Read Thomas Covenant 8 - The Fatal Revenant Online
Authors: Stephen R. Donaldson
comfortless sunlight. Rather the river seemed thick with Earthpower and slaughter.
Covenant had called the Forestal an out-and-out butcher.
At last, he stopped with his boots on the jagged verge of the plateau. Now it was Linden who kept her distance, from him as well as from the cliff. For a while, he waited for her to join him. Then he turned to face her, sighing
quietly.
When the water comes out down there”-he indicated the base of the sheer drop behind him-“it’s sort of red. In the right light, it looks like blood. The ichor of the Earth. But Wildwood uses it to wash the death out of Gallows Howe. That’s what turns the river black.”
Without pausing, he said, “Your kid makes doors. All kinds of doors. Doors
from one place to another. Doors through time. Doors between realities. And doors that don’t go anywhere. Prisons. When you walk into them, you never come out. Ever again.”
Linden gripped the Staff of Law until her knuckles ached; bit down sharply on her numb lip until she felt the pain; said nothing. Her son had such power-
“I can’t explain how he does it. Talent is
always a mystery. But I can tell you a couple of things.
“First, he has to have the right materials for the door he wants to make. Exactly the right wood or stone or metal or bone or cloth-or racetracks. And they have to be in exactly the right shapes. In theory, he could have made a box or portal to take us straight here from Revelstone just after Damelon arrived.
“Incidentally,” Covenant remarked,
“that’s how we were going to make sure Damelon didn’t know we were there. Jeremiah would have built a door to hide us.” Then he continued.
“But in practice, he didn’t have the right materials. There wasn’t enough”- Covenant spread his hands- “whatever he needed in Revelstone. And putting one of his doors together takes too long. The ur-viles were always going to try to stop us. Plus no
one ever knows what Esmer might do.
“No,” he asserted. we had to travel the way we did. And we had to use you and the Viles to distract Wildwood so we could get the wood your kid needs for this door. Without it, the Elohim are definitely going to interfere.
“That’s the other thing. The Elohim. They’re-I don’t know how to put it.” His mouth twisted in disgust. “They’re vulnerable to certain kinds of
structures. Like Vain. Maybe because they’re so fluid. Specific constructs attract them. Exactly the right materials in exactly the right shape. Other structures repel them. Or blind them.
“That’s one reason Findail haunted you the way he did. As hard as he tried, he couldn’t get away from Vain.
“With the right materials, Jeremiah could make a door to lure the Elohim in and never let them out. Which is what
the Vizard wanted. They wouldn’t be able to stop themselves. But this door they just won’t look at. It’ll take us where we want to go, and they won’t know we’re doing it.” Covenant gave another stiff shrug. “Hell, they won’t even know they don’t know.”
Linden stared in awe. Her son could do such things. The idea filled her with wonder and reverence; potential joy. Jeremiah had always been precious to her, but now he seemed priceless in
ways which she could not have imagined.
Yet the mystery of his abilities was also fraught with anguish. She had not known: she had never known. Now he was going to be taken from her. Again. Just when she had finally been granted a glimpse of his true nature—
We’re only an hour or two away—
Beyond question, she needed to be
clear.
Abruptly Covenant changed directions. “Of course, we don’t have to do this. It’s not too late. You can still give me my ring.”
She met his lightless gaze without faltering. “Then what?”
He failed to hold her stare. Something within him appeared to cringe or hide. Glancing aside, he frowned at the
uneven rock of the plateau.
“Then we go back where you and your kid belong,” he said flatly. “I stop Foul. And put Kastenessen out of his misery. With that kind of power, I can find where Foul’s been keeping Jeremiah. When Joan dies, the caesures stop. Everybody lives happily ever after.”
“And what if-?” Linden began. Then she halted. For Jeremiah’s sake, she did not wish to provoke Covenant.
“Go on, say it,” he urged without rancor. “What if I’m not telling the truth? Isn’t that what scares you? Isn’t that why you’re afraid to trust me?’
