The Grave Thief: Book Three of The Twilight Reign (34 page)

Without the trappings of state, Emin looked to be a similar age to Morghien now. Emin had aged noticeably in the last year; both men had lined faces and greying whiskers now. While he retained his slender physique - all wiry strength, like a Harlequin - at that moment his majesty appeared diminished. They had first met when Emin was a carefree young man, but even then he had the bearing of a king. Now he was just a careworn, middle-aged man.
‘Time to begin.’ Morghien crouched at the circle’s edge and began to mutter words so softly they were barely sounds at all. A little magic slid from his fingertips and followed the paths of chalk around in both directions. As they met and sealed the circles, Morghien felt a flash in his mind and reeled backwards as the magic barrier snapped open again.
‘What happened?’ Emin demanded.
Morghien took a moment to clear his wits and let the stinging in his head recede. ‘I . . . Ah, I’m not sure.’ He paused as he felt a stirring at the back of his mind: Seliasei, the Aspect of Vasle that inhabited his mind was making her presence known.
‘Of course,’ Morghien said aloud, ‘it’s the Skull; I’m trying to contain it within the circle as well as you.’
‘And that is a bad thing?’
Morghien forced a smile. ‘The Skulls are repositories of vast power. They constantly draw in and put out energy from the Land around them. I cut off that flow with the barrier, but it was like holding back a river with a sheet of paper - the current simply tore a hole and broke the barrier.’
‘Are you hurt?’
‘Thank you, my friend, but no. I used very little magic, just enough to seal the circle and create the binding on anything inside. Circles have a very specific prominence in the magical realm: you don’t need to use a lot of power to make them effective. But the bond is inward-facing. Forces entering from outside it are not subject to the same constraints.’
‘What do we do about it?’
He held out his hand. ‘Give me the Skull. It won’t disrupt the ceremony outside the circles - in fact, it might make it easier.’
He recommenced the ritual, sealing the circle again and then standing over the king, speaking arcane words he’d learned a century before. The Gods were traditionally at their weakest at twilight, when they would withdraw a little from the Land, so magic involving them always worked best in that halfway time. The ritual itself was simple, and began with a very gentle summoning. The use of force would come later.
The memory of his first teacher in magic, the father of the infamous Cordein Malich, appeared abruptly in Morghien’s mind as the soft syllables slipped from his tongue, leaving a coppery tang in their wake.

Some see magic as a man’s art, where directness and bold action will always triumph. They’re the fools you need to watch for; the ones who puff themselves up like tomcats without a shred of caution. This art we borrow from Gods and daemons, creatures that could swat us like flies should they wish to. Immortals do not appreciate bluster; a little humbleness never goes amiss
.’ He sighed as he thought,
A shame your son never appreciated your lessons, my friend.
Morghien sensed the light grow a little dimmer. The shadows were already deep, with the lamp turned right down, but the change was enough to notice. He took a long breath.
Humble? I’m trying, master, however ill-suited I am to it.
He repeated the words of summoning, holding back the flow of magic as much as he could without breaking it. He wasn’t often glad of his lack of personal power, but this time it was a good thing, for a full summoning would draw an entity and drag it into the real world. With luck what he was doing was nudging it forward at a time when its reach was slightly weakened.
He nodded to Emin and the king let the sheet slip from his body, spreading it out behind him, taking great care not to let it break the circle. Now Morghien held up the lamp to reveal Emin’s shadow on the sheet as he repeated the summoning, slowly, softly. If he was too insistent, the summoning might work too well; they were already running a great risk. This was by no means the first time he had performed a sundering, but King Emin’s presence meant the chance of being noticed was far greater, and therein lay the danger.
The shadow on the sheet gave a slight twitch. Morghien watched it carefully. King Emin kept perfectly still, his eyes fixed on Morghien as he waited. The shadow twitched again, then turned its head to look around the room.
Excellent
. He reached out and placed a hand up against the invisible barrier cast by the circle. It was intact; everything was going according to plan. At twilight the Gods withdrew a little from the Land, but a tiny fragment of their selves was imbued in each of their servants who took holy orders. King Emin had done that years ago - albeit for reasons more practical than pious. The summoning was aimed at the only part of Lord Death available to someone of Morghien’s strength at twilight - that sliver within King Emin.
