The Shadowmage Trilogy (Twilight of Kerberos: The Shadowmage Books) (79 page)

“With your permission, I’ll want to scatter scouts on long-ranged patrols,” Renauld said. “If you are right about a Vos force in the area, I don’t want us to be surprised.”

“I’ll leave military matters to you, Sir Renauld. That is your field of expertise, as this artefact is mine. All I ask is that you do not allow them to interfere with my work.”

Renauld coughed, as if a little embarrassed, and that caused Tellmore to look back at him.

“Yes, about that,” said the knight. “Once you are sure exactly where we will be digging, I’ll be wanting to build a perimeter fence.”

Tellmore frowned. “That will take labour away from the digging, and there will be enough of that.”

“If it were completely down to me, Magister, I would insist on adding a ditch in front of the fencing,” Renauld said, holding up a hand in surrender at Tellmore’s look of alarm.

“We don’t know what Vos will do if they discover our location, and we have to assume they will. Let me rotate men in scout duty – they will accept the manual labour a lot easier if they can get regular breaks from it – and let me build that fence. I assure you, speaking as a military man, you will be thankful I insisted on that at least if we face an attack.”

Sighing, Tellmore relented. There was no sense in finding the location of the Guardian Starlight if he simply had to hand it over to the enemies of the baron soon after.

“I can make things easier, Magister,” Renauld said. “I’ll get that fence built in no time but I’ll assign a few men directly to you, so you can at least make a start on your own work. Then, as the defences near completion, I’ll send more and more hands to you. By the end of the week, you’ll have all the manpower you need, I am sure.”

Tellmore nodded, appreciating the gesture Renauld was trying to make. He had been in the company of knights before, and had usually found them bullish. This Renauld was different, perhaps because of his younger years. Tellmore rather got the impression that the knight was trying hard not only to succeed in the baron’s mission but do so without stampeding and riding roughshod over someone another knight might have simply assumed was a courtier. Despite himself, Tellmore found himself beginning to like the young knight.

“In that case, Sir Renauld, I would like to make an immediate start,” said Tellmore. “Assign your men to duties as you will, but I would be thankful for a handful to help me set up my tent and tools. Then, I can finally begin work.”

“As the Magister wishes.”

 

 

A
LONE IN HIS
tent, Tellmore supported his head in his hands as he stared down at the notes that covered the surface of the small desk. More were piled up in discarded stacks behind him, the results of his fruitless labours.

For three weeks he had been stuck in a makeshift fort he was now coming to despise. Three weeks spent in initial elation at getting to grips with the mysteries of the Old Races but quickly giving in to frustration as those same mysteries proved to become more and more impenetrable. After the first week, it had rained near constantly, his tent had flooded twice, and Tellmore was cold, wet, and getting angrier by the day at his inability to find the Guardian Starlight.

He might have consoled himself with what little good news there had been. Renauld had fulfilled his promise to complete the defences around the now exposed elven ruins by the end of the first week and turned most of his men over to Tellmore for the hard labour of shifting earth away from millennia-old foundations. The knight had remained in a good mood, apparently enjoying the change of pace his assignment was allowing him, and that simply grated on Tellmore’s nerves all the greater.

The scouts Renauld had deployed had spied an armed force to the north some days ago, but it had continued east without breaking step. Everyone in the camp guessed this was the Vos army sent to recover the artefact they sought, and they took heart not only in the enemy heading in the wrong direction but also that the force was reported to be much smaller than theirs and consisting only of cavalry – not much use against the five-foot-high fence they had erected around the ruins.

Tellmore knew he should be thankful for the small mercies but he had found himself stymied almost as soon as the first pale grey rocks of the elven settlement were exposed to the cold, and wet, light of day.

He still did not know whether they were standing on top of a village, outpost, castle, or some weird elven meeting point. The layout of the foundations they had so far discovered defied easy analysis. The men-at-arms would dig hard at his instruction, at first as eager as Tellmore to discover what lay down some mud and rock filled passageway that had lain dormant for countless centuries.

Then they would hit a dead end.

This happened time and again: a promising passage would simply end in a smooth and unbroken wall that, as subsequent experiments showed, was at least four feet thick. Tellmore could almost taste the whiff of older magics in the air when he descended into the ruins, and had at one point convinced himself that he faced a magical challenge, not one whose solution would be found in mere digging.

And yet, there was no centrepoint to the magic, no obvious ethereal construct that could be moved or manipulated. It just seemed to permeate the area, as if something magical were leaking.

He fervently hoped that the something was not the Guardian Starlight itself, and that they had not arrived a few hundred years too late to take advantage of whatever properties the artefact might bestow upon its wielder.

Tellmore knew his objective might be mere yards away, and he could not reach it. His frustration grew to enormous proportions. Renauld soon learned not to interrupt the wizard’s work for any purpose but the most critical.

A few days ago, men had started dying. The first was killed in a rockfall as a ceiling collapsed, and this was put down to inadequate preparation on that part of the excavation, coupled with a weakening of the soil due to the rain. Procedures were revised and work continued. Almost immediately, another man stepped on some sort of pressure plate that triggered a spike as thick as Tellmore’s own arm to shoot up from the floor, impaling the poor soldier from underneath.

At least he had died instantaneously but, as Renauld quietly pointed out, any more deaths of this nature were likely to have a negative effect on morale.

The deaths continued and increased in pace. More traps claimed lives. Pits opened up beneath the feet of soldiers, sending them plummeting into a dark void that was too deep for torches or lanterns to illuminate. Scything metal wheels erupted from walls to cut men apart at the waist, or sections of the ruins would spontaneously collapse, burying whoever was walking on top under tonnes of rock. Hidden reservoirs would flood passageways, drowning any who did not start moving at the first ominous rumbles though, it had to be said, the soldiers were certainly more alert now and false alarms were becoming just as common as real dangers. Either would send men spilling out of the ruins, screaming in raw fear.

