Read The Unwilling Warlord Online
Authors: Lawrence Watt-evans
Tags: #Fantasy, #magic, #Humour, #terry pratchett, #ethshar, #sword and sorcery
This response caught Sterren off-guard, and his tongue stumbled over his answer.
“I . . . that . . . I mean, that’s not . . .” He paused, caught his breath, and tried again.
“What I meant was, are you aware that Semma is in very serious danger?”
“No,” Agor replied calmly. “Is it?”
“Yes!” Sterren collected his wits, and continued, “This is what I don’t want you telling anyone. A war with both Ksinallion and Ophkar is coming, and soon. I expect both of them to attack as soon as the mud dries in the spring. And we don’t have a chance of defeating them; we’re outnumbered four to one, and our army is in terrible shape, and I’m the warlord, but I have no idea at all how to run a war, or even how to get these damn soldiers to take it seriously!”
“Ah,” Agor said, his face blank.
“Yes,” Sterren said.
“So you expect to lose a battle? Do you want me to try and get a god’s blessing on our troops, is that it? I don’t suppose that would violate the ban on using magic to fight wars.”
“No! Or at least, not just that, though I suppose it couldn’t hurt.” He paused, considering. “Would it really help?”
“No,” Agor said, without an instant’s hesitation. “I’ve explained this to everybody before, but I suppose you weren’t here. The gods don’t approve of war or fighting, and they won’t have anything to do with it. They don’t take sides.”
“I don’t approve of it, either! Are you sure they wouldn’t be willing to take into consideration that we’re being attacked, that we don’t want to fight?”
“It wouldn’t matter. The gods swore off war after they wiped out the Northerners two hundred years ago, and they don’t change their minds easily. Besides . . .” This time Agor did hesitate, but at length he said, “Besides, can you tell them that we did nothing to provoke an attack?”
“I didn’t do anything!”
“But did anyone?”
Sterren remembered what Lar had told him about King Phenvel’s behavior. “I suppose so,” he admitted.
“Then the gods won’t help. At least, not directly.”
That reminded Sterren of his original intention in visiting Agor. “But they might indirectly?” he asked.
“Oh, certainly. It might seem odd to a layman, but the fact is, the gods tend to be very careless indeed about the long-term consequences of their actions. You could probably get a great deal of useful advice from them, as long as it’s not overtly military.”
Locating a powerful wizard would hardly be overtly military, but Sterren decided to check out other possibilities first. He asked, “Could they, perhaps, do something to stop Ophkar and Ksinallion from attacking? Start a plague, or something?”
Agor was visibly shocked by the suggestion. “A plague? My lord, how can you think such a thing?”
“Could they?” Sterren persisted.
“No, of course not! My lord Sterren, I am a theurgist, not a demonologist! The gods are good; they do not do evil. Plagues are the work of demons!”
Sterren’s cynicism, drummed into him by years on the streets of Ethshar, came surging to the fore. “The gods don’t do evil?” he inquired, sarcastically, remembering that he, himself was in Semma, facing eventual execution, because of a god’s interference.
“Well,” Agor said, “not directly. Sometimes their actions can have evil consequences, for some . . .”
“I would think so!”
“. . . but they won’t start a plague, or anything else like that.”
Sterren considered this.
Agor was probably right. After all, he was a theurgist, and surely he knew his business. All his life, Sterren had heard from priests and theurgists and even laymen that the gods were benevolent, that they did not approve of any sort of destruction or disorder, that the evil in the World was due to demons or human folly.
It was probably true.
Or if not, at least it was probably true that he, Sterren of Ethshar, would be unable to get the gods to take his side in the upcoming war.
“All right,” he said, “we’ll forget that idea, then.” Another thought popped into his head, though, and he asked, “Might they protect us from the invaders? Stop the war somehow, or at least provide us with what we need to withstand a siege? You say they don’t like war; could they prevent this one?”
“Excuse me, my lord, but wouldn’t that violate the traditional ban on magical warfare?”
“What if it did?” Sterren snapped, his frayed temper breaking. “I never agreed to any such ban, and I’ll be killed if we lose this war! I’m no Semman, and I think it’s a stupid tradition.”
“Ah,” the theurgist said, nodding. “I see.”
“Does breaking the ban bother you?”
“Well, not really; it’s none of my business.”
“Then, can the gods do something to prevent this war?”
Agor hesitated, and chewed his lower lip for a moment before replying, “Well, maybe . . .”
“Maybe?”
Agor blinked uneasily and shifted on his sheepskin. “Well, actually, my lord, they . . .” He stopped, visibly unhappy.
“They what?” Sterren urged.
“Well, actually, my lord, some of the gods would probably be glad to do that sort of thing, but . . .”
“But what?”
“Well . . .” Agor took a deep breath, then let it out and admitted, “But I don’t know how to contact them.”
Chapter Eleven
Sterren stared at the bony theurgist, who stared back miserably.
“What do you mean, you can’t contact them?” Sterren demanded. “Aren’t you the royal theurgist here?”
