chapter THIRTY-FIVE
Corin sank down on the grass again and wrapped his arms around his knees. “I…I do not want this burden.”
“I never meant to lay it on you,” Oberon said. “Nevertheless, you have it. And with it, all my sympathy.”
“I don’t know what to do.”
“And I can’t tell you,” Oberon said. “Although I know this much: don’t bury yourself in an early grave. It profits you nothing and costs you everything.”
“But isn’t that what you’re about to do?”
“My hands are tied by history. Yours are not. Live free.”
Corin nodded, numb. “Very well. Send me home.”
“It isn’t such an easy thing as that,” Oberon said. “Not with the feeble power I have left, to cast you safely over so much time and space.”
“Then what do you intend?”
“I’ll move the city first, and then we’ll have a sympathy. Once we reach the cavern, I will send you home.”
“And until then?”
“Get some rest,” Oberon said. “Find sustenance. And enjoy one last reunion with an old friend.”
“What friend?” Corin asked.
Oberon nodded past the pirate’s shoulder. “You will leave this memory behind, undone, but here and now you are close friends with a hero you’ve admired since you were a child. I take pride in that. It was the one kind thing I did for you in this whole dream.”
Corin craned around in time to see Avery step out onto the landing. The gentleman thief looked weary and bedraggled, but even so, Corin was surprised how slowly he approached down the path toward the king.
“I enjoyed meeting Kellen,” Corin said while they awaited Avery. “Where is Kellen?”
Oberon did not meet Corin’s eyes. His gaze was fixed on Avery. “We will ask the Violet.”
Corin nodded. “And then there was Maurelle. And Ogden Strunk. And you. I have learned so much from you.”
“And I from you,” Oberon said. “Every child of this world brings me some joy, some sense of pride, but it has been an honor seeing you in action. Now, here is Avery, and I see he brings a gift.”
The sword was unconcealed. Avery carried it in an ill-fitting scabbard. The ruby burned bloodred in the strange light beneath the throne room’s canopy, and that same fire seemed to burn in Avery’s eyes.
“Welcome,” Corin said. “I’d begun to fear for Kellen’s health in spite of things I’d heard.” He flashed a smile over to Oberon, but the king kept his eyes still on Avery. Corin’s smile slipped. “Ahem. I…anyway, the king has news for you.”
“Avery of House Violet,” the king intoned, “for the service you have given on this day, I name you mayor of Gesoelig.”
Avery nodded, eyes downcast. “You are kind, Your Majesty.”
Corin cleared his throat. “What ails you? Where…where is Kellen? You have the sword. Ogden said he wouldn’t release it unless Kellen gave his word.”
Avery nodded again. “It wasn’t long after you left. Kellen woke enough to hear what had come to pass. He swore unequivocally that we were good and honorable men.”
Corin smiled. “He doesn’t know us very well.”
Avery didn’t look up. He didn’t smile. “Having said those words, Kellen died. We buried him beneath the earth, and I brought you your sword.”
He raised his head, eyes flashing with tears, and shoved the bundled weapon violently into Corin’s arms. Corin took it with a grunt, then turned to Oberon. “You said he lived. You said he trained the refugees—”
“That is how I remember history.”
“But you said this is your memory! You said your hands were bound and you could not make changes.”
“You changed things,” Oberon said, solemn.
“He might have been the only honest man I’ve ever met! They called him coward, but he fought for you. He was a true hero!”
“And it was a villain who gunned him down,” Oberon answered. “The three of you interrupted a plot that would have seen a hundred thousand dead. I suspect the noble yeoman would have paid his life to save so many.”
“But you paid his life!” Corin said. “You knew this was happening, and you did nothing.”
Oberon sighed. “There is so little I can do. Everything within my power I spent on bringing you to this place, to this understanding, so you can now take it home.”
“Do not lay Kellen’s death on me!” Corin snapped.
“I don’t. I lay it on Ephitel. He is the one responsible, and he will pay in time.”
“He won’t! I have seen it. He gains power and glory without end. A thousand years or more he’ll rule. You call that justice?”
“The world is mad, at times. Even this one of my making. I can only do as much as my resources will allow. I’ll do what little good I can, and you must do the same.”
“You said the things I do here don’t matter—it’s just a dying dream—but I knew him. He was a good man.”
Oberon hung his head, but he offered no apology. “Good men die every day. Take Avery and raise a toast to the noble yeoman. I have my work to do.”
“Your work is wasted. You kill yourself to preserve a twisted dream.”
“I kill myself to save some handful of those lives you hold so dear. And I will spend my last breath returning you to a world that dies without you.”
Corin drew a deep breath and let it out slowly. His gaze sank down to the bundle in his arms. It was Kellen’s scabbard, part of his uniform, and far too small for the legendary sword. Corin sniffed. “You may keep that breath.”
“What?”
“I have no intention of going back. Not until I’ve dealt with this.”
“I’ve already warned you of the risks.”
