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Showing posts with label James Lecky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Lecky. Show all posts

Sing No Songs of Resurrection



Sing No Songs of Resurrection
By James Lecky

On the day that Mistress Cantana completed her eighth – and penultimate – symphony, she held a masquerade in her domus. 'For the purpose of both celebration and commiseration', the invitations read and, accordingly, the citizens of Mortdieu dressed themselves in those costumes prescribed for the occasion.

Lord Lazarus wore the brown armour and helmet of Health, Lady Meridan the bright scarlet gown of Love, and, at their insistence, Dr Sontagg the blue armour and dome of Happiness (a barbed enough jibe on behalf of the Lord and Lady since Sontagg was known to be a morose fellow at best).

And, as the invitation dictated, they danced the Dance though the orchards that led to Mistress Cantana's domus; Sontagg twirling his ceremonial baton while Lazarus and Median used their fans to weave intricate patterns in the evening air.

A mile or so from the domus, along the static shore of Lake Immobile, they encountered Duke Stern and the Naked Angel, sitting on smooth rocks, staring into the unmoving water.

Stern, a literal giant of a man – twelve feet tall and four feet broad - wore only a loincloth and a domed helmet of black iron which belched smoke and flame from its crest at irregular intervals.

“Ridiculous,” he said, speaking to the Naked Angel. “I don't know how you persuaded me to wear this.”

”Nonsense, my lord,” the Angel said. “It is most becoming.” A smooth and androgynous voice to match a smooth and androgynous body. The Angel sighed. “Puzzles and games, she promised, ambrosia and manna. I cannot wait -” It trilled a small run of notes, slightly dampened by the roar of the helmet, and a small pool of the purest ambrosia appeared at the Angel's feet.

“Careful,” the Duke said. “Notes should not be wasted on such frippery.”

“Good day to you both,” Lord Lazarus said, executing a perfect box-step. “And what, pray, are you supposed to be, My Lord Stern?”

“Gloom,” the giant replied.

“An excellent costume,” Meridan said, coming to the end of a complicated pirouette.

“How very apt,” Dr Sontagg said, halting.

“And you,” Meridan said to the Angel, “you wear no costume today?”

The Angel looked down at its own body, as if realising for the first time that it was naked.

“How remiss,” it said and trilled a single, brief, note.

Now it wore vermilion armour and a plumed open-faced helmet topped with the grey tail-feathers of a long-extinct bird.

Dressed, the Angel was even more striking, the very figure of an ancient hero, down to the crimson battle-blade sheathed at its side, the look of steely determination on its sculpted face. It linked arms with Lady Meridan and said:

“Shall we away?”

And once again they began the Dance – a dance that moved without music yet was flawless in its execution – and, with Duke Stern bringing up the rear, they sashayed towards the domus.

* * *

There were live butterflies in Earl Veduc's hair, each one carefully positioned and glued in place. Frugal by nature, he had not used any of his own notes to create them – or any other part of his costume – but rather had caught them himself at dawn in one of the Purple Meadows.

“Risky,” Duke Stern said.

“They are mine,” the petulant Earl said. “Caught on my estate.”

“In lands which abut those belonging to the Margrave of the Marshes.”

“Damn the Margrave,” Veduc said. “Damn him and his library. It's not my fault if he can't keep the creatures on his own estate.”

“I still say it is a risk,” Duke Stern said.

They stood in the great empty hall of the domus, sipping from huge glasses of ambrosia, nibbling upon slices of manna.

As far as they could tell, virtually all the inhabitants of Mortdieu – nearly fifty in all – were in attendance, their costumes spectacular against the dismal backdrop of the hall – a cornucopia of colour representing concepts both great and small.

Lord Jarelle – Pity - was there, with Lord Bleck – Joy – by his side.

Bishop Horne dressed as Invitation, Baronet LeGran as Sorrow, Countess Tanuker as Trivia. and all the other grandees of Mortdieu, a city whose population consisted of nothing but grandees.

They spoke in low, reverential tones as befitted the occasion. It was almost, but not quite, a liturgy.

A moment later all talk ceased.

Mistress Cantana had entered the hall.

The costume she wore was peacock-bright, complete with tail and beak, its colours more intense than any other there. And with her, hopping in her wake, an enormous Blue Jay, her current muse.

“Welcome one and all,” she said, her words amplified by the beak. Then, without further preamble, she reached out and broke the neck of the Blue Jay with her strong but slender hands. A polite smattering of applause in response. “Friends,” she continued. “From today, I shall write no more music.”

She might have said more, but the hall was abruptly filled with noise – leather striking a hollow note against metal.

The Margrave of the Marshes had arrived and, seeing the butterflies fluttering around Earl Veduc's head had immediately struck at him with the massive book he habitually carried on a gilded chain around his neck.

Fortunately for Veduc, Duke Stern had interposed himself between Earl and Margrave and the great volume – in which the Margrave kept his collection of words - had struck hard against his helmet saving the Earl both injury and social embarrassment.

“Miscreant!” the Margrave roared. “Blackguard! Losangier!”

The words, archaic as they were, were understood by few of the assembled crowd but their tone – and the ferocity with which the Margrave swung his makeshift weapon – left none in doubt as to their meaning.

“Please, My Lord Margrave,” Duke Stern said. “Restrain yourself, remember the day and the company we keep.”

The Margrave peered up at him. A vein throbbed in his forehead and his white hair stood in disarray.

“Forgive me, Stern,” he said. “Forgive me, Mistress Cantana,” - here a slight bow to the woman who stood with the dead bird at her feet - “Forgive me one and all.... Except you, Master Veduc. You, sir, are a dastard and a blighter. And it is my intention to...” He riffled through the pages of his book until he found the word he sought. “... my intention to make war upon you and your domus.”

“What the devil do you mean?” Veduc asked.

The Margrave smiled, a twist of rouged lips. “You will find out in good time,” he said.

A curt nod to the assembled nobility and he was gone, the heels of his boots clacking against the stone floor.

“Extraordinary,” Lord Jarelle said.

“Quite so,” echoed Lord Bleck.

The party dissipated soon after - no one in the mood for either celebration or commiseration – leaving Mistress Cantana alone with her slaughtered muse.

As they retuned to their own estates, walking rather than dancing now, Dr Sontagg turned to Lord Lazarus and said:

“What did he mean by 'make war'?”

“Who knows?” Lazarus said. “Just another of those ancient words and phrases he likes to use.”

“Doubtless.” But he could not shake the nagging feeling that all was not as it should be, that something new and terrible had entered the world. Or, worse than that, something old and terrible.

* * *

The Margrave of the Marshes sat in his workroom and plotted.

A rotund man in voluminous grey robes, his thick neck and weak chin disguised by an elaborate ruff, he was, by any definition, not handsome. He could, of course, have Remade himself in a more pleasing form but chose not to. In a society where beauty is commonplace, ugliness has its attractions.

Besides, to Make or Remake cost notes and there were fewer and fewer of those in the world these days.

Not that he was spendthrift with his music – he had created the marshes which gave him his title, the domus where he housed his vast collection of books, unearthed from ruins so ancient that even he could not call them by their proper names.

He took the great volume from around his neck and turned once again to the word 'war'.

A sustained campaign against an undesirable situation or activity.

Something in the words, the shape and sound of them, gave him an inexplicable thrill of delight and he had for some time now – ever since the Naked Angel had introduced him to the concept - been seeking an excuse to put them into practice. The Earl's recent theft had given him his casus belli.

Not that he undertook his new diversion without good reason. The Earl had long been partial to incursions upon the Margrave's estate – a few dozen butterflies here, a jackalope there, crushing flowers underfoot in total disregard for their placement.

No, the man would have to be taught a lesson. A war, a colourful war to determine the exact boundaries of their estates.

If nothing else, it might help to pass the slow drag of time.

* * *

And while the Margrave plotted, Mistress Cantana sat and brooded. Alone in her great empty hall, save for the rotting carcass of the bird, she contemplated the great, empty days that stretched before her.

She might, under present circumstances, be expected to live until Mortdieu itself crumbled into dust. Her health – restored along with her youth at the completion of her Eighth – was robust, her beauty ethereal, her mind as sharp as ever.

But.

An eternity of idleness, the constant knowledge that her life's work would remain unfinished, for to complete – perhaps even to begin – the Ninth Symphony would spell her end.

Others – like Lord Lazarus, his twin sister Lady Meridan and their sometime secretary Dr Sontagg – had already written their finest music and were content now to fritter away their Talent on madrigals, tocattas, little whirls and snatches of melody which could only ever hope to transform the world in small, unimportant ways. Their last notes would remain uncomposed since, for them, the will to live beat stronger than the impulse to create.

Others still, those inhabitants of Mortdieu whose names were long forgotten, had simply allowed music, time and life to expire.

Mortdieu – the great city of composers where music and magic intertwined so completely that one was indistinguishable from the other.

An old, old city surrounded on all sides by impenetrable mist – said to have been conjured and composed by Saint Wolfram to hide the city from the Beautiful Horde, so far back in the ancient past as to have moved into the realm of legend.

Mortdieu, where the lives of the inhabitants were measured in notes; enough to create nine symphonies – no more and no less.

But what a city they had created; a work of art as much as architecture; the delicate towers of the classicists, the rigid utilitarian structures of modernists, the chaos of the avante-garde, fragile balconies overlooking silent lakes whose waters were never disturbed, for no winds blew through the city of Mortdieu.

She understood why so many had chosen death - could already feel the maddening itch of music in her brain, music that demanded to be released. Despite herself she sang a few bars of the overture, sweet and mournful as befitted the Ninth.

Around her the walls of the great hall changed, granite imbued with colour and form, and the bird at her feet twitched back into startled life. She reached down and killed it again.

No.

She would write no more music, no matter how strong the impulse, for there was always that threat of mediocrity – with her since the triumph of her First – and Mistress Cantana feared mediocrity much more than she feared death.

