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Dan-Tor stared out into the greyness that encompassed Narsindalvak. The garish light from the globes illumi-nating the room turned the slowly swirling mist outside the window a pallid white. At the Ffyrst’s feet was a small constellation of dull red stars where his blood had dripped from the barbed end of Hawklan’s arrow still protruding from his side.
Behind him, Urssain and Aelang stood silent and watchful; like the Mathidrin as a whole, loath to be there but bound to him more than ever.
‘How serious is this?’ Dan-Tor asked eventually, without turning round.
The two men exchanged a glance. ‘Very serious, Ffyrst,’ Aelang said. ‘We think that commanders Faron and Groniev are committed to it-and most of their senior officers. Their men will follow them almost certainly, of course.’
‘Of course,’ Dan-Tor echoed softly. ‘And the other commanders?’
‘They’ll wait,’ Aelang said awkwardly, after a dan-gerously long pause.
Dan-Tor’s lips parted to reveal his white teeth in an expression that was neither smile nor snarl. His own image stared back at him from outside, faint and transparent, and seemingly surrounded by the glowing white mist. It taunted him. Great Uhriel, where is your power now? Your vaulting ambition? Bound and blind, and surrounded by ants who think themselves ravening wolves. Will you still be here when Creost and Dar Hastuin are fawning at His feet and receiving His favours? Toying with your remnant soldiers and bleating over the ill-chance that took Fyorlund from you and stuck you like a hunted pig?
‘No,’ Dan-Tor muttered.
‘I beg your pardon, Ffyrst?’ Aelang said, leaning forward intently.
‘No!’ came an awesome, cavernous, voice in reply.
The two Mathidrin froze. The voice was the voice of Oklar. His presence, his malice, filled the room, filled their bodies and their minds leaving space for nothing but himself.
‘It will not be!’
Both Urssain and Aelang had seen the anger of the Uhriel rise up within the Ffyrst before, and even though its terrible purpose had never been directed towards them, they found it terrifying beyond words. It was as if they were falling into the infinitely deep maw of some flaring, malevolent, volcano.
Neither dared to move. Both knew that if one had committed some inadvertent folly, then for the other to seek to aid him would be to do the same, and meet the same fate.
But, as quickly as it had come, the awesome pres-ence faded until it was like a thunderstorm in some far distant valley. Both men remained silent.
‘Why do you bring this to me?’ Dan-Tor said even-tually, his voice and presence normal again. ‘You’re more than able to attend to such… administrative… problems without my aid.’
‘With respect, Ffyrst, this is more than a minor problem,’ Urssain said, speaking for the first time. ‘We knew something was being plotted, but we presumed it was against us, as usual. It was only when two of our informants in Faron’s company met with "accidents" that we even began to suspect how serious it was… ’ He paused.
‘And?’ Dan-Tor prompted.
Urssain looked quickly at Aelang, who nodded.
‘They intend to seize the tower and attempt to make a peace with the Lords.’ Urssain concluded his denun-ciation more hurriedly than he had intended.
There was a long silence. Eventually Dan-Tor raised a hand delicately. ‘And where am I in this… new peace?’ he asked quietly.
Urssain hesitated momentarily. ‘You are to be… assassinated, Ffyrst.’
Dan-Tor frowned uncertainly at his mist-shrouded double hovering outside as a long forgotten sensation stirred within him. It took him some time to identify it. It was amusement.
Its rebirth however, was brief, as Dan-Tor’s black corrosive scorn choked its faltering sunlight.
He turned away from the window and sat down.
‘And you are concerned for my welfare, command-ers? he inquired, looking first at Urssain and then Aelang.
Urssain had stood next to the Ffyrst too long to even attempt the lie that the question seemingly sought. He could however risk an oblique statement of the stark truth.
‘You destroyed half of Vakloss with a gesture of your hands, Ffyrst,’ he said. ‘You have powers beyond our understanding. No one could assail you and hope to live. It’s a measure of Faron and Groniev’s folly that they should even contemplate such an idea. But if their treason is allowed to take too strong a root in the men before it’s torn out then we could find ourselves fighting our own, and that would be disastrous for our cause.’
Dan-Tor appreciated Urssain’s attempted subtlety, especially the reference to ‘our cause’, but suddenly he felt irritated.
It was as if Dilrap was buzzing about him again with his eternal mind-clogging swathes of regulations, procedures, ‘respected traditions’, and who knew what other petty restrictions that he deemed necessary for the quiet, subtle overthrow of Fyorlund.