Instead of answering directly, she countered. “Covenant, what’s happened to you?” Encouraged by his restraint, she risked saying. “You talk about how much strain you’re under, but it was always like that. Ever since I’ve known you, everything has always mattered too much, there were always
too many lives at stake, the Land was always in too much peril.” And he had judged himself harshly, accepting his own hurts while he struggled to spare the people around him. “But you didn’t react the way you do now.” He had tended her when she had been most frail; wounded and broken. Even when she had opposed him, possessed him, he had covered her with forgiveness. “Now you don’t seem to care about anything except making me do what you want.”
For a moment, he looked at her, still frowning. His eyes were empty, unreadable; devoid of depth. Then he bowed his head. His fingers tapped against his thighs as if he required an outlet for a tension which he was determined to conceal.
“I miss my life, Linden.” He seemed to address the grass stains on her jeans. “I miss living. When you made that Staff, you trapped me. I know it’s not what you intended, but it’s what you
did. I’ve been stuck for millennia. Its made me bitter.
“I yell because I hurt. And I don’t tell you everything because you don’t trust me. I don’t know what you’re going to do. I’m sure you won’t hurt your kid, but I don’t know what you might do to me. If you won’t give me my ring-” His tone suggested that she might destroy him out of spite.
Slowly he raised his eyes until he
appeared to be studying the band hidden under her shirt. “That’s why I need to be sure we’re clear. I’m stretched too thin for any more surprises. I have to know what you’re going to do.”
There Linden reached her decision.
Jeremiah had made his choice. He wanted her to prevent Joan’s death from banishing him. He wanted to stay in the Land, conscious and whole. With
Covenant. The EarthBlood would enable her to grant his desire.
Then she would lose him forever. For his sake, she could bear that. In addition, she would be lost herself, trapped ten thousand years before her proper present. And in this time, she and her Staff and Covenant’s ring would pose a profound threat to the Arch of Time; a living affront to the Land’s history. But she could worry about that later, after Jeremiah and the
Land had been spared. She could even set aside the conundrum of Roger, the peril of Joan’s white gold. Such things were problems for a future in which she would play no part.
Nevertheless Covenant’s underlying falseness surpassed her. She could not suffer it.
He feared the Staff of Law. He insisted that any contact with her would unmake the distortion of Time which
allowed him-and Jeremiah-to exist in her presence. Yet Berek’s touch, Berek’s awakening strength, had not harmed him. And he showed no fear when he proposed to approach the Land’s purest and most potent source of Earthpower.
He wanted her to believe that she was more fatal to him than Berek Halfhand or the Blood of the Earth.
When he had said to her in dreams,
Trust yourself, and, You need the Staff of Law, and, Linden, find me, he had sounded more true to himself, more like the man who had twice redeemed the Land, than he ever did when he spoke in person.
More than once long ago, she had believed that he was wrong; that his actions would lead to loss and doom. More than once, she had tried to prevent him. And he had shown her that he had made the right choice. By
the simple force of his courage and love and will, he had forged salvation from the raw materials of disaster.
But he had done so without imposing his desires on her. Nor had he ever-not once-suggested that she was responsible for his dilemmas.
Do you not fear that I will reveal you?
Therefore she did not hesitate. Carefully neutral, and deliberately
dishonest, she replied. “We’re clear. Jeremiah will take us to the EarthBlood.” She was astonished that her voice did not tremble. Yet it remained steady, as if she were stronger than the stone of Rivenrock. “You’ll drink it and use the Power of Command. After that, you’ll disappear,” undone by the scale of the powers which he had released. “and I’ll take my turn so that I can save Jeremiah.”
She had made her choice.
Nevertheless she prayed that she was wrong; that she would be given a reason to change her mind; that Covenant would do or say something to account for his lies-or perhaps merely to show that he cared about her fate. The man whom she remembered would not have been content to abandon her in the depths of Melenkurion Skyweir.
But this Covenant seemed to have no room in his heart for her. Lifting his
head, he let her see the flicker of embers in his eyes as he said. “Good.”
With that one word, he sealed her decision.
Beware the halfhand.