* * *

Two days after the masquerade, the Margrave of the Marshes began his campaign against Earl Veduc.

It was Dr Sontagg, taking his customary morning stroll through one of the abandoned coral gardens who saw – or rather heard – him first.

A great clanking shook the air, accompanied by the sound of ponderous hoofbeats, and the Margrave hoved into view.

Sontagg recognised him at once, despite the strange armour he wore – black and bulky with a featureless helm – and despite the ungainly and preposterous beast he rode, like nothing so much as a great ram, its fleece dyed indigo, its horns gilded with gold. In one hand the Margrave carried a great long lance, a red and white pennant dangling near its tip.

“Good day to you,” Sontagg said, studying both armour and beast with casual scrutiny. “Is there a pageant today? No one has informed me if there is.” His voice took on a slightly peevish tone.

“No pageant,” the Margrave said.

“Is this, then, something to do with the 'war' you spoke of?”

“Exactly that.” He fumbled with a satchel hanging from the ram's left horn and produced a scroll. “This is my formal declaration which I intent to deliver to the Earl.”

Dr Sontagg raised an elegant eyebrow. “Fascinating,” he said. “May I accompany you?”

“Of course,” the Margrave said and kicked the ram into a shambolic trot.

* * *

The Earl had spent most of that morning with his clockwork court.

The collection – to the envy of some and the puzzlement of many – was a vast one, painstakingly assembled by the Earl himself. From miniature guardsmen no bigger than his thumb to life-sized courtiers in lace and velvet, their bland features concealing intricate clockwork brains capable of a modicum of independent thought.

It was one of these – a dandy in a brocade coat and silk knickerbockers – that he pursued across his lawn waving an oversized butterfly net and laughing heartily.

“Spartaco!” the Earl cried. “Come back, our revelries are not yet ended!”

But the automaton paid him no attention, striding away on stick-thin legs. The sight of it made the Earl laugh all the harder.

The dandy stopped, and for a moment Veduc thought that its mechanism had run down. Odd that, since he had carefully wound each one that morning. But as he drew closer it became clear that the clockwork continued to run smoothly. Something else had caused it to stop.

A moment later he knew the reason.

There, coming along a wide boulevard in high pomp, was the Margrave of the Marshes.

A small crowd had gathered in his wake – Dr Sontagg, Lords Jarelle and Bleck, Bishop Horne, Countess Tanuker and, as ever, Lord Lazarus and his sister Lady Meridan.

Despite the Margrave's sinister – if comic – appearance the whole procession had an air of carnival about it. Jarelle and Bleck smiled and laughed, two newly-weds out for an afternoon stroll. The Bishop and the Countess skipped along, and behind them Sontagg, Lazarus and Meridan performed a pastiche version of the Dance.

They drew closer. The Margrave dismounted from the back of his monstrous ram and clanked towards the Earl.

“This,” the Margrave said. “Is for you.” And presented the scroll.

The Earl unrolled it and read the words it contained.

It read:

I, Oswellian, Margrave of the Marshes, declare war upon the Earl Veduc, his estate and domus. I and my allies shall do our utmost in prosecuting the war in the attainment of our aims.

To whit: to ensure the peace and stability of my estate, free from interference, persecution and theft.

Signed

Oswellian, Margrave of the Marshes.


“Allies?” the Earl said. “Who exactly are your allies?”

“They are.” The Margrave waved towards the laughing, dancing group.

“Indeed.” The Earl called down to Lord Lazarus. “Is it so, my lord, are you the Margrave's ally in this affair?”

“I suppose I am,” Lazarus replied diffidently. “I suppose we are all.”

“And I am allowed to engage allies of my own?”

“Yes, of course,” the Margrave said, although he sounded unsure.

“Very well. In that case I accept your declaration. What must we do next?”

“Ah!” the Margrave said. “We must fight a battle - you and your allies against me and mine.”

The Earl nodded.

“Then shall we say, one week from today?”

“Very well.” The Margrave turned, clanked off and clambered back onto the ram with as much dignity as he could manage.

It was only after the procession had disappeared from view that the Earl allowed himself to frown.

* * *

News of the war spread rapidly and by the next evening the majority of the citizens of Mortdieu had declared their allegiances one way or another.

Mistress Cantana remained a notable exception, refusing to be drawn into such nonsense, preferring to be left alone to mope and wander through the corridors of her domus, sometimes visiting her workroom to weep over the manuscripts of her eight symphonies.

Other than these, she had created nothing in her life. Yes, of course the domus had risen with the performance of her First, the Blue Waste been conjured by the bleak power of her Fifth and so on, but these had been byproducts of the work, not their intention.

Musical architecture, atonal landscaping, contrapuntal decoration – these were best left to others. She was and remained a composer. Music was her craft, her genius. Her passion.

Wiping her tears with a lace kerchief, she sat at her harpsichord and tinkered with the keys, careful not to create any new combination of notes. After a moment she found her fingers drawn to the second movement of her Third. The sorcerous properties of the music had gone, dissipated with the creation of the inexplicable machines it conjured in its wake – but the music itself remained, by turns harsh and sweet, soaring and subtle.

Her greatest work?

More technically proficient than her First, more controlled than her second. The Fourth and Fifth might rival – although not equal – it, the Sixth and Seventh have received greater acclaim and the Eighth reduced even Duke Stern to tears.

But was it her greatest? What might her unwritten Ninth accomplish?

Equally, though, what might it fail to achieve?

No, the risk was too great, the possibility – however remote – that her final work and legacy be a commonplace one.

“I will write no more music,” she said, an affirmation as much as an utterance.

“You are too critical, Mistress,” the Naked Angel said, appearing cross-legged on the lid of the harpsichord. A discordant note accompanied its arrival.

“And you attune yourself to emotions that are none of your concern,” Mistress Cantana said, her fingers frozen on the keys.

Au contraire,” the Angel said. “When one of my fellows is in distress it concerns me greatly.”

“It might fit you better to think of the coming war,” Mistress Cantana said.

“A trifling thing at best,” the Angel said, “merely another fad, forgotten when fashions change.” It smiled, the expression filled with mischief rather than malevolence..

“I hope you are correct,” Mistress Cantana said.

“Of course I am. Now, tell me, Mistress, where lies the heart of your sadness?”

“Go away, you irksome thing,” Mistress Cantana said

The Angel vanished as quickly as it had come. It would return whenever it wished, of course, since neither lock nor charm could prevent it from doing so. But for the moment, at least, Mistress Cantana could savour her solitude.

* * *

The battle began on time, just after noon.

The craze for war had swept through the city, with a procession of citizens – both allies and enemies – combing the Margrave's library for definitions, examples, methods and means.

Although he scowled, muttering under his breath, the Margrave remained secretly pleased at this attention, even permitting the Earl Veduc to spend an long afternoon among the books, soaking up all the martial information he wished.

And now the two armies were arrayed, facing each other across the cobalt expanses of the Blue Wastes.

On one side, the Margrave's Alliance, its ranks filled with crude creatures imagined and brought to life by his allies. A mixed bag by any definition, their one cohesive factor the grey serge uniforms the Margrave insisted the rank-and-file wore. There were pikemen and slingers, dragon riders on ill-tempered beasts, mangonels and trebuchets and other archaic machines of war.

On the other side, the Earl's forces, culled in great part from his clockwork court, fashioned by the Earl himself after long hours in his workroom but bolstered by other automata created especially for the day by his allies.

There were hussars on prancing ponies, long lines of red-clad infantry, great field pieces of brass and bronze.

“Magic versus metal,” Duke Stern observed. Like Mistress Cantana he had elected to take no part in the war but, unlike her, had been unable to restrain his curiosity and now sat with the Naked Angel enjoying breakfast while the two armies manoeuvred into position.

“How long do you think it will last?” the Angel said.

“Not long. One side or the other will grow bored with the whole thing, quit the field and that will be the end of that.”

“Doubtless,” the Angel said. It raised a glass of sparkling wine in salute to both sides. “Still, it may be entertaining enough.”

“Do you think of nothing but your own entertainment?” the Duke said.

A little laugh. “Rarely,” it said.

Lord Lazarus came riding up, seated on the back of a white charger. He wore a charcoal coloured uniform of his own design and a long sabre hung from his hip.

“Are you sure you won't join us, my lord Duke?” he asked. “The day promises to be splendid fun.”

“Thank you, no,” the Duke said. “I am content enough to observe.”

“As you wish.” He galloped back to his own lines.

And the battle commenced.

Dr Sontagg was killed in the first exchange, still attempting to mount his horse.

Lady Meridan, laughing so hard that she could hardly sing the resurrection notes, brought him back to life and this time he managed to clamber onto the back of his charger with a little more panache.

* * *

The casualties were greatest in the first hour – Lord Lazarus, Bishop Horne, Baronet LeGrand, Count Wesker, the Boyar-Prince Safronkin – until the grandees began to come to grips with the rules of this new game. But when they had, their laughter boomed in counterpoint to the Earl's clockwork cannons - even Duke Stern was seen to crack a wry smile.

And over it all the sound of resurrection songs as both sides returned their dead back to life and back into battle.

A fine, grand game it was too, distraction enough to fill the endless hours that hung over Mortdieu and her grandees.

Until Lord Lazarus died irrevocably.

“An accident,” the Earl explained afterwards. “An unfortunate accident.” And no one – even Lady Meridan – had cause to disbelieve him.

Lord Lazarus, swept up in the dash and elan of a lancer's charge. Six hundred of them, with Lazarus at their head, determined to take the Earl's cannon with pluck and steel alone.

Lord Lazarus, handsome and smiling, waving his sabre above his head, riding straight into the mouth of a brass monstrosity from another age. An explosion – no greater or louder than any that had gone before – a crash of earth and when the smoke cleared there he was, torn apart by the force of the blast, limbs and organs scattered like discarded playthings.