He turned the lamp up and watched the darkness behind Emin as it strengthened and solidified.
‘I imbue,’ he said aloud, allowing the flow of magic to increase and run forward towards the circle. The shadow trembled. ‘I imbue,’ he repeated, summoning the image of a hammer falling in his mind. Morghien had seen a mage-smith work his trade once, and had noted the directness required to weave magic into steel or silver, where the rhythm of the blows and the repetition of the words were as crucial as the strength of the wielder.
‘I imbue,’ he said a third time, pushing out as much magic as he could while signalling to Emin. As Morghien began to speak the words for a fourth time, Emin rose smartly from his crouching position and stepped out over the circle to join Morghien on the other side. The shadow lurched forward to follow, but was caught on the edge of the circle and rebounded, shuddering, as Emin wrenched himself from its grip. It stilled to a dark stain on the linen sheet.
Morghien blew out the lamp and plunged the room into near-darkness.
Both men blinked to adjust their eyes.
‘It worked then?’ Emin said, looking at the sheet. The shadow looked like a stain of some sort. Emin thought he could make out the top of the head and one arm, but he wasn’t certain.
‘It appears so,’ Morghien said cautiously as he placed a restraining hand on his friend’s arm. ‘Don’t break the circle yet, just in case.’
The two men stood watching the sheet in silence until Emin seemed to remember he was naked and started shivering again.
‘Can I get dressed yet?’
Morghien nodded, his eyes not leaving the sheet. ‘The circle must remain until after the sun is fully down.’
Emin unwrapped the bundle of clothes by the stool and quickly pulled on the breeches, then the boots. He was reaching for the shirt when Morghien suddenly stumbled sideways, as though he’d been struck in the shoulder.
‘Morghien!’ Emin shouted, grabbing his friend by the arm to stop him falling.
‘Shit,’ Morghien whimpered, supporting himself on the wall with one hand, ‘He comes.’
Emin turned towards the circle and saw the air shimmer and prickle with tiny bursts of silvery-green light. A crashing sound came from nowhere and echoed through the small tower-room, sounding like the fall of a tombstone. Both men clapped their hands to their ears, wincing, as a second crash reverberated through their bodies. In the blink of an eye a tall, cowled figure appeared in the circle. The force of his arrival knocked them both backwards, but it was Emin who recovered his wits first. He dragged Morghien down to one knee.
‘You think to bind me?’ Death rumbled slowly.
The eight-foot-tall God towered over them both. His body was hidden by a long robe; in one hand He held a golden sceptre. With His free hand Death stroked the invisible barrier of the circle, His emaciated bone-white fingers and pitch-black, pointed fingernails leaving a trail of light in the air where they scored the barrier.
‘No, my Lord,’ Morghien gasped, flinching every time those fingers touched the barrier he’d created, ‘I would never presume such strength.’
Death looked down at the sheet on the ground inside the circle. His face was hidden in the shadows of His cowl but Morghien felt His gaze burning like a flame.
‘You presume too much.’ There was a growl of anger in Death’s voice and Morghien felt a flicker of panic. ‘I see a traitor before me.’
‘I had no choice,’ Emin said, feeling the God’s focus alight upon him. He chanced a look up and felt pulsing anger radiate over him, as Death’s power had once burned in his veins. ‘What was done in Scree was an abomination, but it was done to provoke a reaction; to undo the damage it did I must be free of its influence.’
‘And so you betray your God,’ came the booming reply. ‘Traitors to my name are heretic and there is only one punishment for that.’
‘My Lord,’ Morghien repeated, ‘can you not see the damage your wrath has done?’
‘I have killed unbelievers. They are of no consequence.’
‘The deaths are poisoning the Land against you, and Azaer exploits that.’
‘Azaer is a shadow, nothing more. I fear no God, no mortal - and certainly no mere shadow.’
‘That is what it is counting on,’ Emin insisted, a feeling of desperation welling up inside him. ‘It has made its weakness a strength. It goes unnoticed and unchecked.’