“Yes, my lord, I am.”
“Are you a fraud, then?”
“No,” Agor said, with a touch of wounded pride visible through his dismay, “I’m not a fraud; I’m just not a very good theurgist.”
“You aren’t?”
“No, I’m not. Ah . . . do you know anything about theurgy?”
“I know as much as most people, I suppose,” Sterren said, glaring.
“But do you know anything about how it actually works?” Agor persisted.
“No, of course not!”
Agor nodded, as if satisfied with Sterren’s answer. “Well, my lord,” he said, “it’s like this. A theurgist is just a person with a natural talent for prayer, who has learned how to pray in such a way that the gods will actually listen.”
“I know that,” Sterren said sharply.
“Well, anybody can pray, of course, but the odds are that the gods won’t hear, or won’t answer. Have you ever wondered, my lord, why the gods don’t listen to everybody, but they do listen to theurgists?”
“No,” Sterren replied flatly. This was not strictly true, but he didn’t care to be sidetracked.
“Well, it’s because of the prayers we use. We learn them as apprentices, just as other magicians learn their spells. The gods are too busy to listen to everything, but there are certain prayers that catch their attention, just the way certain sounds might catch your ear, even in a noisy place — the rattle of dice, for instance.”
Sterren realized that Agor really had taken an interest in him; coming up with that particularly appropriate example could not have been a coincidence. His annoyance faded somewhat. “Go on,” he said.
Agor continued, “Some people are better at some prayers than others. I don’t know why, they just are — just as some people are better at drawing pictures, or singing.”
Sterren nodded. He knew, first-hand, that some people had a talent for warlockry, while others, like himself, emphatically did not, and he could see no reason other magicks, such as theurgy, should be any different.
“There are many, many gods, my lord. I only know the names and prayers for nineteen of them; that was all my master knew, and all he could teach me during my apprenticeship. It’s not a bad number, really. Many of the best theurgists only know a dozen or so specific prayers, and I’ve never heard of anyone who knew more than perhaps thirty, unless he was also dabbling in demonology — except we don’t call those prayers, we call them invocations or summonings.”
“So you can ask nineteen different gods for help, but only those nineteen?”
“Yes, but really, not even all those. You see, as I said, some people are better at some prayers than others. Some gods are just harder to talk to, too. And I know nineteen names and prayers, but I can’t get all nineteen of them to listen to me. Or at least, I never have. Maybe I learned a syllable wrong somewhere, or maybe they just don’t like me, but I can’t get all of them to listen.”
Sterren saw where this was leading. “How many do listen to you, then?” he asked.
“Usually, three,” Agor replied nervously.
Sterren stared. “Three? Out of nineteen?”
“I told you I’m not really a very good theurgist,” Agor said defensively.
“How did you ever wind up as the royal magician, then?”
“The royal magician to the court of King Phenvel III of Semma? Of Semma, my lord? You’re from Ethshar; you know better. If I were any good, would I still be here?”
“I suppose not,” Sterren admitted.
“I was born in Semma, but I ran away from home when I was twelve, and served my apprenticeship in Lumeth of the Towers. I couldn’t make a living there, though, and I didn’t speak anything but Semmat and Lumethan, so when I got tired of starving in Lumeth I came back here, where there wasn’t any real competition. They don’t care if I can only talk to Unniel, Konned, and Morrn, because nobody else here can talk to any of the gods!” A trace of pride had crept into Agor’s voice.
“Unn . . . Who were those, again?”
“Unniel, Konned, and Morrn. Unniel the Discerning is the goddess of theurgical information, Konned is a god of light and warmth, and Morrn the Preserver is the god of genealogy.”
“I never heard of any of them,” Sterren said.
“And how many gods have you heard of by name?”
“Not many,” Sterren admitted. Laymen virtually never bothered with names, since only theurgists could count on getting a specific deity’s attention. Usually prayers were directed to categories of gods, or just any god who might be listening, to increase the chances of reaching someone.
Sterren realized he could not name a single god, other than the three Agor had just mentioned — and he didn’t think he could pronounce two of those. Konned was easy enough, but the diphthong in Unniel and the R sound in Morrn were very alien indeed.
“So, could any of those three help us?” he asked.
“I don’t see how,” Agor replied. “Morrn is completely useless; all he does is keep track of family trees. If you need to know your great-great grandmother’s childhood epithet, or when your third cousin was born, he can tell you, but that’s it. He’s been very useful to me, since all the nobility of Semma are obsessed with family, but a war is completely out of his area.”
“And Konned?” Sterren did not care to try pronouncing Unniel.
“Well, if you make a regular sacrifice to him, he’ll provide you with supernatural light at night, brighter than any candle, and he’ll keep you warm in the winter, so we don’t have to worry about freezing during a siege — but that’s about it. And freezing isn’t very likely in Semma anyway.”
“And . . .”