The Earl was the first to see that something was amiss.

“Pax!” he called out, remembering the word that the Margrave had taught him. “In the name of Saint Wolfram, pax!”

The Margrave trotted across the battlefield to meet him, a broad grin on his florid, face.

“Surrendering so soon? You disappoint me, Veduc, I would have though the battle to go on for hours yet.”

The Earl did not reply, instead he merely pointed to the red ruin that had been Lord Lazarus.

“Oh my...” The Margrave said, that simple phrase as expressive as any curse.

“Help him!” Lady Meridan screamed. “For pity's sake help him!” She ran towards them, her hair in perfect disarray, face smudged with gunpowder and soot. Dr Sontagg rushed behind her, his features carefully composed in a look of professional concern.

“Dead,” he pronounced after a cursory examination of the remains. “Dead, certainly, beyond my capabilities.”

Kneeling beside the body of her brother, Lady Meridan sang a keening song of resurrection. A song so filled with anguish and loss that the universe itself might have wept to hear it.

It did no good.

* * *

“The cremation will be held in five days,” Duke Stern said.

“So it is true then?” Mistress Cantana said. “There is no hope?”

“There is always hope while the stars shine,” the Duke said. “But in these circumstances... no, there is no hope.”

They sat in the stone garden in the grounds of Mistress Cantana's domus, sipping tea.

A curious place, that garden, even given the esoteric nature of Mortdieu. No flowers grew there, nor were there any weeds. It was merely – as far as the Duke could tell - a collection of rocks placed without consideration or aesthetic choice.

Mistress Cantana had taken to spending time her time here, watching the rocks grow, giving the impossible task her full attention in order to silence the music that played in her head.

“I have your invitation here,” Stern said. “Lady Meridan asked me to deliver it.”

He fumbled in the pockets of his red velvet coat and produced an envelope, dwarfed by that massive hand.

She took it and briefly read the contents.

“You will be going, of course,” the Duke said.

“I will consider it.”

“The first death since Von Shirak and you will merely consider it?”

She did not reply, her attention fixed upon the stones once again.

Death was not unknown in Mortdieu, but equally it was not common.

The last demise had been over a hundred years before, when the Mad Knight Baldur von Shirak had thrown himself from the Seagull Tower to plunge into the welcoming rocks below. Not trusting gravity to do its work unaided, he had taken a tincture of strychnine prior to his autodefenestration to ensure that even the finest resurrection song could not have brought him back.

The death of Lord Lazarus, three days before, was more final than that.

It would take a symphony to resurrect him.

And only one person in Mortdieu had so many notes left to them - notes that chased through her head night and day in screeching ill-formed melodies, pleading with her for form and release.

The sound of a dirge broke her from her reverie and she looked up from the rocks to see Lady Meridan driving towards them in her calliope.

The calliope – one of Earl Veduc's many machines – was a gaudy thing, more suited to carnival than mourning, pulled by a team of clockwork horses. It had, according to Duke Stern, been Veduc's gift to Lady Meridan to mark her brother's passing.

She sat stiffly in the passenger seat while a mechanical coachman drove the calliope. She wore a mourning gown of indigo, a grey veil over her face, topaz rings on each of her fingers.

Mistress Cantana rose as the machine drew closer, as did the Duke, towering over her.

The music it played was a simple tune in a minor key – Mistress Cantana recognised it as a fragment of Lazarus' toccata and fugue, pressed into service to mark his death.

An exhausted piece of music, she thought, all sorcerous power long since gone, although at the time it had been enough to rise the rococo towers that faced mistward in the east of the city. Prosaic music, prosaic architecture. The notion was unworthy of her, but she could not help but think it.

The calliope came to a halt, Lady Meridan dismounted and came to them.

Grief had been hard on her, etched into her face, eyes blank with the pain of it. The tracks of tears, both new and old, formed irregular lines through her thick layers of make-up.

“I have come to plead with you,” she said without preamble. “Please, Bring my brother back to life.”

“No,” Mistress Cantana said.

Lady Meridan continued as though she had not heard her.

“A light has gone out in my soul. All joy has left this world. Without him I am nothing more than a shade. Please,” she said again. “Bring him back to life.”

“No.” Mistress Cantana said the word as gently as she could, yet there was still ice in her voice.

“You will, at least, attend his cineration.” As much a command as a question.

“Of course.”

As Lady Meridan turned to go, Mistress Cantana stood and placed a hand upon her elbow.

“I am sorry for your loss,” she said. “And I grieve for the Lord Lazarus, but it was no fault of mine, I have no obligation towards him.”

“Nor to any of us, it would seem.”

And then she was gone, the discordant music of the calliope fading as she went back the way she had come.

“You understand my reasons for refusing her?” Mistress Cantana said when silence had returned.

“Whether I do or do not is unimportant,” Duke Stern said. “Your reasons are your own and that is good enough.”

“Thank you, my friend.”

* * *

Five days passed.

In Mortdieu – the city, the land, the world they inhabited – the only talk was of the death and forthcoming funeral of the Lord Lazarus.

No one quite knew the etiquette, however, since the Lord Lazarus had left no stipulation, no last will and testament. Some – Lords Jarelle and Bleck, for instance – took to openly weeping and rending their garments, returning to their domus every few hours to don new and more elaborate mourning costumes which they tore with artful precision. Others – such as Bishop Horne and the Graf Orlok – remembered the carnival atmosphere that had accompanied the interment of Baldur Von Shirak and used a little of their precious precious music to compose a joyful syncopated melody in honour of their fellow aristocrat.

“To celebrate the life rather than mourn the death,” Bishop Horne explained when questioned.

Upon its first performance the music raised a garden in the southern quarter of the city, a full acre of gladioli and lupins, through which they marched at the head of a mechanical band with trumpets and trombones. In keeping, the Bishop and Graf wore top hats, silk sashes and carried silver maces with which they kept time.

A formal peace was concluded between Earl Veduc and the Margrave of the Marshes at which both men vowed never to make war again and some took small consolation that, if nothing else, the death of Lord Lazarus had brought peace to the world.

“Until the next time,” Dr Sontagg was heard to mutter before scurrying away.

* * *

Mistress Cantana awoke at dawn on the morning of the funeral.

She took an hour to choose her gown, finally settling on a simple design of purple charmeuse. Another hour to choose a pillbox hat and veil. Three more to apply her make-up.

It was the way of things with her now, taking an inordinate time over every decision, and the noon clocks had struck by the time she was satisfied with her appearance.

They were all there at the Necropolis, all the gaudy, silly citizens of Mortdieu.

A band had been assembled close to the funeral pyre, mostly mechanical musicians but not all. Bishop Horne with his trumpet, Lords Jarelle and Bleck with their violas, Lady Peel with her piccolo, half a dozen others with their virtuoso instrument of choice.

Lady Meridan was there, of course, standing in the conductor's position with a ebony baton in her hand.

The tune they played – Mistress Cantana recognised it as she approached – was a variation on Lady Meridan's Seventh, the symphony she had composed to celebrate her brother's five hundredth birthday. But now it was played in a sombre minor key.

“I'm glad you came,” Duke Stern said.

“He was a good man. The least I can do is pay my respects to him.”

“Of course.”

The music ended, Lady Meridan put down her baton and plucked a torch from the brazier beside the pyre.

They had reassembled the Lord Lazarus as best they could, stitching torn flesh and shattered limbs, applying cosmetics to his poor face to at imitate a semblance of health.

An unnecessary refinement, Mistress Cantana thought, since death had already chosen him - or rather had had him thrust into its embrace without warning.

“The Angel is not with you today?” she said to the Duke.

The giant scratched his head. “No,” he said. “I have not seen it, away on some errand of its own devising, no doubt.”

“No doubt.”

But even as she spoke, the Naked Angel appeared beside Lady Meridan. It held something in its hands, something that Mistress Cantana could not help but recognise.

Eight musical scores, each one in her own precise notation.

The Angel handed them to Lady Meridan with a flourish.

“As requested,” it said.

“What does this mean?” Mistress Cantana demanded, advancing upon them.

“Please, Mistress,” said Lady Meridan, “do not take another step.” She held the torch dangerously close to the crisp vellum, so close that a faint crackle could be heard.

“It would be unfortunate,” the Angel said, “if your life's work were to be burned along with the Lord Lazarus.”

* * *

Her symphonies, her precious, precious symphonies. If the manuscripts were destroyed her music would never be heard again. Even she herself could not hope to recreate them other than as simple sound, for the magic that had been released upon their composition was long gone.

“Traitor!” she hissed at the Naked Angel.

“To whom?” the Angel replied. “I owe you no allegiance, Mistress.”

“You would not listen to my pleas,” Lady Meridan said. “Nor would you find it in your heart to aid me. Therefore, you have left me no other avenue than coercion.”

“Please,” Duke Stern said, advancing to stand beside Mistress Cantana. “Some compromise must be possible.”

“None,” Lady Meridan said. “If Lazarus is consigned to the flames, Mistress Cantana's work will follow.” Grief and madness competed in her voice.

“Very well,” Mistress Cantana said. “I will do as you request. And damn your soul for it.”

She turned and walked away from them, her face serene but a fierce hatred burning within her. Hatred. But something more, something that even she herself was unable to completely identify.

A sense of....

What?

Relief? Release? Purpose?

She had feared this moment for so very long – since the first moment she had begun to compose – and now that it had been forced upon her its arrival did not seem so terrible.

No one, not even Duke Stern, would meet her gaze. The Naked Angel – normally so pleased with its schemes - appeared chastened, its smile not quite so broad. But then it was a mercurial creature at best, not inhuman but unhuman, and who knew what emotions resided in the recesses of its elegant cranium.

* * *

Back in her workroom, she worked with an intensity hitherto unknown.

