Hastily Baleron dressed, kissed Amrelain, and descended to the royal armory to be armed and armored. There the other princes had already gathered and were with some assistance preparing for battle. The princes talked little among themselves, but all were tense. Baleron joined them and soon was properly outfitted.
He left with them to meet their father in the courtyard before the Castle. The king was mustering mounted troops, and he was already wearing his spiked armor and death’s-head helm. Chill wind howled all around. To the south, a tide of dark clouds, flickering with lightning, swept this way.
A troop of knights assembled in King’s Courtyard. Grooms led out horses, and knights donned last pieces of armor or weaponry.
Onnng sounded the endless bells beyond. Onnng. Onnng.
A groom brought out Baleron’s black mount (also armored) and the prince heaved himself into the saddle. Once mounted, he exchanged grim looks with the other princes, who were likewise swinging astride their steeds.
“We’ll show that damned vampire,” said Larik. He sounded especially young, even though he was older than Baleron. “Ungier and his ‘stogs won’t get past our wall!”
“We’ll send him packing, all right,” promised Kenbrig, the oldest after Rilurn.
Rilurn, whose face looked especially tight, said, “Maybe he’s come for Baleron.” To Baleron, he added, “Maybe he missed you.”
Kenbrig chuckled.
Baleron said nothing, only met Rilurn’s gaze unblinking.
“We don’t have time for this,” the king said. “Save your anger for Ungier.”
At the head of the procession, King Grothgar led them all down King’s Road toward the South Gate, and Baleron and his brothers followed behind him. Alarm bells continued to toll ominously throughout the city, and the thunder of horse hooves echoed off the tiled roads. Teams of oxen pulled catapults and ballistae. The air tasted of storm.
As he wound up the street, Baleron saw townspeople scurrying about, seeking shelter or provisions. Men rounded up their families and ushered them into storm cellars, then armed themselves and rushed toward the wall to reinforce the troops.
The royal company reached the southern arc of the wall, where soldiers frantically hurried into position—some on the ramparts and towers of the Wall, some near the gates, some running messages or errands. Captains shouted orders. Sorcerers meditated or drew strength from elvish artifacts. Catapults were wheeled into position. Archers formed lines.
Thunder rolled across the sky, shaking the earth.
“The storm draws near,” Logran noted.
The king ascended a stair and joined his captains on the ramparts of the Wall near the high white arch of the South Gate. Baleron, Logran and the other princes followed. Here the wind was even colder, and Baleron felt a few chill drops of rain beat at his helmet.
The first he saw of the enemy were the glarumri. There seemed to be hundreds, maybe thousands of crow-riding Borchstogs wheeling and spinning through the sky, whole columns of them slipping through flashing tongues of lightning.
“Is the aerial shield in place?” Albrech asked Logran.
Logran patted his breast, where Baleron assumed the Flower of Itherin to be. “It is,” he said. “I only wish it could keep out the ground force, as well.”
Albrech told a nearby captain to pass the word along the wall not to worry about the fliers. “Tell them to concentrate only on the ground force,” Albrech said.
“Yes, sir,” said the captain and hurried off to spread the word.
General Kavradnum approached. He, too, wore thick, stylized armor, but his helm was in the shape of a lion’s head.
“How goes it?” Albrech asked.
“The men are in position. Many are new recruits, their training incomplete. I’ve sent messages off to the other cities, demanding aid, but that will take some time. Days, maybe weeks.”
The enemy host drew nearer and nearer, and Baleron cursed when he saw the great wave of Borchstogs and trolls and gaurocks—the terrible Serpents, given the capital S because they could stretch two hundred feet or more—and vampires and great arachnids and more hastening over the rough, rolling countryside, firing farms as they went. The farmers would have abandoned their homes and fled to the city at the first sign of the army.
“There must be tens of thousands,” Baleron whispered.
“Tens of tens.”
“This is your phantom army,” General Kavradnum told him with some rancor. “Do you wish to send troops to Larenthi now? Surely we can spare a few.”
