Zelazny, Roger - Amber Chronicles, The 10 - Prince of Chaos.txt

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<html><head><title>Roger Zelazny. Prince of Chaos</title></head><body><pre>
<ul><a name=0></a><h2>Roger Zelazny. Prince of Chaos</h2></ul>

<hr>
 ROGER ZELAZNY
 THE AMBER SERIES - BOOK TEN
 PRINCE OF CHAOS
<hr>

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<ul><a name=1></a><h2>I</h2></ul>

     See  one  coronation  and  you've  seen  them  all.  Sounds cynical and
probably is, especially when the principal  is  your  best  friend  and  his
queen's  your  inadvertent lover. But there's generally a procession, with a
lot of slow music, and  uncomfortable,  colorful  garb,  incense,  speeches,
prayers,  the  ringing  of  bells.  They  are  tedious,  generally  hot, and
requiring of one an insincere attention, as at weddings, commencements,  and
secret initiations.
     And  so  Luke  and  Coral  became the sovereigns of Kashfa, in the same
church where we'd fought almostbut, unfortunately, not  quite-to  the  death
with  my  mad  brother  Jurt  but  a  few  hours  before.  As  Amber's  only
representative at the event-albeit of, technically, unofficial status-I  was
accorded a ringside standingplace, and eyes were often drifting my way. So I
had  to  keep  alert and mouth appropriate responses. While Random would not
permit formal status to  my  presence  at  the  ceremony,  I  knew  he'd  be
irritated if he heard that my behavior was less than diplomatically sound.



