Chapter one“You will deal with the Shanks, Dray Prescot.” The rustling voice, like dead leaves blown scraping over gravel, spoke menacingly. “Before that you will answer for your disobedience.”
I opened my mouth to shout in baffled rage that this cretin of a scorpion couldn’t understand, and, then, I understood. Disobedience was the issue here. The blue radiance grew about me. I looked up to see the gigantic form of the phantom blue Scorpion hovering. Chill smote me. In an icy blueness I swept away into blackness.
Blackness and blueness swirling all about me... Headlong tumbling with the breath knocked from my lungs... The freezing grip of icy chains lapping my limbs... Oh, yes, I knew all about these sensations. The high and mighty Everoinye, the Star Lords, were summoning me to their presence — and this time they were going to discipline me for what they considered disobedience.
Streaks of lambent blue fire shot through the blackness. My body felt black and blue too, by Vox. Instead of having Queen Leone assassinated and then, through the disgusting rites of Kaopan, making sure she could never be reincarnated, I’d saved her and switched in some poor pathetic dead girl to take her place. No one here in Makilorn apart from we plotters would know that. The Star Lords wanted Kirsty as queen, and now she would be.
As I thus hurtled helplessly through a maelstrom of supernatural forces I, Dray Prescot, Lord of Strombor and Krozair of Zy, felt that perhaps all my modulated feelings for the Star Lords had been misplaced. I’d thought we’d been getting onto a better footing where we might understand more of one another’s problems. Now, particularly after they’d sent Caspar the Peaker to assassinate Leone so that Kirsty might be queen, I fancied all my old hatred and contempt would flare up uncontrollably.
That, as I knew to my cost, would be a mistake.
Maybe, just maybe, the Star Lords’ plans could exist within the framework of decency. Perhaps, just perhaps, absolute power had not corrupted them past redemption.
Below me through the swirling mists I saw a patchwork of green.
Peering more closely I realized I was looking down from a great height upon fields and forests and hills.
This amazed me so completely that I stared without believing.
Never before had I seen anything outside the blue outlines of the phantom Scorpion as I was whisked up to meet the Everoinye or to be tumbled headlong, naked and unarmed, into some dismal spot of Kregen to sort out a problem for the Star Lords.
Arms and spirals of blue, like contorting tentacles, waved all about me. I could hear a vast rushing, as of the wind at the end of the world. A blustery gale swung me up, twisted me about so that for an instant I was staring directly upwards.
Like a lance thrust, a glittering streak of brilliant viridian green slashed across the heavens. I heard the discordant clashing and hissing as the vivid green streak sliced into the blue mists about me.
In the next instant I was right way up, looking down, and seeing my sword and harness falling through thin air below me.
With a single flicking lick of a blue tentacle, a line of blue radiance reached out, snatched the sword and harness, withdrew into the main bulk.
I knew who controlled that acid green. That was the Star Lord called Ahrinye. He might be a million years or so younger than the other Everoinye; he was at once impetuous and icily contemptuous and he wanted to run me hard, so hard that I believed I’d have little chance of survival.
The ground below was coming up mighty fast.
Seeing that ground, and the falling sword, continued to astonish me. When I say I’d not seen anything outside the blue Scorpion I mean ordinary earthly objects of Kregen; I’d seen plenty of fireworks as the Everoinye squabbled among themselves, and as Zena Iztar with her mellow golden yellow light tried to mediate.
The blueness was fading. Without a single doubt the blueness was thinning and vanishing. And I was still high in the air and falling straight down!
“Hey!” I shouted up, feeling the wind gusting about. “Hai! Star Lords!” I bellowed, feeling the wind now as a rushing force upon my falling body. “What are you doing?”
What they were doing was perfectly obvious. They were doing nothing.
“Help!” I hollered up. “I’ll be squashed flat! Hai!”
Down and down I plummeted. The ground was confoundedly nearby now. “You bunch of miserable onkers, you crew of cretins! Catch me!”
By the pustular nose and infected warts of Makki Grodno! The stupid phantom blue Scorpion had dropped me!
I twisted my head around to look up. Maybe I did that because I did not wish to stare at that frightening ground swishing up so rapidly.
Up there a dim redness washed away to one side. Red was often the color of the Star Lords when they argued with Ahrinye and his acrid green.
“Star Lords!” I bellowed. Still, down and down I fell.
The only explanation I could see for this contretemps was that Ahrinye had attempted to take over control of me and had not quite succeeded but had caused the Scorpion to drop me. The phantom blue Scorpion had fumbled.
“Ahrinye!” I yelled up. “Do something, you stupid great onker!”
Down below the ground looked a patchwork of green, and there were the roofs and towers of a town some way off by a river. I was going to hit and go splat! In a very very short time.
“Star Lords!” I shrieked. “Ahrinye!” And then, with desperation and cunning caused by despair, I yelled up: “Zena Iztar!”
She had been off on her own work far removed from Kregen, or so I had been led to believe. If the Star Lords were unable to agree to save me, my only hope remained Zena Iztar. She had promised her patronage and support for the schemes I wanted to implement for the good of Kregen. If I was dead I’d be of no further use to any of ’em, by Krun.
