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    Spellsinger 04 - The Moment Of The Magician

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    with his hands, and dove into the water.

      A couple of fast kicks carried him well out into the

      open lake. He did not surface but swam hard and

      unerringly for the four high islands of the east. Like

      the other isles that combined to form the sprawling

      city of Quasequa, they were connected to one an-

      THE MOMENT or TBB MAOICUJT

      19

      other by causeways, but this was not the time to walk

      openly on city streets.

      It was time for stealth and for clinging to the dark

      bottom of the lake.

      II

      Opiode sat in his robes of office, a thin, narrow

      upswept cap balanced on the middle of his slick

      head, and regarded his visitor. Flute stood quietly by

      the front door.

      The raven wore the kilt of his clan, colorful material

      striped with green, purple, and red. His vest was light-

      ly spun lavender. A single gold chain hung round

      his neck to rest against his chest feathers. He rubbed

      the underside of his beak with a flexible wingtip.

      "Let me get this straight, now, sorcerer." He was

      studying the papers Opiode had handed him. "You

      want me to fly north along this route, turning slighdy

      west here, to deliver this message." He shuffled the

      papers, held up one filled with writing instead of

      diagrams. "It goes to an old turtle named Clothahump

      who lives in"—he checked the map briefly—"this ma-

      jor tree here. For one hundred coins." Opiode nodded.

      "That's a helluva long flight," Pandro said.

      "I had heard that you were not afraid of long flights."

      "I ain't. 1 ain't afraid of anything, least of all a little

      long-distance traveling. But considering how quiet

      you're being about this, and the amount you're paying

      me, well, no disrespect. Master Opiode, but—what's

      the catch?"

      20

      TBK MQMKNT OF THE KAOICIAN 21

      Opiode glanced at Flute, then sighed and smiled,

      down at Pandro. "It would not be right for me to

      keep it from you. You must know what you are

      about, as well as its importance.

      "You must have heard that another has assumed

      my position as chief advisor to the Quorum."

      "Sure. It's all over town. This Markus fella... what's

      it to me?"

      "Good Pandro, I have reason to believe that this

      newcomer intends ill toward our great city. But 1

      cannot convince the members of the Quorum of

      that. They would think I was making accusations out

      of bitterness at my loss- And I cannot move against

      this Markus by myself. I need help. This Clothahump

      that you will seek out is the only one who can help us.

      "The 'catch' is that this Markus the Ineluctable is

      crafty as well as skilled in the arcane arts. You are

      sure none saw you arrive here?"

      "As sure as we can be, Master," said Flute. "I took

      every precaution."

      "Then, good Pandro, there may be no catch. But

      be ever alert as you wing northward, for this Markus

      is not stupid. If he believes you are aiding me, it

      could be dangerous for you. If he did see you arrive

      here, or sees you depart, he may try to stop you

      from completing your journey."

      "Is that all?" The raven rested his wingtips on his

      hips for a moment, then rolled up the message and

      the map and slipped them into his backpack. "Then

      Acre's nothing to concern yourself with. Master

      Optode. There isn't another flier in Quasequa who

      Can stay in the air for as long as I can on as little food

      as I can. Anybody he sends after me, if he sends

      anyone. I can outfly." He flicked his beak with a

      ;Kringtip.

      ^ "See here? Been broken twice in fights. I can take

      ,^care of myself and I'm not worried about anything

      Alan Dean Foster

      22

      this Markus fella might send up after me. If it flies, I

      can outrun or outfight it."

      "It is good to be confident. Overconfidence is

      dangerous."

      "Don't worry. I'll use my good judgment, sir. I've a

      mate and three fledglings to take care of, and you

      can bet I'm coming back to them. That's stronger

      motivation than your hundred coins. Relax. I'll get

      your message through."

      "Can you fly at night?" Opiode asked him.

      "Night, day, the air's all the same to me whether

      it's light or dark out. But if you'd feel better about it,

      I'll leave tonight."

      Opiode smiled. "Feel better, I would. The night

      must be a friend to us all, now." Flute nodded

      solemnly.

      "As you wish, sir."

      "Caution above all," Opiode counseled him. "This

      Markus has spies everywhere. Even among the fliers."

      "I'll keep it in mind, sir. Once I'm clear of the lake

      district I should have free flying all the way north.

      Besides, I know all the'good fliers and fighters in the

      high islands. I don't think any are in this fella's

      pay."

      "I was not worried about your cousins," Opiode

      said darkly, "so much as I was concerned about what

      this Markus might call forth from another, more

      sinister sky to challenge you."

      "Can't spend all our time worrying about the

      unforeseeable, can we, sir? At least I can't. I sup-

      pose that's your job." He tapped his head. "Anyway,

      anything I can't outfly or outfight I can sure as hell

      outsmart."

