NOTICE TEXTE n° 1 (87.01 Ko)
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the LORDS
of Midnight
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| SOFT 957 CASSETTE | ----------------------
| SOFT 1957 DISC | | B E Y O N D |
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CHALLENGING SOFTWARE
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| Index Victory for Doomdark 21 |
| Introduction 3 The Ice Fear and the Moon Ring 21 |
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| Midnight Chronicles The Keyboard |
| Chapter 1: Luxor and Morkin 4 Controlling a character 22 |
| Chapter 2: The Skulkrin 6 Selecting a character 22 |
| Chapter 3: Corleth the Fey 9 How the game works 23 |
| Chapter 4: The Tower of the Moon 12 |
| Chapter 5: The Solstice 18 The Warring Factions |
| Engaging in battle 23 |
| Guide to Play The Map of Midnight 24 |
| Loading instructions 20 The Free and the Foul 24 |
| The keyboard commands 20 |
| Saving a game in progress 20 The Landscape |
| The role you play 21 Looking around 26 |
| A choice of games 21 |
| The Map 32 |
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Using this booklet
Welcome to the World's first-ever Epic game, The Lords of Midnight.
It more closely resembles a fantasy film than a computer game but the main
difference is that you are in control of the main characters and whether you
lead them to victory or defeat, the story is written around your exploits. The
game sets the scene, controls the forces of evil and independent characters
which move in and out of the plot and draws the landscape of Midnight and its
people in a way never before seen in any computer game.
Author Mike Singleton has produced a game which can be played as a quest, a
mighty wargame, or merely as a walk through the spectacular scenery of
Midnight.
To see this scenery for yourself, load up the game and while it is loading,
read the introduction to the game. Try moving through the scenery, using the
compass keys situated on the number pad to look around and press the [q] key to
go forward in the direction you are facing.
Your four own characters, Luxor, Morkin, Corleth and Rorthron can be
controlled using these keys:
[c] = Luxor [v] = Morkin [b] = Corleth [n] = Rorthron
Try and discover where your characters are on the map.
By now you will hopefully realise that the Lords of Midnight is something
special and will be tempted to read the Chronicles of Midnight to ensure you
make the most of the experience which awaits you.
A full guide to play beings on page 20.
the LORDS
of Midnight
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| AN INTRODUCTION |
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The Lords of Midnight is not simply an adventure game nor simply a war game.
It is really a new type that we have chosen to call an epic game, for as you
play the Lords of Midnight you will be writing a new chapter in the history of
the peoples of the Free.
You will guide individual characters across the land of Midnight on vital
quests but you will also command armies that must endeavour to hold back the
foul hordes of Doomdark, the Witchking. Nor will your task be easy for your
computer is programmed to play the role of the Witchking and provide a guiding
intelligence for the forces of evil ranged against you. Yours will be no
inevitable victory.
Above all, at every stage of the game, you will only see the land of
Midnight through the eyes of the characters and commanders you control. You
will see no map plotting with unerring accuracy your own and the enemy's
dispositions. Instead, as you switch your attention to each of the characters
you control, you will see only what they would see from the spot where they
stand: a panoramic view drawn in full perspective. Looking into the distance,
you will see the mountains and forests and hills of the lands of Midnight; you
will see armies camped on the plains, great citadels rising in the distance,
the forlorn ruins of long-forgotten fortresses. And if you wish to see what
lies beyond that mountain range, beyond that dark forest, you must move forward
and look for yourself!
We have called this unique feature "landscaping", for it gives you the power
to journey through the landscape of Midnight in the very same way as any
traveller or captain of war; as you move forward and your path twists and
turns, the landscape changes just as it would if you were really walking
through Midnight. To achieve this effect, the Lords of Midnight program can
create no less than 32,000 different panoramic views!
On the following pages, you will find the prelude to this epic game, the
first passage of the chapter you must write in the long Book of Midnight. The
story sets the scene for the events that will unfold in the game. It contains
no vital clues to the defeat of Doomdark but serves to remind you of the
desperate nature of your task and of the price of failure. We recommend you
read it before embarking on your quest for victory. Further on, you will find
our "Guide to Play"; this is vital reading.
Good luck go with you on your quest and fare thee well!
