The Wandering Fire

The Wandering Fire Read Online Free PDF Page B

Book: The Wandering Fire Read Online Free PDF
Author: Guy Gavriel Kay
Tags: Fiction, Fantasy, Contemporary
matter-of-factly, “To raise a King from the dead and make him surrender a name. After that I’ll be on my own.”
    Kevin had looked past her then, out the window, and seen stars beyond the wing; they were flying very high over deep waters.
    “What time is it?” Dave asked for the fifth time, fighting a case of nerves.
    “After eleven,” said Paul, continuing to fidget with a spoon. They were in the saloon bar of the hotel; he, Dave, and Jen at the table, Kevin, unbelievably, chatting up the waitress over by the bar. Or not, actually, unbelievably; he’d known Kevin Laine a long time.
    “When the hell is she coming down?” Dave had an edge in his voice, a real one, and Paul could feel anxiety building in himself as well. It was going to be a very different place at night, he knew, with the crowds of the afternoon gone. Under stars, Stonehenge would move back in time a long way. There was a power here still, he could feel it, and he knew it would be made manifest at night.
    “Does everyone know what they have to do?” he repeated.
    “Yes, Paul,” said Jennifer, surprisingly calm. They’d worked out their plans over dinner after returning from the monument. Kim hadn’t left her room, not since they’d arrived.
    Kevin strolled back to the table, with a full pint of beer.
    “Are you drinking?” Dave said sharply.
    “Don’t be an idiot. While you two have been sitting here doing nothing, I’ve gotten the names of two of the guards out there. Len is the big bearded one, and there’s another named Dougal, Kate says.”
    Dave and Paul were silent.
    “Nicely done,” said Jennifer. She smiled slightly.
    “Okay,” said Kim, “ let’s go .” She was standing by the table in a bomber jacket and scarf. Her eyes were a little wild below the locks of white hair and her face was deathly pale. A single vertical line creased her forehead. She held up her hands; she was wearing gloves.
    “It started to glow five minutes ago,” she said.
    And so she had come to the place and it was time indeed, here, now, to manifest herself, to show forth the Baelrath in a crimson blaze of power. It was the Warstone, found, not made, and very wild, but there was a war now, and the ring was coming into its force, carrying her with it past the high shrouded stones, the fallen one, and the tilting one, to the highest lintel stone. Beside which she stopped.
    There was shouting behind her. Very far behind her. It was time. Raising her hand before her face Kimberly cried out in a cold voice, far from what she sounded like when allowed to be only herself, only Kim, and said into stillness, the waiting calm of that place, words of power upon power to summon its dead from beyond the walls of Night.
    “ Damae Pendragon! Sed Baelrath riden log verenth. Pendragon rabenna, nisei damae! ”
    There was no moon yet. Between the ancient stones, the Baelrath glowed brighter than any star. It lit the giant teeth of rock luridly. There was nothing subtle or mild, nothing beautiful about this force. She had come to coerce, by the power she bore and the secret she knew. She had come to summon.
    And then, by the rising of a wind where none had been before, she knew she had.
    Leaning forward into it, holding the Baelrath before her, she saw, in the very center of the monument, a figure standing on the altar stone. He was tall and shadowed, wrapped in mist as in a shroud, only half incarnated in the half-light of star and stone. She fought the weight of him, the drag; he had been so long dead and she had made him rise.
    No space for sorrow here, and weakness shown might break the summoning. She said:
    “Uther Pendragon, attend me, for I command your will!”
    “Command me not, I am a King!” His voice was high, stretched taut on a wire of centuries, but imperious still.
    No space for mercy. None at all. She hardened her heart. “You are dead,” she said coldly, in the cold wind. “And given over to the stone I bear.”
    “Why should this be
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