Sign of chaos

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Book by Roger Zelazny - Sign of chaos, page 29

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"In what condition did you leave Mask?"
"Buried under a pile of manure," I said.
She chuckled.
"Wonderful! I like a man with a sense of humor."
"I have to go back," I added.
"Oh? Why is that?"
"Because Mask is now allied with an enemy of mine - man named Jurt, who
desires my death."
She shrugged slightly.
"If Mask is no match for you, I fail to see where Mask and this man
should represent a great problem." Mandor cleared his throat.
"Begging your leave," he said. "But Jurt is a shape shifter and minor
sorcerer from the Courts. He also has power over Shadow."
"I suppose that would make something of a difference," she said.
"Not as much as what the two of them apparently plan to accomplish," I
told her. "I believe that Mask intends running Jurt through the same ritual
your late husband undertook-something involving the Fount of Power."
"No!" she cried, and she was on her feet, the rest of the wine mixing
with Nayda's spittle and a few old bloodstains on the Tabriz I'd purchased
for its delicately detailed pastoral scene. "It must not happen again!"
A storm came and went behind her eyes. Then, for the first time, she
looked vulnerable.
"I lost him because of that . . . ," she said.
Then the moment was gone. The hardness returned.
"I had not finished my wine," she said then, reseating herself.
"I'll get you another glass," I told her.
"And is that a mirror on the table?"