“I cannot bring myself to care. I know the traitor will never have to pay in the world I know, but I can make him pay in this one.” He tore the scabbard free and held the naked blade before him.
“Please, refrain from this,” the king said. “No good can come of it. I need you here, alive.”
“Any authority I might have granted you died with Kellen.” Corin turned to Avery. “What say you? Will you serve your glorious king, or will you help me kill the monster?”
Avery showed his teeth. “I would like nothing more.”
“Then come. We will make plans on the way.”
“Stop!” Oberon called behind them. His voice was weak and worn, his brow creased with the strains he bore. Corin raised his eyebrows, waiting for some compelling argument.
“Stay,” Oberon said. “Stay here, with me, or I may not be able to send you home at all.”
“I like that world little better than this one.”
“But it will die without you! Come. You needn’t wait. Come before my throne, and I will send you now!”
Corin shook his head. “You need that power to move the city.”
“What is one city compared to a world? I will…” His voice cracked, but he shook his head and pressed on. “I will sacrifice them all for you.”
Corin spat. “You are a wretched king. I thank sweet fortune that you are not my liege.”
He turned and left the throne room, Avery at his heels, while behind them the elf king wept upon his throne.
They were past the Midnight Grotto before Avery found his voice again. “What are we about? Corin, I saw the soldiers rushing through the city. I heard a call for the fire brigades. What is happening?”
“Ephitel is on the march. He has a regiment all armed with guns, and he means to contest Oberon for the throne.”
“He will win.”
“The king won’t even fight him.”
Avery shook his head. “Why should he? What could stand against such power?”
Corin gripped the sword Godslayer until his hand ached. “I will stand.”
“You said before that this was not your war.”
“Ephitel made it so when he murdered Kellen. You said before that you would follow me to battle. Will you still? For Kellen? For Maurelle?”
“Maurelle? Has he—”
“No. The king gave her a pretty title, just like yours, and she is hard at work preparing our retreat.”
“Retreat.” The word sounded bitter on Avery’s tongue.
Corin nodded. “Aye. The court and all the pretty lords and ladies will run away and hide, while Ephitel and his followers divvy up the land of men.”
“This is Oberon’s plan?”
“Aye.”
“But you think we should challenge Ephitel.”
“I think we should plant him in the ground.”
Avery rolled his shoulders, loosening up for a fight. “I like your plan better.”
“I thought you might.”
“But it will take us half a day to cross the city on foot. Even longer if a panic’s growing in the streets.”
Corin stopped. He glanced back over his shoulder, toward the distant throne room, then he gave a shrug. “Close your eyes.”
“What?”
“Close your eyes and come with me.”
Corin fixed his mind upon the task at hand. He thought about the city gates near Moneylender’s Lane, where he had first met Aemilia and Ephitel. He fixed his mind on that place and the fight he meant to take to the lord protector. Then he turned around, opened his eyes, and gasped.
Moneylender’s Lane was empty, almost as he remembered it from another life. But here, a noonday sun burned hot and bright above, and it was a graceful gate of iron that surrounded the city, rather than ten paces of solid stone.
Avery shouted when he opened his eyes. “Age of reason! Where’d you learn to do that?”
“From the king,” Corin said, a little numb.
“Why haven’t you been doing that all along?”
Corin barked a laugh. “I didn’t know I could. I never tried.”
“But how—”
“There isn’t time for that,” Corin said, raising his arm to point. “Ephitel approaches.”
From their place near the gate, Corin could see Ephitel’s battle lines. There might have been a thousand men, mostly mounted and all wielding the flintlock rifles Jeff had mentioned. They had their attendants, too, and as Corin looked closer, he frowned.
“Are those catapults?”
“Mangonels, by the looks of them. Is that so strange?”
“For a man who has access to cannons? Yes.”
“Perhaps he had no time to have them built. Or he lacked the resources.”
“He equipped a thousand men with rifles and pistols,” Corin growled. “He could have made a pair of cannons.”
“You seem to suspect a reason. Say it. Why would Ephitel bring catapults?”
Corin bowed his head, remembering so many things the king had said. He sighed. “Why would Oberon raise the fire brigades?”
A quarter mile out, among Ephitel’s lines, someone gave a short, sharp trumpet blast, and Corin turned to Avery. “Take cover. Here, inside this shop!”
He grabbed the gentleman’s sleeve and dragged him off the street just as the two catapults slammed into violent motion. They hurled their ammunition high into the air, overshooting the walls by at least a hundred paces. Avery chuckled. “That won’t get them in.”
“That was not the goal,” Corin said. “They weren’t stones or darts. They were wooden barrels.”
One of the barrels lost itself somewhere behind the building Corin and Avery had used for refuge, but the other smashed down two blocks over, among the shops and houses, and as it landed, it shot a pillar of fire ten paces above the rooftops. It boomed, and an answering explosion rang out to the west.
“He meant to start a fire,” Corin said. “He meant to kill the townsfolk. That man needs to die.”