Quest For Tanelorn
Quest For Tanelorn
Quest For Tanelorn
Tanelorn
The Chronicles of Castle Brass:
Book III
Michael Moorcock
A Mayflower Original
Granada Publishing Limited
First published in 1975 by Mayflower Books Ltd
Copyright Michael Moorcock 1975
Content
Dedication
Book One The World
Insane: A Champion Of
Dreams
Chapter One An Old Friend At Castle Brass
Chapter Two On The Silver Bridge
Chapter Three In The Mist
Chapter Four The Gathering Of The Wise
Chapter Five On The Shore
Tanelorn
Chapter One The Waiting Warriors
Chapter Two The Blind Captain
Chapter Three The Island Of Shadows
Chapter Four A City Haunted By Itself
Chapter Five Agak And Gagak
Chapter Six The Battle For Everything
Chapter Seven The Heroes Part
Dedication
For Bob Weir, Jerry Garcia et al. ...
... and for all the many readers who
wrote and asked for this particular book
and to whom I shall be, of course,
eternally grateful.
Book One
The World Insane:
A Champion Of Dreams
Chapter One
An Old Friend At Castle
Brass
'Lost?'
'Aye.'
'But only dreams, Hawkmoon. Lost
dreams?' The tone was nearly pathetic.
'I think not.'
Count Brass moved his great body
away from the window so that light fell
suddenly on Hawkmoon's gaunt face.
'Would that I had two grandchildren.
Would that I had. Perhaps one day ...'
It was a conversation which had been
repeated so many times that it had
us.'
The difference between us, I
suppose,' said Count Brass, 'is that you,
for all your rediscovered toughness of
mind, continue to allow yourself to
entertain many forms of hope. Long ago,
I dismissed Faith altogether - at least
from my conscious thoughts. Yet you,
Hawkmoon, discover it over and over
again.'
'Aye - through many lives.'
'What?'
'I refer to my dreams. To those
strange dreams of myself in so many
different incarnations. I had identified
those dreams with my madness, but now
I am not so sure. They still come to me,
you know.'
'You have not mentioned them since
you returned here with Yisselda.'
They have not tormented me as they
once did. But they are familiar, still.'
'Every night?'
'Aye. Every night. The names - Elric,
Erekose, Corum -those are the chief
ones. And there are others. And
sometimes I see the Runestaff, and
sometimes a black sword. All seem
significant. And sometimes, when I am
alone, particularly when I ride the
marshlands, they come to me in my
waking hours. Faces, familiar and
unfamiliar, float before me. Snatches of
words are heard. And most common is
that frightening phrase "Champion
Chapter Two
On The Silver Bridge
Fank had elected to remain at Castle
Brass and so Hawkmoon and Yisselda
climbed into the cushioned cabin of the
great ornithopter. Ahead, in his small,
open cockpit, the pilot began to
manipulate the controls.
Count Brass and Fank stood outside
the door of the castle watching as the
heavy metallic wings began to beat and
the strange motors of the ancient craft
murmured, whispered and crooned.
There came a fluttering of enamelled
silver feathers, a lurch, a wind which set
thoughtful
mood
and
Yisselda,
respecting this mood, had made no
attempt to talk to him. Now he turned to
her, smiling gently.
There are still wise men in Londra,
he said. 'Queen Flana's court has
attracted
many
scholars,
many
philosophers. Perhaps some will be able
to help us.'
'You know of Tanelorn?' she said.
The city Fank mentioned.'
'Only the name. I feel I should know
much. I feel that I have been there, at
least once, possibly many times, yet you
and I both know that I have not.
'In your dreams? Have you been there
in your dreams, Dorian?'
TANELORN ...
'Too long have I born my burden - too
long have I paid the price of Erekose's
great crime. ..' It was his voice which
spoke, but it was not his lips which
formed the words - they were other lips,
unhuman lips ... I must have rest - 1 must
have rest...'
And now there came a face - a face of
ineffable evil, but it was not a confident
face - a dark face - was it desperate?
Was it his face? Was this his face, too?
AH, I SUFFER!
This way and that, the familiar armies
marched. Familiar swords rose and
fell. Familiar faces screamed and
perished, and blood flowed from body
Yisselda.'