Here, however, on the borders of Narsindal, Dan-Tor’s vision and purpose were clearer and he refused to have either clouded by such pettifogging human trivia. Yet Aelang and Urssain were correct. A major upheaval amongst the Mathidrin and the renegade High Guards would risk destroying them as a fighting force, espe-cially if it occurred within the claustrophobic confines of Narsindalvak. It might be a measure of Faron and Groniev’s folly that they imagined they could eliminate him as though he was just another Mathidrin officer standing in their ambitious way, but it was also a measure of the seriousness of their intention that he had not detected it himself.
In dwelling too long on the fate that had brought him here and on the deep, silent, purpose of his Master, he had allowed himself to drift too far away from these unreliable and fickle creatures upon whose backs he must necessarily ride to achieve victory.
It was a salutary reminder, he realized. Now, it seemed, others too were in need of the same.
‘Come with me,’ he said, standing up abruptly.
Faron and Groniev were holding an officer’s meeting when Dan-Tor entered with Aelang and Urssain in his wake. On the wall behind the two conspirators was a large map showing Narsindalvak and most of what had been Dan-Tor’s estates in northern Fyorlund. Marked on it were the dispositions of the watching High Guards.
The two commanders came smartly to attention and there was a great scraping and clattering of chairs as their officers hastily stood up.
‘Sit down,’ Dan-Tor said tersely. ‘I have something to show you which it will be in your best interests to take full note of.’
Aelang and Urssain kept their faces impassive, though Aelang’s eyes gleamed at the tone of the Ffyrst’s voice.
‘Ah, you’re still studying our position, I see,’ Dan-Tor went on. Walking to the map he turned his back on Faron and Groniev and began to study it thoughtfully.
‘What’s your assessment of our position, gentle-men?’ he said after a moment.
Faron’s eyes flickered uneasily to Aelang and Urs-sain. He was visibly disconcerted by this unexpected appearance of the Ffyrst, so long ensconced and distant in his eyrie. Groniev however, answered calmly and immediately.
‘It’s adequate for our present needs, Ffyrst,’ he said. ‘But leaves much to be desired if the High Guards move against us in force, as they probably will when the snows have cleared.’
Dan-Tor continued examining the map. ‘This tower fortress is the symbol of the High Guards’ faith and strength, commander,’ he said. ‘It’s generally regarded as being unassailable. Do you think it can be lightly taken from us?’
Urssain quailed inwardly at Dan-Tor’s reasonable tone. Groniev shook his head. ‘No, Ffyrst,’ he said. ‘But I don’t think it has to be. Narsindalvak’s a watch tower and barracks. Enemy movements can be seen at great distances and forces launched against them, but until we join up with the Mandroc divisions we’re in no position to venture out against numerically superior forces. And if we don’t venture out, we’ll be besieged and by-passed, and the Lords will be able to march into Narsindal to find the Mandrocs leaderless.’
Dan-Tor nodded. ‘You think that superior force in an enemy is everything, commander?’ he said.
Groniev looked at him uncertainly. ‘Not everything, Ffyrst,’ he risked. ‘Though it depends on the extent of the superiority. Knowledge of the enemy, leadership, terrain, are also important factors.’
‘Vastly superior force, then,’ Dan-Tor offered, turn-ing slightly.
Groniev nodded. ‘Vastly superior force must tri-umph, Ffyrst,’ he said.
‘And vastly superior force together with knowledge of the enemy, leadership, etc?’ Dan-Tor continued.
Groniev, relaxing now, shrugged a smiling conces-sion of the obvious.
‘What would you call a leader who knowingly led his men against an opposition so armed, commander?’ Dan-Tor said.
Groniev frowned a little, still uncertain about the direction of this conversation. He searched for an answer. ‘Insane,’ he decided. ‘Or suicidal.’
‘Yes,’ Dan-Tor said quietly, as if wearying of the subject. ‘Of course.’
A whirring silence filled the room.
Then, turning to Faron, Dan-Tor said, ‘What insan-ity prompted you to move against such odds, commander? Or are you, as your co-conspirator suggested, suicidal?’
Urssain felt a faint twinge of sympathy for the as-sailed commander.
Faron did not reply but gazed back at Dan-Tor like some timid animal held by the gaze of a predator. Groniev, spared Dan-Tor’s gaze, understood their position immediately.
Urssain watched in disbelief as the man drew a knife.
With seemingly timeless slowness however, Dan-Tor turned and, before Groniev could lunge at him, seized his tunic, dragged him forward and hurled him into the paralysed Faron. The two men staggered across the room and crashed brutally into the wall.
