Sign of chaos

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Book by Roger Zelazny - Sign of chaos, page 30

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will mean extra protection for you."
"Then why can't we be present?"
"Nothing that I learned from her sheds any tight on this," he said.
"Well, since I have a few minutes, there is a small errand I want to
run. Would you keep an eye on things here and take charge if she calls us in
before I get back?"
He smiled.
"If one of your relatives strolls by, should I introduce myself as a
lord of Chaos?"
"I thought you were also a lord of deception."
"Of course," he said, and he clapped his hands and vanished.
"I'll hurry," I said.
"Cheerio," came his voice, from somewhere.
I hurried off up the hall. It was a little pilgrimage, I suppose-one
that I had not made in a long while. On the brink of an enterprise such as
this, it seemed somehow appropriate.
When I reached the door, I stood outside it for a moment, my eyes
closed, visualizing the interior as last I had seen it. It was my father's
apartment. I had wandered through it on many occasions, trying to judge from
the furnishings, the layout, his bookshelves, and his curious collections
something more than I already knew about the man. There was always some
little thing that caught my attention, that answered a question or raised a
new one-an inscription on the flyleaf of a book or a note in a margin, a
silver hairbrush bearing the wrong set of initials, a daguerreotype of an
attractive brunette signed "To Carl, Love, Carolyn," a snapshot of my father
shaking hands with General MacArthur. . . .
I unlocked the door and pushed it open.
I did not move for several seconds, however, as a light glowed inside
the place. For more long moments I listened, but there were no sounds from
within. Slowly then, I entered. A number of candles burned upon the dresser
set against the far wall. There was no one in sight.
"Hello?" I called.out. "It's me. Merlin." There came no answer.
I drew the door closed behind me and moved forward. A bud vase stood
upon the dresser amid the candles. It contained a single rose, and it
appeared to be silver in color. I drew nearer. Yes, it was real, not
artificial. And it was silver. In what shadow did such flowers grow?
I picked up one of the candles by its, holder and moved away with it,
shielding its flame with my hand. I crossed to my left and entered the next
room. Immediately, on opening the door, I saw that there was no need to have
brought the candle. More of them were burning here.
"Hello?" I repeated.
Again, no answer. No sounds of any sort.
I set the candle upon a nearby table and crossed to the bed. I raised a
sleeve and let it fall. A silvery shirt was laid out upon the counterpane
beside a black pair of trousers-my father's colors. They had not been there
when last I had visited.
I seated myself beside them and stared across the room into a shadowy
corner. What was going on? Some bizarre household ritual? A haunting? or. .
. .
"Corwin?" I said.
In that I'd hardly expected a reply, I was not disappointed. When I
rose, however, I bumped against a heavy object hung upon the nearest
bedpost. I reached out and raised it for a better view. A belt with a
sheathed weapon hung upon it. These had not been present last time either. I
gripped the haft and drew the blade.
A portion of the Pattern, contained within the gray metal, danced in
the candlelight. This was Grayswandir, sword of my father. What it was doing
back here now, I had no idea.
And I realized with a pang that I could not stick around to see what
might be going on. I had to get back to my own problems. Yes, timing was
definitely against me today.
I resheathed Grayswandir.
"Dad?" I said. "If you can hear me, I want to get together again. But I
have to go now. Good luck on whatever you're about."
Then I departed the room, touched the silver rose as I passed and
locked the door behind me. As I turned away, I realized that I was shaking.
I passed no one on the walk back, and when I approached my own door I
wondered whether I should enter, knock, or wait. Then something touched my
shoulder, and I turned around but no one was there. When I turned forward
once again Mandor stood before me, his brow slightly creased.
"What's the matter?" he asked. "You appear more troubled than when you
left."
"Something totally different," I told him, "I think. Any word from
inside yet?"
"I heard a shriek from Jasra while you were gone," he said, "and I
burned to the door and opened it. But she was laughing and she asked me to
close it."
"Either ty'igas know some good stories or the news is favorable."
"So it would seem."
A little later the door opened and Jasra nodded to us.
"Our conversation is concluded," she said.
I studied her as I entered the room. She looked a lot more cheerful
than she had seemed when we'd left. There was a bit more of a crinkling
about the outer edges of her eyes, and she seemed almost to be fighting the
corners of her mouth down into place.
"I hope it was a fruitful interview," I said.
"Yes. On the whole, I'd say it was that," she answered.
A glance at Nayda showed me that nothing had changed in terms of her
position or expression.
"I'll have to be asking you for a decision now," I said. "I can't
afford to cut things much closer than this."
"What happens if I say no?" she asked.
"I'll have you conducts to your quarters and inform the others that
you're up and about," I said.
"As a guest?"
"As a very well-protected guest."
"I see. Well, I do not really care to inspect those quarters. I have
decided to accompany you and assist you under the terms we discussed. ".
I bowed to her.
"Merlin!" Nayda said.
"No!" I answered, and I looked to Mandor. He approached and stood
before Nayda.


