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The Weird of the White Wolf Page 8


  “And what do you seek there?” Moonglum in­quired.

  “A secret,” Elric said, and his new-found compan­ion was discreet enough to drop the question.

  Chapter Three

  So they rode, while the rainfall increased and splashed and sang among the rocks with the sky like dull steel above them and the wind crooning a dirge about their ears. Three small figures riding swiftly towards the black mountain barrier which rose over the world like a brooding God. And perhaps it was a God that laughed sometimes as they neared the foothills of the range, or perhaps it was the wind whistling through the dark mystery of canyons and precipices and the tumble of basalt and granite which climbed towards lonely peaks. Thunder clouds formed around those peaks and lightning smashed downwards like a monster finger searching the earth for grubs. Thunder rattled over the range and Shaarilla spoke her thoughts at last to Elric; spoke them as the mountains came in sight.

  “Elric—let us go back, I beg you. Forget the Book—there are too many forces working against us. Take heed of the signs, Elric, or we are doomed!”

  But Elric was grimly silent, for he had long been aware that the girl was losing her enthusiasm for the quest she had started.

  “Elric—please. We will never reach the Book. El­ric, turn back.”

  She rode beside him, pulling at his garments until impatiently he shrugged himself clear of her grasp and said:

  “I am intrigued too much to stop now. Either con­tinue to lead the way—or tell me what you know and stay here. You desired to sample the Book's wisdom once—but now a few minor pitfalls on our journey have frightened you. What was it you needed to learn, Shaarilla?”

  She did not answer him, but said instead: “And what was it you desired, Elric? Peace, you told me. Well, I warn you, you'll find no peace in those grim mountains—if we reach them at all.”

  “You have not been frank with me, Shaarilla,” Elric said coldly, still looking ahead of him at the black peaks. “You know something of the forces seeking to stop us.”

  She shrugged. “It matters not—I know little. My fa­ther spoke a few vague warnings before he died, that is all.”

  “What did he say?”

  “He said that He who guards the Book would use all his power to stop mankind from using its wis­dom.”

  “What else?”

  “Nothing else. But it is enough, now that I see that my father's warning was truly spoken. It was this guardian who killed him, Elric—or one of the guardian's minions. I do not wish to suffer that fate, in spite of what the Book might do for me. I had thought you powerful enough to aid me—but now I doubt it.”

  “I have protected you so far,” Elric said simply. “Now tell me what you seek from the Book?”

  “I am too ashamed.”

  Elric did not press the question, but eventually she spoke softly, almost whispering. “I sought my wings,” she said.

  “Your wings—you mean the Book might give you a spell so that you could grow wings!” Elric smiled ironically. “And that is why you seek the vessel of the world's mightiest wisdom!”

  “If you were thought deformed in your own land—it would seem important enough to you,” she shouted defiantly.

  Elric turned his face towards her, his crimson-irised eyes burning with a strange emotion. He put a hand to his dead white skin and a crooked smile twisted his lips. “I, too, have felt as you do,” he said quietly. That was all he said and Shaarilla dropped behind him again, shamed.

  They rode on in silence until Moonglum, who had been riding discreetly ahead, cocked his overlarge skull on one side and suddenly drew rein.

  Elric joined him. “What is it, Moonglum?”

  “I hear horses coming this way,” the little man said. “And voices which are disturbingly familiar. More of those devil-dogs, Elric—and this time accompanied by riders!”

  Elric, too, heard the sounds, now, and shouted a warning to Shaarilla.

  “Perhaps you were right,” he called. “More trouble comes towards us.”

  “What now?” Moonglum said, frowning.

  “Ride for the mountains,” Elric replied, “and we may yet outdistance them.”

  They spurred their steeds into a fast gallop and sped towards the hills.

  But their flight was hopeless. Soon a black pack was visible on the horizon and the sharp birdlike baying of the devil-dogs drew nearer. Elric stared backward at their pursuers. Night was beginning to fall, and visibility was decreasing with every passing moment but he had a vague impression of the riders who raced behind the pack. They were swathed in dark cloaks and carried long spears. Their faces were invisible, lost in the shadow of the hoods which covered their heads.