‘You have no need to fear the shadow,’ Death growled. ‘You need fear only me. You have walked away from the vow you took, and that makes you my enemy.’ It appeared to the two men watching that the figure looked off into the distance over Emin’s head. ‘You - and your blood; perhaps my punishment should be the son you watch over at night.’
‘No!’ Emin shouted, but before he could say any more, Morghien had plunged his hand into the pocket of his jacket.
‘We are not your enemy,’ he roared, rising. ‘You are blinded by what has been done to you, and you cannot see the danger emerging from the shadows!’
‘Kneel before your God,’ Death snarled, his voice crashing against their ears with savage force. ‘Kneel, or I shall strike you down and consign your soul to Ghenna.’
‘You will do neither,’ Morghien snapped, ‘and nor will you threaten a newborn out of pique.’ His fingers closed around the Skull in his pocket and a surge of energy flooded his body. ‘Our war is with the shadow - whether or not you see the threat, I will not let you stand in our way.’
‘You threaten me?’ Death roared, raising his sceptre.
In response Morghien pulled the Skull from his pocket and held it in the air between the chalk circles. ‘You are weakened, diminished by what happened in your temple in Scree. I have felt the Reapers in Lord Isak’s shadow. They are broken free of your grip and the loss has wounded you gravely. I may not have the strength to defeat you, even with this Skull, but you know the hurt it can cause you. To kill me will cost me more than you can afford.’
‘You declare war on your God? Such foolishness shall be your damnation.’
Death’s reply was considerably quieter. Morghien could feel His attention fixed firmly on the Crystal Skull. For creatures of magic, fighting from within a containing circle would be like an army fighting up a mountain slope, with every step requiring huge effort. The power of one of the Crystal Skulls would be like a river running down that slope.
‘I do not,’ Morghien said as calmly as he could with magic coursing through his body. ‘You are the Lord of Final Judgements and no mortal can deceive you. So I say this: I believe we serve your interests. I believe we do what must be done and that if we fail, so will our Gods. For this reason I must threaten you, for I cannot allow even you to stop us.’
‘You do not lie,’ Death said in an emotionless voice. ‘As misguided as your words are, I see your belief.’
Morghien pressed on, not even trying to understand the mind of a being so old and powerful. He just had to hope the God’s blinding wrath was not all-consuming, that there was some sense of the divine judge left.
‘Then please, accept my apology and permit us to go about our mission.’ He took a slow breath and played the last card he held. ‘At the end of the Wars of the Houses you appeared before Aryn Bwr as he was about to slaughter his defeated foes. You spoke to the fallen princes; you heard their words, and you forgave their deeds as honestly done. You prevented Aryn Bwr from wiping them out, and thus healed the rift between the noble houses.’
Death did not answer immediately. Morghien felt his chest tighten as the enormity of what he was doing struck home.
Bargaining a truce with Death?
What
am I doing?

You appeal for clemency? Very well, it shall be granted. I shall not destroy you or your nation for what you have done. But no more are you welcome in my temple. Your war is foolish and my servants shall give you no aid. Neither ally nor enemy, until the day of your judgement.’
Both men bowed, neither trusting themselves to speak in case they disrupted the fragile balance in the air. With an effort Morghien cut the flow of magic to the circle and reached out to scuff the chalk with his hand. It was a risk, but they had to take it.
Death remained motionless. Morghien could feel the God’s gaze on him, even with his head bowed low. In the next instant it was gone, and they looked up to find an empty room. The sheet lay where Emin had let it fall, but the shadow imprinted upon it had left the linen charred and crumbling. A gust of freezing wind blew in the window. A few flecks of ash skittered away over what remained of the sheet, revealing a sooty stain on the stone underneath.
‘By the Dark Place,’ Emin whispered hoarsely, ‘what have we done?’
CHAPTER 17
Mihn realised he was lurking outside the Chief Steward’s office. He kept to the shadows and ignored the men and women who walked past - he was not exactly waiting, nor exactly hesitating . . . He was glad the palms of his hands had at last stopped stinging. His feet were another matter, but he’d already padded his boots with wool and there was very little more he could do beyond easing from one foot to the other, an occasional, small reprieve.

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