In the past each note had been carefully weighed and considered, its place within the composition precise - technique over instinct. Now she allowed instinct to come to the fore, feeling as much as placing the notes onto the manuscript.

For a single, feverish day she worked, transcribing from the music that whirled and pounded and swept through her head.

Sometimes, a small snatch of music would fall unbidden from her lips. Never more than a few notes, but the power of them, raw as they were, worked its way into the walls of her domus, altering them so that they flowed like quicksilver and, at times, blinked from opaque to translucent, filled with cold fire. Elegia Per La Bella.

Mistress Cantana saw none of this nor, had she been awaret, would she have cared, her focus given over utterly to the majesty of her ninth symphony.

Elegia Per La Bella. She had named it with scorn in that ancient tongue they all knew but none spoke...

Elegy for the Beautiful.

* * *
* * *

The next day they assembled, all the grandees of Mortdieu, bringing with them those instruments upon which they were virtuosi.

And before the mouldering corpse of the Lord Lazarus, they set up their music stands, tuned to A, and waited for the arrival of Mistress Cantana.

A thin rain had begun to fall, which some took as a good omen, although those with stringed instruments – the Graf Orlock with his cello, the violins and violas of Lords Jarelle and Bleck - thought it an inconvenience.

Duke Stern, by common consensus, had been chosen to conduct and he stood with the baton in his great hands, staring towards the distant domus of Mistress Cantana. Now and again he would take out his pocket watch – its face as big as that of a grandfather clock – and check the time.

“Noon, she said,” Lady Meridan said as she approached him, piccolo cradled in the crook of her left arm, a gaudy carpetbag containing Mistress Cantana's stolen musical scores in her right hand.

“It is not quite the time,” Duke Stern replied. And it was true, a minute or more remained until the appointed hour. He brushed a light sheen of rainwater from the shoulder of his black dress jacket. “She will be here.”

“And if she is not I will keep my promise.”

“Is he really so precious to you, the Lord Lazarus?” Duke Stern asked. “So precious that you would destroy one life to restore his?”

Before she could reply, Stern saw the familiar figure of Mistress Cantana, clad in a hooded crimson gown, making her way towards them with measured steps.

She wore a serene expression, a woman content with the world and her place in it, Or, Duke Stern thought, a woman who had accepted fate.

He had seen that expression before – on the face of Baldur Von Shirak before he threw himself from the Tower. Yet Von Shirak had screamed, just once, as he had rushed to meet the ground. What sound, the Duke wondered, might now emanate from the elegant throat of Mistress Cantana?

The assembled orchestra fell silent, as Mistress Cantana moved among them, placing a copy of the music on every stand. Silence, so unusual in chattering, melodious Mortdieu, could be the only possible response now.

The Duke was the last to receive the score and he nodded his thanks as it was placed before him.

Elegia Per La Bella.

He tapped his baton against the podium and every eye in the world was upon him.

They began to play.

Oh! The delicacy of the contrasting musical themes, the perfection of the bridge from First movement to Second, the expositions, the development, the unexpected satire of the modulation.

But, Stern wondered, was it a masterpiece?

By the time they had reached the Third movement he had decided it was not.

No better than her Fifth. Not as well developed as her Third.

It was not an opinion he would ever give voice to, however, not in Mortdieu where critical words were wielded with the precision of a misericorde.

Still, whether he cared for it or not, the music had its desired effect.

Upon the pyre, Lord Lazarus began to stir. By the bridging passage to the Fourth movement he had risen, staring about him with blank incomprehension. Death had changed him – how could it not? Death had been hard on him – how could it not be? His movements, once so graceful, had become stiff, a marionette without a manipulator. His eyes and cheeks had sunk, lustrous skin become slack wax, carmine lips become grey leeches.

As the allegro of the Fourth Movement swelled around him, Lord Lazarus pointed to the east.

And screamed.

The music came to a halt, the violins continuing to play for half a dozen bars after the rest, and every head turned to where Lord Lararus stood with his arm outstretched.

To the east, the mists had rolled away, or rather they had been impelled away by the Elegia.

Mists that had surrounded Mortdieu, kept her hidden and safe.

A horde stood just beyond, so vast that the end of it could not be seen. The tips of lances glittered above parti-coloured pennants, bared swords that held and kept the reflection of a weak and dying sun.

Held and kept, for the horde stood immobile, a frozen moment they had held since the music of Saint Wolfram had trapped them there.

The Beautiful Horde.

They had never truly forgotten it, these last inhabitants of Mortdieu, merely pushed the memory so far back in their minds that it had taken on the substance of a myth. A hundred thousand years will erode even the strongest truth.

Now they remembered. Every blade, every piece of bright silvered armour, every look of hatred and envy on every radiant face.

Duke Stern turned from his podium.

“What have you done?” he whispered to Mistress Cantana.

“Not I,” she said. “I did not know that this would happen.” And he knew she spoke the truth.

The Duke looked down at the music before him. They had almost reached the rondo that marked the end of the symphony. A glance told him of the power of those final bars. What he had thought uninspired had proven to have a darker inspiration than he could have ever imagined.

“Burn it,” he said. “Burn them all.”

“You cannot!” Mistress Cantana said.

“Do you not understand, Mistress?” the Duke said. “To play to the end would destroy us all. The Horde has been revealed. What if it were to awaken?”

“I did not know this would happen,” Mistress Cantana said again. “The music was trapped, I simply freed it.”

“But the rest must never be freed,” the Duke said.

Then, tender as a lover, he reached out his huge hands and snapped her neck.

* * *

They burned her on the pyre so lately occupied by the Lord Lazarus. And they burned her manuscripts - all of them, from the First to the Cursed Ninth - for who knew what latent thaumatology might lurk within those notes even now.

“Sing no songs of resurrection,” the Duke ordered. No one thought to question him.

And no one bothered to watch as the flames consumed Mistress Cantana, their attention fixed upon the Horde not two miles from where they stood. A legend had come to life and not a one of them knew what to do.

Then, from somewhere, a chill breeze blew through the streets of Mortdieu and the music it made as it caressed the stones of that ancient, ancient city, was the sigh of a world eager for its end. For their end.

“Is there magic in that music?” Lord Lazarus asked, his voice empty.

Duke Stern thought he saw a pennant flutter. A trick of the light, perhaps, or the product of his own dire imagination.

“Yes,” he said. “I fear there might be.”

* * *

James Lecky is an actor, writer and (very occasional) stand up comedian from Derry N. Ireland, where he lives with his wife and cat. His work has appeared in a number of publications both online and in print including Mirror Dance, Beneath Ceaseless Skies, Heroic Fantasy Quartery and Swords and Sorcery.

What inspires you to write and keep writing?

A love of words, a love of fiction and the opportunity to create new worlds, let a few characters loose in them and see what happens.



The Fate of Master Wenang


The Fate of Master Wenang
by James Lecky

Master Wenang, District Magistrate of Sen Chan, had the habit of commuting sentences and penalties in return for a certain amount of butterflies.

For the theft of a bag of rice, for instance, he demanded thirty. Fifty for a public brawl. One hundred for adultery and so forth.

Once, in a fit of benevolence, he had offered to spare Han the Merchant from the headsman's block in return for a million of the creatures.

Unfortunately for the Merchant, he was unable to reach the quota in the ten days allotted and had no choice but to keep his appointment in Executioner's Square. Of course, he had murdered his wife in a fit of jealousy and deserved no better.

Still, there were other crimes, other criminals. And other butterflies.

Upon delivery, and the commuting of the appropriate sentence, Master Wenang would take the butterflies and release them into his domed garden. Then, he would stroll along the lawn just for the sheer joy of being surrounded by so much colour; and if the grass was littered with the bodies of hundreds of the poor, trapped creatures, it did not diminish his joy by one iota.

It was said of Sen Chan that it was a city of few butterflies but many thieves – although in winter the prisoners were fuller and Master Wenang's garden less colourful.

* * *

One day, in the summer of the Year of the Fuxi – the fearsome snakefox – a young woman was brought before him.

Her name – or so she whispered, eyes cast to the floor as Penal etiquette required – was Mistress Penyen. She was small, no more than five dainty feet from toe to crown. Her robes, though stained and dirty, were of exquisite red and green silk and her eyes, so large in that doll-like face, were dark as black jade.

“We found her on the Shanann Road,” the arresting officer explained. “Wandering alone. No identification or coin upon her.”

“A vagrant?” Master Wenang said. He looked again at her robes, a vagrant but perhaps of wealthy stock. No coin upon her, but a rich father or brother somewhere with enough to pay a hefty fine. Hefty enough for Master Wenang to keep a little for himself and out of his August Majesty's coffers.

“There are too many wanderers and vagabonds in this city,” Master Wenang said. “An example must be set.” He paused and ran his little pink tongue over his full, dark lips, “The penalty is set at one hundred pieces of silver or one hundred lashes and one hundred days in the Civic Jail or one hundred butterflies.”

Mistress Penyen looked up.

“I have no money,” she said. “Nor do I have any memory of who I am beyond my name. There is no one I know who will ransom me from the Civic Jail.” There were the first glimmer of tears in her black eyes and it made them shine delightfully.

“Then I give you two days to bring one hundred butterflies.”

“I cannot,” she said. She opened her arms in a plea for clemency and, to the surprise of all, out from the sleeves of her robe flew one hundred butterflies - the most exquisite butterflies that Master Wenang had ever seen. Vivid crimson, imperial purple, verdant green, yellows brighter than gold, blues to rival the summer sky.

Master Wenang cried out with the joy of it.

“Mistress,” he said. “How did you accomplish this miracle?”

“I do not know,” she said. “Nor did I know, until this moment, that I could do such a thing.”

“And you truly have no memory of yourself?”

“None,” she said and her tears spilled out.

Although – in keeping with the customs and practices of his time – Master Wenang was a corrupt, greedy, amoral individual, he was not an overtly cruel one, and the sight of this young woman weeping moved even him.