Baleron said nothing.
The general scowled at him a moment, then moved on down the wall, directing troops.
The prince had brought along a spyglass, and, taking the opportunity to squint through it, through the rain and darkness he watched the enemy march closer and closer. He panned the faces of hundreds of Borchstogs. They wore jagged, spiked armor and helmets shaped like the heads of wolves and demons and boars and more. He saw actual monsters of a hundred descriptions, but perhaps what chilled him the most were the giant armored arachnids. He’d never seen their like before.
“The Spiders—they’re the igrith,” Logran explained. “The direct brood of Mogra. Malicious and intelligent.”
“Mogra,” Baleron repeated, stunned by the thought. She was no more real to him than a legend, a name out of myth, said to be not only the lover of Gilgaroth but also his mother, if such a thing could be true. “Is she ... here?”
“I doubt it,” Logran said. “She likes to work behind the scenes, like the spider she is. But I have heard reports that she’s on the move, that she has taken an active part in this war. She is a seductress, a shape-changer, great and powerful, more ancient than the world itself.”
He moved on, and Baleron resumed his study of the oncoming army. At last he found the figure at the head of the host, the figure who rode a great black gaurock alone, batwings folded behind him. The light was dim, but Baleron thought he saw Ungier laughing, his scabrous head thrown back, his fanged mouth agape, shoulders shaking.
“I’ll have your head mounted and stuffed and put over my fireplace before I’m through,” Baleron whispered. “See if I don’t.”
Though no longer laughing, Ungier seemed smug as ever. His jagged crown was gone from his head, and his all-black eyes narrowed in disdain as he observed the human city. Thunderheads rolled across the skies and lightning struck the ground like white-hot whips all around.
The vampire’s host didn’t pause. It surged forward relentlessly, inexorably.
Baleron expected them to stop their march beyond arrow and catapult range, then ring the city and set about laying siege. But instead Ungier led his army on, and on, closer and closer. Baleron found himself holding his breath. He had been pleasantly tired and drunk an hour ago, but now he was as sober and alert as he had ever been in his life, perhaps more so.
“Catapults—fire!” Albrech shouted.
The catapults launched flaming pitch over the Wall and into the ranks of the oncoming army. The payloads struck. Dozens of Borchstogs died instantly in flashes of fire.
The army swept forward steadily, never breaking its relentless pace.
Logran led his sorcerers in summoning Light from elvish artifacts, in directing the flows of energy. White beams shot from the ends of their staffs, or from their palms and eyes, and lanced into the Borchstogs, setting many aflame.
Still the army came.
Ungier led his host within arrow range.
“Arrow—fire!” Albrech ordered.
The archers fired. A hail of arrows arced over the Wall and struck down Borchstogs and others.
“Fire at will!”
The archers fired again and again. The air thrummed with the sounds of raining arrows.
Finally Ungier’s host reached the clearing around the city wall itself. Ungier blew a horn; it looked to Baleron like the blackened horn of a Grudremorqen. At the signal, a dozen gaurocks, each two hundred feet long or more, surged forwards across the clearing. These were well armored; in particular, their heads were sheathed in thick metal with three long, strong iron spikes sprouting forward from the face.
“They’re going to ram the Wall!” Baleron cried.
He grit his teeth; one great serpent was aiming directly for the section of wall upon which he stood. Rain bounced off its onrushing iron spikes.
Logran pointed his staff at the creature, and a lance of light shot out of its end and burned through the gaurock’s helmet and into its head. It shrieked. Smoke rose from its flesh. Still it came.
The beam of light intensified, ate into the monster’s brain, and the serpent stopped its charge, wailing horrifically, writhing about in the throes of death.
Only a few gaurocks succeeded in ramming the wall, and the sorcerers bolstered the Wall so that none got through. But their charge successfully distracted the mages so that they could not assist repelling the first wave of Borchstogs.
