file:///F|/rah/Alan%20Dean%20Foster/Foster,%20Alan%20Dean%20-%20Spellsinger%2001%20-%20Spellsinger.txt
Tree, plucking dangerously at the thin lifeline within. It had to happen
quickly, he knew, or the link would fade without attaching to an ally. And this
was a link he might not hope to generate again.
Yet still the void yielded nothing and no one. The... the writhing tentacle of
wizardness caught a mind, a few thoughts, an identity. Uncertain but unable to
hunt further, he plunged inward. Surprisingly, the mind was pliable and open,
receptive to invasion and manifestation. It almost seemed to welcome being
grasped, accepting the tug with a contented indifference that appalled the
wizard, but which he was grateful for nonetheless. This mind was detached,
drifting. It would be easy to draw it back.
Easy save for the aged enchanter's waning strength. He locked and pulled, heaved
with every ounce of power in him. But despite the subject's lack of resistance
the materialization was not clean. At the last instant, the link snapped.
No, no...! But the energy faded, was lost. An infrequent but damaging senility
crept in and imposed sleep on that great but exhausted mind....
And while he slumbered, the contented evil festered and planned and schemed, and
a shadow began to spread over the souls of the innocent....
The citizens of Pelligrew laughed at the invaders. Though they lived nearest of
all the civilized folk to the Greendowns, they feared not the terrible
inhabitants of those lands. Their town was walled and hugged the jagged face of
a mountain. The only approach was up a single narrow path which could be
defended against attack, it was said, by five old women and a brace of infants.
So when the leader of the absurdly small raiding party asked for their
surrender, they laughed and threw garbage and night soil down on him.
"Go home!" they urged him. "Go back to your stinking homes and your shit-eating
mothers before we decorate the face of our mountain with your blood!"
Curiously, this did not enrage the leader of the raiders. A few within the town
remarked on this and worried, but everyone else continued to laugh.
The leader made his way back through the tents of his troops, his dignity
unimpaired. He knew what was promised to him.
Eventually he reached a tent larger and darker than any of the others. Here his
courage faltered, for he did not enjoy speaking to the one who dwelt within.
Nevertheless, it was his place to do so. He entered.
It was black inside, though it was mid-morning without, black and heavy with the
stench of unwholesome things and the nearness of death. In the back of the tent
was the wizard, awash in attendants. In back of him stood the Font of Evil.
"Your pardon, Master," the leader of the soldiers began, and proceeded to tell
of his disdainful reception at the hands of the Pelligrewers.
When he had finished, the hunched form in the dark of the tent said, "Return to
your soldiers, good Captain, and wait."
The leader left hurriedly, glad to be out of that unclean place and back among
his troops. But it was hard to just wait there, helpless before the unscalable
wall and restrained by command, while the inhabitants of the town mocked and
laughed and exposed their backsides to his angry soldiers.
Suddenly, a darkening turned the sky the color of lead. There was a thunder, yet
there were no clouds. Then the great wall of Pelligrew vanished, turned to dust
along with many of its shocked defenders. For an instant his own warriors were
paralyzed. Then the blood lust renewed them and they swarmed into the naked
town, shrieking in gleeful anticipation.
The slaughter was thorough. Not a soul was left alive. Those who disdained meat
relaxed and sipped the pooled blood of the still living.
There was some question as to whether or not to keep the children of the town
alive for breeding. Upon consideration, the captain declined. He did not wish to
convoy a noisy, bawling lot of infants back to Cugluch. Besides, his soldiers
deserved a reward for the patience they had displayed beneath the barrage of
verbal and physical refuse the annihilated townsfolk had heaped on them. So he
gave his assent for a general butchering of the young.
That night the fire was put to Pelligrew while her children made the soldiers a
fine supper. The wood of the houses and the thatch of the roofs burned all night
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