“This poor child is obviously an orphan,” he told his clerk. “What is more, I believe that she may be harmful to herself and others. Therefore I have no choice but to make her a ward of the court. Is this agreed, Master Feng?” These last words were directed to his First Scribe and there was a warning in them that disagreement would not be tolerated.

The clerk sighed. It was not the first time that such a decree had been laid down – nor, Master Feng thought, would it be the last.

“Agreed, Master Wenang.”

“She will be taken to my home that I may ensure her safety,” Master Wenang said. “Have my maids bathe and attend to her.”

“As you wish, District Magistrate.”

He finished the business of the day as quickly as he dared, laying down harsh sentences for even the most petty of crimes – for harsh sentences are easier to dispense than lenient ones.

“This man stole a chicken.”

“Ten lashes and ten days in the Civic Jail.”

“This woman abandoned her baby.”

“Two years in the Civil Jail.”

“This man indulged in idle gossip.”

“Four days in the Civic Jail and five lashes for every day.”

“This man is a notorious bandit.”

“Then take him to Executioner’s Square in the morning.”

Even so, it was near dusk by the time he clambered into his palanquin and ordered the bearers to take him home.

Years of bribery and extortion had made Master Wenang a wealthy – and corpulent – man. The bearers groaned under the strain of carrying him, sweating and toiling too much to enjoy the beauty of the streets around them.

Sen Chan, whatever else it was, boasted rightly that it was the most magnificent city in the Empire. Each of its buildings could rival the palace of his August Majesty, the temples and pagodas boasted jade and lapis on their façades, gilt glittered from rooftops, reflected in the bared swords of the soldiers employed to keep thieves from stripping the city into poverty and unsightliness.

Elegant ladies and their maids – maids who carried concealed blades and were skilled in their use – strolled through perfumed gardens and cool groves. Imperial officials, resplendent in their formal uniforms, sipped tchai or flasks of wine, while stony-faced swordsmen hovered nearby to protect their possessions and their lives. Musicians played, dancers danced, poets spouted wisdom or doggerel according to their talents.

And if the crowds were sometimes disturbed by the sight of a ragged thief, cut to ribbons by a licensed household guard, they gave no outward indication.

Soon, although not soon enough for him, Master Wenang reached his home.

Outwardly, it was a modest enough dwelling and only the dome over his garden indicated that a man of good taste and breeding lived here. By methods that were both sorcerous and expensive – for the Sorcerers of the Unnamed Mountains never sell their services cheaply – this dome was opaque when viewed from without, but allowed both light and heat within. More than this, only Master Wenang himself could enter it – a refinement that had cost extra but been well worth every penny.

Usually, it was his habit to stroll in the garden before entering his home, but this evening he had other things on his mind. Specifically the young woman who called herself Mistress Penyen.

A hundred butterflies. A hundred butterflies, just like that.

Ah, the gods must love you to send you such a gift, Master Wenang, he thought.

A ward of the court today, Mistress Wenang within the month.

He had already resolved that he would marry the girl – either with or without her consent – and bind her close to him. As her husband she could not refuse any of his commands.

“A hundred butterflies,” he would say. And she would obey.

“A hundred more!”

“Five hundred!”

“A thousand!”

What did it matter how many died in his garden if their replacements were inexhaustible?

The colour. The beauty. The fragility of their bodies, the delicacy of their wings.

He entered the house and found his maids waiting for him, their faces pale with fear. Rightly so, for Master Wenang kept a strict house and beatings were regular for those who displeased him.

“She has gone,” Mistress Osen, head of his household, said.

“Who has gone?”

“The girl. Mistress Penyen.”

“What! You insufferable fool! Could you not stop her? Ten maids and you could not stop her! Summon Master Ban and his troops, have them comb the city until they find her.”

“There is no need, Master,” Mistress Osen said. “We know where she is.”

“Then bring her to me.”

“We cannot.”

“Why?”

“She is in the garden.”

“Impossible!”

“Yet it is so.”

He hurried outside again and stood for a moment looking at the dome. Smooth as ice, dark as night, neither seam nor crack in its surface. Yet the girl had entered, if the maids were to be believed, and against all the rules of sorcery Mistress Penyen was in his garden.

He did not know whether to be angry or excited and in the end chose anger since that was already his mood. Then he stepped through the dome into the garden.

And, yes, she was there.

Mistress Osen and the maids had done their work well. No longer a mud-stained traveller, Mistress Penyen had been transformed into a vision of grace. Her hair had been washed, then combed with a thousand strokes until it gleamed. Her robes cleaned and smoothed, the colours even more vivid now.

And her face. Powder and paint had been applied to emphasise the sweep of her cheekbones, the rosebud perfection of her lips, the lustre of those wonderful dark eyes.

She sat cross-legged in a broad beam of silver moonlight, regal as the Dowager Empress Herself, so motionless that she could have been a statue. Butterflies perched on her shoulders, her knees, crawled through her hair and across her face.

“Mistress Penyen,” Master Wenang said, “How did you get in here?”

She looked up at him. “They called to me. In their pain and despair they called. How could I refuse them?”

“Called? Who called?”

“My children.” She raised one hand and a flurry of butterflies took to the air around her.

“I do not understand.”

“Of course you do not,” she rose and the butterflies rose with her. “So many little lives lost, so much freedom curtailed for your amusement.”

A subtle shift in her features, like a candle beginning to melt.

“Who are you?” he said, afraid, for he knew he was in the presence of dark and malevolent magic.

“I did not know my own nature when I came before you,” she said. “And that is the truth. The journey from the Otherworld robbed me of that.” She smiled and her smile was terrible. “But my children have taught me much already.” Around her, the butterflies frolicked and gambolled, the beating of their wings growing louder with each passing moment.

“Who are you?” he said again. He wanted to run, but the sight of the butterflies – and the young woman they surrounded with such loving intensity – held him in its thrall.

“I am Penyen,” she said, “surely you of all people should know me.”

And he did. In a moment of white-hot revelation he knew her, heard her name echoed in the rustling of ten thousand little wings.

“Mistress Penyen,” he whispered. “The Butterfly Goddess.”

“Even so.” And as she spoke, she changed. Her hair twisted itself into feelers, her eyes grew larger in her face, her smiling mouth became a set of sharp mandibles, her tongue a curled proboscis. Her outstretched arms opened out, bright and thin and delicate.

He screamed once. He had no time for another.

* * *

Master Wenang never emerged from his garden, and since no one – not even the sorcerers who had created it – could enter, he was never again seen in Sen Chan.

But sometimes, on still nights when the moon is at its zenith, long after the last temple bells have been rung and even the most persistent and foolhardy of thieves has retired to his bed, a strange keening can be heard coming from within the dome. A figure, darker even that the surface of the dome itself, might be glimpsed – or imagined – battering against the sides in a desperate attempt to escape.

Some say that the Butterfly Goddess visited the most terrible punishment on Master Wenang, doomed him to spend eternity with the creatures he tormented as they sip away at his blood drop by tiny drop, score his flesh with their legs, batter at him with their wings and that he shall never know the sweet release of death. Others say that she transformed him into a thing that was neither insect or man, but a hideous hybrid of the two, a creature who's very existence is an affront to the gods and who is daily driven mad by the knowledge of what it is.

Others still say nothing of the sort, for idle gossip is a crime – one of oh-so many – in the city of Sen Chan.

* * *

James Lecky is a writer, actor and occasional stand-up comedian. His previous fiction has appeared in various publications both online and in print including Mirror Dance, Beneath Ceaseless Skies and Heroic Fantasy Quarterly. He lives in Derry, N. Ireland with his wife and cat.

What advice do you have for other fantasy writers?

It's an old but true piece of wisdom, espoused by greater writers than me, but I reckon 'read a lot, write a lot' is still one of the cornerstones. Don't just read in your chosen field (although that's important) but as widely as you can, and go out of your comfort zone every once in a while, great surprises and delights lurk there.

Behold

Behold
by James Lecky



"I regret to tell you, your majesty," the Doctor said to the Queen. "That the child has been born ugly."

The Queen, still in the euphoria of certain medicines that the Doctor had prescribed to ease the pain of childbirth said:

"Impossible. Bring him to me."

The elderly medical man did as he had been bid - holding the newborn at arms length, as though his hideousness might be infectious - and laid the child in his mother's arms.

To the Queen's credit, she did not scream when she first saw her son's face, nor did she faint away as the midwife had done. But even she found it impossible not to flinch at his appearance.

"Take him away," she ordered. "Take him away."

Five years passed before she saw him again.

* * *

Time had not improved the Prince's appearance and the clothes he wore - a finely tailored suit of blue velvet trimmed with Flanders lace – added to rather than detracted from, his grotesque facial physiognomy. The wing of the castle he inhabited, a gloomy outcrop to the south, was perennially dark, lit by only a single candle in each vast room. The servants were old, blind for the most part, although the Major Domo still possessed some sense of light and shade through eyes that had been all but sealed shut by cataracts.

"Are you well, my son?" the Queen asked, she wore a thick veil, the better to block her vision of the child. "Healthy, I mean, in and of yourself."

"Yes, Mama," the boy said, he swung his chubby little legs over the side of his chair. His condition had not, it seemed, affected his mind. He was as bright and inquisitive child as one could wish, quick to laughter and no more temperamental or cruel than any other boy of his tender years. Loveable, even. If had not been for his face.

"When may I be allowed to go outside?" he said. His intelligence was fierce and even at this age he spoke with the measured tones of the Court.

The Queen raised her veil. And quickly dropped it again.

"Never," she said.

Ten years passed before she saw him again.

* * *

The Prince had grown tall for his age, broad-shouldered and straight as a lance. His manners were impeccable, his conversation witty and delightful, the cut of his suits stylish, elegant upon his slender frame.

Yet he remained ugly.