"It is best that you sleep now," he told her, and her eyes closed, her
shoulders slumped. "Where is a good place for her to rest deeply?" he asked
me.
"Through there," I said, indicating the doorway to the next room.
He took her by the hand and led her away. After a time, I heard him
speaking softly, and then there was only silence. He emerged a little later,
and I went to the door and glanced inside. She was stretched out on my bed.
I did not see any of his metal spheres in the neighborhood.
"She's out of it?" I said.
"For a long time," he replied.
I looked at Jasra, who was glancing down into the mirror.
"Are you ready?" I inquired.
She regarded me through lowered lashes.
"How do you propose transporting us?" she asked.
"Do you have an especially tricky means of getting us in?"
"Not at the moment."
"Then I will be calling upon the Ghostwheel to take us there."
"Are you certain it is safe? I've conversed with that . . . device. I
am not sure it is trustworthy."
"It's fine;" I. said. "Any spells you want to prime first?"
"Not necessary. My . . . resources should be in good order."
"Mandor?"
I heard a clicking sound from somewhere within his cloak.
"Ready," he said.
I withdrew the Ghostwheel Trump and studied it. I began my meditation.
Then I reached. Nothing happened. I tried again, recalling, tuning,
expanding. I reached again, calling, feeling. . . .
"The door . . . ," Jasra said.
I glanced at the door to the hallway, but there was nothing unusual
about it. Then I looked at her and realized the direction of her gaze.
The doorway to the next room, where Nayda slept, had begun to glow. It
shone with a yellow light, and even as I watched, it grew in intensity. A
spot of greater brightness then occurred at its center. Abruptly, the spot
began a slow up-and-down movement.
Then came music, from where I was not certain, and Ghost's voice
announced, "Follow the bouncing ball."
"Stop it!" I said. "It's distracting!"
The music went away. The circle of light grew still.
"Sorry," Ghost said. "I thought you'd find a little comic relief
relaxing. "
"You guessed wrong," I replied. "I just want you to take us to the
citadel at the Keep of the Four Worlds."
"Do you want the troops, also? I can't seem to locate Luke."
"Just the three of us," I answered.
"What about the one who sleeps next door? I've met her before. She
doesn't scan right."
"I know. She's not human. Let her sleep. "
"Very well, then. Pass through the door."
"Come on," I said to the others, picking up my weapons belt and
buckling it on, adding my spare dagger, grabbing my cloak off a chair, and
drawing it over my shoulders.
I walked toward the portal and Mandor and Jasra followed. I stepped
through, but the room was no longer there. Instead, there came a moment of
blurring, and when my senses cleared, I was staring down and outward across
a great distance beneath a heavily overcast sky, a cold wind whipping at my
garments.
I heard an exclamation from Mandor and, a moment later, another from
Jasra-behind me and to the left. The great ice field lay bone-white to my
right, and in the opposite direction a slate-gray sea tossed whitecaps like
serpents in a bucket of milk. Far below, before me, the dark ground simmered
and steamed.


"Ghost!" I cried. "Where are you?"
"Here," came a soft response, and I looked down to behold a tiny ring
of light near the toe of my left boot. Directly ahead and below, the Keep
stood stark in the distance. There were no signs of life outside its walls.
I realized that I must be in the mountains, standing somewhere near the
place where I had held my lengthy colloquy with the old hermit named Dave.
"I wanted you to take us into the citadel within the Keep," I
explained. "Why did you bring us up here?"
"I told you I don't like that place," Ghost answered. "I wanted to give
you a chance to look it over and decide exactly where you wished to be sent
within. That way I can move very fast on the delivery, and not expose myself
overlong to forces I find distressing."
I continued to study the Keep. A pair of twisters were again circling
the outer walls. If there had not been a moat, they would probably have done
a good job of creating one. They stayed almost exactly 180 degrees apart,
and they took turns at illumination. The nearest one grew spark-shot with
bolts of lightning, acquiring an eerie incandescence; then, as it began to
fade, the other brightened. They passed through this cycle several times as
I watched.
Jasra made a small noise, and I turned and asked her, "What's going
on?"
"The ritual," she n'sponded. "Someone is playing with those forces
right now."
"Can you tell how far along they might be?" I asked.
"Not really. They could just be starting, or they could be finished
already. All the poles of fire tell me is that everything is in place."
"You call it then, Jasra," I told her. "Where should we put in our
appearance?"
"There are two long hallways leading to the chamber of the fountain,"
she said. "One is on the same level and the other a floor above it. The
chamber itself is several stories high."
"I recall that," I acknowledged.
"If they are working directly with the forces and we simply appear

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   Wednesday 19 November, 2008