Authors: Karl Edward Wagner
Tags: #Fiction.Fantasy, #Short Stories & Novellas, #Collection.Single Author, #Fiction.Dark Fantasy/Supernatural
It was Mauderas. He halted at the threshold in surprise. His hulking figure blocked the doorway; behind him stretched the inn’s bar, and beyond she could see several of Pleddis s men moving through the common room.
“Close that door!” she hissed. “Lock it!”
Mauderas obeyed, a stunned expression on his dark face. “What happened?”
“Never mind,” Ionor told him. “I had to stop her from talking to Pleddis.”
“She dead?”
“I think so. We can’t let them find her.”
Mauderas licked his mustache and surveyed the room. The outer doors were barred, but Pleddis’s men were watching from outside. Fortunately the windows were shuttered on the back wall. No one had seen… yet.
“I don’t see what Pleddis would care about—”
“Don’t forget Captain Pleddis is a lawman!” she snapped. “Maybe he wouldn’t use his authority, maybe he would. No point in tempting luck. I don’t want to fool around with that bounty hunter right now. We’ll have to hide her body—tell them she went back to the village, if anyone asks.”
“How? She’s too big to stuff under something, and Pleddis’s men are all over the place. Someone’s going to want to come in here any minute. They can’t turn up Kane anywhere, and Pleddis was about to tear up the floorboards looking for hiding places.”
“I know; they came through here twice before. Does it look like Kane left the inn, then?”
Mauderas nodded. “Pleddis figured out how. They’ll be out scouring the ridges next.”
Ionor thought carefully for a moment and came to a decision. “Then we’ll do it the old way. Take her out the passage and sink her. That way it’s certain they won’t find her.”
Mauderas put a broad hand on her shoulder. “Been a long time since I sunk anyone.”
“I feel confident you haven’t lost your touch.”
“Passage hasn’t been opened since the raid. Thought you wanted to forget the old days, keep the passage closed up.”
“I know what I said. But I don’t want to risk complications with Pleddis.”
Mauderas shrugged. “Anyway you call it then, Ionor.”
Stooping over the limp body, he arranged the loose limbs with the calm competence of one who knows his task. With a grunt he rose up again,Greshha’s lax figure slung across his broad back. “The old woman weighs more than a side of beef,” he grumbled.
But Ionor had left him. Descending the steps to the wine cellar, she paused to grasp a portion of the railing. With a sharp tug, the upright swung out from the banister like a lever. It was a lever. Somewhere below a counterbalance released, and a large section of the flagstone cellar floor rumbled smoothly into the outer wall.
A square of blackness opened in the cellar floor, fromwhich a stale, damp wind welled up. It was like a breath from some slumbering behemoth. Indeed, the sound of muffled breathing seemed to emanate from within—a distant rushingmoan.
Stairs of greasy limestone descended into the gloom. Mauderas took a lamp from Ionor, holding it clumsilyunder the weight of his burden. He eyed the passage doubtfully.
“Hurry! I think I hear someone calling for me!”
Mauderas grunted and put a boot on the top step. “Oh, I’ll hurry. But I’ll hurry back to keep you warm tonight.”
Ionor made an impatient gesture. “Stay there for awhile before you return to the inn—and leave by the other way. They’ll believe me if I say you went to walk Greshha part way to the village. And later no one will question a disappearance on Demonlord’s Moon.”
“Any way you call it, honey,” Mauderas drawled, his ice rising from the darkness. “I’ll be along to keep you warm directly…”
Hurriedly Ionor swung the lever back to its upright position. The section of flagstones grated back into place. Pounding on the kitchen door was thunderous as she emerged from the cellar.
“Sorry. I was getting brandy,” she explained, unbolting the door to admit Nattios and several of his fellows. “With that devil running loose, a lady likes to keep herself locked in safe.”
Satisfied that no bones were broken, Kane struggled tohis feet. He would limp badly, but his high boots had reinforced his ankles so that the shock of impact had not resulted in a disabling sprain or worse. Or worse. He massaged his aching shoulder; his right arm had almost been torn from its socket. But by all rights he should be lying here with a broken neck.
Kane looked about him, reconstructing what had happened now that the scarlet bursts of pain were receding from his consciousness.
When Klesst had fastened the closet door, Kane had stepped back against its wall. He had a vague impression of reaching to steady himself. His groping fingers closed on something—had it been one of the pegs?—that had swung inward with his shove.