Urssain found himself almost gaping at the specta-cle. He had stood and quaked before the Ffyrst many times, in fear of some terrible, if unknown, retribution, and he had seen others worse affected; but he had never seen him resort to actual personal violence. Strangely he felt the action should have demeaned the man in some way; but it did not. Both Faron and Groniev were heavy and powerful men, well used to dealing with physical assaults, but Dan-Tor had hurled them across the room as effortlessly as if they had been mere playthings. Urssain noticed that he was not even breathing heavily.
Groniev slithered to the ground, stunned, but Faron lurched forward from the impact. As he did so, despera-tion broke him free of whatever fear had restrained him. With a cry of pain and anger he bent forward, snatched up the knife that Groniev had dropped and in one smooth movement hurled it at Dan-Tor.
It was a swift and powerful throw and the knife struck Dan-Tor squarely on the chest.
Then it clattered to the floor.
He doesn’t wear armour, Urssain thought, but his momentary bewilderment vanished as Dan-Tor stepped forward and, taking hold of Faron, lifted him clear of the floor and hurled him against the opposite wall of the room. Again the deed seemed to be effortless.
Urssain needed to feel no pulse to realize that this second impact had killed Faron, but it was Dan-Tor’s casual indifference that chilled him. It was far worse than any callousness or wild-eyed cruelty.
Dan-Tor looked down at the fallen knife. He opened his hand and the knife rose up into it.
Then he extended his other hand, palm upwards, and drove Groniev’s knife into it. It did not penetrate. No scratch appeared, nor blemish. He repeated the attack several times but the hand remained uninjured. ‘You could not wield the weapon that could injure me, commander,’ he said. Then, as if bored, he tossed the knife away idly.
Groniev meanwhile had struggled to his feet. He was leaning against the wall, his eyes wide with terror and rage.
Dan-Tor cast a brief glance at the broken body of Faron, then turned to Groniev. ‘Superior force, com-mander,’ he said quietly. ‘Indeed, vastly superior force.’
Groniev did not reply.
‘And I know my enemy, commander, do I not?’ Dan-Tor went on. ‘I know his very heart; his darkest, closest, fears.’ The tone of his voice made Urssain shiver. Dan-Tor held out his arm to the stunned audience. ‘As for leadership, let your men choose now who they wish to follow.’ No one moved.
‘What was your other point?’ he said thoughtfully. ‘Ah yes, the terrain. Well… ’ He paused. ‘I know and understand that better than you can begin to imagine.’
Groniev, still leaning on the wall, looked hastily from side to side, seeking an escape from his plight. Urssain felt again a brief sympathy for this fellow creature caught in the path of a force he could not begin to understand, but it faded rapidly. The man had seen the destruction of Vakloss; if he chose to dispute with its perpetrator then let him take the consequences.
Dan-Tor raised his right hand towards Groniev as if he were about to offer a blessing. With a flesh-crawling screech of protest, a wide and jagged crack appeared in the wall immediately behind the commander and, with a surprised cry, he tumbled backwards into it.
Several of the watching officers moved forward instinctively but a wave of Dan-Tor’s left arm froze them all where they stood.
Groniev managed to regain his balance, but even as he did so, the crack closed a little, wedging him tightly and he let out a brief but unexpectedly fearful shout.
Urssain remembered that Groniev had a morbid and abiding fear of enclosed places. He felt Oklar’s spirit filling the room.
‘I know and understand my terrain, commander,’ Dan-Tor repeated. Then, slowly, as if to a foolish child, ‘And I am master over all that shape and form it. From the weather-blasted peaks of the highest mountains, through the choking, suffocating dust of the southern deserts, to the rocks that lie bound helpless and airless in the dark, crushing, depths far below us; the rocks from which this tower is built.’
As he spoke, the crack slowly began to close and Groniev began to struggle desperately.
‘Do you doubt this, commander?’ Dan-Tor contin-ued.
Groniev opened his mouth as if to reply, but all that emerged was a choking cry; a cry of terror that began to rise rapidly in pitch and intensity, until it was a howling, pleading scream.
Urssain then saw that the crack was not crushing Groniev as he had imagined, but closing around him so that soon he would be entombed. Groniev’s scream became one of primeval, inhuman terror. Urssain tried to swallow, but could not; the scream seemed to resonate with every tiny, unreasoned fear lurking in the dark unknown reaches of his own spirit. And it went on and on and on…
Then the crack was gone, closed utterly, and the last shrieking note of Groniev’s nightmare rose into the dank silence of the room and died.