     So  I  wound  up with hurting feet, a stiff neck, and colorful garments
soaked with sweat. That's show biz. Still, I wouldn't have had it any  other
way.  Luke and I go back through some of the damnedest times, and I couldn't
help but think of them-from sword's point to track meets, from art galleries
and into Shadow-as I stood there sweltering and wondering what would  become
of  him  now he wore a crown. Such an occurrence had changed my uncle Random
from a happy-go-lucky musician, footloose and degenerate, into  a  sage  and
responsible  monarch-though I've only my relatives' reports when it comes to
knowing about the first. I found myself hoping it wouldn't mellow  Luke  out
all that much. Still-again-Luke was a very different person than Random, not
to mention ages younger. Amazing what years can do, though-or is it just the
nature  of  events?  I realized myself to be a lot different than I had been
not so very long ago, from all that had  happened  to  me  recently.  A  lot
different than I'd been yesterday, come to think of it.
     During the recessional Coral managed to pass me a note, saying that she
had to  see  me,  giving  a time and a place, even including a small map. It
proved an apartment to the rear of the palace. We met there that evening and
wound up spending the night. She and Luke  had  been  married  as  kids,  by
proxy,  I learned then, part of the diplomatic arrangement between Jasra and
the Begmans. It didn't work out, though-the diplomatic part, that is-and the
rest kind of fell by the wayside. The principals had sort of forgotten about
the marriage, too, till rezhent events served as a reminder. Neither had seen
the other in years. Still, the  record  showed  that  the  prince  had  been
married.  While  it  was an annullable thing, she could also be crowned with
him. If there were anything in it for Kashfa.
     And there was: Eregnor. A Begman queen on the Kashfan throne might help
smooth over that particular real estate gab. At least, that had been Jasra's
thinking, Coral told me. And Luke had been swayed by this,  particularly  in
the  absence  of the guarantees from Amber and the now-defunct Golden Circle
Treaty.
     I  held  her.  She  was  not  well,  despite  what  seemed  an  amazing
postoperative  recovery.  She  wore a black patch over her right eye and was
more than a little reactive should my hand stray near it-or even if I looked
at it for too long. What might have led Dworkin to replace the  damaged  eye
with  the  Jewel  of  Judgment,  I  could  not even guess. Unless he somehow
considered her proof against the forces of the Pattern  and  the  Logrus  in
their  attempts  to  recover  it.  My  expertise  in  this area, though, was
nonexistent. Having finally met the diminutive mage, I had become  convinced
of  his  sanitythough  this  feeling  in  no  way  served to penetrate those
enigmatic qualities that ancient wise men tend to possess.
     "How does it feel?" I asked her.
     "Very strange," she replied. "Nat pain-exactly. More  like  the  way  a
Trump  contact  feels.  Only  it's  with  me all the time, and I'm not going
anywhere or talking to anyone. It's as if  I'm  standing  in  some  sort  of
gateway. Farces are moving about me, through me."
     In  an instant I was at the center that was the gay ring with its wheel
of many-spoked reddish metal. From the inside, here, it  was  like  a  great
web.  A  bright strand pulsed for my attention. Yes, it was a line to a very
potent force in  distant  Shadow,  one  that  might  be  used  for  probing.
Carefully,  I  extended  it  toward  the  covered  jewel she wore in her eye
socket.
     There was no immediate  resistance.  In  fact,  I  felt  nothing  as  I
extended  the  line  of  power.  An  image came to me of a curtain of flame,
however. Pushing through the fiery veil, I  felt  my  extension  of  inquiry
slowing,  slowing, halted. And there I hovered, as It were, at the edge of a
void. This was not the way of attunement, as I  understood  it,  and  I  was
loath  to  invoke  the  Pattern, which I understood to be a part of it, when
employing other forces. I pushed  forward  and  felt  a  terrible  coldness,
draining the energies I had called upon.
     Still,  it  was not draining the energy directly from me, only from one
of the forces I commanded. I pushed it farther, and I beheld a  faint  patch
of light like some distant nebula. It hung against a background the deep red
of  port  wine.  Closer still, and it resolved itself into a form-a complex,
three dimensional construct, half familiar-which must  be  the  pathway  one
takes  in  attuning  oneself to the Jewel, from my father's description. All
right, I was inside the Jewel. Should I essay the initiation?
     "Go no further," came an unfamiliar voice, though I realized it  to  be
Coral  who  was  making the sounds. She seemed to have slipped into a trance
state. "You are denied the higher initiation."
     I drew back on my probe, not eager for any  demonstrations  that  might
come my way along it. My Logrus sight, which had remained with me constantly
since  recent  events in Amber, gave me a vision of Coral now fully enfolded
and penetrated by the higher version of the Pattern.
     "Why?" I asked it.
     But I was riot vouchsafed a reply. Coral  gave  a  little  jerk,  shook
herself, and stared at me.
     "What happened?" she asked.
     "You  dozed off," I replied. "No wonder. Whatever Dworkin did, plus the
day's stress . . ."
     She yawned and collapsed back on the bed.
     "Yes," she breathed, and then she was really asleep. I  pulled  off  my
boots and discarded my heavier garments. I stretched out beside her and drew
a quilt over us. I was tired, too, and I just wanted someone to hold.
     How  long  I  slept  I  do  not  know. I was troubled by dark, swirling
dreams. Faces-human, animal, demonic, moved about me, none of  them  bearing
particularly  cheerful  expressions.  Forests fell and burst into flame, the
ground shook and split, the waters of the sea rose  in  gigantic  waves  and
assailed the land, the moon dripped blood and there came up a great wailing.
Something called my name. . . .
     A  great  wind rattled the shutters till they burst inward, dapping and
banging. In my dream, a creature entered then and came to crouch at the foot
of the bed, calling softly to me, over and  over.  The  room  seemed  to  be
shaking,  and  my mind went back to California. It seemed that an earthquake
was in progress. The wind rose from a shriek to a roar, and I heard crashing
sounds from without, as of trees falling, towers toppling. . . .
     "Merlin, Prince of the House of Sawall, Prince of Chaos, rise  up,"  it
seemed to say. Then it gnashed its fangs and began again.
     At  the  fourth  or  fifth  repetition it struck me that I might not be
dreaming. There were screams from somewhere outside, and  steady  pulses  of
lightning came and went against almost musical rolls of thunder.
     I  raised  a  protective shell before I moved, before I opened my eyes.
The sounds were real, as was the broken shutter. So was the creature at  the
foot of the bed.
     "Merlin,   Merlin.   Rise  up,  Merlin,"  it  said  to  me-it  being  a
long-snouted,  pointed-eared  individual,  wellfanged  and  clawed,   of   a
greenish-silver  cast  of  complexion, eyes large and shining, damp leathery
wings folded against its lean sides. From its expression,  I  couldn't  tell
whether it was smiling or in pain. "Awaken, Lord of Chaos."
     "Gryll," I said, naming an old family servant from the Courts.



     "Aye, Lord," it replied. "The same as taught you the bonedance game."
     "I'll be damned."
     "Business  before pleasure, Lord. I've followed the black thread a long
and horrid way to come calling."
     "The threads didn't reach this far," I said, "without
     an awful lot of push. Maybe even not then. Do they now?"
     "It's easier now," he replied.
     "How so?"
     "His Majesty Swayvill, King  of  Chaos,  sleeps  this  night  with  the
ancestors of darkness. I was sen...
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