Down below the ground was so close I could see walled gardens filled with greenery and flowers and fountains. Low red buildings bordered the gardens. In the next instant I’d go squash! and that would be the end of Dray Prescot, lord of this and that, etc., and prince of onkers.
Inevitably, my last thought would be of the one person in two worlds who matters more than anything else — including the damned Star Lords.
I thought of Delia, Delia of the Blue Mountains, Delia of Delphond. I’d not been as attentive to her as I ought to have been, as I desperately wanted to be, in the sweet name of Opaz. The Everoinye called me away from Delia. Still, the Sisters of the Rose called her away from me, too...
I composed myself for oblivion.
Two thin streaks of fire reached down from the heavens.
On one side the acrid green of Ahrinye smoked down to coil and lap beneath me.
On the other side the glorious golden yellow radiance diffused a cushion under me.
“Zena Iztar!” I gasped.
The sensation was like falling upon a fireman’s safety sheet. My headlong descent checked. The torrent of wind past me ceased. I was still falling, but slowly as immaterial superhuman forces caught and cushioned me.
The water felt hard enough as I went bodily into it, by Krun!
Down and down I went, turning, ready to begin the ascent to the surface. Great, fat, golden fish swam lazily away, flicking their transparent fins insolently. The bottom of the pool, all green and clean, showed me I was in one of the carp pools of cultivated gardens. Lily stems twined away above. I gave a look of dislike to the tangle of stuff; a couple of flipper strokes drove me safely past and now I began to rise. Able to swim underwater for a long time, I was in no discomfort whatsoever from lack of air.
Although Zena Iztar and Ahrinye had slowed my fall, I’d still been traveling at a good rate of knots when I went into the water. The following rise in balancing compensation saw me shooting up swiftly. I felt a vast wet and floppy mass cushion above my head and then I popped up out of the water into the air with a lily pad balanced on my skull.
I must have shot up over man height before flopping back like a porpoise. In that fragment of time I saw an encircling red brick wall, a green and blossoming garden, an iron gate — and standing each side of that iron gate an armed and armored guard leaning on a spear.
In a lightning swift vision, that whole scene as it must have appeared to an observer etched itself on my brain. Sink me! It must have tickled up those two drowsy guards. There they were, standing guard duty with the sound of the party going on in the next garden. They were bored stiff, itchy, thirsty, and half-asleep. Then like a thunderbolt a thing falls straight out of the sky and goes splash! smack into the middle of the carp pond.
Before the guards have time to close their astonished mouths up leaps a fountain of water and a monstrous naked man like a salmon leaping the weir. Sploshing and splashing, down he goes into the water again. Just where he’s come from, the guards really don’t wish to think about. All they know is that he’s fallen in the water.
That scene, bright and brittle, and wet, was good for a laugh in after years, especially with the lily pad balanced on my skull.
By the time I’d spouted water like a whale and got rid of the lily pad and swum to the bank, the guards had managed to close their mouths and were waiting on the edge ready to prod their spears at me.
I checked my stroke a few feet from the pond bank, treading water, and looked up.
“Hai, doms,” I called up. “It’s a nice day for it.”
Bored, insensitive, callous though these guards most certainly were they remained guards with a job to do for which they took pay. They wore uniforms of a cut and style unfamiliar to me. There was altogether too much flowing drapery, and gold lace, and looping cords and feathers. These were clearly gala uniforms, put on in honor of the party whose sounds were now clearly evident beyond the red brick wall. Two ornate pole arms slanted down at my head. I was not fool enough to imagine those fancy halberds would not be honed to razor sharpness.
“You’re a dead man, dom,” said the left hand one. His face, brown and seamed, strip-bearded, wore no particular expression. Bored, he’d kill as a mere part of his duty.
“You know no man is allowed in here,” confirmed the other, whose face might have been his companion’s twin.
The streaming mingled lights of the Suns of Scorpio slanted in across the pond and the ruby of Zim and the emerald of Genodras struck sparks of fire from the wicked spiked and bladed halberd heads.
I spouted some more water and pondered the situation.
If this amazes you, it should not. By this time in this my narrative you should be well aware that I, Dray Prescot, abhor violence and killing. Behavior of that kind has been forced on me by the force of circumstances and — I own it, I own it — by the arrogance of my own resentment and resistance to unjustified and cruel authority.
“Now, see here, doms—” I began.
They were having none of that. The sweet scent of fully blooming blossoms drifted across the carp pond. The suns shone. The air, that glorious fragrant air of Kregen, filled my lungs. And these two talked indifferently of killing.
“No good arguing,” said the left hand one. “Stick him, Lin. Them’s the orders.”
Obediently, Lin thrust his halberd at me.
There was no difficulty in evading the spiked halberd head. I paddled a little way off, regarding these two in frustrated sorrow.
“He wants to play clever,” observed Lin. “Better send for a bowman, Hwang, and get it over with.” He yawned. “We’re off duty in half a bur.”
Guardsmen can usually judge the time they stand on duty and know when their reliefs are due.
Hwang nodded and propped himself on his halberd. “Off you go, then.”