White Gold Wielder Page 27
The impact of his countervailing instructions struck chaos into the Coursers. Two of them fell trying to lunge in several directions simultaneously. A third stumbled over them. The others attacked the fallen, tried to kill them.
Reft of control, the Riders sprawled to the hard ground. One was crushed under the massive body of a Courser. Another received a dangerous spur slash. She cried out to her comrades for help; but they were already in flight back toward the Keep, bearing the broken Rider for his blood. Weakly she struggled after them.
Sunder ordered the Coursers out into the desert so that the Clave would not be able to use them again. But two of them squealed with pain when they tried to obey: they had broken legs. Gripping her falchion in both fists, the First stalked up to the maimed beasts and slew them.
Then Sunder, Linden, and Pitchwife approached Covenant.
The Graveler was panting heavily. “Gibbon does not put forth his full strength. I am not the equal of six Riders.” Yet there was a Grim pride in his tone. At last he had struck an effective blow against the Clave.
“He’s trying to provoke you,” Linden warned. “You almost didn’t pull back in time. You’ve got to be careful.” Fear of Ravers twisted her face into a scowl.
“Earthfriend,” breathed Pitchwife, “what will you do? There is a madness upon Grimmand Honninscrave. We will not be long able to withhold him.”
But Covenant made no reply. His legs were trembling now, and he could not stop what he was doing or turn aside. He headed toward a blunt boulder jutting from the lower slope of the foothill. When he reached it, he struggled up onto its crown, defying the way the wide landscape below and about him sucked at his balance. All his limbs felt leaden with suppressed devastation. From horizon to horizon, the desert sun had almost finished its work. In the low places of the terrain lay ponds of sludge which had once been trees and brush and vines, but every slope and rise was burned to dust and death. The thought that he would have to damage Revelstone was intolerable. Sheer grief and self-loathing would break him if he set his hand to that stone. Yet the necessity was inescapable. The Clave and the Banefire could not be permitted to go on. His heart quivered at the conflict of his fears—fear of harming the Keep and of not harming it, fear of himself, of the risk he meant to take; his desire to avoid killing and his need to protect his friends. But he had already chosen his path. Now he started down it.
Trembling as if he were on the verge of deflagration, he spoke the name he had been hoarding to himself ever since he had begun to understand the implications of what he meant to do.
The name of a Sandgorgon.
“Nom.”
TEN: The Banefire
Clearly through the sudden shock of the company, he heard Linden gasp. There was no wind, nothing to soften the arid pressure of the sun. Below him, the terrain was falling into the paradoxical purity of desecration. The cleanliness of extermination. No wonder fire was so hard to resist. His balance seemed to spin out of him into the flat brown sky. He not eaten or slept since the previous day. Perhaps it was inanition which made the horizons cant to one side as if they were about to sail away. Inanition or despair.
But Pitchwife and Cail caught him, lowered him from the boulder; and Linden came to him in a blur of vertigo. He had never been good at heights. He knew that she was saying his name, yet he felt unable to hear her. Her face was impossible to focus. She should have been protesting, A Sandgorgon? Are you out of your mind? What makes you think you can control it? But she was not. Her hands gripped his shoulders roughly, then flinched away. This time, her gasp was like a cry. “You—!” she began. But the words would not come. “Oh, Covenant!”
The First’s voice cut through the wild reel of the hills. “What harms him?” All his friends were crowded around him and spinning. He saw Mhoram and Foamfollower, Bannor and Elena—and Caer-Caveral—all there as if they deserved better from him. “What has transpired to harm him?” They had met him in Andelain and given him everything they dared; and this was the result. He was caught on a wheel that had no center. “Chosen, you must speak!”
“He’s on fire.” Linden’s tone was wet with tears. “The venom’s on fire. We’d already be dead, but he’s holding it inside. As long as he can. Until it eats its way out.”
The First cursed, then snapped a command that Covenant failed to hear. A moment later, Pitchwife’s heat-impervious hands lifted a bowl of diamondraught to Covenant’s mouth.
