Michael Moorcock - Runestaff 2 - Sorcerer' s Amulet

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The Runestaff Book 2
Sorcerer's Amulet
By Michael Moorcock
CONTENTS
BOOK ONE
1 Soryandum 8
2 Huillam d'Averc 14
3 The Wraith-folk 25
4 The Mechanical Beast 34
5 The Machine 41
6 Mad God's Ship 51
7 The Ring on the Finger 64
8 Mad God's Man 76
BOOK TWO
1 The Waiting Warrior 86
2 The Mad God's Castle 93
3 Hawkmoon's Dilemma 102
4 The Power of the Amulet 113
5 The Slaughter in the Hall 119
6 The Mad God's Beasts 124
7 Encounter in a Tavern 131
8 The Dark Empire Camp 146
9 The Journey South 157
10 The Fall of the Kamarg 161
11 Return of the Warrior 174
12 Escape to Limbo 186
BOOK ONE
WE HAVE LEARNED now how Dorian Hawkmoon, last
Duke of Koln, threw off the power of the Black
Jewel and saved the city of Hamadan from conquest
by the Dark Empire of Granbretan. His arch-enemy,
Baron Meliadus, defeated, Hawkmoon set off west-
ward again, bound for the besieged Kamarg, where
his betrothed, Yisselda, Count Brass's daughter,
awaited him. With his boon companion Oladahn, beast-
man of the Bulgar Mountains, Hawkmoon rode from
Persia toward the Cyprian Sea and the port of Tara-
bulus, where they hoped to find a ship brave enough
to bear them back to the Kamarg. But in the Syranian
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Desert they lost their way and came close to dying
of thirst and exhaustion before they saw the peace-
ful ruins of Soryandum lying at the foot of a range
of green hills on which wild sheep grazed. .. .
Meanwhile, in Europe, the Dark Empire extended
its terrible rule, while elsewhere the Runestaff pulsed,
exerting its influence over thousands of miles to in-
volve the destinies of some several human souls of
disparate character and ambitions...
—The High History of the Runestaff
Chapter One
SORYANDUM
THE CITY WAS old; begrimed by time. A place of
wind-worn stones and tumbler masonry, its towers
tilting and its walls crumbling. Wild sheep cropped
the grass that grew between cracked paving stones,
bright-plumed birds nested among columns of faded
mosaic. The city had once been splendid and terrible;
now it was beautiful and tranquil. The two travelers
came to it in the mellow haze of morning, when a
melancholy wind blew through the silence of the
ancient streets. The hooves of the horses were hushed
as the travelers led them between towers that were
green with age, passed by ruins bright with blossoms
of orange, ocher and purple. And this was Soryandum,
deserted by its folk.
The men and their horses were turned all one
color by the dust that caked them, making them re-
semble statues that had come to life. They moved
slowly, looking wonderingly about them at the beauty
of the dead city.
The first man was tall and lean, and although weary
he moved with the graceful stride of the trained war-
rior. His long fair hair had been bleached near white
by the sun, and his pale blue eyes had a hint of mad-
ness in them. But the thing most remarkable about
his appearance was the dull black jewel sunk into his
forehead just above and between the eyes, a stigmata
he owed to the perverted miracle workings of the
sorcerer-scientists of Granbretan. His name was Dor-
ian Hawkmoon, Duke von Koln, driven from his
hereditary lands by the conquests of the Dark Empire,
which schemed to rule the world. Dorian Hawkmoon,
who had sworn vengeance against the most powerful
nation on his war-tormented planet.
The creature who followed Hawkmoon bore a
large bone bow and a quiver of arrows on his back.
He was clad only in a pair of britches and boots of
soft, floppy leather, but the whole of his body, in-
cluding his face, was covered in red, wiry hair. His
head came to just below Hawkmoon's shoulder. This
was Oladahn, cross-bred offspring of a sorcerer and
a mountain giantess from the Bulgar Mountains.
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Oladahn patted sand from his fur and looked per-
plexed. "Never have I seen a city so fair. Why is it
deserted? Who could leave such a place?"
Hawkmoon, as was his habit when puzzled, rubbed
at the dull black jewel in his forehead. "Perhaps
disease—who knows? Let's hope that if it was disease,
none of it lingers on. I'll speculate later, but not now.
I'm sure I hear water somewhere—and that' my first re-
quirement. Food's my second, sleep's my third—and
thought, friend Oladahn, a very distant fourth. . . ."
In one of the city's plazas they found a wall of blue-
gray rock that had been carved with flowing figures.