CHAPTER 11

I waited till she was finished primping, glancing out of the window at
the snow and surreptitiously trying again to reach Coral or Luke while my
back was turned to her.
No luck, though. When she put down the comb and brush she'd borrowed
from me and laid the mirror beside them, I gathered she'd finished
organizing her thoughts as well as her hair and was ready to talk again. I
turned back slowly and strolled over.
We studied each other while practicing expressionlessness, then she
asked, "Is anyone else in Amber aware that you have awakened me?"
"No," I replied.
"Good. That means I've a chance of leaving here alive. Presumably, you
want my assistance against Mask and this Jurt?"
"Yes. "
"Exactly what sort of help do you desire, and what are you prepared to
pay for it?"
"I intend to penetrate the Keep and neutralize Mask and Jurt," I said.
"'Neutralize'? That's one of those little euphemisms for `kill,' isn't
it?"
"I suppose so," I replied.
"Amber has never been noted for its squeamishness," she said. "You have
been exposed to too much American journalism. So, you are aware of my
familiarity with the Keep, and you want my help in killing the two of them.
Correct?"
I nodded.
"Rinaldo has told me that if we were to arrive too late and Jurt had
already undergone the transformational ritual, you might know a way to use
that same power against him," I explained.
"He'd gotten further into those notes than -I'd realized," she said. "I
am going to have to be frank with you then, since our lives may depend on
it: Yes, there is such a technique. But no, it won't be of any help to us.
Some preparations are required to turn the power to such an end. It is not
something I could simply reach out and do at a moment's notice."
Mandor cleared his throat.
"I'd rather not see Jurt dead," he stated, "if there's a possibility I
could take him back to the Courts as a prisoner. He could be disciplined.
There might be a way of neutralizing him without really ... neutralizing
him, as you put it."
"And if there isn't?" I asked.
"Then I'll help you to kill him," he said. "I have no illusions about
him, but I feel obliged to try something. I'm afraid that the news of his
death could push our father over the edge."
I looked away. He could be right, and even though old Sawall's death
would mean his own succession to the title and control of considerable
holdings, I was certain he was not anxious to acquire them at that price."
"I understand," I said. "I hadn't thought of that."
"So give me a chance to subdue him. If I fail, I'll join you in
whatever must be done."
"Agreed," I said, watching to see how Jasra was taking this.
She was studying us, a curious expression on her face.
" 'Our father'?" she said.
"Yes," I replied. "I wasn't going to mention that, but ,since it got
out, Jurt's our younger brother."
Her eyes were alight now, at the scent of connivance.
"This is a family power struggle, isn't it?" she asked.
"I suppose you could put it that way," I said.
"Not really," Mandor said.
"And yours is an important family in the Courts?"
Mandor shrugged. So did I. I'd a feeling she was trying to figure a way
to cash in on that end of it, too, and I decided to stonewall her.
"We were discussing the task at hand," I said. "I want to take us in
there and accept Mask's challenge. We stop Jurt if he gets in the way and
give him to Mandor. If it is impossible simply to subdue him, we go the rest
of the way. Are you with us?"
"We have not yet discussed the price," she said.
"All right," I acknowledged. "I've talked about this with Rinaldo, and
he told me to tell you that he's called the vendetta off. He feels things
were settled with Amber when Caine died. He asked me to release you if you
would go along with this, and he suggested that in return for your help
against the new lord of the citadel we restore the Keep of the Four Worlds
to your sovereignty. Bottom line, as he put it. What do you say?"
She picked up the goblet and took a long, slow sip. She'd stall, I
knew, trying to figure a way to squeeze more out of this deal.
"You've spoken with Rinaldo very recently?" she said.
"Yes."
"I am not clear as to why he is running about with Dalt; rather than
being here with us, if he is so much in agreement with this plan."
I sighed.
"Okay, I'll tell you the story," I said. "But if you're with us, I do
want to get moving soon."
"Proceed," she said.
So I recounted the evening's adventure in Arden, omitting only the fact
that Vialle had placed Luke under her protection. Nayda seemed to grow
progressively distressed as I told the tale, uttering small whimpering
sounds at odd intervals.
When I was finished, Jasra placed her hand upon Mandor's arm and rose,
brushing him lightly with her hip as she passed, and she went to stand
before Nayda.
"Now tell me why the daughter of a high Begman official is restrained
here," she said.
"She is possessed of a demon that enjoys interfering in my affairs," I
explained.
"Really? I've often wondered what hobbies demons might pursue," she
observed. "But it seems this particular demon has been trying to say
something in which I might be interested. If you would be so good as to free
it for a moment's conversation I promise to consider your offer afterward."
"Time is running," I said.
"In that case my answer is no,'' she told me. "Lock me up someplace and
go to the Keep without me."
I glanced at Mandor.
"In that I have not yet agreed to accept your offer," Jasra continued,
"Rinaldo would call this an entertainment expense."
"I see no harm in it," Mandor said.
"Then let her speak," I told him.
"You may talk, ty'iga," he said.
Her first words were not addressed to Jasra, however; but to me:
"Merlin, you have to let me accompany you."
I moved around to where I could see her face.
"No way," I told her.
"Why not?" she asked.
"Because your penchant for protecting me will actually hinder me in a
situation where I will probably have to take some chances."
"That is my nature," she responded.
"And my problem," I said. "I mean you no ill. I'll be glad to talk to
you when this is all over, but you're going to have to sit this one out."
Jasra cleared her throat.
"Is that the entire message? Or is there something you wished to tell
me, also?" Jasra asked.
There followed a long silence, then, "Will you be accompanying them or
not?" Nayda inquired.
Jasra took just as long to respond, obviously weighing her words:
"This is a clandestine, personal operation," she said. "I am not at all
certain it would be countenanced by Merlin's seniors here in Amber. While it
is true that I stand to gain if I cooperate, I will also undergo
considerable risk. Of course, I want my freedom and the restoration of the
Keep. It is almost a fair trade. But he also asks a quitclaim on the
vendetta. What assurance have I that this means anything here, and that the
hierarchy of Amber will not hunt me down as a troublemaker afterward? He
cannot speak for the others when he operates on the sly this way."
Somehow, it had become a question addressed to me, and since it was a
very good question to which I did not really have an answer, I was glad that
the ty'iga had something to say:
"I believe that I can persuade you that it would be in your best
interest to agree to accompany them and to render every assistance you can,"
she offered.
"Pray, begin," Jasra told her.
"I would have to speak with you in private on this matter."
Jasra smiled, out of her love for intrigue, I am certain.
"It is agreeable to me," she said.
"Mandor, force her to say it now," I said.
"Wait!" Jasra declared. "I will have this private conversation or you
can forget about my help."
I began wondering just how much help Jasra really represented if she
couldn't call upon the Fount to dispose of Jurt, should that become our
biggest problem. True, she knew the Keep. But I didn't even know for certain
how accomplished a sorceress she might be.


On the other hand, I wanted this thing settled now, and one more adept
could make the difference.
"Nayda," I said, "are you planning something that could be damaging to
Amber?"
``No," she replied.
"Mandor, what do ty'iga swear by?" I inquired.
"They don't," he said.
"What the hell," I said. "How much time do you want?"
"Give us ten minutes," she told me.
"Let's take a walk," I said to Mandor.
"Surely," he agreed, tossing another metal ball toward Nayda. It joined
the others in orbit about her, a little above waist level.
I fetched a key from my desk drawer before departing. And as soon as we
were in the hall I asked him, "Is there any way Jasra could free her?"
"Not with the additional circuit of confinement I established on the
way out," he replied. "Not many could figure a way past it, and certainly
not in ten minutes."
"She's just full of secrets, that damned ty'iga," I said. "Kind of
makes me wonder who's really the prisoner here."
"She's only trading some bit of knowledge for Jasra's cooperation," he
said. "She wants the lady to accompany us if she can't go herself, since it

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