All that could be heard then was a faint and distant stirring as of some tiny burrowing rodent scuttling behind a panel, though it seemed to Urssain that the whole room was vibrating with the frenzy of Groniev’s demented struggling.
Dan-Tor stared pensively at the wall for a moment. Urssain noted that he was leaning slightly towards his wounded side as if it were troubling him.
The officers, somehow released from their paralysis, seemed unable to look at each other. All were pale and visibly shaken. Some sat down heavily, as their legs refused to support them. One man vomited.
Dan-Tor remained standing, staring at the wall for a long time, as if awaiting some event, then, though he made no movement that Urssain could see, the crack opened again, silently and suddenly, and Groniev slithered from it. As he crawled clear, the crack closed with what, it seemed to Urssain, was almost a sigh.
Groniev lay at Dan-Tor’s feet and made no effort to rise. His choking breaths were as inhuman as had been his screams.
Dan-Tor signalled to two men at random. ‘Take him and leave him in the valley somewhere,’ he said.
Wrinkling their noses, the two men hoisted Groniev into a standing position. He was unable to walk so they placed his arms roughly around their shoulders and hauled him hastily from the room. His feet dragged lifelessly.
Urssain stepped aside as they passed. Groniev’s finger nails were torn and bloody. And he stank! Urssain’s stomach heaved as the smell wafted past him, but he fought down the spasm. Worse than that was the slack-jawed mouth and the dreadful blankness in Groniev’s eyes. Whatever he had been, he was that no more. The Ffyrst had weapons far worse than death ready to hand.
Dan-Tor watched the departure of the would-be usurper impassively and then turned his attention to the shocked officers, awaiting their own sentence in silence. Those who had sat down, stood again, as inconspicu-ously as they could.
‘As for you, gentlemen,’ Dan-Tor began. ‘I own to a mistake.’ His voice, however, lacked the self-reproach of the words. ‘A mistake in trusting in your loyalty, a mistake in imagining that you knew where your best interests lay, a mis… ’
‘No, Ffyrst,’ began the cries before he could con-tinue.
‘We were lied to and misled-threatened-forgive us, Master,’ was the gist of the ensuing babble.
Dan-Tor watched impassively. Then he stepped forward and walked among them. Tall and straight, and the desperate focus of all there, he was like a hunter surrounded by his fawning dogs.
Abruptly, he was almost avuncular. ‘Gentlemen,’ he said, smiling. ‘I think perhaps you persuade me. These… misunderstandings… are the inevitable conse-quence of our confinement here. Men such as yourselves-warriors-fretful at such inactivity when a treacherous enemy lies so near, can easily fall pray to the corrupting forces that pervade these times. But you are officers, leaders, you must be vigilant. Doubts and lies can be as deadly weapons as swords and spears.’
He looked around at his audience. ‘Sit down,’ he said, making a signal to Urssain and Aelang to remain standing. ‘I reproach myself a little for allowing this to arise. I’ve been too long away from you, occupied with matters of wider strategy. Tell me now your fears and concerns so that I can undo the work of those traitors.’
Despite his seeming warmth and charm, the stark images of the recent violence were still far too clear in the minds of all present for them to rush into sudden camaraderie with their enigmatic leader, but equally, a silence might be just as dangerous.
‘Why are we here, Ffyrst?’ came a hesitant voice eventually. ‘Why did we flee when we could have held and defeated the High Guard?’
Urssain could hear his pulse throbbing in the silence that followed.
But there was no explosion. Dan-Tor’s smiling rea-sonableness remained.
‘You did not have my view, captain,’ he replied eventually. ‘Neither of the battlefield nor… of the conflict on other planes.’ He paused as if searching for a simple explanation. ‘It’s true, you could well have held the field, but the Fyordyn were aided in ways which I was unprepared for. Aided by powers that you know nothing of.’ He paused again briefly. ‘As you know, they had been inspired by the Orthlundyn, Hawklan, a strange fanatic who had already attempted to kill me at the very gates of my palace. What you could not know, and what I learned almost too late, was that he has dabbled in certain ancient arts and has somehow acquired a skill in them; a skill far beyond his under-standing-a child wielding a great and powerful sword.’ He leaned forward confidentially. ‘Had I resisted him as he rode secretly amongst the High Guards then, in his flailing ignorance, he could have unleashed forces that might have destroyed us all. It was no easy decision for me to quit that field, but I had no choice. I had to let slip what we had won together to save my best men for another time.’
