The Fight in the
Bailey
“Here is a real enemy,” I said. “With a real
weapon.” I walked down into the mist, groping ahead of me with my
sword blade.
“You see in my cloud chamber real
enemies too,” Baldanders rumbled, his voice quite calm. “Save that
they are outside, in the bailey. The first was one of your friends,
the second one of my foes.”
As he spoke, the mist dispersed, and I
saw him near the center of the room, sitting in a massive chair.
When I turned toward him, he rose from it and seizing it by the
back sent it hurtling toward me as easily as he might have thrown a
basket. It missed me by no more than a span.
“Now you will attempt to kill me,” he
said. “And all for a foolish charm. I ought to have killed you,
that night when you slept in my bed.”
I could have said the same thing, but I
did not bother to reply. It was clear that by feigning helplessness
he was hoping to lure me into a careless attack, and though he
appeared to be without a weapon, he was still twice my height and,
as I had reason to believe, of four times or more my strength. Then
too I was conscious, as I drew nearer him, that we were reenacting
here the performance of the marionettes I had seen in a dream on
the night of which he had reminded me, and in that dream, the
wooden giant had been armed with a bludgeon. He retreated from me
step by step as I advanced ; yet he seemed always ready to come to
grips.
Quite suddenly, when we were perhaps
three quarters across the room from the stair, he turned and ran.
It was astonishing, like seeing a tree run.
It was also very quick. Ungainly though
he was, he covered two paces with every step, and he reached the
wall—where there was just such a slit of window as Ossipago had
stared from—long before me.
For an instant I could not think what
he meant to do. The window was far too narrow for him to climb
through. He thrust both his great hands into it, and I heard the
grinding of stone upon stone.
Just in time I guessed, and managed a
few steps back. A moment later he held a block of stone wrenched
from the wall itself. He lifted it above his head and hurled it at
me.
As I leaped aside, he tore free
another, and then another. At the third I had to roll desperately,
still clutching my sword, to avoid the fourth, the
stones coming quicker and quicker as the lack of those already torn
away weakened the structure of the wall. By the purest chance, that
roll brought me close to a casket, a thing no bigger than a modest
housewife might have for her rings, lying on the
floor.
It was ornamented with little knobs,
and something in their form recalled to me those Master Gurloes had
adjusted at Thecla’s excruciation. Before Baldanders could pry out
another stone, I scooped the casket up and twisted one of its
knobs. At once the vanished mist came boiling out of the floor
again, quickly reaching the level of my head, so that I was blinded
in its sea of white.
“You have found it,” Baldanders said in
his deep, slow tones. “I should have turned it off. Now I cannot
see you, but you cannot see me.”
I kept silent because I knew he was
standing with a block of stone poised to throw, waiting for the
sound of my voice. After I had drawn perhaps two dozen breaths, I
began to edge toward him as silently as I could. I was certain that
despite all his cunning he could not walk without my hearing him.
When I had taken four steps, the stone crashed on the floor behind
me, and there was the noise of another being torn from the
wall.
It was one stone too many; there came a
deafening roar, and I knew a whole section of the wall above the
window must have gone crashing down. Briefly I dared to hope it had
killed him; but the mist began to thin at once, pouring through the
rent in the wall and out into the night and the rain outside, and I
saw him still standing beside the gaping hole.
He must have dropped the stone he had
wrenched loose when the wall fell; he was empty-handed. I dashed
toward him hoping to attack him before he realized I was upon him.
Once again he was too quick. I saw him grasp the wall that remained
and swing himself out, and by the time I had reached the opening he
was some distance below. What he had done seemed impossible; but
when I looked more carefully at that part of the tower illuminated
by the lights of the room in which I stood, I saw that the stones
were roughly cut and laid without mortar, so there were often
sizable crevices between them, and that the wall sloped inward as
it rose.
I was tempted to sheathe Terminus Est and follow him, but I would have been
utterly vulnerable if I had done so, since Baldanders would be
certain to reach the ground before me. I flung the casket at him
and soon lost sight of him in the rain. With no other choice left
to me, I groped my way back to the stair and descended to the level
I had seen when I first entered the castle.