Braving a hail of arrows, the demons marched right up to the Wall, and Baleron grimaced; they stank of offal and rotted meat. Their red eyes flashed in pitch-black faces hidden behind terrible masks of ghouls and monsters.
They threw up ladders and one thunked into the Wall right before him. He drew his sword with a grnnng, wishing it were Rondthril.
Borchstogs climbed.
“Fight well, my sons!” shouted Albrech, gripping his own sword tightly. “Make me proud!”
Baleron peered over the side of the ladder that was thrown up before him. A steady stream of armored Borchstogs climbed toward him.
“Be steady!” shouted Albrech, to everyone. “Be strong! Be swift!”
The first Borchstog reached the top.
It wore an eel-head helm, and its red eyes blazed with bloodlust. It opened its mouth in a howl of rage, and lightning reflected off of sharp teeth.
Baleron stabbed it in the face through the eye-slits of its helm. A shock ran up his arm. With a sickening crunch, he jerked his blade free. The demon fell away, off the ladder into the throng below.
The next one came. He stabbed at its neck. Its gorget protected it. The blow went wild. He kicked its chest. It fell away, growling and grasping for his ankle.
More streamed up, and Baleron fought them alongside his brothers and his father. To either side of him, soldiers did battle with the demons upon the wall while a seemingly endless wave of Borchstogs poured over the lip.
The air overhead rippled with reddish color when the field was struck by a glarumri, and the great birds cried out and flew away.
Ungier had his own sorcerers, however. These threw down lightning upon Logran’s shield, which shimmered and rippled under the assault—but held. They caused the very ground to quake, and Baleron lost his footing more than once, but he fought on, though he felt naked without Rondthril. He missed the sword’s bloodlust and its power, and he hoped Logran finished with it soon.
Baleron slashed and stabbed, kicked and cursed. Borchstogs fell away, dead, but more kept coming. And coming.
He booted one now in the chest, nearly impaling his foot on a spike in the process, and it tumbled off the ladder.
He chopped down on another’s helm, and the vibration nearly wrenched the weapon from his fingers. If he’d had Rondthril, the helm would’ve split, but as it was the Borchstog was merely stunned. Baleron kicked it in the face and it fell to the ground ten yards below.
He swung his sword past the next one’s neck guard and half-severed its head. Black blood jetted high. He danced back, as the blood was a poison; it would not kill him, but it would burn him and weaken him, maybe blind him.
The dead Borchstog’s grip on the ladder held firm. The corpse refused to yield its hold. The next Borchstog up had to climb over its body.
This one looked up at Baleron just as lightning flashed, and its red eyes widened. “Ul Ravast!”
Baleron grimaced in distaste. “That’s right,” he told it solemnly. “I’m the Ender. So, devil, meet your end.”
His blade bit into its neck. No gorget protected this one. It gurgled and died.
More came. He lost himself in a frenzy of violence, and for a time he forgot who he was, what he was. His mind burned.
He was dimly aware of soldiers fighting to either side of him. His father the king in his thick, spiked armor and death’s helm also fought, wielding a heavy broadsword. He wasn’t a large man, but he was stout, and he wielded his weapon expertly. Prince Rilurn fought beside him. Archers shot their bolts into Borchstog necromancers below, who conjured spells against the Men. Logran and his sorcerers made the ground quake and split beneath enemy feet and hurled down searing beams of light. Necromancers caused sicknesses and hallucinations among the Men. Catapults from within the wall released flaming loads of pitch that passed (with his will) through Logran’s shield and smote ruin among the onrushing Borchstogs.
Baleron continued to fight. Sweat and blood flew.
Around him, soldiers fell. Human as well as Borchstog corpses began to litter the catwalk.
Soon he saw one stir.
“Mogra’s dugs!” he swore.
The body, a young soldier no more than seventeen years old, picked itself up. It had an arrow through the neck and another through the heart, but it was moving. Its eyes were blank, lifeless, its movements jerky and odd.