No amount of cosmetics, however artfully applied, could truly improve his face, no careful positioning of his long, black hair disguise it. Masks were tried, of course, but the young man found them uncomfortable. The feeling of enclosure suffocated him, even the finest silk lining irritated his skin, and the wearing of them left him in a black mood for days afterward.

“And my father,” the Prince said. “How is he”

“Melancholy,” the Queen said. “And has been since the death of his first son.”

The Prince smiled. “His first son is not dead.”

“No,” the Queen said. “But he will never know that.” Her eyes were hidden behind dark glasses, the lens black as a forest midnight. “And you will never sit upon the throne, my son, for the very sight of you would be enough to drive men to madness.”

“I know,” the Prince said. “I merely hope that my brother will be a good king when the time comes.”

“As do I.”

She tried to love him, to look beyond his hideous features and into his beautiful soul. She could not. She was not a callous woman, the Queen, nor was she superficial in any way, but it was impossible for her to love her son.

She could respect him, certainly, for he had borne his ugliness with good grace, had lived his life so far in semi-darkness without uttering a word of complaint. Had grown strong and wise where logic dictated he should have embraced cynicism and animosity.

Yet she could not love him.

“I wish you a happy birthday,” she said.

“Thank you, Mama.”

* * *

Ten summers and ten winters passed. He grew uglier with each.

Once a year, upon his birthday, the Queen arrived to spend a few hours with her son, although she did so from a sense of duty rather than maternal instinct.

The Prince treasured those days, listening with rapt attention to the news of his Father and brother, to the courtly gossip about Dukes and Earls – who had duelled with whom, which Lady had borne the bastard child of which Lord. He sat in the gloom and watched her, longing for a sweet word or a nod of approval.

She was old now, he realized, her hair – once so thick and dark – had grown white, her rosy skin sallow, lined like the cracked portraits in the Red Hall. Strange to see the change in her from year to year, how weary she had grown.

“War will be upon us soon,” the Queen said. “And I fear it will be terrible.”

“All wars are terrible,” the Prince said.

“That is so. But his will sweep us all away.” She smoothed a crease on her black dress. “And there is nothing we can do to prevent it.”

They sat in silence until the Prince spoke again:

“Thank you for the gift, Mama.”

The year before he had asked her for a mirror and, after twelve months of debate with herself, she had brought him one.

It was an antique, beautiful thing. The frame intricately carved, painstakingly gilded, the glass of ground obsidian polished to an incredible sheen. It was her own, brought from her bedchamber. Now that she had grown old she did not care for the reflection in that glass – too precise, too perfect.

“I will see you again in one year.”

“Good night, Mama.”

He placed the mirror in his own chambers but, for now, dared not look at it.

* * *

Six months passed.

He heard the news from his Major Domo, from the over-loud whispers of the elderly servants as they tended to his household.

“War has broken out.”

“Our armies destroyed on the plains.”

“The countryside ravaged, town and villages burned. Dead in their thousands...”

“... in their hundreds of thousands.”

His mother came to him then, a silk scarf across her eyes, her face streaked from weeping.

“Your father is dead. Your brother, dead. Killed in the first battle.”

The Prince wept too, although he had never known them.

“Am I to be King, then?”

“King of what?” the Queen said. “Our land is ruined, our people slaughtered. This castle is all that remains.”

“It will be enough,” he said.

* * *

Three days passed.

The invaders drew closer, a vast, unstoppable horde, their banners proud, their march enough to shake the very earth. Half the world had fallen before them, and now they wished the other half.

The Prince watched them from the little glassless window in the highest tower of his quarter.

They moved like ants, blackening the countryside, leaving fire and ruin in their wake. And that very destruction was the thing that propelled them onward; to retreat was to fall into a vast wasteland of their own making.

We are to die, he thought. And the thought, chilling though it was, liberated him. Without further hesitation he left the tower and went to his chambers.

The mirror stood there, draped with black velvet.

His life had been spent without reflection. Oak, rather than glass filled every window pane, his drinking vessels and cutlery were crafted from dulled metal, every reflective surface carefully covered with black paint.

But no man wants to die without seeing his reflection at least once.

He pulled away the velvet and, for the first time, saw he own face.

Yes, there could be no doubt about it, he was hideous.

Hideous enough to drive an unwary mind to madness.

But the Prince was not unwary – he had touched his own face often enough to know every line and contour, each crevice in the skin.

“A face to drive men mad,” he said.

* * *

A day passed.

The Prince stood on the battlements and waited.

He wore a plain mask of porcelain lined with red silk. a uniform of grey worsted.

The crown of the realm was upon his head, although he wore it without coronation.

He watched as the horde grew closer, could smell the sour stink of them, hear the clash of their swords, their harsh battlecries. Gongs sounded, firecrackers popped in the air, silk banners, every colour of the spectrum, streamed above them.

Terrified animals ran before their ranks, those not swift enough crushed beneath marching feet, others brought down by spears for the sheer sport of it.

“I am King,” he said. “And though my people may fear me, though they may never look upon my face, they are my people.”

As the first of the invaders drew to within a spear's throw of the castle, the King removed his mask and looked down at them.

“Behold,” he said.

No more than that.

At the sight of him, those in the vanguard turned and fled. Those behind them hacked them down – for the order was No Retreat – but when they saw the King upon the battlements they, too, turned in terror. Into the waiting swords of their comrades.

So the horde destroyed itself, all save a handful of bloodied survivors who wandered away into the wastes.

* * *

Time passed.

The Queen died, then the King died of heartbreak.

They built no statues to his memory, hung no portraits, for no artist had ever set eyes upon him. He left nothing behind to mark his passing; except perhaps deep within the glass of an antique mirror that stood in the disused south wing. A sheet of obsidian glass where the shade of his reflection may have remained.

That, and a saying passed down from mother to child. Words of whose origin they are ignorant:

“Behave, or the Ugly Prince come for you.”

* * *

James Lecky is a writer and actor from Derry, N. Ireland. His short fiction has appeared in a number of publications both in print and online including Beneath Ceaseless Skies, Heroic Fantasy Quarterly, Sorcerous Signals, Arcane, The Phantom Queen Awakes and Emerald Eye.

What do you think is the attraction of the fantasy genre?

For me, the attraction of fantasy is the opportunity to explore new worlds, new societies, even new modes of thinking. A chance to explore how the human condition either changes or remains constant even in the most extreme or bizarre of circumstances. Of course, sometimes the attraction of fantasy is sheer spectacle and extravaganza and I think the best writers manage to hold up a mirror to humanity even in the most colourful and unlikely of landscapes.

The Fearsome Knight and the LIttle Dragon: A Fairytale

The Fearsome Knight and the Little Dragon: A Fairytale
by James Lecky

Fearsome Knight / Little Dragon


Once there was a knight named Guy de Rosillion (Guy pronounced ‘Ghee’, since he was French) who was regarded both by himself and by those around him as the fiercest warrior in the land. Guy had inherited both his fierceness and reputation from his father, Adrien of Rosillion, who had in turn inherited it from his father, Zacharie of Rosillion, who had in turn… and so forth…

Wherever he went, men trembled, women swooned and small boys ran and hid behind their mother’s skirts, while secretly making promises to themselves that, one day, they too would be so feared and so respected.

In fact, Guy de Rosillion was so feared and so respected that never once in his life had he been forced to draw his sword in anger – one glance from those steely blue eyes was enough to set the worst of ruffians to his heels and not even the most courageous of his fellow knights was prepared maintain eye contact let alone cross blades with him.

Now, it happened that, one day, a dragon arrived in the countryside surrounding Rosillion. It was not a big dragon, as dragons go - being only the size of a decent elephant - but it was true to its nature - as dragons are – taking away sheep, goats, cattle and occasionally placing damsels in distress.

So terrible was the dragon that, despite its reduced stature (in dragon terms) one glance from its smouldering eyes was enough cause anyone who saw it to flee in abject terror.

“Who will rid us of this troublesome beast?” cried the good citizens of Rosillion. (An English King, who happened to be passing, misheard their words as ‘turbulent priest’ and many years later he… but that’s another story)

“You are the best and fiercest warrior in the land,” the citizens said to Guy, “ride forth and slay this beast.”

Guy agreed and, together with his squire (a young man whose name has since been forgotten) rode out of the city gates one fine spring morning.

His armour was polished, his sword sharp and his steely glint cowed all those who were foolish enough to look directly into his eyes.

“Fear not,” he said as he rode away. “The dragon will be slain by sunset.”

It is well known that dragons pay little attention to the affairs of men – much less, certainly, than men pay to the affairs of dragons – so that when the dragon saw Guy in all his polished splendour it did not tremble, swoon, take to its heels or, in fact, do anything that was expected of it, being totally unaware of Guy’s fearsome reputation.

Similarly, and most puzzlingly to the dragon, Guy did not flee in terror - abject or otherwise – since he was fiercest warrior in the land and the son and heir of Adrien de Rosillion, grandson of Zacharie de Rosillion… and so forth…

Instead, the knight dismounted from his horse and fixed the dragon with his steely glare. And in turn, the dragon ambled towards him and fixed Guy de Rossilion with its smouldering gaze.

“No creature can withstand my stare,” thought Guy and glared even harder than before.

“One glance and he will run like a frightened mouse,” thought the dragon (although this is a very rough translation from Dragonesque) and glared even harder.

And as the squire watched from a conveniently safe distance behind a conveniently safe rock, something wondrous and utterly unexpected happened.

Like the irresistible force and the immovable object, Guy and the little dragon simply cancelled one another out. They stood and stared, eyeball-to-eyeball, neither one moving or, indeed, capable of movement.

After an hour or so, the squire slipped away and informed the good citizens of Rosillion of what had happened.

“A triumph!” said some. “The dragon is vanquished!”

“A tragedy!” said others. “Guy is vanquished!”