It had been silent then, uninhabited save by
its ancient mechanisms. Now it was pandemonium. Over and under and
through the machines swarmed scores of hideous beings akin to the
ghostly thing whose phantom I had seen in the room Baldanders
called his chamber of clouds. Like Typhon, some wore two heads;
some had four arms; many were cursed with disproportionate
limbs—legs twice the length of their bodies, arms thicker than
their thighs. All had weapons, and so far as I could judge, were
mad, for they struck at one another as freely as at the islanders
who fought with them. I
remembered then what Baldanders had told me: that the courtyard
below was filled with my friends and his foes. He had surely been
correct; these creatures would have attacked him on sight, just as
they attacked each other.
I cut down three before I reached the
door, and I was able to rally the lake men who had entered the
tower to me as I went, telling them that the enemy we sought was
outside. When I saw how much they dreaded the lunatic monsters who
leaped still from the dark stairwell (and whom they failed to
recognize for what they undoubtedly were—the ruins of their
brothers and their children) I was surprised they had dared to
enter the castle at all. It was wonderful, however, to see how my
presence stiffened them; they let me take the lead, but by the look
of their eyes I knew that wherever I led they would follow. That
was the first time, I think, that I truly understood the pleasure
his position must have given Master Gurloes, which until then I had
supposed must have consisted merely in a celebration of his ability
to impose his will on others. I understood too why so many of the
young men at court forsook their fiancees, my friends in the life I
had as Thecla, to accept commissions in obscure
regiments.
The rain had slackened, though it still
fell in silver sheets. Dead men, and many more of the giant’s
creatures, lay on the steps—I was compelled to kick several over
the side for fear I would fall if I tried to walk over them. Below
in the bailey there was still much fighting, but none of the
creatures there came up to attack us, and the lake men held the
stair against those we had left behind in the tower. I saw no sign
of Baldanders.
Fighting, I have found, though it is
exciting in the sense that it takes one out of oneself, is
difficult to describe. And when it is over, what one best
remembers—for the mind is too full at the time of struggle to do
much recording—is not the cuts and parries but the hiatuses between
engagements. In the bailey of Baldanders’s castle I traded frantic
blows with four of the monsters he had forged, but I cannot now say
when I fought well and when badly.
The darkness and the rain favored the
style of wild combat forced on me by the design of Terminus Est. Not only formal fencing but any sword or
spear play that resembles it requires a good light, since each
antagonist must see the other’s weapon. Here there was hardly light
at all. Furthermore, Baldanders’s creatures possessed a suicidal
courage that served them badly. They tried to leap over or duck
under the cuts I made at them, and for the most part they were
caught by the backhand that followed. In each of these piecemeal
fights, the warriors of the islands took some part, and in one case
actually dispatched my opponent for me. In the others, they
distracted him, or had wounded him before I engaged him. None of
these encounters was satisfactory in the sense that a
well-performed execution is.
After the fourth there were no more,
though their dead and dying lay everywhere. I gathered the
islanders about me. We were all in that euphoric state that rides
with victory, and they were willing enough to attack any giant, no
matter how huge; but even those who had been in the bailey when
the stones fell swore they had seen none. Just as I was beginning
to think they were blind, and they were no doubt ready to believe I
was mad, we were saved by the moon.
How strange it is. Everyone looks for
knowledge in the sky, whether in studying the influence of the
constellations upon events, or like Baldanders in seeking to wrest
it from those the ignorant call cacogens, or only, in the case of
farmers, fishermen, and the like, in searching for weather signs;
yet no one looks for immediate help there, though we often receive
it, as I did that night.
It was no more than a break in the
clouds. The rain, which had already grown fitful, did not truly
cease; but for a very short time the light of the waning moon (high
overhead and, though hardly more than half full, very bright) fell
upon the giant’s courtyard just as the light from one of the
largest luminaries in the odeum in the oneiric level of the House
Absolute used to fall upon the stage. Beneath it the smooth, wet
stones of the pavement shone like pools of still, dark water; and
in them I saw reflected a sight so fantastic that I wonder now that
I was able to do more than stare at it until I perished—which would
not have been long.
For Baldanders was falling upon us; but
he was falling slowly.