It ambled toward Baleron, arms outstretched, ready to tear into him. Another undead thing joined it, a bearded man whose head was cloven in.
Baleron gritted his teeth. Anything but this.
“Find the vampire!” he shouted to a squad of archers nearby. “Kill it!”
He saw that down below, half hidden in the fury of advancing Borchstogs, a daughter of Ungier was grinning, bloated and smug and bat-like. Like all vampires, she could animate the dead.
The archers found her and sent a rain of arrows hurtling down at her. She waved a claw, conjuring a strange wind, and knocked the arrows aside.
The undead soldiers closed in on Baleron, but he was busy repelling Borchstogs and could not spare a moment to deal with them. Their hands clenched and unclenched, eager to tear his flesh from bone.
Another hail of arrows sought out the vampiress, and again she sent them away. But the effort distracted her just enough for the undead things closing in on Baleron to pause, to waver.
A Borchstog leapt up the ladder. Baleron chopped down on its head and it fell. Taking a moment, he kicked the walking dead into the ranks of men on the inside of the wall, and the living soldiers set about securing or dismembering the dead.
Baleron turned back to the fight. The vampiress had gone.
The battle stretched on, and Baleron tired, his sword now dull. Glarumri wheeled through the skies, frustrated by Logran’s shield. Some flew low, shooting poisoned arrows into the men on the wall. Havensrike archers fired back.
Ungier for his part did not fight openly in the conflict but rather conducted the battle from afar. Baleron could see him now and again, as he often winged over the battle, directing his battalions from the air. Havensril archers fired at him, but he was far away and his power was greater than any other vampire. No shaft struck him.
Enemy catapults hurled flaming loads of pitch at the city and its wall, but Logran’s shield disintegrated them if they passed too high yet allowed the missiles of Havensrike to pass through in the other direction.
But the deadly rain did not concern the Borchstogs and the other darkspawn. Ungier’s army kept rolling up the walls, and the men kept resisting. The great losses the Borchstogs incurred did not give them pause; they did not value life as the men did. They depended on sheer numbers to overwhelm the Havensri, and numbers they had. Wave after wave broke against the walls, and their black blood smoked upon the stone and poisoned more than a few Havensrike soldiers. Baleron once got a spurt of the black stuff in an eye, and it temporarily blinded him, and made him so sick that another soldier had to man his position until he cleansed his eye with a squirt from his water-gourd.
As he retook his position, Baleron saw something that seemed to stop the very turning of the planet.
He saw the Lord of Oslog, Enemy of the Light, Breaker of the World, out from behind the Black Shield of the Aragst.
Gilgaroth had come himself to the war.
* * *
Gilgaroth had drawn a veil of darkness about himself, and he could only be seen as a great shadow, his fiery eyes blazing from the darkness. He surged forward, indomitable. It was hard to tell through his shadow, but Baleron thought he’d taken the form of the Great Wolf, that half-mythical shape that Baleron may or may not have seen three long years ago in the Aragst, and had seen once more for certain at the fall of Celievsti.
Baleron swore. A general had led a battalion of troops beyond the wall to fight the Borchstogs openly, and, seeing Gilgaroth himself, the general led his men toward the Omkaroggen, apparently meaning to kill him.
“What courage!” Kenbrig said.
“What idiocy!” snarled Albrech. “The fool’s wasting my men!”
Gilgaroth moved towards the advancing men, his fiery eyes ablaze through the veil of shadow, and then, too suddenly, he cast aside the veil. All beheld the terrible figure of the Great Wolf, and like a wolf he was in many aspects, but he was a thing of nightmare, the Architect and Lord of the Second Hell, and his form reflected his nature. Gilgaroth towered over his thralls, and yet he was of normal size once more, or a little larger, perhaps fifteen feet at the shoulder, not the giant he’d become after swallowing Celievsti’s essence.
Where did that energy go? Baleron wondered. What did he do with all that power?