  Now Elric and his companions were forcing their horses up a steep incline, seeking the shelter of the rocks which lay above.

  “We'll halt here,” Elric ordered, “and try to hold them off. In the open they could easily surround us.”

  Moonglum nodded affirmatively, agreeing with the good sense contained in Elric's words. They pulled their sweating steeds to a standstill and prepared to join battle with the howling pack and their dark-cloaked masters.

  Soon the first of the devil-dogs were rushing up the incline, their beak-jaws slavering and their talons rattling on stone. Standing between two rocks, block­ing the way between with their bodies, Elric and Moonglum met the first attack and quickly dis­patched three of the animals. Several more took the place of the dead and the first of the riders was visible behind them as night crept closer.

  “Arioch!” swore Elric, suddenly recognising the riders. “These are the Lords of Dharzi—dead these ten centuries. We're fighting dead men, Moonglum, and the too-tangible ghosts of their dogs. Unless I can think of a sorcerous means to defeat them, we're doomed!”

  The zombie-men appeared to have no intention of taking part in the attack for the moment. They waited, their dead eyes eerily luminous, as the devil-dogs attempted to break through the swinging net­work of steel with which Elric and his companion defended themselves. Elric was racking his brains—trying to dredge a spoken spell from his memory which would dismiss these living dead. Then it came to him, and hoping that the forces he had to invoke would decide to aid him, he began to chant:

  'Let the Laws which govern all things

  Not so lightly be dismissed;

  Let the Ones who flaunt the Earth Kings

  With a fresher death be kissed.'

  Nothing happened. “I've failed.” Elric muttered hopelessly as he met the attack of a snapping devil-dog and spitted the thing on his sword.

  But then—the ground rocked and seemed to seethe beneath the feet of the horses upon whose backs the dead men sat. The tremor lasted a few seconds and then subsided.

  “The spell was not powerful enough,” Elric sighed.

  The earth trembled again and small craters formed in the ground of the hillside upon which the dead Lords of Dharzi impassively waited. Stones crumbled and the horses stamped nervously. Then the earth rumbled.

  “Back!” yelled Elric warningly. “Back—or we'll go with them!” They retreated—backing towards Shaa­rilla and their waiting horses as the ground sagged beneath their feet. The Dharzi mounts were rearing and snorting and the remaining dogs turned ner­vously to regard their masters with puzzled, uncer­tain eyes. A low moan was coming from the lips of the living dead. Suddenly, a whole area of the sur­rounding hillside split into cracks, and yawning crannies appeared in the surface. Elric and his com­panies swung themselves on to their horses as, with a frightful multi-voiced scream, the dead Lords were swallowed by the earth, returning to the depths from which they had been summoned.

  A deep unholy chuckle arose from the shattered pit. It was the mocking laughter of the Earth Kings taking their rightful prey back into their keeping. Whining, the devil-dogs slunk towards the edge of the pit, sniffing around it. Then, with one accord, the black pack hurled itself down into the chasm, following its masters to whatever cold doom awaited them.

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nbsp; Moonglum shuddered. “You are on familiar terms with the strangest people, friend Elric,” he said shak­ily and turned his horse towards the mountains again.

  They reached the black mountains on the follow­ing day and nervously Shaarilla led them along the rocky route she had memorised. She no longer pleaded with Elric to return—she was resigned to whatever fate awaited them. Elric's obsession was burning within him and he was filled with impa­tience—certain that he would find, at last, the ulti­mate truth of existence in the Dead Gods' Book. Moonglum was cheerfully sceptical, while Shaarilla was consumed with foreboding.

  Rain still fell and the storm growled and crackled above them. And, as the driving rainfall increased with fresh insistence, they came, at last, to the black, gaping mouth of a huge cave.

  “I can lead you no further,” Shaarilla said wearily. “The Book lies somewhere beyond the entrance to this cave.”