In the end, they were unable to decide if this turn of events was to be celebrated or mourned (although, since they no longer had to concern themselves either the dragon or Guy, a slim majority thought the whole thing was for the best) and so the incident was discreetly forgotten about.

Guy and the dragon continued to stare and - I am reliably informed - remain there to this very day, though Guy de Rosillion’s armour is less bright than it once was, sparrows have a tendency to nest on his shoulders and head and the scales of the little dragon are covered with moss, ivy, creeping buttercup and various other hardy perennials

So, if circumstance should take you to Rosillion and the countryside around it (the city still exists, somewhere just beyond the corner of one’s eye) and you should see a dragon and a knight locked in a staring contest, for pity’s sake do not be tempted to try and break their stalemate.

They would not thank you for it.

And neither, I believe, would anyone else.

* * *


James Lecky is a theatre actor and director from Northern Ireland. Most recently, his work has appeared in Everyday Fiction and the Aeon Press anthology Emerald Eye. He lives with his wife, his cat and is sickeningly content.

What do you think is the most important part of a fantasy story?

I think what fantasy tries to do - and for that matter all fiction - is to transport the reader, however briefly, into a different world and it is those different worlds and the characters that inhabit them that attract us to fantasy.

The Substance of a Dream

The Substance of a Dream
by James Lecky

That summer there was talk of war. The young men sharpened their weapons and drilled from dawn until dusk in the plains beyond the Bright Gates of Amaritsard, sending great dust clouds into the air as their horses thundered back and forth.

For me the talk meant little – there were always rumours of war in those days, ever since the Nazarani had come from the west with fire and sword. Besides, more welcome news had reached me of late, that of my aged uncle Marwan who had been taken to Paradise, leaving me, his favoured nephew, Tulun of Birjand, the sum of one thousand gold sequins. The timing was fortunate. I had recently gambled with and lost the greater part of my personal wealth - in backing a spice caravan which had then been taken by desert raiders - and the knives of my creditors were already being sharpened in anticipation of payment.

And so it was with no regret that I resigned my commission from Amaritsard’s famed light cavalry, took up my sword, shield and lance and rode to Jassala province on the fine chestnut gelding that I had acquired on the fall of three dice the previous spring.

For three leisurely days I rode south through land that became increasingly arid with every passing hour, making camp wherever the fancy took me and mentally preparing to spend my not inconsiderable inheritance.

It was on the fourth day, as I crossed the border into Jassala, that I encountered the raiders and their captive.

The sun, as fierce and unforgiving as the land it shone upon, was high in a cloudless sky, broken only by the wheeling black shapes of carrion birds a mile or so distant. It did not take a soldier’s instincts to realise that their presence meant danger, but equally I was aware that they circled the only waterhole for a hundred miles and to skirt around it would have meant many unwelcome, dry miles.

The potential danger did not trouble me unduly, however. I was in the prime of life then – not yet in my thirtieth year - as strong and ferocious a ghulam warrior as one could hope to meet and mounted upon a steed that could easily outdistance any horse should force of arms prove insufficient. I readied my shield and lance, loosened my sword in its scabbard, and touched my spurs to the gelding’s flank.

The waterhole, little more than a wet scratch in the land, lay in the centre of a small gully and as I crested the ridge that overlooked it I saw what had interested the birds so much.

An unconscious man – a Nazarani judging from his golden hair and pale skin – had been staked to the ground tantalisingly close to the water. He wore nothing except a white loincloth, and the noonday sun had already stamped painful blisters onto his exposed flesh. A short distance away, a group of horses were tied to the stump of a tree and beside them four robed men squatted over a pile of clothing and weapons, squabbling over who should receive the lion’s share. I knew the cast of them at once – desert nomads, doubtless cousins to those who had helped in my recent impoverishment – and already held little love for them.

As soon as they became aware of my presence, the leader – a tall man with a curled beard and a pockmarked face – stood and bowed.

“Peace be upon you,” I said.

“And on you be peace,” he replied. “Welcome to our encampment. Please, friend, dismount and join us.” As he spoke I could see his gaze roving over my weapons and horse, calculating how much they were worth.

“You have a guest already and I would not wish to share in such a welcome.”

“The Nazarani? Shed no tears for him, he is an enemy, his death is well deserved.”

“I was not aware that we were yet at war.”

“My people are always at war.” He smiled - his teeth white against sun-darkened skin - then bowed again, a little deeper his time. “I am Rabiah of the Kasseef.”

“Tulun of Birjand,” I replied, taking a tighter grip on my lance.

“Ride on, friend,” Rabiah said. “Why do you care if this pale dog lives or dies?” As he spoke, his companions took a surreptitious step towards me, reaching down to touch the hilts of their scimitars.

“The Book says, ‘He who forgives and is reconciled with his enemy shall receive his reward from God.’”

Rabiah’s smile slowly turned to a sneer. “It also says ‘Take not my enemies and yours as friends’ – you see, Tulun of Birjand, I know the Book as well as you.”

“Enough talk,” one of the other men barked. “Kill him!” Three swords were drawn with a hiss as the raiders charged towards me.

“Wait!” Rabiah cried, but it was too late.

I spurred the gelding down the slope and met the first with my lance, the point entering his stomach and punching out through his back. I deflected a sword-thrust with my shield and drew my own blade, screaming a wild eastern battle cry. The second man died with his throat torn open and the third with my steel buried deep in his heart.

It was over in an instant, and the three bodies lay before me, staining the sand with their bright blood. Rabiah had not moved during the skirmish and now he stood staring at me, his face impassive.

“Go,” I told him. “Let this be an end to it.”

“Why should you spare me?” he asked.

“You did not raise your hand to me – why should I raise mine to you?”

“As you say, why should you?” He grinned wolfishly as he mounted his horse. ”But if we meet again I will kill you for what you have done today.”

“Perhaps, Rabiah, or perhaps not.”

I watched until he disappeared into the desert, then turned my attention to the Nazarani.

He was an older man, at least twice my age, and there was more grey than gold in his beard and hair. But his body was heavily muscled, criss-crossed with numerous old scars - the body of a warrior. Fortunately, he appeared not to have been too long in the sun and he stirred as I poured a few drops of water into his parched mouth. His eyes, startlingly blue, flicked open.

“An angel,” he whispered through cracked lips. “An angel in the midst of hell.” Then unconsciousness took him again.

* * *


He slept for the rest of that day, awaking only when the sun had set and the desert began to release its heat. Other than a large lump on the back of his head, his wounds were light – and a little healing balm soon took the fire from his skin.

“Peace be upon you,” I said as he opened his eyes.

“And upon you, my heavenly friend – it would seem that God works in mysterious ways after all.” He spoke the trader’s tongue fluently, but with a thick accent that I was unable to place.

“I am no angel,” I told him, “and there are many who would attest to that fact.”

“Not an angel, certainly, but heaven sent for all that.” He stood and extended his hand. “My name is Luicien of Rossilion and you have my deepest thanks for your timely intervention. They caught me unaware when I stopped to drink.” He glanced across to the three bodies that lay on the sand. “Three of them? What of the fourth, the one named Rabiah …?”

“I allowed him his life.” I took the offered hand and found iron in the grip. “Tulun of Birjand at your service.”

“You are a merciful man, Tulun of Birjand - an extraordinary quality in these troubled times.”

“But then I am an extraordinary man.”

He looked quizzically at me for a moment, trying to ascertain if I spoke in jest. Then he grinned.

“I believe that you are, at that.”

* * *


As night fell, we sat by our small camp fire and he told me how he had come to be here, so far away from home and from the camps and cities of the Nazarani.

“This is not the first time I have travelled these lands,” Lucien said. ”As a young man I fought with Baldwin on the Field of Blood and years later with his son at Ascalon. It was there that I received this.” He pulled down the front of his shirt to reveal a long, puckered scar on his upper chest. “An honourable wound from the lance of a ghulam not unlike yourself.” Then he winked to show that he harboured no malice. “Ah, those were the days, Tulun, when men were men and war was war, not like the dirty little scraps they call battles now!”

He paused for a moment, staring out across the desert. When he spoke again his tone had changed.

“I remember it well – the heat and the sand, the blood, the screams of horses and men. And the pain. I shall never forget the pain.” He rubbed absently at the old wound. “They left me for dead when the battle moved on and when I awoke I witnessed something that has remained with me equally as long.” He paused, gathering his thoughts.

“It began as a single, sweet note drifting through the mounds of the dead. And as it rose I could feel it surging through my mind, calling to me. Another joined it, then another and another, merging into a beautiful, unearthly melody that dragged me to my feet despite my wounds.

“And all around me others rose from the masses of dead. Others who, like me, still retained some spark of life within their shattered bodies – I could see it in their pained eyes and twisted faces.

“Step by agonised step I followed the song as it led me towards the horizon. Its words – if words they were – meant nothing to me. I only knew that it called and I must answer.

“How long I walked I cannot say, time meant nothing in that strange half-life, but finally we came to a fog-bound valley that appeared suddenly from the scrub and sand.” Lucien leaned closer to the fire and, for a moment, his eyes were hidden in deep shadows, but I could still see the fierce spark that glowed there.

“And there in the swirling mists, was the most beautiful woman I have ever seen – she had the face of a goddess, or an angel fallen to earth. Her voice rose in greeting and her arms opened in welcome.”

Despite the night’s chill I could see beads of sweat on his deeply lined forehead.

“And yet she did not receive you.” I said.

“No, she did not, Tulun. I watched the others disappear one by one into the mist and saw the joy in their faces. I tried to follow them but could not. I do not know why I was refused. Perhaps there was still too much life left within me, or perhaps I was simply not worthy, but for some reason she turned me away. When her song ended she too vanished and I simply wandered back the way I had come. The next day one of our patrols found me, half dead and delirious from loss of blood, no more than a mile from Ascalon.”