Its potent smell stung his nostrils with panic. Diamondraught would restore him. Perhaps it would restore his self-mastery as well. Or it might fuel the Maze of his suppressed power. He could not take the chance.
Somehow he slowed the spin. Clarity was possible. He could not afford to fail. And he would not have to hang on long; only until he reached the culmination of his nightmares. It was possible. When he was certain of the faces hovering around him, he said as if he were suffocating, “Not diamondraught. Metheglin.”
The First glared doubt at him; but Linden nodded. “He’s right,” she said in a rush. “He has to keep his balance. Between strength and weakness. Diamondraught is too strong.”
People were moving: Hollian and Mistweave went away, came back at once with a pouch of the Land’s thick mead. That Covenant drank, sparingly at first, then more deeply as he felt his grasp on the conflagration hold. By degrees, the vertigo frayed out of him. His friends were present and stable. The ground became solid again. The sun rang in his eyes, clanged against his temples, like Lord Foul’s silent laughter; and his face streamed with the sweat of desperation. But as the metheglin steadied him, he found that he was at least able to bear the heat.
With Pitchwife’s help, he gained his feet. Squinting, he turned to the east and thrust his gaze out into the shimmering desert.
“Will it come?” the First asked no one in particular. “The wide seas intervene, and they are no slight barrier.”
“Kasreyn said it would.” Linden bit her lips to control her apprehension, then continued, “He said, ‘Distance has no meaning to such power.’ ” Covenant remembered that. The Sandgorgons answer their release swiftly. That was how Hergrom had been killed. But Covenant had already summoned Nom once at Linden’s instigation; and he had not been slain. And Nom had not gone back to Sandgorgons Doom. Therefore why should the beast answer him now? He had no reason for such a wild hope—no reason at all except the fact that Nom had bowed to him when he had refrained from killing it.
But the east was empty, and the haze closed against him like a curtain. Even the eyes of the Giants discerned no sign of an answer.
Abruptly Cail’s uninflected voice broke the silence.
“Ur-Lord, behold.”
With one arm, he pointed up the hillside toward Revelstone.
For an instant, Covenant believed that the Haruchai wanted him to observe the immense hot vermeil shaft of the Banefire. With sun-echoes burning white and brown across his sight, he thought the sizzling beam looked stronger now, as though Gibbon-Raver were feeding it furiously to arm the Clave for combat. Killing the captured villagers and Haruchai as fast as their blood could be poured onto the floor of the sacred enclosure where the Banefire burned.
At the idea, the spots flaring against the backs of his eyes turned black. His restraint slipped. The fang-marks on his forearm hurt as if they had been reopened.
But then he saw the Riders at the base of the tower. Four of them: two holding up their rukhs to master a Haruchai they had brought with them; two equipped with knives and buckets.
They intended to shed their mind-bound prisoner in full view of Covenant and the company.
Covenant let out a shout that made the air throb. But at the same time he fought for control, thinking, No, No. He’s trying to provoke me. The blackness in him writhed. He refused it until it subsided.
“Honninscrave.” The First sounded almost casual, as if the sight of atrocities made her calm. “Mistweave. It is my thought that we need not permit this.”
Half the Haruchai
had started upward at a sprint. She made no effort to call them back. Stooping to the dirt, she picked up a rock larger than her palm; and in the same motion she hurled it at the Riders.
Striking the wall behind them, it burst in a shower of splinters that slashed at them like knives.
Instantly Honninscrave and Mistweave followed the First’s example. Their casts were so accurate that one of the Riders had a leg smashed, another was ripped by a hail of rebounding fragments. Their companions were compelled to release the Haruchai so that they could use their rukhs to defend themselves.
While the four Riders retreated into the tunnel, their captive turned on them. Suddenly free of their coercion, he slew the injured men. Then he pivoted disdainfully on his heel and strode down the slope to meet his people. He was bleeding from several cuts inflicted by sharp pieces of stone, but he bore himself as if he were unscathed.