From the eyes of one stone maiden fell pure spring
water that splashed into a hollow fashioned below.
Hawkmoon stooped and drank, wiping wet hands
over his dusty face. He stepped back for Oladahn to
drink, then led the horses forward to slake their thirst.
Hawkmoon reached into one of his saddlebags and
took out the cracked and crumpled map that had been
given him in Hamadan. His finger crept across the
map until it came to rest on the word "Soryandum."
He smiled with relief. "We are not too far off our
original route," he said. "Beyond these hills the Eu-
phrates flows and Tarabulas lies beyond it by about
a week's journey. We'll rest here for today and to-
night, then continue on our way. Refreshed, we will
travel more rapidly."
Oladahn grinned. "Aye, and you'd explore the city
before we leave, I fancy." He splashed water on his
fur, then bent to pick up his bow and quiver. "Now
to attend to your second requirement—food. I'll not
be gone long. I saw a wild ram in the hills. Tonight
we'll dine off roast mutton." He remounted his horse
and was away, riding for the broken gates of the city
while Hawkmoon stripped off his clothes and plunged
his hands into the cool spring water, gasping with a
sense of utter luxury as he poured the water over his
head and body. Then he took fresh clothing from the
saddlebag, pulling on a silk shirt given him by Queen
Frawbra of Hamadan and a pair of blue cotton brit-
ches with flaring bottoms. Glad to be out of the heav-
ier leather and iron he had worn for protection's sake
while crossing the desert in case any of the Dark
Empire's men were following them, Hawkmoon
donned a pair of sandals to complete his outfit. His
only concession to his earlier fears was the sword he
buckled about him.
It was scarcely possible that he could have been
followed here, and besides, the city was so peaceful
that he could not believe any kind of danger threat-
ened.
Hawkmoon went to his horse and unsaddled it,
then crossed to the shade of a ruined tower to lie with
his back against it and await Oladahn and the mutton.
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Noon came and went, and Hawkmoon began to
wonder what had become of his friend. He dozed for
another hour before real trepidation began to stir in
him and he rose to resaddle his horse.
It was highly unlikely, Hawkmoon knew, that an
archer as skilled as Oladahn would take so long in
pursuit of one wild sheep. Yet there seemed to be no
possible danger here. Perhaps Oladahn had grown
weary and decided to sleep for an hour or two before
hauling the carcass back. Even if that were all that
was delaying him, Hawkmoon decided, he might need
assistance.
He mounted his horse and rode through the streets
to the crumbling outer wall of the city and to the hills
beyond. The horse seemed to recover much of its
former energy as its hooves touched grass, and Hawk-
moon had to shorten the rein, riding into the hills at
a light canter.
Ahead was a herd of wild sheep led by a large, wise
looking ram, perhaps the one Oladahn had mentioned,
but there was no sign at all of the little beast-man.
"Oladahn!" Hawkmoon yelled, peering about him.
"Oladahn!" But only muffled echoes answered him.
Hawkmoon frowned, then urged his horse into a
gallop, riding up a hill taller than the rest in the hope
that from this vantage point he would be able to see
his friend. Wild sheep scattered before him as the
horse raced over the springy grass. He reached the top
of the hill and shielded his eyes from the glare of the
sun. He stared in every direction, but there was no
sign of Oladahn.
For some moments he continued to look around
him, hoping to see some trace of his friend; then, as
he gazed toward the city, he saw a movement near the
plaza of the spring. Had his eyes tricked him, or had
he seen a man entering the shadows of the streets that
led off the eastern side of the plaza? Could Oladahn
have returned by another route? If so, why hadn't he
answered Hawkmoon's call?
Hawkmoon had a nagging sense of terror in the
back of his mind now, but he still could not believe
that the city itself offered any menace.
He spurred his horse back down the hillside and
leaped it over a section of ruined wall.
Muffled by the dust, the horse's hooves thudded
through the streets as Hawkmoon headed toward the
plaza, crying Oladahn's name. But again he was an-
swered only by echoes. In the plaza there was no sign
of the little mountain man.
Hawkmoon frowned, almost certain now that he
and Oladahn had not, after all, been alone in the city.
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Yet there was no sign of inhabitants.
He turned his horse toward the streets. As he did
so his ears caught a faint sound from above. He
looked upward, his eyes searching the sky, certain that
he recognized the sound. At last he saw it—a distant
black shape in the air overhead. Then sunlight flashed
on metal, and the sound became distinct, a clanking
and whirring of giant bronze wings. Hawkmoon's
heart sank.