CHAPTER ONE
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| LUXOR AND MORKIN |
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Luxor stood at the doorway of the hut, gazing into the white gloom of the
forest. A thin scatter of ersh, the fine powder-snow of the new moon, was
floating down onto the frozen ground. It was time, thought Luxor, it was time.
An icicle of fear touched him and shivered through him. He drew his cloak
tightly around himself, as though it would warm the chill in his heart, and
turned from the forest.
"You are troubled, my Lord," said Morkin. The boy looked up at Luxor, his
face a mirror of the man's sadness.
"The world is troubled," said the Forest Keeper. He threw another log onto
the fire and sent a flock of sparks flying into the smokey darkness of his hut.
"Come and warm yourself by the fire, my Lord," said the boy. He stood up and
offered the stool he was crouched on.
"No, Morkin, we must go. The Solstice is nearly upon us and Doomdark is
already waking from his slumber. We must reach the Tower of the Moon by
tomorrow yet our ride promises to be long and hazardous."
"The horses, my Lord?"
"Yes, fetch them and let's be on our journey."
The boy scurried out. Luxor turned to the Forest Keeper.
"Your fire and shelter have been a precious gift, Keeper; I thank you."
"If you and your young squire can keep Doomdark's scum from my trees, you're
more than welcome," growled the Keeper. Then, grudgingly, he added, "My Lord,"
and spat into the fire.
Luxor turned and strode out of the hut into the crisp forest air. Morkin was
already astride his horse, waiting. Luxor swung himself up onto the saddle of
his white war-stallion. Then, at a word to the horses, they rode off into the
trees. Ersh was still falling and in an hour, there was no trace of their
passing.
For many hours they rode in silence, Luxor lost in his thoughts, the boy
watching the forest in a mixture of fear and fascination. He had heard the
tales men told and couldn't quite believe they were only tales. Yet, the forest
had its own vast and lonely beauty, its trees standing still as stones but each
drinking a silent power from the earth that could thrust them, as tall as
towers, towards the sky. Morkin felt smaller than he had ever felt.
As darkness neared, the boy grew tired of the forest and turned to speak to
his Lord. Luxor was gazing into the distance as though in a dream.
"Why does the Solstice trouble you, my Lord?" asked the boy.
Luxor turned his head slowly towards Morkin. For a few moments he said
nothing and then, as though he had suddenly remembered, he began to speak.
"Our world wasn't always white, Morkin. You've heard the legends of Summer
when the land was green and teeming with life. Ten thousand moons ago it was,
so long that men barely believe such a time ever existed. Yet the Wise
remember. They have scrolls that tell of the first snows falling and the first
carpets of ice covering the land. Suddenly, all the lands of Midnight were
plunged into this winter of ours. Then came famine, a great famine that ravaged
our people, and with famine came war."
"But the Solstice, my Lord," insisted the boy.
"I am coming to it, Morkin, I am coming to it. The Wise shut themselves up
in their towers and let war take its course. They had not foreseen this winter,
yet they knew that war was the only way, for the lands that had teemed with
people in the long moons of Summer could not feed such a throng any longer.
Only one of the Wise, Gryfallon the Stargazer, stayed with his Lord and gave
him much counsel concerning war and conquest. Gryfallon was astute, his advice
was well-measured, and soon the Lord he served was powerful throughout the
lands of Midnight, no longer a mere Lord but, by conquest, a King."
"Was that Doomdark, then?" asked the boy.
"No, the King was not Doomdark. Lord Ushgarak reigned for but twelve moons
before Gryfallon had him murdered and took the crown for himself. The people
and the Lords were not
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displeased, for they knew Gryfallon had advised wisely and they knew nothing of
his crime. They told each other that Gryfallon the Wise would see them through.
So he did, after a fashion, but he ruled not through wisdom but through fear
and slaughter and sorcery. As the years passed, an icy chill spread through the
hearts of those not already enslaved to him. No longer did people call him
Gryfallon the Wise but instead Doomdark, Witchking of Midnight. Even this was
his own doing, for it pleased him to know so many trembled in fear of him."
"So Doomdark is one of the Wise!" said Morkin, in surprise.
"Who else but they could wield such power?" asked Luxor.
