The heirs of hammerfell, p.1

The Heirs of Hammerfell, page 1

 

The Heirs of Hammerfell
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The Heirs of Hammerfell


  Also by Marion Zimmer Bradley

  Darkover

  Rediscovery

  The Heirs of Hammerfell

  The Planet Savers

  The Sword of Aldones

  Darkover Anthology

  The Keeper's Price

  Sword of Chaos

  Free Amazons of Darkover

  The Other Side of the Mirror

  Red Sun of Darkover

  Four Moons of Darkover

  Domains of Darkover

  Renunciates of Darkover

  Leroni of Darkover

  Towers of Darkover

  Marion Zimmer Bradley's Darkover

  Snows of Darkover

  Hunters

  Hunters of the Red Moon

  The Survivors

  Standalone

  Warrior Woman

  Falcons of Narabedla

  The Complete Lythande

  Genuine Old Master

  Bluebeard's Daughter

  The Brass Dragon

  The House Between the Worlds

  Castle Terror

  Endless Voyage

  Night's Daughter

  Souvenir of Monique

  Seven from the Stars

  Survey Ship

  The Catch Trap

  The Colors of Space

  The Dark Intruder

  The Door through Space

  Tiger Burning Bright

  Watch for more at Marion Zimmer Bradley’s site.

  The Heirs of Hammerfell

  Marion Zimmer Bradley

  Marion Zimmer Bradley Literary Works Trust

  PO Box 193473

  San Francisco, CA 94119-3473

  www.mzbworks.com

  Table of Contents

  The Heirs of Hammerfell

  Table of Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Copyright

  Chapter 1

  A storm raged over the Hellers; lightning split the sky asunder, followed by thunder rolling in long, echoing crashes through the valleys. The driven clouds revealed ragged patches of lurid sky still lighted with the last rays of the swollen crimson sun and, hanging near the tooth of the highest peak, the crescent rim of the pale turquoise moon. Near the zenith, a second moon hung violet and day-pale, intermittingly hiding behind the racing clouds. Snow lingered on the peaks, and occasional patches of ice endangered the precarious footing of the small, horned riding beast that fled along the narrow path. Neither of the other moons was visible at the moment, but the solitary rider who traveled by the dim light did not care.

  On the chervine’s back, the old man clung to his seat in the saddle, unaware of the blood that still flowed sluggishly, mixing with the rain to stain the front of his shirt and cloak. Moaning cries escaped his lips as he rode, but he was no longer aware of the lament that flowed as unheeded as the blood from the wound he had all but forgotten. In any case, there was none to hear.

  “So young, and the last, the last of my lord’s sons, and dear as a son to me, too. So young, so young...so young to die...not much farther now. If I can only make it back before those folk of Storn realize that I managed to get away....”

  The chervine stumbled on a rock loosened by the up-thrusting ice and nearly went down. It recovered, but the old man was jarred from his seat. He fell hard and lay still, without strength to rise, still whispering the half-voiced lament.

  “So young, so young...and how shall I bring the news to his father? Oh, my lord, my young lord...my Alaric!”

  His eyes lifted painfully to the rough-hewn and battle-scarred castle high on the crags above. It might as well have been on the green moon for all he could do to reach it now. His eyes closed reluctantly. The beast, aware of the loss of its burden but still held by the weight of the saddle binding it to the rider’s will, nosed gently at the old man who lay on the icy, wet trail. When it scented the others of its kind moving down the steep pathway the old man had been climbing with such toil, it raised its head and whickered softly to attract attention it knew would mean food, rest, and freedom from the saddle’s weight.

  Rascard, Duke of Hammerfell, heard the sound and held up his hand, bringing the little procession following him to a halt.

  “Hark, what’s that?” he asked the paxman who rode behind him. In the dim light, he could just see the riderless beast and the slumped form lying in the road.

  “By the dark gods! It’s Markos!” he cried out, flinging himself heedlessly from his saddle and down the steep, slick path, falling to his knees beside the wounded man. “Regis! Lexxas! Bring wine, blankets!” he bellowed, bending toward the wounded man and gently drawing away the cloak. “He’s still alive,” he added more quietly, hardly able to believe it was true.

  “Markos, old friend, speak to me! Ah, gods, how did you come by such a wound? Those bastards of Storn?”

  The man in the roadway opened dark eyes, blurred now more with confusion than pain, as a dark form bent over him with a flask and held it to his mouth. He swallowed, coughed painfully, and swallowed again, but the duke had seen the bloody foam on his lips.

  “No, Markos, don’t try to speak.” He cradled the dying man in his arms, but Markos heard with the bond between them that had endured for forty years the question the Duke of Hammerfell forbore to speak aloud.

  What of my son? What of my Alaric? Ah, gods, I trusted him to you as to my own self...never in a lifetime have you betrayed that trust.

  The same link bore to him the semiconscious man’s thoughts. Nor now. I do not think he is dead, but the men of Storn came upon us unseen...a single arrow for each...curse them all.

  Duke Rascard cried out in pain.