A long silence greeted him, this was the first coher-ent explanation of the retreat from Vakloss that had been offered to the Mathidrin. Very cautiously, the original questioner pursued his inquiry. ‘But what of Hawklan, Ffyrst? He lives still. Will his… power… be any the less in the future?’
Urssain, deeply sensitive to Dan-Tor’s moods, felt the distant rumbling of the Uhriel and held his breath in anticipation. But it faded, or was restrained, and Dan-Tor smiled-almost laughed-again. ‘Hawklan offers us no threat now, captain,’ he said. ‘Nor in the future. His strength lay in surprise only. I have his measure, and should he choose to ride against us again I’ll demon-strate to him what skill in his chosen art really means.’
There was just enough barrack-room bravado in his voice to set his listeners alight; he had caught their mood and their needs exactly. Clapping his hands together, he straightened up; his tall lank frame dominated the room.
‘Don’t let the narrowness of our confinement here make you forget that this is no small venture we’re employed upon,’ he said. ‘You mustn’t take to heart the loss of a few petty privileges in Vakloss, and a little… sparseness… here. One day, not too long away, you’ll look back on this time and smile at yourselves for fools. The One that I follow, is bringing together the many threads of His intent. Soon, you will be leading our vast Mandroc army out of the interior. An army that will sweep through the waiting Lords like an icy winter wind through dead autumn leaves. An army that will move irresistibly down through Orthlund and Riddin and out into the world beyond, where all will fall before you and where His bounty will give you power and wealth such as you would hesitate to dream of now.’
Urssain recognized the rhythms and inflections he had heard echoing across the torchlit crowds in front of the palace at Vakloss and he felt the thrill of the other listeners as Dan-Tor’s words reaffirmed his own ambitious intent.
However, Dan-Tor finished this harangue with a dark and, for some of those present, familiar warning. ‘Remember this day above all others, and the fate that has befallen those who defied me. The choice is yours; be you my faithful servants and you will be rewarded as my power grows. But recall. You are bound to me and by me. You can be expunged at my whim and others found. Serve me well.’
As they walked away from the now crushed rebel-lion, Urssain keeping a respectful pace behind his master, noted again that the Ffyrst was leaning slightly to his injured side.
It occurred to him briefly to make some sympathetic inquiry, but no sooner did the thought arise than others rose hastily to silence it; the demon in the Ffyrst was far too close to the surface for such a risk.
‘Do you want the companies broken up, Ffyrst?’ Aelang said.
Without pausing in his long strides, Dan-Tor shook his head and replied, ‘No. They’ll be no more trouble now. Besides, things will be happening shortly-we’ve no time for re-organizing our company structure. Promote Castarvi and Mendarran and put them in charge. Tell them it’s a field commission-provisional-that’ll encourage them to stamp out any lingering problems those men are having with their loyalty.’
The two Mathidrin exchanged a brief look. It was a good choice and also a small lesson or themselves; it told them that the Ffyrst had not distanced himself from his troops as far as he affected. Castarvi and Mendarran were both young, capable, and ruthlessly ambitious, and both had conducted themselves well on the field at Vakloss and in the subsequent retreat. Urssain and Aelang would be able to claim credit and thus loyalty for their promotion, but at the same time Dan-Tor had pointed up his warning-‘Others can be found.’ They would both need to be watched.
A salutary lesson, Urssain thought later, alone in his own quarters. In a few brief minutes Dan-Tor had not only quelled the incipient rebellion, he had fired the whole force occupying the tower with a new resolve; the tale of the destruction of Faron and Groniev and Dan-Tor’s subsequent speech would have been retailed to everyone in the tower within the hour. The terrifying physical strength, hitherto never suspected, had been grim surprise enough, but his antics with the knife and the horrific destruction of Groniev had told everyone in the Mathidrin exactly who commanded them in terms they understood. And the promotion of Castarvi and Mendarran would send ripples down through every rank as the jockeying to replace them began.
Yet above all this had come the mention of Him; and His plans. That had been more than a surprise. Urssain could not remember when he had last heard Dan-Tor refer to these world-spanning intentions, and certainly he had never heard them aired so freely.
He felt excitement, ambition and fear-terror, even-ring within him. Part of him wanted to flee; flee back to a life of petty thieving in the old unchanging Fyorlund of Rgoric and the Geadrol, of village Redes and their Pentadrols. But even had he not participated in the destruction of that order, he had been shown too much now for such thoughts to be ever more than fleeting distractions on his journey forward in the wake of his master.