"You could, my Lord," the boy replied, fiercely.
Luxor smiled, "Your heart speaks louder than your head, Morkin. I would not
seek such power, even if I could wield it."
"But, my Lord, what of the Solstice? Why is the Solstice so important?"
"The Solstice, Morkin, is the deepest, darkest day of winter. The Witchking,
by his sorcery, draws his power from the very winter itself; he sucks from its
heart the cold that fills his own and turns its icy force to his own will. For
many moons now Midnight has known a false peace while Doomdark waits and
prepares for the Solstice. Doomdark's last full assault on the Free was moons
before you were born, Morkin, and even then we barely held him at bay. When the
Solstice comes and winter is deepest, Doomdark will draw more power than he has
ever known from its icy heart. Then he will unleash all the hellhounds of
Midnight against us and I fear we may not withstand him."
A stricken look passed across Morkin's bright face.
"How so, my Lord?" We are the Free and you are the mightiest warrior in all
of Midnight!" the boy exclaimed.
Luxor smiled wryly. "Morkin, you do me more than justice, but even if I were
as you say it will take more than swords and strong arms to defeat the
Witchking. In the last war he made against us, I slew score upon score of his
foul creatures yet always there were more to take their place. But worst was
the ice-fear, the cold blast of terror he sent creeping over the land to stab
at men's hearts and turn their blood to water. This time it will be as cold as
the Frozen Wastes."
"Even they can be crossed, so the legends say."
"Perhaps, Morkin, perhaps."
Morkin was silent for a moment, as though lost in thought. Then, as gravely
as one of the Wise, he said, "We'll win, my Lord."
"How so?" said Luxor.
The boy grinned, mischievously.
"This time you've got me to help you!"
Luxor looked at the youngster, smiled and then roared with laughter, not at
Morkin's ludicrous reasoning but at the enormity of his innocent, affectionate
conceit. Morkin, suddenly realising how boastful his words had sounded, burst
into laughter too.
"Morkin," said the Lord Luxor, still laughing. "I doubt the ice-fear could
ever touch you. There's not a chink it could pierce."
"It couldn't catch me anyway!" said Morkin, suddenly galloping ahead.
Luxor shook his head in disbelief and galloped after his runaway squire.
5
CHAPTER TWO
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| THE SKULKRIN |
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As darkness seeped through the trees, the skulkrin shivered and grunted.
Still asleep in a nest of leaves and bracken, he cowered as he lay there and
his tiny hands quivered in supplication.
"O Great One," he whimpered. "Fawkrin would not fail you. Fawkrin is your
faithfullest servant."
The skulkrin's long tongue lolled out to lick an absent hand. A cold,
crackling voice rang out in the creature's dream.
"Wretch! I would not trust you further than I could kick you!"
As if to demonstrate, Doomdark aimed the toe of his boot at the skulkrin's
thin belly. Fawkrin, half-expecting such a response, darted away but not
swiftly enough. The blow caught him on the backside and sent him sprawling.
Doomdark sneered.
"Fool."
The skulkrin picked himself up and dusted the splinters of ice from his
ragged tunic.
You're too kind to Fawkrin, Great One. Fawkrin loves to be kicked around. Oh
surely, Fawkrin loves a sore backside, oh surely, too kind!" said the skulkrin,
adding under his breath, "Great mound of flatulence."
In a withering voice, Doomdark whispered, "Go."
Fawkrin cringed as the Witchking's frozen breath rolled towards him,
trailing a glittering cloud of ice as it clawed through the air. Fawkrin
shrieked, shook and woke.
"Must find Luxor," he muttered to himself. "Surely must."
Shaking himself as he stood up, the skulkrin pawed at all his bodily parts
to make sure they were still there, then scuttled off into the murk of the
forest.
Fawkrin moved swiftly, skipping over the crisp snow where the ground was
even, dropping to all fours when fallen trees and stray boulders made a
mountain range of the forest floor. For a few moments, he imagined he was a
young skulkrin again, dancing alone and carefree through the white wilderness,
but presently he remembered, stopped and sniffed. The simmering breath of the
trees streamed into his twitching nostrils but then a different warmth mingled
with the resinous gloam of the forest: man-warmth. The skulkrin shivered and
sniffed again. There was another warmth there too - boy-warmth! His long tongue
slavered out over his lips. A bite to eat would not go amiss.