Gilgaroth’s long jaws thrust forward and snapped a Havensrike soldier up, biting him in two, then belched flame into the faces of some who had come to attack his flank. His huge head whipped out again and picked up another victim, this time the general himself, and chewed the screaming, thrashing man, before swallowing him, soul and all. Flame gouted from between the long sharp teeth as the general disappeared.
“Damn him!” said Albrech, and Baleron knew he didn’t mean Gilgaroth.
Surprisingly, the Dark One did not seem to have come as a leader of the army, for he commanded no host. It did not even seem that the Beast had come to inspire his minions with his presence, as he did not call to them or spur them on in any way. Rather it seemed that he’d come simply to kill, to taste the blood and flesh of Men upon his tongue and the feel of their bones snapping between his jaws.
Here was a god participating in a war fought on his behalf, and he was wallowing joyfully in the slaughter. It was awesome. Baleron shuddered to watch him. Many arrows, some aflame, some poisoned with Light, arced through the air and struck at the Beast, but all burst into flame before reaching him.
Gilgaroth sent down lightning bolts upon the Walls. He released wrathful spirits from the Second Hell. Visible as shadow-like wraiths, or wisps of smoke, red or black or green, they assailed the Men on the Walls, and Logran and his sorcerers spent much of their energy driving the wraiths away.
Sometimes when Baleron looked at the Enemy, he saw Gilgaroth as a giant figure, as tall as a mountain, as high as the clouds, dark and swollen with awesome power. But then he would simply be the Great Wolf, menacing and strong, certainly, but flesh, and flesh on a relatable scale. There was more than one reality at work here, Baleron understood; there was Gilgaroth the god and Gilgaroth the material being; what Baleron could see of him was only the smallest part of him. The rest didn’t exist on this plane, if that was the way to think of it.
At one point Gilgaroth lifted his long, hairy snout and howled at the black sky above, wraiths swarming about him, living shadow throbbing, and Baleron shuddered all the way down to his toes. A heavy weight seemed to come over him, clouding his mind. The black tide kept coming. Mustering his strength, Baleron returned to the fight.
One of his brothers, he thought it was Larik, shouted, “Will it never end? When will they stop?”
About two hundred paces to Baleron’s right, an armored gaurock rammed the wall. The sorcerer assigned to that section either was too weak or had been slain. The monster broke through. Instantly, the gathered knights and townspeople within the wall slew it, by blade and by bolt, but even before its death throes ended a tide of Borchstogs riding murmeksa, the tusked, hog-like creatures, charged in through the gap.
Havensril sorcerers converged on the spot, and the Enemy’s necromancers greeted them. The ground split, lightning flashed, and combatants burst into flame as the mages warred.
Baleron had to turn his attention back to the Borchstogs streaming up the ladders. He only hoped the sorcerers, knights and townspeople would be enough to repel those coming through the breach. If they failed, the war would be lost right then.
He chopped down on the Borchstog at the top of the ladder, but the darkspawn raised an armored forearm and deflected the blow. It whipped its arm around and actually seized Baleron’s wrist.
Baleron cried out in shock as the Borchstog jerked him towards the spikes protruding from its helmet.
The Borchstog’s red eyes widened then, and he hurled the prince back.
“Ul Ravast!” the Borchstog shouted. “Roschk ul Ravast!”
A Havensrike archer shot an arrow though its eye. The Borchstog tumbled away. Baleron lay there near the parapet gasping for a moment. A mistake. The next Borchstog was upon him, over the wall.
He swiped its legs out from under it. It collapsed to the walkway beside him. He yanked out a dagger and plunged it into the Borchstog’s throat. It squirmed and thrashed. Black blood ran everywhere, burning his hand, and he jerked the dagger free. Kicked the Borchstog over the side into ranks of men below.
While he had a moment, Baleron sought out the Beast. There Gilgaroth was, not a hundred yards away, standing still, smoke from his mouth wreathing his head. Borchstogs and other creatures streamed around him, as if he were a rock in a raging river. His flaming eyes fixed on Baleron, or so it seemed through the rain and smoke.