  “Zandru’s demons seize them all! Oh, my son, my son!” He held the fallen man in his arms, feeling the old man’s grief as sharply as the arrow wound, which burned as if it were in his own body. “No, my old friend, my more-than-brother, no reproach to you. Well do I know you guarded him with your own life.”

  The serving-men were crying out with dismay for their master’s grief, but he silenced them with a stern command. “Take him up—gently, now! His wound need not be mortal; you will answer for it if he dies! That blanket over him—yes, like that. And a little more firi...careful, don’t choke him! Markos, where lies my son? I know you would not abandon him—”

  “Lord Storn, that elder son of his, Fionn, carried him off...” The harsh rasping whisper failed again, but Duke Rascard heard the words Markos was too weak to speak aloud. I thought it was indeed over my dead body...then I recovered consciousness and came to bear you word, even with my last breath....

  “But you will not die, my friend,” the duke said gently, as with giant strength the horse-master Lexxas lifted the wounded man. “Set him on my own beast—gently, if you wish to go on breathing the air of this world. Back now to Hammerfell as swiftly as we may, for the light is failing, and we should be within doors before nightfall.”

  The duke, supporting the fainting body of his oldest retainer in his arms as they slowly moved back up the pathway to the heights, saw the picture in Markos’ mind as he lapsed into unconsciousness: Alaric, lying across Fionn’s saddle with a Storn arrow in his breast, latest victim of the blood feud that had raged between Storn and Hammerfell for five generations, a feud so ancient that no man living now remembered its original cause.

  But Markos, though grievously wounded, still lived. Was it not possible that Alaric, too, might survive, even be held for ransom?

  If he dies, I swear I shall not leave a single stone of Storn Heights heaped upon another or a living man of Storn blood anywhere in the Hundred Kingdoms, he vowed as they crossed the ancient drawbridge and reentered the gateway so recently closed behind them.

  He called aloud for serving men as they bore Markos into the Great Hall and laid him down gently on a rough settee. Then Duke Rascard stared around wildly and commanded, “Send for damisela Erminie.”

  The household leronis, crying out in dismay, had already hurried into the Hall; kneeling on the cold stone floor, she bent over the wounded man. Duke Rascard swiftly explained what was needed, but the young sorceress, too, had dwelt lifelong with this blood feud. She was a cousin of the duke’s long-dead wife and had served him at Hammerfell since childhood.

  Drawing out the blue starstone from the folds of her dress, she leaned over Markos. Focusing on the stone, she ran her hands down his body without touching him, holding them about an inch from the wound, her eyes remote and unfocused. Rascard watched in frozen silence.

  At length, she straightened, her eyes full of tears.

  “The bleeding is stanched; he breathes still,” she said. “I can do no more now.”

  “Will he live, Erminie?” asked the duke.

  “I cannot tell, but against all probability, he has lived this long. I can say only that it is in the hands of the gods. If they continue to be merciful, he will survive
.”

  “I pray so. We were children together, and I have lost so many...” said Rascard. Then he broke out in a great shriek of long-held-back fury. “I swear before all the gods! If he dies, such vengeance shall be taken...”

  “Hush!” said the girl sternly. “If you must bellow, Uncle, go and do it where you will not disturb this wounded man.”

  Duke Rascard flushed, and his ranting subsided. Walking toward the hearth and dropping into a deep chair, he marveled at the composure and quiet competence of this chit of a girl.

  Erminie was seventeen, slim and delicate, with deep-set gray eyes and the bright, new-minted copper hair of a telepath. Except for these eyes, she had not a single regular feature; but with them, she was almost beautiful. She followed the duke toward the fire and looked levelly into his eyes.

  “If he is to live, he must be kept quiet, and you, too, must leave him in quiet, sir.”

  “I know, my dear. You were right to scold me.”

  Rascard, twenty-third Duke of Hammerfell, was past forty, in the fullest strength of middle age. His hair, once dark, was gray as iron, his eyes the blue of copper filings in the flame. He was strong and muscular, his weathered features and the twisted ropy muscles displaying the contours of the dwarfish forge-folk from whom he derived his heritage. He was a once-active man who had softened a little with age and inactivity; his stern face was softer than usual as he looked on the young girl. She was not unlike the wife he had lost so many years ago.

  Erminie and Alaric had been brought up as brother and sister; the duke almost broke down, thinking of the two red heads, cropped curls, long braids, bent together over a lesson book.

  “Have you heard, child?”

  The young woman lowered her eyes. No one for a thousand leagues who possessed a single scrap of telepathic awareness, far less a leronis, intensively trained in the use of the psychic powers of her caste, could have been unaware of that agonized interchange in which the duke had learned the fate of son and old servant, but she did not say so.

  “I think I would know if Alaric were truly dead,” she said, and the duke’s harsh face softened.

  “I pray you are right, chiya. Will you come to me in the conservatory when you can leave Markos?” He added unnecessarily, “And bring your starstone.”

  “I will come,” she said, understanding what he wanted, and bent over the injured man once more, without looking again at Duke Rascard as he left the Hall.

