Elric to Rescue Tanelorn - Michael Moorcock [134]
“I must do it,” Elric decided, “for the sake of this man. I must call Arioch and lift the doom that is on R’lin K’ren A’a.”
“And bring a greater doom to us!” Duke Avan said, putting his hand automatically upon his sword-hilt. “No. I think we should take our chances with the Olab. Leave this man—he is mad—he raves. Let’s be on our way.”
“Go if you choose,” Elric said. “But I will stay with the Creature Doomed to Live.”
“Then you will stay here for ever. You cannot believe his story!”
“But I do believe it.”
“You must come with us. Your sword will help. Without it, the Olab will certainly destroy us.”
“You saw that Stormbringer has little effect against the Olab.”
“And yet it has some. Do not desert me, Elric!”
“I am not deserting you. I must summon Arioch. That summoning will be to your benefit, if not to mine.”
“I am unconvinced.”
“It was my sorcery you wanted on this venture. Now you shall have my sorcery.”
Avan backed away. He seemed to fear something more than the Olab, more than the Summoning. He seemed to read something in Elric’s face which even Elric did not know.
“We must go outside,” said J’osui C’reln Reyr. “We must stand beneath the Jade Man.”
“And when this is done,” Elric asked suddenly, “how will we leave R’lin K’ren A’a?”
“There is a boat. It has no provisions, but much of the city’s treasure is on it. It lies at the west end of the island.”
“That is some comfort,” Elric said. “And you could not use it yourself?”
“I could not leave.”
“Is that part of the curse?”
“Aye—the curse of my timidity.”
“Timidity has kept you here ten thousand years?”
“Aye…”
They left the chamber and went out into the square. Night had fallen and a huge moon was in the sky. From where Elric stood it seemed to frame the Jade Man’s sightless head like a halo. It was completely silent. Elric took the Image in the Gem from his pouch and held it between the forefinger and thumb of his left hand. With his right he drew Stormbringer. Avan, Moonglum and the Vilmirian crewman fell back.
He stared up at the huge jade legs, the genitals, the torso, the arms, the head, and he raised his sword in both hands and screamed:
“ARIOCH!”
Stormbringer’s voice almost drowned his. It pulsed in his hands; it threatened to leave his grasp altogether as it howled.
“ARIOCH!”
All the watchers saw now was the throbbing, radiant sword, the white face and hands of the albino and his crimson eyes glaring through the blackness.
“ARIOCH!”
And then a voice which was not Arioch’s came to Elric’s ears and it seemed that the sword itself spoke.
“Elric—Arioch must have blood and souls. Blood and souls, my lord…”
“No. These are my friends and the Olab cannot be harmed by Stormbringer. Arioch must come without the blood, without the souls.”
“Only those can summon him for certain!” said a voice, more clearly now. It was sardonic and it seemed to come from behind him. He turned, but there was nothing there.
He saw Duke Avan’s nervous face, and as his eyes fixed on the Vilmirian’s countenance, the sword came round and plunged towards the duke.
“No!” cried Elric. “Stop!”
But Stormbringer would not stop until it had plunged deep into Duke Avan’s heart and quenched its thirst. The crewman stood transfixed as he watched his master die.
Duke Avan writhed. “Elric! What treachery do you…?” He screamed. “Ah, no!”
He jerked. “Please…”
He quivered. “My soul…”
He died.
Elric withdrew the sword and cut the crewman down. The action had been without thought.
“Now Arioch has his blood and his souls,” he said coldly. “Let Arioch come!”
Moonglum and the Creature Doomed to Live had retreated, staring at the possessed Elric