I opened my mouth to speak again but he cut me off.

“It was not a dream, Tulun, I know it was not. I have heard that music echoing through my mind in quiet moments ever since, no matter where I have travelled, no matter where I have fought it calls to me.” He cocked his head to one side, listening to something in the night. “It calls to me still. I have searched long and hard for her and now I am close, I can feel it.” Then, abruptly, his sombre tone left him and he flashed me a dazzling smile.

“Would you believe that there are those who call me Lucien the Mad Knight. Imagine that, Tulun!”

Our laughter rang across the desert sands.

Substance of a Dream


The next day we rode south together. We made a strange pair, Lucien of Rossilion and I–the burly Nazarani with his dusty red tunic and black cloak and the young ghulam in his flowing white robes and turban.

Lucien proved himself an amiable travelling companion, politely curious without being intrusive and I soon found myself warming to this strange, haunted man. As we rode I told him of my childhood in Khursasan province, of how I had been sold to the army of the eastern Caliphs when still a boy, to be trained as a ghulam warrior. I told him of the battles I had fought for my masters – against Daylami rebels, Berber tribesmen and even the Nazarani themselves – and of my eventual release from obligation.

“You have lived a full life for one so young,” Lucien said.

“And with the grace of God I may even live to be as old and fat as you, my friend.”

He swore softly in his own language and then laughed. “I thought that ghulams were still taught manners at least.”

“Most,” I told him. “But not all.”

By mid-afternoon we had reached the trails leading to Jassala town.

“And here we must part, Tulun of Birjand,” Lucien said. “My path does not lie that way.” He offered me his hand and I took it, wrist to wrist as warriors should.

“I hope you find what you seek, Lucien of Rossilion.”

“Who knows, perhaps I will. Or perhaps I am mad after all.”

“Go in the name of God,” I said.

He nodded once and then tugged on the reins of his warhorse. The land swallowed him up in moments.

* * *


As it leaves the desert, the road to Jassala winds slowly towards stark hills and snow capped mountains. But its wild beauty was lost on me that day – Lucien had left me with many troubling questions, and the buoyancy of heart with which I had begun my journey had disappeared.

I thought of the Mad Knight, alone in a hostile land, searching for the fragment of a dream. What had he seen on that night so many years ago and what was the song that had called to him ever since?

I am by nature no more curious than any other man and by rights I should have simply spurred onward to Jassala and the glittering coins that were waiting there, but the mystery nagged at me with every step. Finally, I could stand it no longer and with a flick of the wrist I turned my horse around and galloped back the way I had come.

I had no difficulty in picking up Lucien’s trail and caught up with him in less than an hour. I reined in beside him and we rode for a mile or two in comfortable silence until at last he said:

“Thank you, Tulun.”

“You are an old man,” I said. “And the desert is a dangerous place. What kind of a man would I be to allow you to travel by yourself?”

“A wise one.”

“God grants wisdom to whom He pleases,” I said.

“But the righteous man is cautious in friendship,” he replied with a smile.

“So you too are a man of the Book, Lucien of Rossilion?” The knowledge surprised me.

“A different book, my friend – but perhaps it is the same in God’s eyes.”

Without warning he reined his horse to a halt and stared towards the darkening horizon.

“I have no wish to alarm you, Tulun, but we may have a little more company on our journey.” He indicated a swiftly moving dust cloud a mile or two to the west. Within in it the blood red light of the waning sun picked out the glitter of steel.

I had no doubt who it was. “Rabiah of the Kasseef seeks us out again.”

“And why not, were there ever two more amiable travelling companions than us?” He frowned slightly. “You made a grave mistake in allowing him his life.”

I readied my lance as Lucien drew a great bladed axe and a sword from the scabbards on his saddle. “I seldom make the same mistake twice,” I said. And we rode to meet them.

There were ten of them, scowling Kasseef raiders with hatred burning in their faces. Rabiah halted them a short distance from us.

“You owe me three lives, Tulun of Birjand,” he called. “But I will be merciful if you give us the Nazarani – I will only take your right hand and left eye in payment.” He smiled his wolf’s smile again. “What do you say to that?”

“I say that your mother bore a cowardly bastard.”

The smile vanished from his face. “For that I will take both eyes and both hands before I kill you.”

“This whoreson talks too much,” Lucien said, then with a bellow he spurred his horse forward, swinging sword and axe in a whirl of steel.

I followed him a heartbeat later and together we crashed into the Kasseef horsemen.

My lance snapped as it went through a horse’s neck, sending the screaming animal and its rider to the ground. I smashed a face with my shield, then drew my sword. Beside me Lucien’s blades weaved and slashed, hacking and cutting with a ferocity equalled only by my own. I saw him cleave through a raider’s shoulder and down into his chest, almost splitting the man in two. The Mad Knight’s eyes shone with the glory of battle and his voice rose in barbaric exultation as he fought.

Steel flashed in the dusk as Rabiah’s sword plunged into Lucien’s side and the joyful battle-song was choked off. Twisting in the saddle, Lucien brought his axe around to return the blow and Rabiah screamed as his arm was struck from his body, the force of the blow throwing him from his horse.

I pushed forward, striking left and right until I had won free to the other side of the melee. As I turned to rejoin it a second sword plunged into Lucien, almost unseating him – his sword swung back in reply and the last of the Kasseef died.

Lucien reeled in his saddle and a groan escaped from his blood-spattered lips. Then he slid slowly to the ground and lay there, his massive chest heaving as he fought to breathe.

A few feet away Rabiah knelt on the sand, his life pouring out of him in red torrents. As I dismounted he raised his head and glared at me.

“The prince of hell awaits your coming, Tulun of Birjand,” he snarled through gritted teeth. “And I will wait with him.”

I struck his head from his shoulders with a single blow.

As I approached, Lucien coughed weakly, sending fresh blood onto his lips.

“It was a good fight, Tulun.”

“Yes, old man, it was a good fight.”

A spasm of pain passed through his body and he fought back a groan. His eyes closed and the breath rattled wetly in his throat, too loud in the rapidly closing night.

“May God take you to His side.” I had no other words, no other prayers.

All around us the land was silent and still, even the perpetually shifting sand was motionless now, as if in respect for this dying warrior.

Suddenly, his eyes flicked open.

“Can you hear it, Tulun? Can you hear her song?”

“I hear nothing.”

His hand shot out and gripped my robe. “Help me to my horse,” he gasped. “She is calling to me.”

“There is no song, Lucien.”

“Help me, you heathen bastard!” But there was no hatred in his voice, only an entreaty.

It took a long time to get him into the saddle, but finally we did it. His face was grey with pain and even those incredible eyes had dulled, but when he spoke again his voice was strong and determined.

“Ride with me one last time, Tulun, and I will show you the substance of a dream.” Without waiting for a reply, he touched his spurs to the flanks of the warhorse and trotted into the darkness.

I followed, straining to hear the music that called to him. But there was nothing, nothing but the jingle of our harnesses and the soft fall of hooves on sand. Above us the sky grew dark, the stars themselves had been snuffed out and until a thin sliver of the moon remained to light our way.

And then, from somewhere in the night, I heard it – a single, sweet note drifting toward us. At its coming the moon waxed full and the stars broke through the heavens again.

“Can you see, Tulun?” Lucien whispered. “Can you see?”

We stood on a path that sloped down into a wide, broad-bottomed valley wreathed in mist. On either side its jagged walls rose sharply, as if a gigantic hand had torn this place from the land. And before us, her arms open in welcome, stood the woman that Lucien had sought all these long years.

As we rode towards her the music grew stronger filling my senses until I thought I would weep with joy. Lucien turned to me.

“Farewell, Tulun of Birjand, may God keep you safe until we meet again.” He grinned and winked, his vitality suddenly returning, then spurred his horse forward and was lost from sight.

Abruptly, the music ended. I was alone with this strange, beautiful woman. Her hair was as dark as the night itself, her eyes as luminous as the moon.

“Thank you, Tulun.” When she spoke her voice was sweeter than her song.

“Who are you?”

She smiled. “I have many names – Inanna, Badb, Eshara - which would you prefer?” She stepped closer to me and for the first time I could see that her flesh was pale, almost translucent, her body wavered and shimmered with each word she spoke.

“Inanna,” I said and somehow the name was fitting. “I know you, but from where?”

“You know me better than you think, Tulun of Birjand – I was there at your birth and I shall be there at your death.”

“I don’t understand.”

“You will.” She began her song again, slowly and softly, each note like a fragment of crystal.

And I heard. And I saw. And I understood.

Inanna, the goddess of war, whose very existence had been all but taken away by the Book – for what are the gods without belief? – who still dwelt at the edges of the world and called the bravest and the best to her side at the moment of death.

I should have hated her – what was she but the fragile remnant of a time before God opened the eyes of righteous men? – but I could not.

She reached out and touched me with a hand as insubstantial as smoke.

“Do not fear for your friend, Tulun,” she said. “Paradise has many rooms, many gardens – he has found his with me. As will you one day.”

“Not I.” And at my words a flicker of pain passed across her exquisite face and a little more of her form faded away.

“Go then,” she said softly.

I turned my horse and cantered away.

When I looked back I saw only featureless desert and heard nothing but the shifting of the sands.

“Farewell, Lucien of Rossilion,” I said. “May you find the peace you deserve.”

Then I dug my spurs into the flank of my fine chestnut gelding and set off south again, towards Jassala and the thousand sequins that awaited me there.

* * *


James Lecky is a theatre actor and director from Northern Ireland. Most recently, his work has appeared in Everyday Fiction and the Aeon Press anthology Emerald Eye. He lives with his wife, his cat and is sickeningly content.

What do you think is the most important part of a fantasy story?

I think what fantasy tries to do - and for that matter all fiction - is to transport the reader, however briefly, into a different world and it is those different worlds and the characters that inhabit them that attract us to fantasy.