“Who is it?” they said, and I heard the words.
“Corwin,” said I, and he held forth his left hand, which no longer bore the goblet.
“Then come to me, if you would.”
I reached forth and our fingers met. I took a step.
I was still holding the card in my left hand, but Bleys and I stood together on a cliff and there was a chasm to our side and a high fortress to our other side. The sky above us was the color of flame.
“Hello, Bleys,” I said, tucking the card into my belt with the others. “Thanks for the assistance.”
I suddenly felt weak and realized the blood was still flowing from my left shoulder.
“You’re wounded!” he said, throwing an arm about my shoulders, and I started to nod but fainted instead.
Later that night, I sprawled in a big chair within the fortress and drank whiskey. We smoked and passed the bottle and talked.
“So you were actually in Amber?”
“Yes, that’s right.”
“And you wounded Eric in your duel?”
“Yes.”
“Damn! I wish you’d killed him!” Then he reflected. “Well, maybe not. Then you’d have held the throne. I might have a better chance against Eric than I’d have had against you. I don’t know. What are your plans?”
I decided upon complete honesty.
“We all want the throne,” I said. “so there’s no reason to lie to one another. I’m not about to try killing you for it — that would be foolish — but on the other hand I’m not about to renounce my claim because I’m enjoying your hospitality. Random would like it, but he’s pretty much out of the picture. No one has heard from Benedict for some time now. Gerard and Caine seem to he supporting Eric, rather than promoting their own claims. The same goes for Julian. That leaves Brand and our sisters. I don’t know what the hell Brand is up to these days, but I do know that Deirdre is without power, unless she and Llewella can raise something in Rebma, and Flora is Eric’s creature. I don’t know what Fiona is up to.”
“And so that leaves us,” said Bleys, pouring us each another drink. “Yes, you’re right. I don’t know what’s going on in everone’s head right now, but I can assess our relative strengths and I think I’m in the best position. You made a wise choice in coming to me. Support me, and I’ll give you a regency.”
“Bless your heart,” I said. We’ll see.”
We sipped our whiskies.
“What else is there to do?” he asked, and I realized that the question was important.
“I might raise an army of my own, to lay siege to Amber,” I told him.
“Where among Shadows lies your army?” he inquired.
“That, of course, is my affair.” I said. “I don’t think I’d oppose you. When it comes to monarchs, I’d like to see either you, me, Gerard, or Benedict — if he still lives — upon the throne.”
“Preferably you, of course.”
“Of course.”
“Then we understand one another. So I think we can work together, for the time being.”
“And I,” I agreed, “else I would not have delivered myself into your hands.”
He smiled within his heard.
“You needed someone,” he said, “and I was the lesser evil.”
“True,” I agreed.
“I wish Benedict were here. I wish Gerard had not sold out.”
“Wishes, wishes,” I told him, “Wish in one hand and do something else in the other, and squeeze them both and see which comes true.”
“Well taken,” he said.
We smoked a while in silence.
“How far can I trust you?” he asked.
“As far as I can trust you.”
“Then let’s make a deal. Frankly, I had thought you dead for many years. I hadn’t foreseen your showing up at a crucial time and pressing your own claim. But you’re here, and that’s that. Let’s form an alliance, combine our forces and lay siege to Amber. Whichever of us lives through it winds up on top. If we both do, well — hell! — we can always fight a duel!”
I thought about it. It sounded like the best deal I’d get anywhere.
So I said, “I’d like to sleep on it. Tell you in the morning, okay?”
“Okay.”
We finished our drinks then and fell to reminiscing. My shoulder throbbed a bit, but the whisky helped, and the salve which Bleys had supplied. After a time, we were almost maudlin.
It is strange, I guess, to have kin and to be without kinship, for as long as our lives had led us along our separate paths. Lord! We talked the moon out of the heavens before either of us grew tired. Then he clapped me upon my good shoulder and told me that he was beginning to feel his load and that a servant would be by in the morning to bring my breakfast. I nodded, we embraced, and he retired.
Then I moved to the window, and from that vantage I could see down far into the chasm.
The campfires below burned like stars. There were thousands of them. I could tell that Bleys had assembled a mighty force, and I was envious. But, on the other hand, it was a good thing. If anyone could take Eric, it was probably Bleys. He wouldn’t be a bad thing in Amber; it was just that I preferred me.
Then I watched a while longer, and I saw that strange shapes moved among the lights. I wondered then as to the nature of his army.
Whatever, it was more than I possessed.
I made my way back to the table and poured me a final drink. Before I quaffed it, however, I lighted a taper. In its light, I withdrew the pack of cards I had stolen.
I spread them before me and I came across the one depicting Eric. I laid it in the center of the table and put the rest away.
After a time, it came to life; and I saw Eric in his sleeping garments and I heard the words, “Who is it?” His arm was bound.
“Me,” I said, “Corwin. How are you?”
He cursed then, and I laughed. This was a dangerous game and maybe the whisky had contributed to it, but I continued: “I just felt like telling you that all goes well with me. I also wanted to advise you that you were right when you spoke of the uneasy head. You won’t be wearing it long, though. So cheerio! Brother! The day I come again to Amber is the day you die! Just thought I’d tell you, since that day is not too far off.”
“Come ahead,” he told me, “and I’ll not want for grace in the matter of your passing.”
His eyes focused on me then and we were close.
I thumbed my nose at him and passed my palm over the card.
It was like hanging up a telephone, and I shuffled Eric in with all the rest.
I wondered though, as I approached sleep, concerning those troops of Bleys which occupied the defile below, and I thought upon Eric’s defenses.
It would not be easy.
Chapter 6
The land was known as Avernus, and the assembled troops were not quite men. I reviewed them the following morning, walking behind Bleys. They were all of them around seven feet in height, had very red skins and little hair, catlike eyes, and six-digited hands and feet. They wore garments that looked as light as silk, but were woven of something else and were mainly gray or blue in color. Each bore two short blades, hooked at the end. Their ears were pointed and their many fingers clawed.
The climate was warm and the colors bewildering, and everyone thought we were gods.
Bleys had found a place where the religion involved brother-gods who looked like us and had their troubles. Invariably, in the terms of this mythos, an evil brother would seize power and seek to oppress the good brothers. And of course there was the legend of an Apocalypse where they themselves would be called upon to stand on the side of the surviving good brothers.