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Roger Zelazny
The dawn of Amber
Part 1
PROLOG
ONE YEAR AGO
I felt the world around me bend and sway like the branches of a willow in a
storm.
Strange colors turned, misshapen geometries that couldn't possibly exist but
somehow did,
drifting like snowflakes, patterns within patterns within patterns. My vision
brightened then
dimmed, repeatedly, and in no perceptible rhythm.
Come ...
A voice... where? I turned, the world kaleidoscoping.
Come to me ...
The voice pulled me on.
Come to me, sons of Chaos ...
I followed the sound across a land of ever-changing design and color to a tower
made of
skulls, some human and some clearly not. I stretched out my hand to touch its
walls, but my
fingers passed through the bones as though through fog.
Not real
A vision? A dream?
A nightmare, more like it. The thought came from deep inside.
Come ... the voice called to me.
I gave in to the sound and drifted forward, through the wall of skulls and into
the heart of
the tower.
Shadows flickered within. As my eyes began to adjust to the gloom, I could make
out a
stairway of arm and leg bones that circled the inside wall, climbing into a
deeper darkness,
descending into murky, pulsating redness.
I drifted down, and the redness resolved into a circle of torches and five men.
Four of
them wore finely wrought silvered chain mail of a design I had never seen
before. They held
down the limbs of the fifth man, who lay spread-eagled on a huge sacrificial
altar, a single
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immense slab of gray marble threaded with intricate patterns of gold. His chest
and stomach had
been opened and his entrails spread across the altar as though some augur had
been reading the
future from them. When the victim shuddered suddenly, I realized the men were
holding him
down because he was still alive.
I reached instinctively for my sword. In any other time or place I would have
rushed
them, decency and honor commanding me to try to rescue this poor victim. Only he
isn't real, I
told myself. This was some sort of vision, some kind of fever dream or
premonition.
I forced myself closer, staring at the dying man, trying to see his face. Was it
mine? Did
this vision predicting fate?
No, I saw with some relief, it wasn't me on the altar. His eyes were a muddy
brown; mine
are blue as the sea. His hair was lighter than mine, his skin smoother. He was
little more than a
boy, I thought, maybe fourteen or fifteen years old.
"Who are you?" I whispered, half to myself.
The suffering victim turned his head in my direction.
"Help me," he mouthed. He seemed to be staring straight at me, as though he
could see
me.
I reached out for him, but my hand passed through his body and into the stone of
the altar.
Had I become some sort of ghost? A powerless creature forced to watch atrocities
unfold around
me, with no power to act?
I pulled my hand free. A mild tingling, like the return of blood after
circulation had been
cut off, shot through my fingers, but nothing else. I couldn't help him.
The young man turned his head away. He shuddered again, but though tears rolled
down
his cheeks, he did not cry out. Brave and strong, I gave him that.
"Have courage," I whispered.
He did not reply, but his body began to shake and his eyes rolled back in his
head.
Again that wild, uncontrollable rage surged inside me. Why was I here? Why was I
having this vision? What could it possibly mean?
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I looked at the soldiers, searching their faces for an explanation, and suddenly
I realized
they were not human. Their slitted eyes glowed a faint red behind their helms.
Nasals and cheek
guards concealed most of their features, but could not hide the faintly
iridescent pattern of scales
around their mouths and chins. I had never seen their like before. They must
have the blood of
serpents in their veins, I thought, to kill one so young in such a horrible
manner.
The victim on the slab gave one last convulsive shudder, then lay still. They
released him.
"Lord Zon," one of the soldiers croaked.
Something stirred in the darker shadows by the far wall. Slitted eyes, much
larger than the
soldiers' and set a foot apart, opened, then blinked twice. As the creature
shifted, torchlight
glinted off its metallic-gray scales and the sharp talons of its four spindly
limbs.
I felt a sudden chill, a blind panic that made me want to run screaming from
this tower.
Yet I steeled myself and held firm in my place, facing it, knowing this to be a
true enemy-the
enemy of all men.