      "Then be off with you, owner of an unseen cloud,

      and hasten back to us safely."

      Pandro started for the doorway. "You can bet on

      that, sir."

      THE MOMENT OF THE MAGICIAN

      23

      "A raven, you say?" Markus the Ineluctable was

      listening with only half his mind to what the mouse

      was telling him. He was too busy enjoying the splen-

      dor of his new tower quarters, the finest that the

      Quorumate Complex could offer.

      "Yes, wise one," said the mouse. It had a tendency

      to stutter, a condition made worse by its proximity to

      the powerful and much-feared new chief advisor to

      the Quorum. "It flew s-s-straight away from the

      H-Ianding where Mossamay Street and the wizard's

      c-c-close join."

      "Which direction did it take?"

      "It f-f-flew north, wise one. Few city fliers live to

      the n-n-north."

      Markus turned from contemplation of an exqui-

      site wood carving to stare at his bodyguard. The

      mouse barely came up to his hip. "Prugg, what's

      your opinion of this?"

      Prugg was very big, very strong, and not very

      bright. Despite his size and strength, people had a

      tendency to laugh at him. At least, they used to.

      Since he'd become Markus the Ineluctable's personal

      servant they'd stopped laughing. Prugg was just intelli-

      gent enough to realize this. He was very grateful to

      ' the magician. Markus made him feel comfortable,

      feven though he understood very little of what his

      new master had to say.

      But he didn't have to think anymore. Markus did

      all
    his thinking for him, Prugg found thinking

      uncomfortable. And nobody laughed at him anymore.

      • He was respected and feared. It was a new sensation

      <and Prugg found that he liked it. Markus under-

      '•Steod him, understood his needs. Prugg responded

      ^with devoted, unquestioning service.

      ^' So he considered the question carefully before

      )lying. "It is true that the lands to the north of the

      24 Alan Dean Foster

      city are not as thickly inhabited as those in other

      directions. Master."

      "What's the land to the north of here like?"

      "Open forest where live peoples who do not pledge

      their allegiance to the city or to any other government,

      Master. North of that is the Wrounipai, the first of

      many swamps all connected together that run from

      west to east. They cut us off from any lands that lie

      still farther north."

      "And what about those lands?"

      "I do not know. Master. I have never been there. I

      do not know anyone from the city who has ever been

      there."

      "And that's the way this bird was heading when he

      left Opiode's place." Markus turned his full attention

      on his spy. "You're certain of that?"

      "Y-y-y-y-for sure, wise one! I am certain of it. He

      f-f-f-flew straight away from the wizard's neighborhood.

      I followed him with my eyes from the rooftops

      nearby."

      "Okay, but how can we be sure he was on a mission

      for Opiode?"

      The visitor moved nearer, anxious to ingratiate

      himself with the magician- His whiskers trembled as

      he whispered.

      "The wizard Opiode has a young assistant named

      Flute. I s-s-saw him conversing with the raven before

      he took off for the north." Markus was nodding

      absently, admiring the polished hardwood inlay of

      the table behind him- A single chair rested against

      the table.

      It needs something, he thought. A gargoyle or

      demon or some such carved atop the chair. Some-

      thing to draw the visitors' eyes upward. For that

      matter, if the table was going to serve as a desk, it

      had to be up on a dais. He'd have to get some

      TBE MOMENT OF THE MAGICIAN 25

      carpenters in here and get them started on the

      alterations he wanted.

      He was aware of his spy standing hopeful and

      silent by his legs. "That's it?"

      "That is all, w-w-wise one "

      Markus nodded, glanced toward Prugg. "Give him

      a gold piece."

      "Thank you, wise one!" The spy was unaccus-

      tomed to such largess, but Markus had always be-

      lieved in paying his help as much as possible. Other-

      wise you ended up with garbage working for you,

      ready to sell you out to the first high bidder. Even if

      he was overpaying for this particular bit of information,

      in so doing he was buying himself a valuable servant

      forever.

      The mouse took the coin; skittered quickly away

      from the ominous, silent shape of Prugg; and did

      some admirable bowing and scraping as he retreated

      from the magician's room.

      When the door was closed once more, Prugg turned

      to his benefactor. "What will you do now, Master?"

      "What would you suggest?"

      Prugg strained. Thinking hurt his head. "There

      are faster fliers than ravens, Master. I would send

      them after this one. Better not to take chances. Kill

      it."

      "He has nearly a full day's head start," Markus

      murmured, "but I agree with your suggestion." Prugg

      smiled proudly. "I will send fliers out after him, yes,

      faut 1 will not hire them. I will conjure them forth to

      do our bidding."

      ""Yes. Master," said Prugg admiringly, waiting to

      see what the magician would do next.