He drew a deep breath. 'Oh,
Yisselda.' And he was grateful that at
least she had not been taken from him,
for he had no other consolation but her in
all the world, in all the many worlds he
experienced while he slept; so he held
her close to him in his strong warrior's
arms, and he wept for a little while, and
she wept with him. Then they rose from
the bed and dressed themselves and in
silence they left the inn without
breakfasting, mounting the good horses
which waited for them. They rode away
from Karlye, along the coast road,
through the rain which swept from the
grey, turbulent sea, until they came to the
Chapter Three
In The Mist
No!'
It was another voice - a booming,
pain-racked voice, far louder than
Hawkmoon's, louder than thunder.
And the bridge swayed and the horse
reared and Hawkmoon was thrown
heavily to the metal causeway. He tried
to rise; he tried to crawl back to where
he was sure he would find Yisselda.
'Yisselda!' he cried.
'Yisselda!'
And wicked laughter sounded behind
him.
He
turned
his
head,
lying
spreadeagled on the swaying bridge. He
saw his horse, its eyes rolling, tumble
over, slide to the edge, to be pinned
against a rail, its legs kicking at the air.
Now Hawkmoon tried to reach for
the sword beneath his cloak, but he
could not free it. It was pinned beneath
him.
The laughter came again, but its pitch
and its tone changed; it was less
confident. Then the voice gave out its
bellowing echo:
'No!'
Hawkmoon knew a terrible fear, a
fear greater than anything he had
previously confronted. His impulse was
hoped...'
If I should remember anything, I will
tell you.'
The cat mewled again and Jhary
craned his head around, "Aha! Land of
some sort. Let us hope it is friendly.'
'You have no idea where we are,
then?'
'None at all, Duke Dorian.' The
bottom of the boat scraped against
shingle. 'Somewhere in one of the
Fifteen Planes, it's to be hoped.'
Chapter Four
The Gathering Of The Wise
They had walked for five miles over
chalky hills and seen no sign that this
land was inhabited. Hawkmoon had told
Jhary-a-Conel of everything that had
befallen him, of everything which
puzzled him. He remembered little of the
adventure of Garathorm and Jhary
remembered more, speaking of the Lords
of Chaos, of Limbo and the perpetual
struggle between the Gods, but all their
conversation, as conversation often will,
caused further confusion and at length
they agreed to put an end to their various
speculations.
'Only one thing I know, and I know
that in my bones,' said Jhary-a-Conel,
'and that is that you need not fear for
your Yisselda. I must admit that I am, by
nature, optimistic - against considerable
evidence on occasion - and I know that
in this venture we stand to win much or
lose all. That creature you encountered
on the bridge must have considerable
power if he could wrench you from your
own world, and there is no question, of
course, that he means you ill, but I have
no inkling of his identity or when he will
find us again. It seems to me that your
ambition to find Tanelorn is pertinent.'
'Aye, Hawkmoon looked around
him. They stood on the crown of one of
'Aye. Is it a man?"
'I think it is.' Impulsively, Jhary
cupped his hands around his mouth,
shouting: 'Hey! Can you see us? Are you
a native of these parts, sir?
Suddenly the figure was very much
closer. It had an aura of black fire
flickering around its whole body. It was
clad in black, shining stuff that was not
metal. Its dark face was hidden by a high
collar, but enough was visible for
Hawkmoon to recognize it.
'Sword...' said the figure. 'Me,' it
said. 'Elric.'
'Who are you?" This was Jhary
speaking. Hawkmoon could not speak his throat was cramped, his lips dry. 'Is
struggle.'
And into the blackness Hawkmoon
shouted:
'It is not enough! It is not enough! I
must know more!'
Jhary placed a sympathetic hand upon
his arm. 'Come, Duke Dorian, we shall
only learn more by doing as they
instructed, Come, let us go back to the
ocean.'
But then Jhary was gone and
Hawkmoon was alone, 'Jhary-a-Conel?
Jhary?'
Hawkmoon began to run through the
night, to run through the silence, his
mouth gaping to emit a scream which
would not come, his eyes stinging with
tears which would not flow, and in his
Chapter Five
On The Shore
And now it was dawn and the mist
was on the sea, spilling aboard the stony
land; and there were lights, silver-grey,
drifting in the mist, and the cliffs behind
Hawkmoon were ghastly. He had not
slept He felt a ghost in a ghost's world.