  Elric and Moonglum looked uncertainly at one an­other, neither of them sure what move to make next. To have reached their goal seemed somehow anticli­mactic—for nothing blocked the cave entrance—and nothing appeared to guard it.

  “It is inconceivable,” said Elric, “that the dangers which beset us were not engineered by something, yet here we are—and no one seeks to stop us enter­ing. Are you sure that this is the right cave, Shaarilla?”

  The girl pointed upwards to the rock above the entrance. Engraved in it was a curious symbol which Elric instantly recognised.

  “The sign of Chaos!” Elric exclaimed. “Perhaps I should have guessed.”

  “What does it mean, Elric?” Moonglum asked.

  “That is the symbol of everlasting disruption and anarchy,” Elric told him. “We are standing in terri­tory presided over by the Lords of Entropy or one of their minions. So that is who our enemy is! This can only mean one thing—the Book is of extreme impor­tance to the order of things on this plane—possibly all the myriad planes of the universe. It was why Arioch was reluctant to aid me—he, too, is a Lord of Chaos!”

  Moonglum stared at him in puzzlement. “What do you mean, Elric?”

  “Know you not that two forces govern the world—fighting an eternal battle?” Elric replied. “Law and Chaos. The upholders of Chaos state that in such a world as they rule, all things are possible. Opponents of Chaos—those who ally themselves with the forces of Law—say that, without Law nothing material is possible.

  “Some stand apart, believing that a balance be­tween the two is the proper state of things, but we cannot. We have become embroiled in a dispute be­tween the two forces. The Book is valuable to either faction, obviously, and I could guess that the min­ions of Entropy are worried what power we might release if we obtain this Book. Law and Chaos rarely interfere directly in Men's lives—that is why we have not been fully aware of their presence. Now perhaps, I will discover at last the answer to the one question which concerns me—does an ultimate force rule over the opposing factions of Law and Chaos?”

  Elric stepped through the cave entrance, peering into the gloom while the others hesitantly followed him.

  “The cave stretches back a long way. All we can do is press on until we find its far wall,” Elric said.

  “Let's hope that its far wall lies not downwards,” Moonglum said ironically as he motioned Elric to lead on.

  They stumbled forward as the cave grew darker and darker. Their voices were magnified and hollow to their own ears as the floor of the cave slanted sharply down.

  “This is no cave,” Elric whispered, “it's a tunnel—but I cannot guess where it leads.”

  For several hours they pressed onwards in pitch darkness, clinging to one another as they reeled for­ward, uncertain of their footing and still aware that they were moving down a gradual incline. They lost all sense of time and Elric began to feel as if he were living through a dream. Events seemed to have be­come so unpredictable and beyond his control that he could no longer cope with thinking about them in ordinary terms. The tunnel was long and dark and wide and cold. It offered no comfort and the floor eventually became the only thing which had any reality. It was firmly beneath his feet. He began to feel that possibly he was not moving—that the floor, after all, was moving and he was remaining station­ary. His companions clung to him but he was not aware of them. He was lost and his brain was numb. Sometimes he swayed and felt that he was on the edge of a precipice. Sometimes he fell and his groan­ing body met hard stone, disproving the proximity of the gulf down which he half-expected to fall.

  All the while he made his legs perform walking motions, even though he was not at all sure whether he was actually moving forward. And time meant nothing—became a meaningless concept with relation to nothing.

  Until, at last, he was aware of a faint, blue glow ahead of him and he knew that he had been moving forward. He began to run down the incline, but found that he was going too fast and had to check his speed. There was a scent of alien strangeness in the cool air of the cave tunnel and fear was a fluid force which surged over him, something separate from himself.

  The others obviously felt it, too, for though they said nothing, Elric could sense it. Slowly they moved downward, drawn like automatons towards the pale blue glow below them.