  ~o0o~

  The conservatory, a standard feature of a mountain household, was high up in the castle, with double-thick windows, heated by several fireplaces, and even during this inhospitable season thronged with green leaves and flowers.

  Duke Rascard had seated himself in a very old and battered armchair where he could look out over the entire valley below him. He stared at the road winding up to the castle, remembering more than one pitched battle which he had fought there in his father’s lifetime. So intent was he on memory that he did not hear the soft step behind him until Erminie came around the chair and sat on the little hassock at his feet.

  “Markos?” he asked.

  “I will not deceive you, Uncle; his wound is very serious. The arrow pierced his lung, and it was hurt worse when he pulled the arrow forth. But he still breathes, and the bleeding has not begun again. He is sleeping, and with rest and good fortune, he will live. I left Amalie with him. She will call me if he wakes. For now, I am at your service, sir.” Her voice was soft and husky, but quite steady. Living with hardship had matured her beyond her years. “Tell me, Uncle, why was Markos on the road, and why did Alaric go forth with him?”

  “You might not have known, but the men of Storn came last moon and burned a dozen ricks in the village. There will be hunger before seeding time, so our men chose to go forth and raid Storn itself for food and seed for the burned-out houses. Alaric need not have gone with them. It was Markos’ place to lead the men, but one of the burned houses belonged to Alaric’s foster-mother, so he insisted that none but he himself should lead the raid. I could not refuse him this; he said it was a matter of honor.” Rascard paused for an unsteady breath. “Alaric is not a child. I could not deny him what he felt he must do. I asked him to take one or more of the laranzu’in with him, but he would not. He said he could deal with Storn with armed men alone. When they had not returned at twilight, I grew anxious and found Markos alone escaped to bring word. They were ambushed.”

  Erminie covered her face with her hands.

  The old duke said, “You know what it is that I need from you. How is it with your cousin, my girl? Can you see him?”

  She said softly, “I will try,” and brought out the pale blue stone from its hiding place at her throat. The duke caught a brief glimpse of the twisting lights in the stone and turned his eyes away. Although he was an adequate telepath for one of his caste, he had never been trained to use a starstone for the higher levels of power, and, like all half-trained telepaths, he found that the shifting lights within the starstones made him feel vaguely ill.

  He looked at the soft parting of Erminie’s hair as she bent her head over the stone, her eyes serious and remote. Her features were so fresh, so young, untouched by any deep and lasting grief. Duke Rascard felt old and wearied and worn with the weight of the many years of feud and the very thought of the clan of Storn, which had taken from him grandfather and father, two elder brothers, and now his only surviving son.

  But, please the gods, Alaric is not dead and not lost to me forever. Not yet, and not ever.... He said hoarsely, “I pray you look and give me word, child.” His voice trembled.

  After an unusually long time, Erminie said, in a soft, wandering, unfocused voice, “Alaric...cousin...” and almost at once, Duke Rascard, dropping into rapport, saw what she saw, the face of his son, a younger version of his own, save that his son’s hair was brilliant copper and curled all over his head. The boyish features were drawn with pain, and the front of his shirt was covered with bright blood. Erminie’s face, too, was pained.

  “He lives, but his wound is more serious than Markos’,” she said. “Markos will live if he is kept quiet, but Alaric...the bleeding still goes on within the lung. His breathing is very faint...he has not yet recovered consciousness.”

  “Can you reach him? Is it possible to heal his wound at such a distance?” the duke demanded, recalling what she had done for Markos, but she sighed, tears flooding her eyes.

  “Alas, no, Uncle. I would willingly try, but not even the Keeper of Tramontana could heal at such a distance.”

  “Then can you reach him and tell him that we know where he is, that we will come to rescue him or die in the attempt?”

  “I am afraid to disturb him, Uncle. If he wakes and should move unwisely, he could tear his lung past healing.”

  “Yet if he wakes alone and knows himself in the hands of our enemies, could not that also prompt him to despair and death?”

  “You are right. I will try to reach his mind without disturbing him,” Erminie said, while the duke dropped his face in his hands, seeing through the young girl’s mind what she saw: the face of his son, pale and worn with pain. Although untrained in the healing arts, it seemed to him that he could see the mark of mortality on the young features. At the edge of his perceptions, he could sense Erminie’s face, tense and searching, and heard, not with his ears, the message she was trying to insinuate into a deep level of Alaric’s mind.

  Have no fear; we are with you. Rest and heal yourself. Again and again, she sent the soothing touch of warmth, trying to carry reassurance and love.

  The intimate feel of Erminie’s mind touched Rascard. I did not know how much she loved him; I thought they were simply as brother and sister, children together. Now I know it is more than that.

  He became slowly aware of the young girl’s blushes; he knew that she had overheard his thoughts.

  “I loved him even when we were children together, Uncle. I do not know if I am more to him than a kind foster-sister, but I love him much more than that. It does not...it does not make you angry?”

  If he had learned this news any other way, Duke Rascard might indeed have been angered. For many years, he had given much thought to a great marriage, perhaps even to some lowland princess from the Hastur lands to the South, but now fear for his son was all he knew.

 

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