He was abandoned, and still he had not
wept. His eyes stared into the mist, his
cold hand gripped the cold pommel of
his sword, his white breath streamed
from lips and nostrils, and he waited as
a morning hunter awaits his prey, making
no sound himself lest he fail to hear that
Tanelorn?'
"Aye. I seek Tanelorn. You will find
allies aboard the ship.'
What is the ship? Where is it
bound?'
'Only those w ho sail with her know
that.
Is there one called "Captain"
aboard?'
"Aye, our Captain. He is aboard.'
Brut climbed from the boat and held it
against the movement of the waves.
Those who rowed turned their heads to
look at Hawkmoon. They were all
experienced faces, the faces of men who
had fought in more than a single battle.
Warrior Hawkmoon knew other
warriors when he saw them.
Book Two
Sailing Between The Worlds:
3 Sailing For Tanelorn...
Chapter One
The Waiting Warriors
Hawkmoon looked about him while
Brut of Lashmar joined him on deck.
Already a wind had sprung up and was
filling the great, black sail. It was a
familiar
wind.
Hawkmoon
had
experienced it at least once before, when
he and Count Brass had fought Kalan,
Taragorm and their minions in the
caverns below Londra, when the very
essence of Time and Space had been
disrupted thanks to the efforts of the
Dark Empire's two greatest sorcerer
scientists. But, for all that it was a
seem to remember.'
'And did you find peace there?'
'Briefly, sir, I think.'
'Your memory, then, is poor?'
'It is no worse than the memories of
most of us who sail on the "Dark Ship,'
said Corum.
'Have you heard of the Conjunction of
the Million Spheres?'
"Yes, it strikes a chord. A time of
great changes, is it not, on all the planes?
When the planes intersect at specific
points in their histories. When our
normal perception of Time and of Space
becomes meaningless and when it is
possible for radical alterations to be
made in the nature of reality itself. When
Chapter Two
The Blind Captain
Hawkmoon had n o idea how much
time had passed before Brut came back
to the cabin, but Emshon and Thereod
had played two games of chess and were
half-way through another.
The Captain is ready to receive you,
Hawkmoon.' Brut looked tired; mist
streamed in through the open door before
he could slam it shut.
Hawkmoon got up from his chair. His
sword caught under the table and he
freed it so that it swung to its usual
position on his thigh. He drew his cloak
Erekose?'
'No.'
'He inhabits the forward cabin. Eight
other warriors are there, too. They await
only Elric. We sail now to find him. He
must be drawn from what would be your
past, just as Corum has been drawn from
what would be your future if you shared
the same world. Such are the forces at
work which make us risk monumental
stakes! I pray that it will prove
worthwhile.'
'And what are the forces at work?'
'I tell you what I have told the other
two and what I will tell Elric. I can tell
you no more, so ask no further questions
when I have finished. Do you agree to
that?'
Chapter Three
The Island Of Shadows
'And did the Captain illuminate you,
Sir Hawkmoon?' Emshon fingered his
chess queen as Hawkmoon entered the
cabin.
'A little, said Hawkmoon, 'though he
mystified me more. Why do our numbers
seem significant? Ten men to a cabin?'
Is it not the maximum the cabins can
hold comfortably?' asked Thereod, who
seemed to be winning the game.
There must be a considerable
amount of space below,' Corum said.
'That cannot be the reason.'
True.'
'And yet I learn that the equilibrium is
one maintaining the power of the gods.
Why do we fight to maintain their
power?'
Corum smiled reminiscently. 'Do
we?" he said.
'Do we not?'
'Usually, I suppose,' said Corum.
'You become as irritating as the
Captain,' said Hawkmoon with a laugh.
'What do you mean?'
Corum shook his head. 'I am not sure.'
Hawkmoon realized that he felt better
than he had done for some while. He
commented on this.
'You have drunk the Captain's wine,'
to Corum.
'The Captain would have the Four
join him now,' said Brut soberly.
'Has he more information for us?'
Hawkmoon asked, aware that the other
warriors in the cabin listened eagerly.
One by one they came up to the wine jug
and helped themselves from it. They
drank as he had drunk, quickly.
Hawkmoon and Corum rose and
followed Brut from the cabin. Walking
along the deck, through the mist,
Hawkmoon tried to see beyond the rail,
but saw only mist. Then he noticed a
man standing at the rail, his attitude
introspective. He recognized Elric and
called out in a friendlier tone than he had
used before:
your arms.'