The Beast moved.
Cutting a swath through his advancing troops, Gilgaroth strode almost casually over to the portion of the wall on which princes and king stood. The Borchstogs gave him room, for the moment stopping their assault on this section. Baleron caught his breath and rested his aching arms, staring down at the great steaming blood-drenched god. Awe fell on him.
“Dear gods!” whispered Rilurn. “Protect us.”
Logran had summoned several other sorcerers to him, and now the seven mages flanked the king. Albrech glared down at the Wolf, and the Wolf glared up at him. All about, the battle continued. In this one spot existed a bubble of calm. Rain sheeted down, plinking off armor and mixing with the blood that slicked the surface of the ramparts.
“Begone, devil!” shouted Albrech.
“Surrender,” said the Wolf in his harsh, blackened voice. If words could sound burned, fire-licked, his did. “You cannot win, mortal king. Your city WILL fall. Surrender ... and live. You and your sons shall still be the lords of the city, but I shall be your Overlord. Surrender.”
“Never!” cried Albrech.
“You are Fallen. I can raise you up. You no longer have the gifts of the Elves. You have not those powers. Nor do you have purpose, direction, reason to be. I can give you all of those things. Power. Purpose. Simply serve Me. Live. Forever. Wrap yourself in the gifts of Shadow. Do not linger in the realm BETWEEN Light and Darkness. CHOOSE a side. The winning side. Or ... oblivion.”
Albrech glared. “True, we may be cast out of the Light, but you are the very Dark itself!” His face was contorted in rage and hate, but his voice was remarkably steady. “We are not that Fallen! Begone!”
“LOOK INTO MY EYES.”
Gilgaroth’s gaze smoldered.
“No!” shouted Baleron. He raised his sword like a javelin and hurled it down at the Wolf. The weapon burst into flames and dissolved halfway to its target, yet it did what Baleron had wanted.
Gilgaroth switched his gaze to him.
“Baleron,” said the Breaker of the World.
“Leave my father alone!”
The Great Wolf pulled back its lips, revealing sharp teeth in a ghastly smile. “I have not forgotten you, My Spider.”
“I am not your spider. I will never be your spider.”
“Look about you. See the shape of your Web.”
“Enough!” shouted Logran. While the Wolf had been distracted, he and his sorcerers had been building their strength and now all their seven staffs glowed with bright white light. “Begone, Shadow, or feel the pain of the Grace that was denied you!”
Gilgaroth growled.
Logran went on: “I have a weapon from the Elves that will give even you pause. It is what prevents your glarumri from attacking.”
The Wolf narrowed his eyes. “I know.”
“Now!” said Logran, and the sorcerers leveled their staffs at Gilgaroth. Seven beams of light shot out from the seven staffs and lanced into the Wolf’s chest. Gilgaroth howled in pain.
Baleron marveled as Logran led his sorcerers in the attack. Baleron knew that Logran must be drawing upon the strength of Elethris’s gift; there was no other way a mere mortal could combat the Wolf.
Gilgaroth, baring his teeth, held his ground.
The beams of light grew brighter and brighter as they bore into his chest and head. Through the darkness that veiled him it was difficult to tell if this caused any damage, yet it must have, as Gilgaroth grew wrathful. He belched flame, and fire licked the walls. Logran and his sorcerers strove to ignore it.
Smoking, burning, the Wolf deepened the darkness that he’d drawn about him, and now it was as if he were shadow incarnate, all save his burning eyes, which flamed from the blackness. From the living shadow came a rough snarl: “You will regret this, little king.”
Gilgaroth withdrew. A sea of Borchstogs and Trolls swarmed the place where he’d been. Logran and his sorcerers relaxed their beams of light. As one, they all slumped back, breathing heavily, plainly exhausted.