Fawkrin found his quarry in a clearing. There was no fire, else he would
have found them sooner, and the man and the boy were huddled under a makeshift
roof of branches and ferns. Quiet as a snowfall, Fawkrin crept into the
bivouac. He pawed around in his tunic and from the grubby depths he tugged out
a small pouch of matted fur. From it, the skulkrin poured a heap of glowing
white dust into his palm which he quickly sprinkled over the sleeping faces of
the humans. Even so, Fawkrin felt a frosty numbness gripping his fingers like a
glove of ice.
He muttered to himself, "Rotten Doomdark magic. Could make magic that don't
hurt Fawkrin, surely could." Then he shook his clawed little hand until he felt
the blood trickle back, whimpering softly all the while.
It seemed that stars had fallen from the sky to settle on the faces of the
man and the boy. One by one, each glinting speck faded and disappeared as the
sleep-frost melted into their skin. Fawkrin waited until the last glimmer had
died, then edged closer to the man. He sniffed at the man's tepid breath, his
nose wrinkling and twitching as he tested its warmth and texture. Then he
giggled in delight.
"Khlee-khlee-khlee! The great Lord Luxor! Khlee-khlee! Now He won't kick
Fawkrin on his backside, surely not."
The skulkrin knelt down, brought his mouth close to Luxor's ear and in a
mellow, soothing voice that seemed absurd from such a creature, he whispered,
"Lord Luxor, great Lord Luxor, brave Lord Luxor, why have you come to the
Forest of Shadows, tell me, Oh tell me where you are bound!"
Luxor stirred. Eyes still closed, his arm rose mechanically and his hand
wavered towards the knife in his belt. The skulkrin scurried away with a squeak
of terror but Luxor's arm fell back,
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lifeless, to the ground. Fawkrin crouched in the darkness a full minute before
he found courage enough to crawl back to Luxor. In truth, even this was simply
the courage of necessity, his fear of Doomdark reasserting itself over his fear
of the warlord.
"Great Lord Luxor!" sang the skulkrin. "Tell me where you are bound!"
This time, Luxor did not stir. He spoke in a faint, weary murmur.
"I have been called by the Wise," he slurred, "I have been called to their
Council at the Tower of the Moon, summoned."
"But why, tell me why?" crooned the skulkrin.
"The Solstice. Doomdark grows stronger yet. We must act. I know no more. The
Wise keep their own counsel."
Fawkrin guessed this was the truth. Though a great warlord of the Free, even
Luxor would not be privy to the secrets of the Wise.
"Bah! Great warlump. Might as well tell Doomdark the sun will rise tomorrow.
Sore backside for Fawkrin."
Then a thought struck the skulkrin and he grinned a jagged, twinkling grin.
"O great lord, how do you think of the Witchking? Is he not greater than
you?" hissed the skulkrin.
"Doomdark is hag-spawn, a foul pestilence, a piece of scum adrift on the
fair waters of Midnight. If he fought like a man, I would slay him in two
breaths."
The skulkrin convulsed in tremendous giggles. Though he shivered at the
thought of Him, there was nothing more deliciously exciting than to hear Him
insulted. Suddenly, a cold breath trickled down Fawkrin's neck. His laughter
stopped just as suddenly and he clenched his hands together.
"I wasn't laughing, O Great One, oh no! Surely I wasn't."
Only silence and the gentle whisper of the trees was the reply. The skulkrin
sighed and smiled crookedly.
"Silly skulkrin. Can't hurt you here, can He?"
He swivelled round and turned to the sleeping boy. He snuffled at his face
and shoulders and chest.
"Mmmm. Fresh! And so warm!" he declared.
Morkin was lying on his side, towards the skulkrin, with his bare forearm
hooked in front of his face. Fawkrin tugged another pouch from his tunic and
poured some more white powder into his palm. Sparingly, he sprinkled it over
the boy's arm. No melting glow could be seen for this time the white dust was
more mundane; it was salt. Fawkrin opened his jaws wide and ducked eagerly
forward.