They issued into the writhing mist. It
clung to the ship like a desperate beast.
It stirred. It threatened them. Erekose's
mood had changed. 'We have little free
will,' he said morosely, 'for all we
deceive ourselves otherwise. If we
perish or live through this venture, it
will not count for much in the overall
scheme of things.'
'I think you are of a gloomy turn of
mind, friend,' Hawkmoon told him
sardonically. He would have continued,
but Corum interrupted.
'A realistic turn of mind.'
They reached the cabin shared by
Erekose and Elric. Corum and
city of peace?
John ap-Rhyss sniffed suspiciously,
wiping the mist from his moustache, his
other hand playing with the hilt of his
sword. 'I have seen no place less
welcoming,' he said.
The Captain had left his cabin. His
steersman stood next to him. Both held
armfuls of brands.
With a shock, Hawkmoon saw that
the steersman's face was the twin of the
Captain's - but the eyes were not blind.
They were sharp, they were full of
knowledge. Hawkmoon could hardly
bear to look at the face as he accepted
his brand and tucked it into his belt.
'Only fire will destroy this enemy
Chapter Four
A City Haunted By Itself
The sky was like a wound gone bad,
full of dreadful, unhealthy blues,
browns, dark reds and yellows, and
there were shadows in it which, unlike
those on the land, sometimes moved.
One called Hown Serpent-Tamer, a
member of Elric's party, whose armour
was sea-green and scintillating, said: 'I
have rarely been ashore, it's true, but I
think the quality of this land is stranger
than any other I've known. It shimmers. It
distorts.
'Aye,' said Hawkmoon. He had
building.
'Well, let us set to it,' Baron Gotterin
said. 'Let us enter Hell, if this is not Hell
already.'
Corum gave the Baron an amused
glance. 'You are certainly determined to
prove your theory!'
Again Hawkmoon took the initiative,
heading over the level ground towards
what he guessed to be the doorway of
the nearest building - a dark,
asymmetrical gash. As the twenty
warriors approached, experienced eyes
wary for attack by any possible
defenders, the building seemed to take
on a brighter glow, seemed to pulse with
a steady beat, seemed to emit peculiar,
chamber.
Chapter Five
Agak And Gagak
There were eight milky colours to
each of the eight inwardly sloping sides
of the chamber; each colour changing in
unison with the others. From time to time
a side would become almost transparent
and it was possible to see through it to
the ruins of the city below, the other
building, still connected by a network of
tubes and threads.
There were noises within the
chamber - a sighing, a whispering, a
bubbling. They came from a great pool
set into the centre of the floor.
his sword.
'Agak!' shouted Emshon of Ariso.
The others all took up the shout; all
save the four heroes.
Hawkmoon was beginning to guess
what the words had meant. And
something was growing inside his mind another understanding, an understanding
of how the sorcerers must be slain. His
lips formed the word 'No,' but could not
voice it. He looked again into the faces
of the three other aspects of the
Champion Eternal. He saw that the
others were also afraid.
'We are the Four Who Are One.'
Erekose's voice was shaking.
'No . .' Elric spoke now. He was
satisfied.
The Four was tempted to join with
Agak and feast, though it knew if it did
so it would rob its own universe of
every shred of energy. Stars would fade,
worlds would die. Even the Lords of
Law and Chaos would perish, for they
were part of the same universe. Yet to
possess such power it might be worth
committing such a tremendous crime
It controlled this desire and gathered
itself for its attack before Agak became
too wary.
'Shall we feast, sister?'
The Four realized that the ship had
brought it to the island at exactly the
proper moment. Indeed, they had almost
Chapter Six
The Battle For Everything
Four faces laughed upon a gigantic
head. Eight arms waved in triumph, eight
legs began to move. And over that head
it waved a single, massive sword. And it
was running.
It ran upon Agak while the alien
sorcerer was still in his static form. Its
sword was whirling and shards of
ghastly golden light fell away from it as
it moved, lashing the shadowed
landscape. The Four was as large as
Agak. And at this moment it was as
strong.
energy.
And the sword sang its triumph and
its glee.
And little shreds of black and golden
light whispered away and were reabsorbed.
Hawkmoon knew the nature of the
Champion, He knew the nature of the
Black Sword. He knew the nature of
Tanelorn. For at this moment that part of
him which was Hawkmoon had
experience of the whole multiverse. It
inhabited him. He contained it. There
were no mysteries at that moment.