“Now to stop the fire,” Logran muttered. But he didn’t move to dampen the flames just yet. He looked winded. Sweat ran off his face in sheets, and his hands trembled.
Baleron glanced at his father and was surprised to see Albrech casting a wary eye on him. The prince said nothing, but he knew what his father must be thinking.
There was no time for conversation. The Borchstogs rushed up the ladders, braving the flames their Master had started along the wall, and continued the attack. From a fallen soldier, Baleron procured a sword and met the new tide.
My web! he thought bitterly. How can I cast off this godsdamned Doom? Vilana said it would stay with me till Gilgaroth died. But killing Gilgaroth is above me, so how?
Thunder shook the wall, and fires scorched his hands and heated his armor so that he felt like he was being cooked. Thankfully, rain infiltrated the cracks and soaked him. His sword slashed and clanged, rose and fell. His arm ached in weariness.
It seemed the night would never end.
* * *
The battle raged until the mound of dead bodies about the wall became an impediment to the Borchstogs’ ladders and siege towers, but there was another reason the fighting came to a close, as well.
A host of Havensrike soldiers had gathered to the southeast. These were men from the border fortresses to either side of Ungier’s entry point. His army had destroyed two forts coming through the border, but there were many more. Sorcerers from the doomed forts had contacted sorcerers in the others, and word had gone out from one stronghold to another. Their commanders had united under General Brahal, who led the largest fortress, and he had them mass their forces at Mount Heornid in the wake of Ungier’s army.
With General Brahal leading the charge, the men struck at the back of the vampire’s host. Taking the Borchstogs by surprise, they cut a swath through the demon ranks, breaking Ungier’s battle lines and dividing his forces. At last the bordermen neared the South Gate, which the king ordered opened, and they reached safety.
Ungier, realizing his momentum was broken, recalled his troops and encircled the city, the Borchstogs pitching tents and making camp. Glorifel, like Clevaris, was now well and truly under siege.
* * *
Baleron stood with his father staring out at the endless campfires of the enemy, countless pinpricks of light in the dark. The stench of the bonfires stung his nose, and he was loath to breathe it in; the demons often fueled their fires with the bodies of the dead, friend and foe alike. The night air blew chill. Baleron, his brothers, their father, General Kavradnum and Logran Belefard all stood staring out at the enemy camp, and for a long time no one spoke.
Finally, Larik said, “What did he mean?”
Albrech turned his head. “Who?”
“Him.” His voice hushed. “Gilgaroth.” He looked up as if to reassure himself with the sight of the moon, but Illiana’s Lamp could not be seen. “What did he mean about Baleron and a web?”
“Excellent question,” Rilurn said. “Father?”
Albrech grunted. He obviously saw Rilurn’s ploy, but he seemed to feel the question deserved to be addressed. “Sorcerer—explain.”
“Gilgaroth thinks Baleron is his prophesied Champion,” Logran answered. “Or at least he wants us to think so, and he wants his troops to think so. Elethris supposed it to be a trick of some sort.”
Rilurn cast a sharp look at Baleron. “To what end?”
Baleron straightened. He’d hoped to avoid this conversation.
Logran responded by saying, “To demoralize us and to inflate the morale of his own forces. Now that he’s declared his Champion, his Deliverer, the Borchstogs believe the time of their Master’s victory has come. Their spirits are bolstered. And it does seem to have worked. The darkspawn tonight fought with unusual enthusiasm, even for them.”
Larik asked, “But why would they believe Baleron’s his Champion?”
“Apparently he placed a curse, a Doom, on the good prince—a curse to fulfill the prophecy.”
“What if Baleron were to fall in battle?”
“I can’t say. Perhaps the curse protects him, or perhaps Gilgaroth would say his spirit lived on to fulfill the prophecy.”
“Tell us of the prophecy,” Rilurn said.
While they were talking, Baleron glanced at his father. Albrech scowled at him coldly, warily, listening to Logran’s words, trying to make up his mind. He’d surely heard it all before, but he was listening with fresh ears. Baleron found himself holding his breath.