The thing descending from the sky was unmistak-
ably an ornate ornithopter, wrought in the shape of a
gigantic condor, enameled in blue, scarlet, and green.
No other nation on Earth possessed such vessels. It
was a flying machine of the Dark Empire of Gran-
bretan.
Now Oladahn's disappearance was fully explained.
The warriors of the Dark Empire were present in
Soryandum. It was more than likely, too, that they
had recognized Oladahn and knew that Hawkmoon
could not be far away. And Hawkmoon was the Dark
Empire's most hated opponent.
Chapter Two
HUILLAM d'AVERC
HAWKMOON MADE for the shadows of the streets, hop-
ing that he had not been seen by the ornithopter.
Could the Granbretanians have followed him all the
way across the dessert? It was unlikely. Yet what else
explained their presence in this remote place? -
Hawkmoon drew his great battle blade from its
scabbard and then dismounted. In his clothes of thin
silk and cotton he felt more than ordinarily vulner-
able as he ran through the streets seeking cover.
Now the ornithopter flew only a few feet above
the tallest towers of Soryandum, almost certainly
searching for Hawkmoon, the man whom the King-
Emperor Huon had sworn must be revenged upon for
his "betrayal" of the Dark Empire. Hawkmoon might
have slain Baron Meliadus at the battle of Hamadan,
but without doubt King Huon had swiftly dispatched
a new emissary upon the task of hunting down the
hated Hawkmoon.
The young Duke of Koln had not expected to jour-
ney without danger, but he had not believed that he
would be found so soon.
He came to a dark building, half in ruins, whose
cool doorway offered shelter. He entered the build-
ing and found himself in a hallway with walls of pale,
carved stone partly overgrown with soft mosses and
blooming lichens. A stairway ran up one side of the
hall, and Hawkmoon, blade in hand, climbed the wind-
ing, moss-carpeted steps for several flights until he
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found himself in a small room into which sunlight
streamed through a gap in the wall where the stones
had fallen away. Flattening himself against the wall
and peering around the broken section, Hawkmoon
saw a large part of the city, saw the ornithopter
wheeling and dipping as its vulture-masked pilot
searched the streets.
There was a tower of faded green granite not too
distant. It stood roughly in the center of Soryandum,
dominating the city. The ornithopter circled this for
some time, and at first Hawkmoon guessed that the
pilot believed him to be hidden there, but then the
flying machine settled on the flat, battlement-sur-
rounded roof of the tower. From somewhere below
other figures emerged to join the pilot.
These men were evidently of Granbretan also.
They were all clad in heavy armor and cloaks, with
huge metal masks covering their heads, in spite of the
heat. Such was the twisted nature of Dark Empire
men that they could not rid themselves of their masks
whatever the circumstances. They seemed to have a
deeprooted psychological reliance on them.
The masks were of rust red and murky yellow,
fashioned to resemble rampant wild boars, with fierce,
jeweled eyes that blazed in the sunlight and great
ivory tusks curling from the flaring snouts.
These, then, were men of the Order of the Boar, in-
famous in Europe for its savagery. There were six of
them standing by their leader, a tall, slender man
whose mask was of gold and bronze and much more
delicately wrought—almost to the point of caricatur-
ing the mask of the Order. The man leaned on the
arms of two of his companions—one squat and bulky,
the other virtually a giant, with naked arms and legs
of almost inhuman hairiness. Was the leader ill or
wounded? wondered Hawkmoon. There seemed to
be something almost artificial about the way he leaned
on his men—something theatrical. Hawkmoon thought
then that he knew who the Boar leader was. It was
almost certainly the renegade Frenchman Huillam
d'Averc, once a brilliant painter and architect, who
had joined the cause of Granbretan long before they
has conquered France. An enigma, D'Averc, but a
dangerous man for all that he affected illness.
Now the Boar leader spoke to the vulture-masked
pilot, who shook his head. Evidently he had not seen
Hawkmoon, but he pointed toward the spot where
Hawkmoon had abandoned his horse. D'Averc—if it
was D'Averc—languidly signed to one of his men, who
disappeared below, to reemerge almost at once with
a struggling, snarling Oladahn.
Relieved, Hawkmoon watched as two of the boar-
masked warriors dragged Oladahn close to the battle-
ments. At least his friend was alive.
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Then the Boar leader signed again, and the vulture
pilot leaned into the cockpit of his flying machine
and withdrew a bell-shaped megaphone, which he
handed to the giant on whose arm the leader still
rested. The giant placed this close to the snout of his
master's mask.
Suddenly the quiet air of the city was filled with
the bored, world-weary voice of the Boar leader.