Just as the skulkrin's fangs were about to sink into the morsel prepared,
Morkin opened his eyes. Had the skulkrin been turned to ice, an event not
unfamiliar to Doomdark's servants, he could not have stopped in mid-bite more
swiftly. For half a moment, Fawkrin was at a loss and could only stare in
amazement and terror. Then, a half-moment more and his gaping bite had suddenly
transformed itself into a broad grin.
"Hello, young sir!" the skulkrin gulped. He gulped again as a knife-point
pressed sharply against his throat.
"If you so much as twitch, little furry one, you'll twitch no more. What's
your business with us?" said Morkin.
"Nothing, young sir, nothing, surely. Fawkrin only seeks warmth and shelter.
Gets fine hospitality too. Knife at his throat. Questioned like a criminal.
Fine hospitality, surely."
"Oh!" said Morkin, mockingly, "Hospitality in your country stretches to
becoming a meal for your guests. Fine hospitality that!"
"Oh no, young sir, oh no! Fawkrin is a good skulkrin. He would not eat such
a fine, strong, handsome, kind boy."
"The salt, then, is for good luck, I suppose."
"So clever, young lord, surely. Yes, good luck. Course!"
"I ought to make your end now but I fear you have worked some doomish spell
on my Lord. He sleeps strangely and has not stirred. Wake him and I'll spare
you your skin and bones."
"Only the light of day can do that, young sir," whimpered the skulkrin.
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"You're lying, fur-thing!" said the boy angrily. He prodded the creature's
throat with the knife-point. Fawkrin winced.
"It's dangerous, young sir, dangerous, surely."
"More so if you don't," said Morkin, prodding more firmly with the knife.
"I think, perhaps, I should try to wake him young sir," squeaked the
skulkrin.
With his knife-hand, Morkin waved the creature towards Luxor. Fawkrin took
yet another pouch from his tunic and waved it to and fro under Luxor's nose.
Languidly, the man opened his eyes. For a moment Morkin's gaze left the
skulkrin. The skulkrin bit savagely at the boy and, instinctively, the boy
lashed out with the skulkrin clamped to his hand. The creature crashed through
the thin branches that sheltered them. His jaws dropped open at the shock of
impact but his flight continued, out into the forest towards a particularly
prickly clump of brambles. He scrambled to his feet and raced off northwards,
plucking out thorns as he ran.
"Armour," he muttered glumly. "That's what Fawkrin needs, armour on his bum.
Rotten Doomdark magic. Don't even work on food. Fah!"
Morkin was gently shaking Luxor.
"Luxor, my Lord, are you hurt?"
"At peace, Morkin; I was only dreaming. What's amiss?"
"A furry creature was about to make a meal of my arm before I stopped it at
knife-point. It had put you under a spell, my Lord."
"Did it speak?"
"Yes; it said it was a skulkrin."
"A skulkrin! Then Doomdark senses something. The skulkrin rarely come so far
south. Did you tell it anything, Morkin?"
"No my Lord. but it was speaking to you when I woke."
Luxor sat up and peered at the folds of the cloak where his head had lain. A
few specks of glimmering dust lingered on the dark fabric.
"Sleep-frost! Morkin, did you kill it?"
Morkin shook his head.
"No, my Lord. It escaped."
"Come, we must ride! You did well enough to wake, though how you did that
after sleep-frost I cannot fathom."
Luxor grasped Morkin's hand firmly. Morkin winced and Luxor felt the warm
slick of blood.
"You're hurt Morkin."
"It's only a bite, my Lord."
"A skulkrin bite turns foul in hours," said the man.
"Then must I cut it open and suck out the poison?"
Luxor laughed. "You listen to too many ale-tales, Morkin. No, a few leaves
of sweetflame will clean the wound. We will ride now and gather some on the
way, but we must find the skulkrin. If we do not I fear Doomdark may get
untimely warning that the Wise are awake."
8
CHAPTER THREE
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| CORLETH THE FEY |
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Upon the forest hung a sparkling frost. The air was cold and thick. If a
twig snapped it would crackle for miles around but only the muted whisper of
the trees could be heard. Above, the Moonstar hovered bright and clear in a
deep dark sky. The Moon itself was not even a sliver, just a deeper darkness
blotting out the glistening haze of the Roads of Light.