And he recalled that one of his
aspects had read something in the
Chronicle of the Black Sword, that
record of the Champion's exploits: For
Chapter Seven
The Heroes Part
Outside, standing amongst the
shadows of buildings that were not
there, or only partly standing; standing
beneath a bloody sun which had not
moved a fraction in the sky since they
had landed on the island; Hawkmoon
watched the bodies of the sorcerers
burn.
The fire took eagerly, shrieking and
howling as it consumed Agak and
Gagak, and its smoke was whiter than
Elric's face, redder than the sun. The
smoke filled the sky.
lost.'
'I fear it,' said Hawkmoon. 'I know
not why.'
'You are wise to fear it,' Elric told
him. 'It is more than a sword.'
'A demon, too?'
'If you like.' Eric would say no more.
'It is the doom of the Champion to
bear that blade at the Earth's most
crucial crises,' Erekose said. 'I have
borne it and would not bear it again, if I
had the choice."
The choice is rarely the Champion's,'
Corum added with a sigh.
Now they had come to the beach
again and hovered there, contemplating
the white mist surging on the water. The
dark silhouette of the ship was plainly
visible.
Corum, Elric and some of the others
began to go forward into the mist, but
Hawkmoon, Erekose and Brut of
Lashmar all hesitated at the same time.
Hawkmoon had come to adecision. 'I
will not rejoin the ship,' he said. 'I feel
I've served my passage now. If I can find
Tanelorn, this, I suspect, is where I must
look.
My own feelings.' Erekose moved
his body so that he was looking again at
the ruins.
Elric's glance at Corum was
questioning and Corum smiled in
answer.
'I have already found Tanelorn. I go
times,
plagued
by
paradoxes,
manipulated by beings who refuse to
enlighten us - it is tiresome, is it not?'
Tiresome, said Erekose laconically.
'Aye.
'My struggle has ended, I think,' said
Corum. 'I believe that soon I will be
allowed to die. I have served my turn as
Champion Eternal. I join my Rhalina, my
mortal bride.'
'I must still seek for my immortal
Ermizhad,' said Erekose.
'My Yisselda lives, I'm told,
Hawkmoon added. 'But I seek my
children.'
'All the parts of the thing that is the
Eternal Champion come together, said
Corum. This could be the last quest for
all of us.'
'And shall we know peace, then?'
Erekose asked.
'Peace comes to a man only after he
has struggled with himself,' said Corum.
'Is that not your experience?'
'It is the struggling which is so hard,'
Hawkmoon told him.
Corum said no more. He followed
Elric and Otto Blendker into the sea.
Soon they had disappeared into the mist.
Soon they heard faint shouts. Soon they
heard the anchor raised. The ship was
gone.
Hawkmoon was relieved, for all he
did not relish the idea of what lay ahead
of him. He turned.
the Conjunction.'
'No!' cried the apparition.
Erekose's laugh was contemptuous.
The black figure darted forward,
became huge; darted back, became tiny;
resumed its normal size, fled across the
ruins, its own shadow capering behind
it, not always in unison. The great, heavy
shadows of that collection of cities
seemed about to fall on the figure, for he
recoiled from many of them.
'No!' they heard him cry. 'No!'
John ap-Rhyss said: 'Was that what
was left of the sorcerer?'
'It was not,' said Erekose. 'It is what
is left of our nemesis.'
You know it, then?' said Hawkmoon.
suspicion.'
'I think one of the names is
Stormbringer,' the scarred man told him.
'And now I know why I feared Elric's
sword,' Hawkmoon said.
They spoke no more of this.
Book Three
In Which Many Things Are
Found To Be One Thing
Chapter One
Prisoners In Shadows
We are like ghosts, are we not?'
Erekose lay upon a pile of broken
stone and stared up at the red,
motionless sun. 'A converse of ghosts ...'
He smiled to show that he spoke idly,
merely to pass time.
'I am hungry,' said Hawkmoon. "That
proves two things to me - that I'm made
of ordinary flesh and that it has been a
long while since our comrades returned
to the ship.'
Erekose sniffed at the cool air. 'Aye. I
wonder, now, why I remained. Perhaps
the Runestaft?'
And a voice from behind Orland Fank
said:
'Father, you need seek no further.'