"Duke von Koln, we know that you are present in
this city, for we have captured your servant. In an
hour the sun will set. If you have not delivered your-
self to us by that time, we must begin to kill the little
fellow...."
Now Hawkmoon knew for certain that it was
D'Averc. No other man alive could both look and
sound like that. Hawkmoon saw the giant hand the
megaphone back to the pilot and then, with the help
of his squat companion, help his master to the partially
ruined battlement so that D'Averc could lean against
it and look down into the streets.
Hawkmoon controlled his fury and studied the
distance between his building and the tower. By jump-
ing through the gap in the wall he could reach a series
of flat roofs that would take him close to a pile of
fallen masonry heaped against one wall of the tower.
From there he saw that he could easily climb to the
battlements. But he would be seen as soon as he left
his cover. It would be possible to take that route only
at night—and by nightfall they would have begun
torturing Oladahn.
Perplexed, Hawkmoon fingered the black jewel,
sign of his former slavery to Granbretan. He knew
that if he gave himself up he would be killed instantly
or be taken back to Granbretan and there killed with
terrible slowness for the pleasure of the perverted
lords of the Dark Empire. He thought of Yisselda, to
whom he had sworn to return, of Count Brass, whom
he had sworn to aid in the struggle against Granbretan
—and he thought of Oladahn, with whom he had
sworn friendship after the little beast-man had saved
his life.
Could he sacrifice his friend? Could he justify such
an action, even if logic told him that his own life was
of greater worth in the fight against the Dark Empire?
Hawkmoon knew that logic was of no use here. But
he knew, too, that his sacrifice might be useless, for
there was no guarantee that the Boar leader would let
Oladahn go once Hawkmoon had delivered himself
up.
Hawkmoon bit his lips, gripping his sword tightly;
then he came to a decision, squeezed his body through
the gap in the wall, clung to the stonework with one
hand, and waved his bright blade at the tower.
D'Averc looked up slowly.
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"You must release Oladahn before I come to you,"
Hawkmoon called. "For I know that all men of Gran-
bretan are liars. You have my word, however, that if
you release Oladahn I will deliver myself into your
hands."
"Liars we may be," came the languid voice, barely
audible, "but we are not fools. How may I trust your
word?"
"I am a Duke of Koln," said Hawkmoon simply.
"We do not lie."
A light, ironic laugh came from within the boar
mask. "You may be naive, Duke of Koln, but Sir
Huillam d'Averc is not. However, may I suggest a
compromise?"
"What is that?" Hawkmoon asked warily.
"I would suggest you come halfway toward us so
that you are well within the range of our ornithopter's
flame-lance, and then I shall release your servant."
D'Averc coughed ostentatiously and leaned heavily
on the battlement. "What say you to that?"
"Hardly a compromise," called Hawkmoon. "For
then you could kill us both with little effort or danger
to yourself."
"My dear duke, the King-Emperor would much
prefer you alive. Surely you know that? My own
interest is at stake. Killing you now would only earn
me a baronetcy at most—delivering you alive for the
King-Emperor's pleasure would almost certainly gain
me a princedom. Have you not heard of me, Duke
Dorian? I am the ambitious Huillam d'Averc."
D'Averc's argument was convincing, but Hawk-
moon could not forget the Frenchman's reputation
for deviousness. Although it was true that he was
worth more to D'Averc alive, the renegade might well
decide it expedient not to risk his gains and might
therefore kill Hawkmoon as soon as he came into
Certain range of the flame-lance.
Hawkmoon deliberated for a moment, then sighed.
"I will do as you suggest, Sir Huillam." He poised
himself to leap across the narrow street separating
him from the rooftops below.
Then Oladahn cried, "No, Duke Dorian! Let them
kill me! My life is worthless!"
Hawkmoon acted as if he had not heard his friend
and sprang out and down, to land on the balls of his
feet on the roof. The old masonry shuddered at the
impact, and for a moment Hawkmoon thought he
would fall as the roof threatened to crack. But it held,
and he began to walk gingerly toward the tower.
Again Oladahn called out and began to struggle in
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the hands of his captors.
Hawkmoon ignored him, walking steadily on,
sword still in one hand but held loosely, virtually
forgotten.
Now Oladahn broke free altogether and darted
across the tower, pursued by two cursing warriors.
Hawkmoon saw him dash to the far edge, pause for
a moment, and then fling himself over the parapet.
For a moment Hawkmoon stood frozen in horror,
hardly understanding the nature of his friend's sacri-
fice.
