Peril's Gate (Book Excerpt) by Janny Wurts Buy from Amazon.comPage 3 of 5 "Hush! Listen, the Warden speaks!" Cloth rustled nearby. The
drafts sang of indistinct movement.
Sethvir wrestled the crazy quilt cataract of images that
battered his mind beyond reason. "Lysaer s'llessid knows..." He rammed his
thoughts stable, framed intent like stamped crystal, and at last, transferred
the gist of his desperate message.
While Sethvir sank back, Luhaine's staid presence assumed the
task of explaining. "Yes, we have news, an ill turn for the worse. The
Mistwraith's curse does not rest while we're burdened. Lysaer s'llessid has
discovered his s'Ffalenn half brother has dared to return to the continent.
He'll muster for war on false grounds and religion. Yes, winter blizzards will
slow him. But the pack of fanatics who have cast him as savior have resorted to
unclean practice and dark augury. Word of the Shadow Master's presence will be
sent on ahead. Sethvir foresees armed troops assembled in Darkling. Etarra has
mustered for years against this hour. The field commander there will set
seasoned troops on the march, well prepared for rough country and cold weather.
They may not move fast, but they'll be relentless once they know Arithon's
position. Until the s'Ffalenn prince escapes back to sea, his life is going to
stay vulnerlable."
A second voice questioned; Luhaine settled into exhaustive
lecturing, but Sethvir lost the thread as his cognizance faded back into the
tangling resurgence of imagery...
In the wooded foothills of Tornir Peaks, an escaped pack of
Khadrim flew on bat-leather wings, keening their shrill song of bloodlust. They
circled a trade caravan bound for Karfael, stooped in attack, and shredded the
drover's campsite. Armed guards died inflames. The screams of ripped horses and
disemboweled men blended into the predators' whistles of quavering
dissonance.
Sethvir sensed the bleak pain of the dying. Beyond sorrow, he
curbed his flash-point anger that the clean-cut, new wards Asandir had just
raised to hold the renegade packs in confinement had been utterly destroyed in
the cascading flux of the lane imbalance. Morriel Prime had succeeded too well;
the Fellowship was caught too desperately shorthanded to dispatch trained help
to intervene.
A second scene flowered: this one farther south, couched
amid the ocherbrick towers of Lysaer's restored capital of Avenor. There, the
subtle, secretive man appointed as High Priest of the Light sat awake and
brooding by candlelight. In black jealousy, he pondered the name bandied in
taprooms and wineshops across the city. In place of Lysaer, Divine Prince, the
land's folk praised young Prince Kevor, whose bravery at the untried age of
fourteen had quelled last night's pending riots. Fell portents had sheared
across the clear sky, an ominous harbinger of evil to come at the hand of the
Master of Shadow. Yet Avenor's unnerved people did not hail the Light, but
instead drew their heart from the mortal courage displayed by the young heir
apparent...
Sethvir had no chance to pursue the implications sprung from
that startling twist. The unformed premonition of danger dispersed like blown
smoke as his view of the high priest's sanctum whirled away. Shifted sight
showed a herd of dun deer, startled from grazing the ice-rimmed hummocks of
the Salt Fens due north of Earle. The does turned raised heads, while a
foam-flecked black stud thundered by, its rider charged to spell-driven haste.
Upon his broad shoulders, the most perilous threat unleashed by the old Prime's
plotting...
The Fellowship Sorcerer, Asandir, raced toward the grimward
which confined the unquiet dreams of the ghost of the king drake, Eckracken.
The torn guard spells he spurred at a gallop to mend leached at Sethvir's
consciousness, a burning imbalance that frayed through ordered thought with the
tenacity of flung acid. Copyright© 2002, HarperCollins Publishers. All rights reserved. No part of this may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. This excerpt has been provided by HarperCollins and printed with their permission.
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