When they returned to the center of the plateau, Linden found her son
.. -
constructing what appeared to be a crude cage. Around a clear space large enough for at least three people to stand without touching each other, he stacked crooked branches to form walls. Some of the limbs looked so heavy that he must have had difficulty lifting them: others seemed too slight and brittle to support the weight above them. And they gave the impression that they were precariously balanced, almost haphazardly poised on top of each other. Yet he worked steadily,
without faltering or hesitation. Guided by an instinct beyond her comprehension, he used his stolen boughs and twigs as if they were Tinkertoys or pieces of an Erector set, and all of his movements were certain. Even his maimed hand never fumbled.
With unconvincing nonchalance,
Covenant asked, “How’s it going, Jeremiah?” but the boy did not answer. His concentration was as complete as it had ever been in Linden’s living
room. His eyes had resumed the muddy hue with which she was familiar-the color that she had learned to love-and he seemed lost in his task; reclaimed by dissociation.
Already he had raised the walls of his construct to the height of Linden’s chest. When she walked around it in a vain attempt to understand it, she saw that he had left a gap in the side toward Melenkurion Skyweir’s cliffs. Once we climb insideFor a moment, she
wondered whether the opening would be too small for her. But he knew what he was doing. If she turned sideways, and handled the Staff carefully—
Without apparent effort, Jeremiah picked up a log which he should have needed help to lift and put it in position, propping its ends atop branches that were obviously too unstable to hold its weight. Yet the structure did not topple: it hardly wobbled. Then it seemed to become visibly sturdier.
As he began to devise a roof for his edifice, Linden felt faint emanations of power from the construct. And they grew stronger with every added branch. Somehow the shapes and positions and intersections of his materials evoked a form of theurgy from the dead wood.
His magic did not smell or taste familiar. Certainly it did not resemble any manifestation of the Earth’s essential vitality that she had
encountered before. Nor did it remind her of the darkness of the Viles, or the malign vitriol of the Demondim. It did not imitate the illimitable liquid possibilities of the Elohim, or Esmer’s storm-charged potency, or the dangerous eagerness of wild magic. Yet she discerned no wrongness in the energies of the construct; no violation of Law.
Linden’s son had brought into the Land a form of puissance entirely his own.
When he had finished bracing and balancing dead limbs to fashion a roof, the entire construct seemed to thrum with constrained readiness. At the same time, it looked as solid and irrefusable as the rock of its floor. And on a level too visceral for language, it called to Linden. Although the wood was dead, it possessed-or Jeremiah had given it-a palpable intention, a will to be used. In spite of her rapt surprise and her many fears, she wanted to enter the portal immediately.
But this was Jeremiah’s magic, not hers. She needed his instructions or permission: she owed him that. Out of respect for his talent, his accomplishment, she waited until he stepped back from his task and looked around, first at Covenant, then at her.
“Good,” Covenant pronounced with obvious approval. “That should do it. Looks like we’re ready.”
Linden’s reaction was stronger. When
Jeremiah met her gaze, blinking as though he had been asleep, she allowed herself a moment of simple humanity. “Oh, Jeremiah, honey,” she breathed. “My God. You said that you could do this, but I had no idea-I didn’t really understand. This is the most wonderful-“
Her throat closed. Under other circumstances, her eyes would have filled with tears. But there was no room for weeping or grief in what she meant
to do.
His tic intensified, signaling until he could hardly open his left eye. “I’m glad you like it,” he said bashfully. “I could do a lot more, if I had the right things to work with.”
Then he faced Covenant again. “We should go. You’ve been under too much strain for a long time.”
Covenant grinned fiercely. “I’m ready. If
I get any readier, I’m going to rupture something.”
He must have believed that he had persuaded Linden-
“Then, Mom-” Jeremiah kept his face turned away from her. You go first. Be careful with the Staff. It won’t fit. You’ll have to poke it through a gap. Once you’re inside, get down on your hands and knees at the back. Brace yourself. Well be in there with you. When the
ground shifts, you might touch one of us. Or the Staff might. We won’t have room to dodge.”
“All right,” she murmured. “I
understand.”
She approached the opening slowly, searching for the best way to enter. She did not fear treachery here. It would serve no purpose. But she had to be sure that she did not dislodge any detail of Jeremiah’s design.