“The one who will usher in the End Times,” the Archmage was saying. “The one that will help Gilgaroth set the World aflame, cleanse it of his enemies and prepare it for the coming of Lorg-jilaad and the Second War of the Omkar, a War that if started by Gilgaroth and his father can only result in their victory, because they will only initiate it when they are ready.” Logran said all this as though reciting from a book, and perhaps he was. Yet his eyes as they looked on Baleron were warm. He added, “Complete rubbish, of course—the prophecy, I mean. The threat of the End Times, I’m afraid, is all too real. But Elethris knew as I do that Baleron is no danger.”
Baleron took a deep breath. Thank you, Logran.
“You’re certain of this?” asked Albrech, his hard gaze still on his youngest son.
“Quite sure,” said Logran. “Though I’m still puzzled by why he chose Baleron to name his Champion. Perhaps because his plan requires one who has reason to come into contact with the nobility of both Havensrike and Glorifel; that’s the only way I can reason it—but Baleron is certainly not ul Ravast. I do know that much.”
“Queen Vilana seemed to disagree,” Albrech said with deceptive mildness. “She sensed his curse.”
“She sensed his curse, yes. But did she say that he was ul Ravast? Il Enundian? Of course not. I discussed it with Elethris after Baleron first came to us, and he said that the power of the Light rendered the curse harmless, and he gave Baleron a Light-fused charm to make it so. Baleron no longer has the charm, or I would feel it, but here in my possession I have an even more powerful artifact of the Light.” He patted his chest where the Flower would be. “Thus Baleron’s curse is of no moment.”
Albrech’s gaze roamed searchingly over Baleron’s face, as if scrutinizing it for the slightest hint of treachery.
Baleron waited for his father’s judgment. They all did. The wind hissed and moaned, and dark clouds roiled above. Lightning flickered. Thunder rolled. In the distance, Baleron heard Borchstogs chanting some black rite to their Master.
Baleron could wait no longer.
“I will leave,” he said suddenly.
Albrech glared at him. “What?”
“I will leave and go ... to them.” He gestured to the Borchstogs. “I will leave you and cause you no further trouble.”
The king grunted. “Send one of my sons to the Enemy? I think not.”
“They’d probably welcome him,” Rilurn said.
They probably would, thought Baleron. “It is the only way to make you safe,” he said.
“Gilgaroth would use you, Baleron,” Logran said. “His prophecy of ul Ravast states that the Deliverer will lead his armies to victory over the forces of Light. If you go to him, he’ll only find a way to get control of your mind, or have a demon possess you, and soon you’ll replace Ungier as his general.” He shook his head. “No, do not fall into that trap. If you go to him ... he will make you ul Ravast.”
“There,” said Albrech. “That is an end to it.”
Slowly, Baleron nodded. Logran was probably right. “So what shall be done about me? I cannot stay here.”
“You can,” Albrech countered. “You will. You’re an able swordsman, and that we need.” He glared again at the Borchstogs’ endless bonfires. “We need all the swords we can get.”
Silence fell over the group. Acrid smoke blew on the wind.
Baleron was glad for the talk—glad that his Doom was known, admitted, and dismissed. Yet he couldn’t help but feel that its purpose was not yet fulfilled, could not help but feel that his Doom was stronger than Logran realized. He stared out into the darkness, out on the enemy hosts. In the distance hundreds of Borchstogs danced about a huge pyre that threw sparks high into the night, while necromancers chanted and strange lights wheeled and spun about the flame. A large wolvish shape sat nearby in a place of honor, eyes aglow.
The ranks of the Enemy were neverending, Baleron thought. There was no way the men of Glorifel could overcome them. It was hopeless. And yet, Queen Vilana had said he, Baleron, could decide the issue, whether the forces of Light or Dark would prevail.
Somewhere in the night, the Great Wolf howled, and the shadows grew long and dark.