Not blind to the panic around him and all too aware of stories of bloody mutinies in Pontaine’s history, Tellmore started to create protective charms, spells of shielding and absorption that robbed most traps of their lethality. Gradually, Renauld’s soldiers began to settle back down into the rhythm of work and progress began to be made.

Tellmore had felt a rush of elation yesterday when they finally broke into a new chamber that seemed to serve as some kind of entrance hall. There were no cobwebs in the darkest recesses of this chamber, nor layers of dust, just the same flat grey stone they had all seen throughout the rest of the ruins. The place might have been deserted only a month ago, and yet Tellmore instantly recognised the unmistakable pull of magic tugging on his senses, ancient though it might be, and he knew they had taken a large step towards their goal.

The flap of his tent was pulled aside and Renauld, his armour dripping with the rain still pouring outside, entered. His face, as it had remained since his men started dying on the expedition, was grim.

“We are ready for you now, Magister.”

Tellmore took a deep breath, closed his eyes briefly, and then stood.

“Good. Let’s finish this.”

Renauld held the tent flap open for the wizard, but could not refrain from the question that burned within.

“Do you think it will work this time, Magister?”

Tellmore gave him a sharp glare, a warning for the knight to keep his questions to himself lest someone in the camp overhear them. Pontaine troops had been known to mutiny before, and he feared the continued deaths would drive the soldiers in this camp to do something very foolish.

Drawing his cloak around him, Tellmore bent his head against the rain as he strode outside, Renauld quickly following. He kept his eyes to the ground, as much to avoid the stares of the soldiers as to shield his face from the rain, though he could feel the cold glare of each one, the blame for lost friends and comrades landing squarely on his shoulders.

Picking their way past the tents that had served as home for the entire camp over the past weeks, Tellmore and Renauld marched through the excavation area. What had once been a picturesque valley with lush grass had been transformed by the industry of the men-at-arms. Within the stockade, great mounds of earth were piled next to long trenches and shallow shafts, the glint of ancient grey stone flashing here and there as it shone in the first rain to touch it for thousands of years. Picking a careful path to avoid slipping on the thickening mud, Tellmore turned past a large pile of excavated earth and stepped gingerly onto a set of narrow stairs that descended underground and into a long passageway. His heart quickened its pace, as it always did when he came to this place. He could feel they were very close to their goal now.

They had broken into the chamber through a passageway that had started to slope downwards, and ended at the top of a wide flight of stairs that continued downwards to the chamber’s floor. The floor itself was tiled, though from the same rock as the walls, and spanned perhaps thirty yards from end to end. The ceiling was domed, though torchlight rapidly fell away from its tallest point, leaving it in darkness.

To either side of the chamber were narrow alcoves, two to each wall, and it had been presumed that either statues or guards had once stood there, though they were empty now.

Directly opposite the staircase lay a large stone door, between two pillars set into the wall and decorated with a single line of elven text that Tellmore had been labouring to decipher. No handle or bar was present to open the door, but he believed the text suggested that, under the right conditions, one merely had to push lightly against the portal, and it would swing open. He had theorised the door was at least a couple of yards thick and it had so far resisted any attempt to break through or tunnel round, usually with lethal consequences for the soldiers involved.

Four men-at-arms stood nervously between the alcoves, studiously avoiding a glance at the scorch marks that marred the grey stone floor before them, the results of the last attempt to pass through the door.

Smiling in a way he hoped was both confident and encouraging, Tellmore nodded to the soldiers, and strode past them to confront the door. It remained a grey, monolithic barrier but, as Tellmore reached out, his hand hovering just an inch away from its surface, he could feel the latent magical energies stored within and, just at the far reaches of his senses, the arcane throb of something else that lay beyond the portal, something old, ancient and powerful. He turned back to the men-at-arms.

“I have devised a new spell of shielding and protection,” he told them. “However, I won’t be using the normal magics taught at the Three Towers, but will instead bind the magic of this place itself into the spell.”

The men-at-arms looked at one another, and he cold see the doubt. He decided to use another tack.

“Basically, this means wreathing the protection spell with energies that the elves will have used themselves. It would be like... covering oneself with musk in order to approach a bear you are hunting, without it attacking you.”

That seemed to work, for a couple of the men at least, and he saw them steel themselves to the task,

“The spell will take only a moment to fashion – when I give the word, you need only approach the door, push gently, and it will open. You will be the first to see riches that have lain here, undisturbed, since before the nations of Vos and Pontaine even existed!”

Renauld, he noticed, had not come down the stairs and was standing with obvious nervousness at the entrance of the chamber.

Reaching into his tunic, Tellmore produced a small silk bag and, as he paced slowly around the men-at-arms, he reached into the bag and threw pinches of sand. Murmuring a chant as he did so, Tellmore continued his pacing, feeling the magic rush into him as he shaped the spell, infusing the energy into the sand as it drifted through the air to settle on the armour and weapons of the men.

Having paced round them three times, Tellmore stopped and his chant grew louder as he sought to snare the magical energy permeating the chamber, binding it into his own spell to combine the magic of man with that of the elves. It was a strange feeling, like nothing he had felt before; he could liken it to wrapping his naked body in a single expanse of silk, but one that felt at once warm and inviting, as well as utterly alien. There was immense power to be used here, but he saw the dangers inherent in his own lack of knowledge. He just hoped that what little energy he was siphoning from the chamber would not unbalance any other defences that they had not yet discovered.

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