Covenant hated killing. He had chosen his path in an effort to spare as many lives as possible. But as he watched the released Haruchai walking toward him like pure and utter dispassion, a dire grin twisted the corners of his mouth. In that moment, he became more dangerous to Gibbon and the Clave than any host of warriors or powers.
When he looked toward the east again, he saw a plume of dust rising through the haze.
He did not doubt what it was. Nothing but a Sandgorgon could travel with enough swift strength to raise that much dust.
Mutely Linden moved to his side as if she wanted to take his arm and cling to it for support. But the dark peril he radiated kept her from touching him.
Mistweave watched the dust with growing amazement. Pitchwife muttered inanely to himself, making pointless jests that seemed to ease his trepidation. The First grinned like a scimitar. Of the Giants, only Honninscrave did not study the beast’s approach. He stood with his head bowed and his arms manacled across his chest as if throwing stones at the Riders had whetted his hunger for violence.
Unexpectedly Findail spoke. He sounded weary and mascerated, worn thin by the prolonged burden of his responsibility; but some of the bitterness was gone from his voice. “Ring-wielder,” he said, “your purpose here is abominable and should be set aside. Those who hold the Earth in their hands have no justification for vengeance. Yet you have found a wise way to the accomplishment of your ends. I implore that you entrust them to this beast. You little comprehend what you have summoned.”
Covenant ignored the Elohim. Linden glanced at the Appointed. Sunder and Hollian gazed at him in confusion. But none of the companions spoke.
Nom had become visible at the arrow-point of the advancing dust.
Albino against the desiccated waste, the beast approached at a startling pace. Its size was not commensurate with its might: it was only a few hands taller than Covenant, only a little more thickly built than the Haruchai; yet given time and concentrated attention and freedom it was capable of reducing the entire gutrock wedge of Revelstone to wreckage. It had a strange gait, suited to deserts: its knees were back-bent like a bird’s to utilize the full thrust of the wide pads of its feet. Lacking hands, its arms were formed like battering rams.
And it had no face. Nothing defined its hairless head except the faint ridges of its skull under its hide and two covered slits like gills on either side.
Even to Covenant’s unpenetratmg sight, the Sandgorgon looked as pure and uncontestable as a force of nature—a hurricane bound into one savage form and avid for a place to strike.
It came running as if it meant to hurl itself at him.
But at the last it stopped in a thick nimbus of dust, confronted him across a scant stretch of bare dirt. For a moment, it trembled as it had trembled when he had defeated it in direct combat and it had not known how to hold back its elemental fury even to save its own life. Service was an alien concept to its brute mind; violence made more sense. Sweat blurred the edges of his vision as he watched the beast quiver for decision. Involuntarily he held his breath. A few small flames slipped past his control and licked at his forearm until he beat them back.
Nom’s trembling mounted—and abruptly subsided. Lowering itself to the ground, the beast placed its forehead in the dirt at Covenant’s feet.
Slowly he let pent air leak away through his teeth. A muffled sigh of relief passed through the company. Linden covered her face momentarily, then thrust her fingers through her hair as if she were trying to pull courage up out of her alarm.
“Nom,” he said, and his voice shook. “Thanks for coming.”
He did not know to what extent the beast was able to understand him; but it surged erect by unfolding its knees and stood waiting before him.
He did not let himself hesitate. The bond which held Nom was fragile. And he could feel venom gnawing in him like acid. His purpose was as clear to him as the soothtell which had sent him on his futile quest for the One Tree. Turning to his companions, he addressed them as a group.
“I want you to stay here.” Gritting his will, he strove to suppress the tremors which made his tone harsh. “Leave it to Nom and me. Between us, we’re already too much for the job.” And I can’t bear to lose any of you.
He had no right to say such things. Every member of the company had earned a place in this hazard. But when he considered what might happen to them, he burned to spare them.