Near the forest's tangled heart lay a glade where the darkness moved
strangely, dancing over the pale snow like mist in a squall. The skulkrin
paused at the clearing's edge; though darkness was his daylight, this was
beyond his ken. Nameless fears urged him to turn and run but his muscles would
not move nor his eyes unfix themselves from the dancing shadows.
As he watched, his fears seemed to drift away as though they were just brief
clouds that had enshrouded him and were now passing into the far, far distance.
The skulkrin edged forwards into the glade. He felt a beautiful, glowing glory
shiver through him. He was completely bewildered; never, not even as a young
skulkling, had he been happy like this. Unaccountably, he felt good and kind
and gentle.
The feeling gnawed at him like an aching tooth. In a daze, he wandered to
the centre of the glade and as the shadows danced around him he peered up at
the Moonstar. Its bright needles of light pierced him with wonder. His mind had
never before grasped what beauty was and now the strange, intoxicating
experience overwhelmed him. In a gentle, lilting voice, he began to sing a song
he had never heard.
The forest filled with the skulkrin's fleeting song. The smaller creatures
of the night, hearing only the deadly burr of a skulkrin, however
well-disguised, fled to the burrows and nests. The larger creatures paused, as
bewildered as the skulkrin itself, and then quickly passed on their way,
suspecting some devious skulkrin trap.
Yet there was one who heard and understood. Waking himself easily from his
walking sleep, Corleth the Fey turned and made his way towards the strange
singer. His long, flowing strides carried him swiftly to the glade. There, at
the edge of the clearing, Corleth stood and watched the tiny man-thing as it
sang from the bottom of its ill-used heart.
In a soft, deep whisper, Corleth added his own voice to the refrain. Then,
as if prompted, a breath of wind murmured through the trees and the whole
forest seemed to hum with joy.
Gradually the skulkrin's song shrivelled to silence. The creature stirred
from his dream and looked around himself. The dancing shadows had gone but
across the clearing he spotted a tall, dark figure clad in a cloak that seemed
to shimmer with stars. Corleth stepped forward, laughing gently.
"Now, little skulkrin, you know what it is to be a child of the earth, not
just a spawn of the Ice Lord."
Fawkrin smiled foolishly. Not knowing what to say in reply, he scampered up
to Corleth and stroked his cloak of midnight blue, gazing in wonder as tiny
pinpricks of light glinted in the gaps between his fingers.
"Come, little skulkrin, tell me on what mischief you are bound!"
"None, my Lord," lied the skulkrin automatically. Then, having said so, he
suddenly regretted it. A longing to be truthful stabbed so fiercely at him that
he cried out with a squeal of pain. Even so, his skulkrin ways were not so
easily abandoned and the most he could bring himself to say was, "None of my
own, Fey Lord."
"I need not ask whose," smiled Corleth.
The skulkrin shook his head slowly from side to side.
"I have been bad, my Lord. I sprinkled sleep-frost on the Lord Luxor and
found out where he was bound. And the boy who served him . . . well, I was
hungry . . . even skulkrin have to eat, my Lord. He was a nasty boy anyway. He
prodded my throat with his knife."
Corleth's eyes lit with sudden anger. The skulkrin realised his mistake and
babbled away in fearful haste.
"I only gave him a nip on the hand. I didn't eat him. He was a kind boy, a
nice boy, surely he was." whined the skulkrin.
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"Be at peace, little skulkrin," said Corleth. "To each his own way. I know,
in truth, you are but a tool in the hand that made you."
The skulkrin began to fidget nervously.
"The Cold One will frostify me for sure. He sees thoughts, you know, sees
thoughts. Can't escape him. Make me forget, Fey Lord, surely you can make me
forget!"
The skulkrin looked up at Corleth with wide, pleading eyes. Corleth shook
his head.
"I cannot save you from the beauty of the world. I can make you forget this
forest, this glade, but you have tasted the sweetness of life and that is
beyond my powers to dispel. Besides, how could I bring myself to steal such a
remembrance from you? Better kill you than cripple you again."
"Very kind of you, surely, but I wouldn't want to put you to any trouble,"
said the skulkrin.
Corleth laughed.
"You have a wry tongue, skulkrin. It may save you yet. Here, a small gift
for you before I leave."
