes, the chance for freedom. You have wings, but have you ever flown?”
“I do not remember.”
“I doubt that you have. How does the prospect of doing such a thing strike you?”
“It occurs to me that flying must be part of my nature.”
“Undoubtedly. Uh, I’ll lay it on the line. I need a lift. I must travel quickly and you can help. I wish you to carry me to my destination. How does
The creature considered the matter. Then it said, “I find it odd that I have no objection to this thing. Why is it that I do not?”
“I must confess that I stacked the deck a little. You were brought to life with the desire to repay the kindness bestowed on you.”
“What kindness?”
“That of bringing you to awareness and setting you free. You were getting a little tired of standing up here in the wind, weren’t you?”
“I am glad that it will no longer be necessary. I will repay you for this boon.”
“Good. Wait one second.”
He took the saddle off his horse and put it on the statue’s base. He boosted himself up, picked up the saddle, and placed it on the creature’s back. The girth didn’t reach around the belly, but he positioned the saddle as squarely as he could. A little magical concentration would be needed anyway to hang on, secure saddle or none.
He mounted the creature and seated himself.
“Anytime you’re ready,” he said.
“Where are we going?”
“To the valley of the Mizzerites. Do you know where it lies?”
“No.”
“No matter. I will direct you.”
The wings unfolded and began to move up and down. Soon they were two great pinions beating the air.
The creature left its base and took to the air. The slope dropped away. Beast and rider soared on the cool