Yet what kind of a man could it be to whom even Dan-Tor would bend his knee? And what kind of a place was Derras Ustramel, His great fortress, whose very name was whispered nervously, if it was mentioned at all? No one that Urssain knew of, save Dan-Tor himself, had ever been there, and even his visits were rare.
In front of Urssain glowed some of the genuine radiant stones he had had the foresight to ensure would be stored for him here in preference to those concocted in Dan-Tor’s workshops. But even their sunlight could not reach the inner chill that possessed him when he thought about the dank mists that for most of the year pervaded the outer reaches of Lake Kedrieth and the great Mandroc barracks that lay there. And beyond the mists…
Involuntarily, Urssain wrapped his arms about him-self and gazed into the glowing stones.
Mimicking his aide, Dan-Tor too sat still and silent in his eyrie, high in the mist-shrouded tower. The arrow in his side ached dully through his use of the Old Power in dealing with Groniev but he scarcely noticed it. The very triviality of the events had heightened his growing inner turmoil at the bleak impotence of his position.
Silence.
All was silence. Here, in Narsindal, His will could reach out and touch His servant, but…
Silence.
And darkness too. The seeing stones of Narsindal-vak saw the surrounding mountains and valleys, even, to some extent, through the mist, but what of Fyorlund and Orthlund and Riddin? Where was that silent, elusive demon, Hawklan? Had that horse witch Sylvriss truly reached Dremark and perhaps raised the Muster to seek vengeance for her husband’s death?
These were matters of no small tactical importance.
Then, thoughts that had not come to him for eons. How fared his detested comrades, Creost and Dar Hastuin? Sent forth, as he had been, to seize the peoples of their old domains, had they returned in triumph while he languished in this prison, bound and blind, and contending yet with these feckless and inadequate humans? Was that why He sent no word? Was Oklar, first and greatest of the Uhriel to be the butt of their mockery because chance had wrenched Fyorlund from him? Was he to place his hand beneath the feet of Creost and Dar Hastuin? The thought was unsupportable.
He stood up and turned to the window; a circle of dark grey in the darkness of his room. No double mocked him here. Nor would any mock him ever, save Him… until…
Red glaring eyes blazed in at him from the mist.
It was his own gaze. He turned away from it sud-denly as if, even at this great height, some unseen observer might read this last, dangerous, scarce-formed thought, in his face.
He must have his true sight again! The thought burned inside him as never before. The bird held by the Cadwanol must be torn free so that the Vrwystin a Goleg could see again!
But with this accursed arrow in his side he could not use the power, and if he could, there still lingered the fear that such use might inadvertently awaken Ethriss.
The thought of the Guardian, terrible and vengeful, rose before him. Yet even as it formed, other, quieter, thoughts came with it. The Cadwanol, alerted now to the wakening of Sumeral must surely be putting forth their greatest power to find and waken their erstwhile master. And their power was not trivial if it could bind the Vrwystin a Goleg.
Yet Ethriss slept still.
Wherever he was, he was beyond their reach! And beyond the reach of any casual disturbance.
New patterns formed in the Uhriel’s dark mind. Calm resolve entwined itself around his mounting rage to form an unholy duo. The bird must surely lie at the heart of the Cadwanol’s stronghold. Released, it would not only give Dan-Tor his eyes again, but it would show where that heart lay and, with that, the destruction of the Order could be assured. For destroyed they must be. At best they were an unknown factor in any impending conflict, while at the worst they might yet awaken the Guardian; their very survival through the ages beto-kened a patience and will not to be ignored lightly.
And with his eyes and his power restored, he would once again have the true vision of an Uhriel. He could tolerate the cloying masquerade that he was obliged to maintain to fire these creatures about him, and no enemy could stand against him; not the Muster, the Lords, that seeping, corrosive sprite, Hawklan, nor those upstarts for His favour, Creost and Dar Hastuin.
Dan-Tor nodded to himself. Several ends could be served here.
His surging passion burst through its restraint and he reached out his power deep and distant; under the cold mountains and across the plains of Fyorlund until, reluctantly, it shied away from the touch of the Great Harmony of Orthlund. For an instant he felt an almost overwhelming urge to shake this, his domain, and tumble these irksome creatures into oblivion, though it shatter his mortal frame utterly.
He would tolerate this impotence no longer.
He would wait His will no longer.
He would do that which had never been done.
He would go to Derras Ustramel. He would seek an audience.