Then the section of closet floor on which he stood dropped away, and Kane felt himself plunging through darkness. Blindly he struck out. His fingers closed on wood—the rung of a ladder. But the rotted wood tore away under the wrenching force of Kane’s three hundred pounds of bone and muscle.
Spun about by the jarring contact, Kane desperately clawed at the wall. Other mildewed rungs smashed against his grasp, splintered under his weight. But it was enough to check his hurtling body. Kane’s steel- tendonedfingers locked onto the flashing rungs, almost bringinghis fall short. Then the dragging mass of his body proved more than the weakened timbers could withstand. The ladder tore loose from its anchorage to the wall and careened to the stones below.
It had been enough to break his fall, Kane dropped the final eight or ten feet and struck the stones on his feet, the wreckage of the ladder splintering beneath him.
He lay for several minutes, semiconscious after the stunning impact. Above him stretched a seemingly endless shaft of blackness. Kane had no clear idea of how far he had fallen. He was in a chamber beneath the cellars of Raven’s Eyrie. Klesst’s room must be at least fifty feet above—probably more, since the sound of his fall seemed to have brought no response from his pursuers.
Patches of skin were abraded from his hands, and he dug out several large splinters. Gingerly he flexed his fingers, found they were otherwise uninjured. A smile twitched his bleeding lips, for a man with crippled hands was more helpless than if he had broken his leg. Casting about, he found his sword, its point buried inches in the damp limestone. He drew it out, reflecting he had narrowly missed being impaled on itstempered steel.
Once more he gazed up the pitch-dark shaft. He had triggered a trapdoor in the rear of the closet, somewhere above. Obviously a counterbalance had sprung the trap shut once again, otherwise he would see light and puzzled faces would be staring down at him. A ladder was anchored to one wall of the shaft, though it appearedunlikely he would be able to climb back up after the destruction his fall had caused.
Kane had just begun to form a guess as to the shaft’s purpose, when he heard a grating rumble overhead. Light suddenly washed down from the roof of the chamber some fifty feet to his left. A section of stone had slid open, revealing a long flight of stone steps. Voices trickled down.
Baring his teeth in a snarl—
Had Pleddis’s hound s sniffed him out even in this lost hole?
—Kane concealed himself behind a massive stone column. Sword in bleeding fist, he waited.
Instead of the anticipated rush of mercenaries, Kane saw only one man descend the steps—and then the door overhead slid shut. His eyes narrowed in calculation. The man he recognized as one of Ionor’s servants; the deadwoman he carried slung over his back Kane had never seen before. This turn of events was a mystery to him. More to the point, it meant that his presence here had not been discovered—on the contrary, the brawny servant seemed intent on a task which demanded secrecy.
The newcomer carried a lantern in his fist. Its light was hardly sufficient to disclose the walls of the chamber—tens of yards across, and in places shared and vaulted, Evidently the room was a natural cavern which at one time had been roughly restructured to serve as a hidden cellar. A damp breeze ghosted through the darkness, causing the lantern flame to dance, and Kane noted a narrow passage leading out of the cellar’s far wall.
Mauderas glanced about the hidden cellar, his face showing more fear than suspicion. This was a place where countless dark crimes had bloodied the stones. It was not a wholesome spot to linger, particularly on the night of Demonlord’s Moon.
“What the hell!” he muttered, raising his lantern suddenly He tensed as the feeble light picked out the splintered endsof the ladder, pointing in all directions like the half-flexed fingers of a dead man’s hand. The woman’s body slid from his shoulders with a heavy flopping sound.
“That wasn’t so rotten it would of collapsed by itself,” Mauderas thought aloud. Drawing his sword, be shuffled toward the wreckage, the lantern thrust before him like a shield.
Whichleft him blind to anything outside the close cirle of its light. As he crept past, Kane leaped from the shadow of the pillar. Mauderas sensed his rush andstarted to turn. Kane’s heavy blade sheared off half hisface as it passed down through his neck.
The lantern smashed against the floor. A pool of flamelicked over the damp stone. Grotesque shadows writhedOverthe nitre -frosted walls, mocking killer and slain, as Kane wiped his blade clean of the dead man’s gore.
“Kane…” A rasping voice called to him.
He spun on his heels, a curse exploding from his throat.