Then he tightened his grip on his sword and raised
his head to glare at D'Averc and his men. Bending
low, he made for the edge of the roof as the flame
cannon began to turn in his direction. There was a
great whoosh of heat over his head as they sought his
range; then he had swung himself over the edge and
hung by his hands, peering down into the street far
below.
There was a series of stone carvings quite close to
him on his left. He inched along until he could grasp
the nearest. They ran down the side of the house at
an angle, almost to street level. But the stone was
plainly rotten. Would the carvings support his
weight?
Hawkmoon did not pause. He swung himself down
on the first carving. It began to creak and crumble,
like a bad tooth. Quickly Hawkmoon dropped to the
next and then the next, bits of stone clattering down
the sides of the building, to crash in the distant street.
Then at last Hawkmoon was able to leap to the
cobbles and land easily in the soft dust that covered
them. Now he began to run, not away from the tower
—but toward it. He had nothing in his mind now but
vengeance on D'Averc for driving Oladahn to suicide.
He found the entrance to the tower and entered in
time to hear the clatter of metal-shod feet as D'Averc
and his warriors descended. He chose a spot on the
staircase (which was enclosed) where he would be
able to take the Granbretanians one at a time. D'Averc
was the first to appear, stopping suddenly as he saw
the glowering Hawkmoon, then reaching with gaunt-
leted hand for his long blade.
"You were foolish not to take the chance of escape
your friend's silly sacrifice gave you," said the boar-
masked mercenary contemptuously. "Now, like it or
not, I suppose we shall have to kill you...." He began
to cough, doubling up in apparent agony, leaning
weakly against the wall. He signed limply to the squat
man behind him—one of those Hawkmoon had seen
helping D'Averc across the battlements. "Oh, my
dear Duke Dorian, I must apologize ... my infirmity
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is liable to seize me at the most inconvenient moments.
Ecardo—would you...?"'
The powerfully built Ecardo sprang forward
grunting and pulling a short-hafted battle-axe from his
belt. He tugged out his sword with his free hand and
chuckled with pleasure. "Thanks, master. Now let's
see how the no-mask prances." He moved like a cat
to the attack.
Hawkmoon poised himself, ready to meet Ecardo's
first blow.
Then the man sprang with a great feral howl, the
battle-ax splashing the air to clang against Hawk-
moon's blade. Then Ecardo's short sword ripped up-
ward, and Hawkmoon, already weak from exposure
and hunger, barely managed to turn his body in time.
Even so, the sword slashed through the cotton of his
britches and he felt its cold edge against his flesh.
Hawkmoon's own blade slid from beneath the ax
and crashed down on Ecardo's grinning boar-mask,
wrenching one tusk loose and badly denting the snout.
Ecardo cursed, his sword stabbing again, but Hawk-
moon leaned against the man's sword arm, trapping it
beneath his body and the wall. Then he let go of his
own sword so that it hung by its wrist thong, grasped
Ecardo's arm, and tried to twist the ax from his hand.
Ecardo's armored knee drove into Hawkmoon's
groin, but Hawkmoon held his position in spite of the
pain, tugged Ecardo down the stairs, pushed, and let
him fall to the floor under his own momentum.
Ecardo hit the paving stones with a thud that shook
the whole tower. He did not move.
Hawkmoon looked up at D'Averc. "Well, sir, are
you recovered?"
D'Averc pushed back his ornate mask, to reveal the
pale face and pale eyes of an invalid. His mouth
twisted in a little smile. "I will do my best," he said.
And when he advanced it was swiftly, with the move-
ments of a man more than ordinarily fit.
This time Hawkmoon took the initiative, darting a
thrust at his enemy that almost took him by surprise
but that he parried with amazing speed. His languid
tone belied his reflexes.
Hawkmoon realized that D'Averc was quite as
dangerous, in his own way, as the powerful Ecardo.
He realized, too, that if Ecardo were merely stunned,
he himself might soon be trapped between two op-
ponents.
The swordplay was so swift that the two blades
seemed a single blur of metal as both men held their
ground. With his great mask flung back, D'Averc
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摘要:

file:///F|/rah/Michael%20Moorcock/Moorcock,%20Michael%20-%20Runestaff%20\2%20-%20Sorcerers%20Amulet.txtTheRunestaffBook2Sorcerer'sAmuletByMichaelMoorcockCONTENTSBOOKONE1Soryandum82Huillamd'Averc143TheWraith-folk254TheMechanicalBeast345TheMachine416MadGod'sShip517TheRingontheFinger648MadGod'sMan76BOO...

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