“Unniel’s our best hope, I suppose. She knows everything there is to know about all the other gods, and sometimes she can be coaxed into carrying messages to them; I found you by having her call her brother Aibem for me. I know a prayer for Aibem, but I can never make it work right, so when I really need him, sometimes I can get him through Unniel. Aibem is a god of information; I’ve never found anything he doesn’t know, but getting him to tell me what I’m after is usually like trying to catch a black cat in a dungeon at midnight. Unniel can also talk to the dead, sometimes — not all the dead, just certain ones, and I have no idea why.”
“Information? Couldn’t Unn . . . Unniel or Aibem tell us how to avoid the war, then?”
Agor shrugged. “I don’t know,” he said. “Maybe.” He sighed. “It’s too bad I could never get Piskor the Generous to answer; she provides food and water and advice, and that would be ideal if we’re besieged, wouldn’t it?”
“It would help, certainly,” Sterren agreed.
They sat in moody silence for a moment, thinking.
Sterren considered what he had just been told, and decided that he did not care to rely on the gods for help.
That meant returning to his original intent of locating a really powerful magician and somehow buying a miracle. Agor, it appeared, did not qualify.
“So, Agor,” he said, “are there any other theurgists in Semma?”
“No,” Agor answered. “It’s too bad, because I wouldn’t mind having someone to talk theurgy with.”
“What about other magicians? Do you know of any?”
“Oh, certainly! When I first got the job here, naturally I looked over the potential competition. It turned out I had nothing to worry about.” Sterren suppressed a groan at this news. Agor continued, “There are a few village herbalists, of course, and a couple of local shamans who seem to be more fraud than anything else. There are two wizards in the whole kingdom; one’s here in the castle, where he helps out in the kitchen, and the other’s in a village to the east. The one here in the castle used to be the other’s apprentice, I think.”
He paused, thinking.
“I don’t remember exactly how many witches there are; four or five, I’d say. None of them are in the castle.”
“What about sorcerers, or demonologists, or warlocks, or thaumaturges, or . . . or anything?”
“Well, demonology is illegal, of course, and I haven’t found any outlaw demonologists, but I suppose one could be hiding somewhere. The gods can’t see demons, usually. Sorcery is illegal, too, I suppose because the Northerners used to use it so much, and I know for certain there aren’t any sorcerers.”
“And warlocks?” He used the Ethsharitic word, since he had never heard a Semmat term.
Agor looked puzzled. “What’s a warlock?” he asked.
“Another sort of magician,” Sterren explained. “We’ve had them in Ethshar for about twenty years now.”
Agor shrugged. “I never heard of them,” he said.
That accorded well with Sterren’s suspicion that warlockry did not work in Semma, that the Power in Aldagmor was too far away. Quite aside from his losses at dice, surely, if warlockry were possible, there would be warlocks.
“Anything else?” he asked.
“Not that the gods would tell me about. Believe me, I’ve asked them.”
Sterren nodded. No mysterious hermits, then. He could not help asking, “You’re absolutely sure there aren’t any you’ve missed?”
“I could have missed a demonologist, and maybe one of these warlock things you mentioned, but that’s all.”
“How good are the two wizards? And the witches?”
“My lord Sterren, the younger wizard is working in the castle kitchens, lighting fires and entertaining the cooks; how good do you think he is? And they always say you can judge the master by the student.”
Sterren did not entirely believe that particular proverb, but he admitted that the older wizard could not be much of a miracle-worker. “What about the witches?”
“Well, my lord, none of them ever gave me any competition for the post of royal magician; does that tell you enough?”
Sterren had to agree that it did. He stared at the gleaming silver hasp on a nearby trunk, trying to think what else he could ask.
“My lord Sterren,” Agor said, after a thoughtful pause, “do you really mean to use magic to fight this war?”
Sterren started. “Of course I do!” he shouted. “How else am I going to get out of this alive?”
“In that case, my lord, I don’t think you’d want Semman magicians in any case. They’ve all been raised in the tradition of using no magic in war. Wouldn’t it make more sense to get your magicians from somewhere else?”
“I suppose so, but where?”
“Ethshar, of course.”
“Of course,” Sterren said sarcastically. “Except that I’m not allowed to go back there!”
“Really? Well, then you could send somebody. But are you really sure you aren’t?”
Sterren opened his mouth, and then closed it again.
Because of the way he had arrived, he had assumed that he would not be allowed to leave Semma, but nobody had ever actually said that. And certainly, there were all the magicians he could ever need in the Wizards’ Quarter of Ethshar of the Spices.
Not that they would be eager to go gallivanting off to Semma to get involved in something as nasty and unpleasant as a war. He would need a powerful incentive.
Gold would work just fine, of course.
Sterren didn’t have any gold himself, but Semma’s royal treasury contained a good bit of the stuff. As warlord, his officers had assured him that he had access to the treasury for legitimate military expenses. He didn’t even need the treasurer’s cooperation; as warlord, he outranked the treasurer.
However, he did need the king’s permission for any expenditures out of the ordinary.
Sterren realized that it was time to speak to the king.