“I’ll need Linden,” he went on before anyone could protest. “Gibbon’s going to try to hide from me. I won’t be able to locate the Raver without her.” The mere thought hurt him; he knew how deeply she dreaded Ravers. “And I’ll take Cail and Fole. To guard our backs,” Even that concession made him want to rage. But Linden might need the protection. “The rest of you just wait. If I fail, you’ll have to do it for me.”
Unable to face what his friends wanted to say, the pained indignation in their eyes, the expostulations rising from their hearts, he impelled Linden into motion with his hand on the small of her back. A gesture called Nom to his side. Striding stiffly past the people who had served him with their lives and deserved better than this, he started up the slope toward Revelstone.
Then for a moment he came so close to tears that his courage nearly broke. Not one of his companions obeyed. Without a word, they arranged themselves for battle and followed him.
Under her breath, Linden murmured, “I understand. You think it all depends on you. Why should people as good as they are have to suffer and maybe get killed for it? And I’m so scared—” Her face was pale and drawn and urgent. “But you have got to stop trying to make other people’s decisions for them.”
He did not reply. Keeping his attention fixed on the open tunnel under the watchtower, he forced his power-clogged muscles to bear him steadily upward. But now he feared that he was already defeated. He had too much to lose. His friends were accompanying him into his nightmares as if he were worthy of them. Because he had to do something, no matter how insufficient or useless it might be, he moved closer to Cail and whispered, “This is enough. Bannor said you’d serve me. Brinn told you to take his place. But I don’t need this kind of service anymore. I’m too far gone. What I need is hope.”
“Ur-Lord?” the Haruchai responded softly.
“The Land needs a future. Even if I win. The Giants’ll go Home. You’ll go about your business. But if anything happens to Sunder or Hollian—” The idea appalled him. “I want you to take care of them. All of you. No matter what.” He was prepared to endanger even Linden for this. “The Land has got to have a future.”
“We hear you.” Cail’s tone did not betray whether he was relieved, moved, or offended. “If the need arises, we will remember your words.”
With that Covenant had to be content.
Nom had moved somewhat ahead of him, thrusting toward the great Keep as if it triggered a racial memory of the Sandwall which the Bhrathair had raised to oppose the Sandgorgons in the years before Kasreyn had bound them to their Doom. The beast’s arms swung in anticipation. Grimly Covenant quickened his pace.
In that way, with Linden beside h
im, two Stonedownors and four Giants behind him, and eleven Haruchai nearby, Thomas Covenant went to pit himself against the Clave and the Banefire.
There was no reaction from Revelstone. Perhaps the na-Mhoram did not know what a Sandgorgon was, wanted to see what it would do before he attempted to provoke Covenant again. Or perhaps he had given up provocation in order to prepare his defenses. Perhaps the Raver had found a small worm of fear at the bottom of his malice. Covenant liked that idea. What the Clave and the Banefire had done to the Land could not be forgiven. The way in which this Raver had transformed to ill the ancient and honorable Council of Lords could not be forgiven. And for Gibbon’s attack on Linden, Covenant would accept no atonement except the cleansing of the Keep.
Those who hold the Earth in their hands have no justification for vengeance.
Like hell, Covenant gritted. Like hell they don’t.
But when he reached the base of the watchtower, he commanded Nom to halt and paused to consider the tunnel. The sun was high enough now to make the inner courtyard bright; but that only deepened the obscurity of the passage. The windows of the tower gaped as if the rooms behind them were abandoned. A silence like the cryptic stillness of the dead hung over the city. There was no wind—no sign of life except the stark hot shaft of the Banefire. Between the two slain Coursers, dead wasps littered the ground. The Riders had taken their own fallen with them for the sake of the blood. But red splotches marked the rocks in front of the tower as if to tell Covenant that he had come to the right place.
He turned to Linden. Her taut pallor frightened him, but he could no longer afford to spare her. “The tower,” he said as the company stopped behind him. “I need to know if it’s empty.”