      What Markus did was to assume a wide stance in

      the middle of the room. The floor there had been

      deared of all furniture and decoration. Prugg moved

      to one side for a better view. He found it astonishing

      Alan Dean Foster

      26

      that Markus required no special chamber in which to

      perform his wizardry. Nothing but a clear floor and

      plenty of arm room.

      As always, Markus mumbled the incantation. Not

      that Prugg would have understood the words any

      better than Opiode, but Markus the Ineluctable took

      no chances with his secrets.

      The room darkened perceptibly and the air grew

      very still. Prugg would have been able to see better

      with glow bulbs, but Markus would have nothing of

      Opiode's around him and insisted instead on using

      simple torches for illumination.

      Then a faint whine became audible, alien and

      harsh, rising slowly in volume. Prugg strained to see.

      In the center of the room, in front of Markus,

      shapes took form. If was as the magician had said:

      fliers, but fliers akin to none Prugg had ever heard

      tell of. He found himself backing away. They were

      far smaller than he was, but ugly and threatening to

      behold.

      Markus, on the other hand, seemed delighted by

      their appearance. They danced and whirled over his

      head as he guided them with words and hands.

      "Beautiful, beautiful! Better than I dared hope

      for. If only I could've called them up as a child. Ah,

      well, Prugg, it takes time to master the art. See,

      they're just as I described theml"

      The demons continued to pivot and spin over

      their master's head, roaring exultantly and gnashing

      their long teeth. In the enclosed space the din was

      deafening.

      They had no faces, Prugg noted.

      No eyes, nostrils, external ears, or visible mouths.

      Only those mindless, clashing teeth. Fangs without

      jaws. Prugg found he was shaking. There were worse

      things in the world than one's own nightmares^

      "To the north!" Markus cried, pointing with one

      Tsss Moanswr or THE WAQSCSAS 2,7

      If v!

      ft^

      ^

      m

      hand. "There flies the raven named Pandro. Where

      he's going 1 don't know, but see that he doesn't get

      there. Go!"

      One by one, in single file, the faceless demons tore

      through the open window. Only when the last of the

      growling chorus had faded into the light of mideve

      did Markus drop his hands and return to stand

      behind his desk.

      "About this chair, Prugg. What I want you to do

      is—" He stopped and stared at his bodyguard. "Are

      you paying attention?"

      The huge servant forced his gaze away from the

      window where the demons had taken their leave and

      back to his master. Markus was speaking as though

      die conjuration had never taken place. It was all so

      matter-of-fact, so ordinary to him, this calling up of

      otherworldly powers.

      Truly Prugg was fortunate to have him for a master.

      It was a lovely warm day, the air thick with humidi-

      ty but not oppressively so. Below Pandro the trees

      had closed in, shuttin
    g off sight of the ground. He

      was already well north not only of Quasequa but of

      its outlying villages and satellite communities as well.

      Rising thermals allowed him to glide effortlessly

      over the dense tropical forest. Since departing

      Quasequa he'd stopped only once, and that briefly,

      the previous night to catch a bit of sleep. Then up

      before dawn for a fast breakfast of fruit, nuts, and

      dried fish and on to the north.

      In his mind he reviewed the landmarks he would

      pass on his way to the distant Bellwoods, a forested

      region that was little more than rumor in Quasequa.

      Opiode assured him such a place existed, just as he

      assured him the great wizard he was to deliver his

      message to existed.

      If he was real, Pandro would find him. He'd never

      28 Alan Dean Foster

      failed to make a detivery yet, and this morning he

      was feeling particularly confident. He felt so good he

      skipped his usual midday snack, preferring to cover

      as much territory as possible. Thus far the journey

      had proved anything but dangerous. He'd assured

      his mate before leaving that it would be more in the

      nature of an extended vacation than a difficult

      assignment. So far it had developed exacdy as he'd

      told her.

      Then he heard the noise.

      It was behind and slightly above him and growing

      steadily louder as he listened. At first he couldn't

      place it. More than anything, it sounded like the

      droning he imagined the fliers of the Plated Folk

      might make. But those historic enemies were likewise

      little more than rumor in Quasequa. Pandro had

      only seen drawings of them, the fevered sketches of

      far-ranging artists with more imagination than fact

      at their disposal.

      Hard-shelled, gray-eyed relatives of the common

      bugs and crawly things that inhabited the woods and

      lakes, they were. None had penetrated as far south

      as Quasequa. He certainly never expected to see

      them in person. Yet when at last he was able to look

      back and make out the shapes pursuing him, he was

      startled, for they certainly looked like the representa-

      tions he'd seen of the Plated Folk.

      The reality as they drew nearer still was worse.

      They were not minions of the Plated Folk but some-

      thing far more sinister. Similarities in shape and

      appearance there were, but even the Plated Folk had

      faces. The demons overtaking him had none. They

      were hard-shelled but utterly different from any-

      thing he'd ever seen before- Nor were they fliers like

     


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