  And then they were out of the tunnel, staring awestruck at the unearthly vision which confronted them. Above them, the very air seemed of the strange blue colour which had originally attracted them. They were standing on a jutting slab of rock and, although it was still somehow dark, the eerie blue glow illuminated a stretch of glinting silver beach beneath them. And the beach was lapped by a surging dark sea which moved restlessly like a liquid giant in disturbed slumber. Scattered along the sil­ver beach were the dim shapes of wrecks—the bones of peculiarly designed boats, each of a different pat­tern from the rest. The sea surged away into darkness and there was no horizon—only blackness. Behind them, they could see a sheer cliff which was also lost in darkness beyond a certain point. And it was cold—bitterly cold, with an unbelievable sharp­ness. For though the sea threshed beneath them, there was no dampness in the air—no smell of salt. It was a bleak and awesome sight and, apart from the sea, they were the only things that moved—the only things to make sound, for the sea was horribly silent in its restless movement.

  “What now, Elric?” whispered Moonglum, shiver­ing.

  Elric shook his head and they continued to stand there for a long time until the albino—his white face and hands ghastly in the alien light said: “Since it is impracticable to return—we shall venture over the sea.”

  His voice was hollow and he spoke as one who was unaware of his words.

  Steps, cut into the living rock, led down towards the beach and now Elric began to descend them. The others allowed him to lead them staring around them, their eyes lit by a terrible fascination.

  Chapter Four

  Their feet profaned the silence as they reached the silver beach of crystalline stones and crunched across it. Elric's crimson eyes fixed upon one of the objects littering the beach and he smiled. He shook his head savagely from side to side, as if to clear it. Trembling, he pointed to one of the boats, and the pair saw that it was intact, unlike the others. It was yellow and red—vulgarly gay in this environment and nearing it they observed that it was made of wood, yet unlike any wood they had seen. Moonglum ran his stubby fingers along its length.

  “Hard as iron,” he breathed. “No wonder it has not rotted as the others have.” He peered inside and shuddered. “Well the owner won't argue if we take it,” he said wryly.

  Elric and Shaarilla understood him when they saw the unnaturally twisted skeleton which lay at the bottom of the boat. Elric reached inside and pulled the thing out, hurling it on to the stones. It rattled and rolled over the gleaming shingle, disintegrating as it did so, scattering bones over a wide area. The skull came to rest by the edge of the beach, seeming to stare sightlessly out over the disturbing ocean.

  As Elric and Moonglum strove to push and pull the boat down the be
ach towards the sea, Shaarilla moved ahead of them and squatted down, putting her hand into the wetness. She stood up sharply, shaking the stuff from her hand.

  “This is not water as I know it,” she said. They heard her, but said nothing.

  “We'll need a sail,” Elric murmured. The cold breeze was moving out over the ocean. “A cloak should serve.” He stripped off his cloak and knotted it to the mast of the vessel. “Two of us will have to hold this at either edge,” he said. “That way we'll have some slight control over the direction the boat takes. It's makeshift—but the best we can manage.”

  They shoved off, taking care not to get their feet in the sea.

  The wind caught the sail and pushed the boat out over the ocean, moving at a faster pace than Elric had at first reckoned. The boat began to hurtle for­ward as if possessed of its own volition and Elric's and Moonglum's muscles ached as they clung to the bottom ends of the sail.

  Soon the silver beach was out of sight and they could see little—the pale blue light above them scarcely penetrating the blackness. It was then that they heard the dry flap of wings over their heads and looked up.

  Silently descending were three massive ape-like creatures, borne on great leathery wings. Shaarilla recognised them and gasped.

  “Clakars!”

  Moonglum shrugged as he hurriedly drew his sword—“A name only—what are they?” But he re­ceived no answer for the leading winged ape de­scended with a rush, mouthing and gibbering, showing long fangs in a slavering snout. Moonglum dropped his portion of the sail and slashed at the beast but it veered away, its huge wings beating, and sailed upwards again.

  Elric unsheathed Stormbringer—and was astounded. The blade remained silent, its familiar howl of glee muted. The blade shuddered in his hand and instead of the rush of power which usually flowed up his arm, he felt only a slight tingling. He was panic-stricken for a moment—without the sword, he would soon lose all vitality. Grimly fighting down his fear, he used the sword to protect himself from the rush­ing attack of one of the winged apes.