And there sat the child whom
Hawkmoon had seen in Dnark, who had
transformed himself into pure energy in
order to inhabit the Runestaff when
Shenegar Trott, Count of Sussex, had
sought to steal it. The one who had been
called the Spirit of the Runestaff,
Jehamiah Cohnahlias. The boy's smile
was radiant, his manner friendly.
'Greetings to you all,' he said. 'You
summoned the Runestaff.'
'We did not summon it.' said
Hawkmoon.
'Your hearts summoned it. And now,
Chapter Two
In Tanelorn
'Come, I will show you some history,'
said the child.
And he led the men through quiet
streets where people greeted them with
friendly gravity.
If the city shone, now, it shone with a
light so subtle that it was impossible to
identify its source. If it had one colour, it
was a kind of whiteness which certain
kinds of jade have, but as white contains
all colours, the city was of all colours. It
thrived; it was happy; it was at peace.
Families lived here; artists and
him.
'It could be,' said the child. 'For the
proud cannot accept being ignored. They
have a different sort of pride in Tanelorn
-and that is a pride which prefers to be
ignored.'
He took them past high towers and
lovely battlements, through parks where
excited children played.
'They play at war, then, even here?'
said John ap-Rhyss. 'Even here!'
'It is how children learn,' said
Jehamiah Cohnahlias. 'And if they learn
properly, they learn enough to abjure
warfare when they are grown.'
'But the gods play at war,' said
Oladahn.
Champion Eternal.'
Looking, Hawkmoon saw faces he
recognized amongst the statues. He saw
Corum and he saw Elric and he heard
Erekose murmur: 'John Daker, Urlik
Skarsol, Asquiol, Aubec, Arflane,
Valadek ... They are all here ... all, save
Erekose ...'
'And Hawkmoon,' said Hawkmoon.
Orland Fank spoke. There are gaps in
the ranks. Why so?'
They wait to be filled,' said the child.
Hawkmoon shivered.
'They are all the manifestations of the
Champion Eternal,' said Orland Fank.
Their comrades, their consorts. All in
one place. Why are we here, Jehamiah?'
'Free?'
'Freedom, Erekose, for the Champion
Eternal and all those he has served down
the long ages.'
Erekose's face filled with dawning
hope.
'But it has still to be earned,'
cautioned the Spirit of the Runestaff.
'Still.'
'How can I earn it?'
That you will discover. Now watch.'
The child motioned with his staff at
the statue of Elric.
And they watched.
Chapter Three
The Deaths Of The Undying
They watched as one statue stepped
down from its dais, face blank, limbs
stiff - and slowly his features assumed
the qualities of flesh (though bone-white
flesh) and his armour turned black and a
real person stood there; and though the
face was animated he did not see them.
The scene around him had altered
profoundly. Hawkmoon felt something in
himself drawing him closer and closer to
the one who had been a statue. It was as
if their faces touched, and still the other
was not aware of Hawkmoon's presence.
vanished.
Corum walked through the courtyard,
through the dusty halls and corridors of
the castle, up to the high tower where he
could look across the sea. And he knew
that Lwym-an-Esh, that lovely land, was
now drowned, that only a few fragments
still stood above the waves. And he
sighed, but he was not unhappy.
He saw a black figure come capering
over the waves towards, him, a grinning
figure with an insinuating stare.
'Corum? Corum?'
I know you,' said Corum.
'May I guest with you, Corum? There
is much I can do for you. I would be
your servant, Corum.'
I need no servant.'
Chapter Four
Captives Of The Sword
'I am the Sword,' said the black
figure. He waved a hand airily at the
massed statues all around them. 'These
w e r e mine once. I owned the
multiverse.'
'You have been disinherited,' said the
child.
'By you?' the black figure smiled.
'No,' said the child. 'We share a fate,
as you well know.'
You cannot give me back the things I
must have,' said the figure. 'Where is it?'
He looked about him. 'Where?'
luxury of chains!
All but one of them did Hawkmoon
recognize. And he was full of cold anger
now. 'Yisselda! Yarmila and Manfred!
D'Averc! Bowgentle! How are you this
creature's prisoners.'
That tale's a long one' began
Huillam D'Averc, but his voice was
drowned by Erekose and Erekose was
shouting with joy:
'Ermizhad! My Ermizhad!'