Yes, it said. The creature did not speak, but I heard the rumble of its words
clearly in my
head.
"He is dead."
Bring me the other son of Dworkin.
A shock of recognition went through me. Dworkin! I knew that name. But it had
been
such a very long time since I had seen him.., .
Calmly, two of the serpent-soldiers turned and left the tower through a doorway
set deep
in the shadows. The remaining pair pulled the young man off the slab and dragged
him to a small
hole in the floor. They rolled him into it, and he plunged into darkness. I did
not hear him hit the
bottom.
A moment later the other two returned, half carrying, half dragging another man
between
then, this one older than the one who had just died. He wore the tattered
remains of a military
uniform, but I did not recognize the design, and his face and hands were bruised
and dirty. Still
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he bucked and fought, kicking and biting, struggling frantically to free
himself. He almost threw
off the serpent-soldiers several times; he was strong and determined not to be
taken easily.
Instinctively, my hand sought my sword again. I wished I had the power to help
him. But
I remembered how my hand had passed through the body of the last victim and knew
I could do
nothing but watch.
The two soldiers who had disposed of the young man's body rushed forward, and
together
the four of them managed to heave the newcomer up onto the altar's slab. All
four leaned on his
limbs heavily, holding him down despite his valiant efforts to free himself.
The serpent-beast in the shadows stirred, immense scales sliding across the
floor's stones.
I heard a laugh that chilled my heart.
Son of Dworkin. You will help me now.
"Never!" the young man yelled. "You'll pay for this!" And he followed with a
string of
obscenities.
Then he raised his head defiantly, staring at the giant serpent, and the
flickering torches
revealed his features for the first time.
My features. For he had my face.
I could only gape. How was it possible? Was this nightmare some premonition of
things
to come? Would this Lord Zon capture me, drag me here, too, and read the future
from my guts?
Drifting closer, like a phantom, I peered down at the man. I had to get a better
look, had to
know more about who he was and how he had gotten into this situation. If this
really was some
future vision of myself-
Fortunately neither the soldiers nor their serpent-master seemed aware of me. I
might
have been some spectral figure wandering through their nightmare world, unseen
and unheard,
forced to witness atrocities beyond all human suffering but unable to stop them.
And yet, I reminded myself, before his death, the first victim had seen me. How?
What
did it all mean?
As I continued to study the man with my face, I began to notice small
differences between
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us. Like the boy before him, he had brown eyes to my blue. But despite our eye
colors, there were
many uncanny similarities between us. The high rise of our cheekbones, the shape
of our noses
and our ears... we could have been brothers.
Or father and son.
My father is already dead, I told myself. This cannot possibly be him. Could it?
No, my father would have been much, much older.
This man looked about my own age.
Tell me of Dworkin, the voice in my head commanded. Where is he hiding? Where
else
has he spread his tainted blood?
I felt my heart leap. Dworkin again. What did my former teacher have to do with
all of
this?
The man on the slab spat at the creature, then declared, "I have never heard of
Dworkin.
Kill me and be done with it!"
Let him go, I thought desperately, dreading what might come next. Whatever you
are,
you're looking for me, not him. I'm the one who knows Dworkin!
The serpent-creature didn't hear me. Talons lashed out from the darkness, seized
the man,
and ripped his chest and stomach open like cheesecloth. I gasped, stunned. The
prisoner screamed
and kept screaming. With a quick motion, the creature pulled his entrails across
the altar's slab
like an offering to the dark gods.
Blood sprayed in the air and hung there, forming a cloud, a shifting pattern
like the
snowflakes of color outside the tower. But this pattern was different, somehow-I
could see holes
where it was incomplete, jagged, and somehow wrong.
Come to me...
The serpent-creature writhed, body undulating before the pattern in the air,
working its
foul sorcery. Rings of light burst from the floating droplets of blood,
spreading out through the
walls of the tower, disappearing into the greater void outside.
Come to me, sons of Dworkin . . .
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