“Kane… is it you?” theeerie voice whispered.
Kane stalked toward the sound. In the rippling light he that the woman Mauderas had carried had raised herself weakly.
He knelt at her side. “I’m Kane,” he told her, noting the blood that matted her hair.
Her ashen face was lax; her arms quivered spasmodically. Seemingly she had barely strength left to whisper. “The child, Kane… Save Klesst… She may be of your seed, but she’s innocent.”
“Why is Klesst in any danger, old woman?”
“Ionor… She birthed her seven years ago tonight… Nothing but hate in her… She called out to him for vengeance that night…”
“Called out to whom?”
“I heard him at her bedside… His black hound was clawing at our door… The Demonlord came to her…”
Only willpower held life in the mountain woman’s dying flesh. All strength had left her—only her eyes and lips showed trembling movement, like the final flickering of a lampwick when no more oil remains. Her voice was trailing off, and Kane anxiously bent his ear to her face.
“The Demonlord bargained with her that night. In seven years he’d draw you back to Raven’s Eyrie. In seven years he’d come with his hound to drag your living flesh down to Hell. Ionor would see her vengeance fulfilled—but the price would be the child. Ionor must take Klesst to Raven’s Bald where the Demonlord and his black hound wait. She must give the hellhound your spoor by throwing the child into its maw…”
“Then the black hound will come for you Kane, to drag your evil soul down to everlasting torment in its master’s realm… and there’s no place you can hide from the hound of Hell! It’s no worse than you deserve, but the child’s done no wrong. Don’t let her sacrifice Klesst… There’s naught but hate in—”
Greshha’s whisper was no longer audible. Kane shook her still form, intent on learning more. And now her eyes and lips were fixed and silent. As they would be forevermore.
The pool of flaming oil crept into tiny islands of fire that one by one snapped and died. Kane arose from the dead woman, and the chamber was once more in darkness.
He stood wondering for a moment, while his uncannyeyes adapted somewhat to the thick gloom. Numbness was stealing over his body. Fighting the pain and exhaustion that clouded his perception and dragged at his limbs, Kane limped toward the passage at the opposite wall. The damp and softly moaning breath issuing from the blackness indicated the passage must lead outward—and Kane had no desire to return to the inn, even if be could gain entrance without discovery.
The passage was cramped, with walls and floor of irregular masses of limestone. Kane judged that portions of the rock had been broken away to enlarge the natural tunnel. He had begun to form an idea of the hidden cellar’s function, and when he reached the end of the passage, his suspicions were confirmed.
The tunnel opened onto a narrow ledge, jutting mid-way from the limestone bluff below Raven’s Eyrie. The River Cotras rushed thunderously beneath the mists another hundred feet down. Close by the mouth of the passage lay a pile of fist-sized stones and broken rubble—harmless enough, but Kane read a more sinister interpretation.
Before the raid, Raven’s Eyrie had been a prosperous caravanserai. But Ionor’s family had gathered its great Wealth by darker harvests than the hosting of trail-weary travellers . Kane suddenly realized that he had uncovered the chilling secret of Raven’s Eyrie.
Such inns of terror were not rare along desolate roadsthrough untilled wilderness. Kane had encountered them on occasion, although never on so grand a scale as Raven’s Eyrie, whose dark secret had never been suspected.He wondered how many other hidden passages opened into guest’s rooms like the one he had unwittinglystood over and tripped. How many black crimes, what heaps of stolen riches, had this hidden cellar known? Studying the cairn of fist-sized rocks, Kane thought of nameless travellers who had been secretly dragged from their beds to this unhallowed cellar, where here,their bellies ripped open and weighted with stones, their corpses were thrown from the ledge to sink forever in thedeep current far below.
No doubt their disappearance, if noted, would havebeen laid to marauding gangs of outlaws; some of the crimes Kane bitterly reflected, were probably laid to his name. But now the passage showed evidence of long disuse, and Kane wondered why. Did wealthy travellers no longer risk these trails; were their guests too few to disappear without notice? Or was Ionor of a less murderous temperament than her predecessors here? Remembering the hatred in her eyes tonight, Kane doubted this last.
He dismissed the matter; it was of no concern. Instead there was Pleddis to deal with. And the words of the dying woman. Truth or madness? Kane dared not disregard her whispered warning. He knew the power of hate.