The woman, whom Hawkmoon had
not recognized, was of a race resembling
Elric's and Corum's. In her own way, she
was as beautiful as Yisselda. There was
much in the two women's very different
faces which provoked a sense of
resemblance.
Bowgentle turned an apparently
placid face this way and that. 'So we are
in Tanelorn at last.'
The woman called Ermizhad was
straining at her chains, trying to reach
Erekose.
'I thought you Kalan's prisoners,' said
Hawkmoon through the confusion,
addressing D'Averc.
'I thought so, too, but I believe this
somewhat
demented
gentleman
intercepted our journey through Limbo
..,' D'Averc made a pantomime of
dismay as Erekose glared at the black
figure.
'You must release her!
The being smiled. 'I will have the
we involved?'
'Because neither can exist without
Man,' said Orland Fank, They go with
Man wherever He goes.'
'That is why you are here,' said the
child. 'We are your creations.'
'Yet you control our destinies.'
Erekose's eyes had never left
Ermizhad's. 'How?'
'Because you let us,' the child told
him.
'Well, then, "Justice", let me see you
keep your word,' said the creature called
Sword.
'My word was given that I would
admit you to Tanelorn,' said the child. 'I
can do no more. The bargain itself must
home.'
He reached towards the creature, the
Black Jewel upon the palm of his hand.
The chains of golden silk fell away
from the limbs of the six captives.
Laughing, confident, his eyes glowing
with evil triumph, the being took the
Black Jewel from Hawkmoon's hand.
Hawkmoon embraced his children.
He kissed his daughter. He kissed his
son.
Erekose held Ermizhad in his arms
and he could not speak.
And the Spirit of the Black Jewel
raised his prize to his lips.
And he swallowed the jewel.
Take this,' said the child urgently to
Ha w kmo o n. 'Quickly.' He handed
Chapter Five
The Captain And The
Steersman
'It was found on the South Ice, at
sunrise, after you had but recently left
that world, Erekose. It had performed
one action for humanity which was not
directly to its benefit and so its spirit
was driven from it.'
The Captain stood there, his blind
eyes staring beyond them. Next to him
was his twin, the steersman, with arms
outstretched, the great black runesword
held on the flats of both palms.
'It was that manifestation of the sword
Captain quietly.
Erekose ignored him, staring
meaningfully at Hawkmoon. The power
of the Black Sword and the power of the
Balance are equal at this moment, you
say, Captain.'
That's so.'
'And this being can inhabit either the
sword or the jewel, not both?'
And Hawkmoon understood the
implication of Erekose's questions and
kept his face expressionless.
'Hurry!' said the black being from
behind
them. 'Hurry. The Balance
materializes!'
For an instant, Hawkmoon felt
something of the experience that he had
had when they had fought Agak and
Chapter Six
The Sword And The Staff
Erekose placed one large hand upon
the hilt of the Black Sword and he
placed the other under the blade, lifting
it from the steersman's grasp.
'Ah!' cried the creature. 'We are
united!'
And he flowed towards the Black
Sword and he laughed as he entered it,
and the sword began to pulse, to sing, to
emanate black fire, and the creature was
gone.
But, Hawkmoon noticed, the Black
Jewel had returned. He saw Jhary-a-
Chapter Seven
Going Back To Castle Brass
The time of the Conjunction is
almost passed,' said the Captain, 'and the
multiverse begins another cycle. Free of
gods, free of what you, Hawkmoon,
might term "cosmic authority. Perhaps it
will never need heroes again.'
'Only examples,' said Jhary-a-Conel.
He was walking towards the statues,
towards an empty space in the ranks.
'Farewell all of you. Farewell,
Champion who is no longer Champion,
and farewell to you, in particular,
Oladahn.'
or the Kamarg?'
To Londra, of course, at once!' said
D'Averc. 'After all, a kingdom awaits
me.'
'You were never a cynic, Huillam
D'Averc,' said Yisselda of Brass, 'and
you cannot make us think you are one
now. Give our greetings to Queen Flana.
Tell her we shall visit her soon.'
Huillam D'Averc bowed with a
flourish. 'And my greetings, in turn, to
your father, Count Brass. Tell him I shall
be sitting beside his fire before long and
drinking his wine. Is the castle as
draughty as it ever was?'
'We shall prepare a room suitable for
one of your delicate health,' Yisselda