Into the skulkrin's hand, Corleth dropped a small amber crystal. The sphere
lay in Fawkrin's palm like a tiny sun, glowing with its own soft and soothing
light. The skulkrin gazed on it and smiled; he felt it was very precious. A
single tear trickled down his cheek. No one had ever given him a gift before
and Fawkrin was sure this was peerless amongst all gifts that had ever been
given.
Thankyou, my Lord!" he gasped and tore his gaze from the jewel to look at
Corleth. Corleth was already disappearing into the dark of the forest.
"Wait, my Lord, wait!" cried the skulkrin.
A deep and distant voice called in reply, "Farewell little skulkrin, and
begone swiftly; I suspect the wrath of the Lord Luxor will not be far behind
you."
The skulkrin looked nervously around the glade, as if Luxor might burst out
of the darkness at any moment. Then he clenched his fist tightly around the
glowing heartstone and scurried to cover. Though he was fearful of his return
to Ushgarak, return he must. This time, he had a glimmer of hope to comfort
him: the marvellous discovery that there was another being in the world who
cared about his fate.
Corleth did not resume his own journey but instead followed the skulkrin's
old trail southwards. It was a difficult path to follow if you were not a
skulkrin and Corleth made slow progress. At length, he emerged onto a forest
road. His eyes quickly scoured the width of the pathway for hoofprints and
finding none, he smiled to himself, seated himself on a nearby tree-trunk and
waited.
It was not long before the riders he expected appeared. Luxor slowed his
horse to a trot and approached Corleth with his sword drawn. Corleth stood and
smiled.
"What's your business, tall one?" said Luxor.
"I know a skulkrin who shows me more courtesy than that," laughed Corleth.
Morkin reined in beside Luxor and drew his sword swiftly from its scabbard.
"He must be one of Doomdark's, my Lord," hissed the boy, in what he imagined
was a whisper, "Let me slay him."
Corleth laughed again, a long langorous laugh that rolled through the night
air like a gentle mist.
"You may try, Morkin, if you wish," said Corleth.
He tugged a cord at his neck and the cloak of midnight blue fell away from
him, revealing a shirt of mail so finely woven it seemed like a skin of silver.
Corleth rested his hand on the hilt of his sword and waited. Morkin looked
astonished, but nevertheless he frowned, bared his teeth in an attempt to look
grim and fearsome, and urged his horse towards Corleth.
As Morkin's sword scythed down, Corleth stepped lightly aside and caught the
boy's wrist in his hand. Both Morkin and his sword tumbled into the snow. At
once, Morkin scrambled towards his dropped weapon but Corleth was quicker. He
took up the sword and held its point against the boy's chest.
"I will not yield," blurted out Morkin, red and angry, "You must kill me
first!"
"Then it seems I must yield, for I would not kill you," said Corleth. Then
he reversed the sword and handed it, hilt first, to the boy.
10
Morkin jumped to his feet and held the sword uncertainly against Corleth's
shining shirt of mail.
"Will you give quarter, young knight?" asked Corleth with only a hint of a
smile breaking on his lips.
"Only if you give your word that you will not try to escape," answered
Morkin.
"Luxor, my friend, you have a bold squire!" laughed Corleth.
"Friend?" said Morkin.
"Friend indeed," said Luxor, striding up beside Morkin, "We fought
side-by-side on the Plains of Blood in the last war against Doomdark. I did not
recognise him at first, but this is Corleth the Fey. This prisoner of yours
will fetch a hefty ransom, Morkin!"
Morkin dropped the point of his sword to the ground and turned towards
Luxor, his face burning.
"How was I to know that? You let me make a fool of myself."
Luxor placed his hand on the boy's shoulder.
"No, Morkin, Corleth was testing your spirit; it is better to know your
comrade's mettle before the real battle begins, is it not?"
"And you made no fool of yourself," added Corleth, "You did what any true
warrior would."
Morkin frowned and sheathed his sword. "Truly?" he asked.
"Truly," said Luxor. Morkin beamed with pleasure. He turned to Corleth.
"You fought quite well too, my Lord," he said, magnanimously. Then the man
and the boy and the fey all laughed together.
Morkin lent his horse to Corleth and sat afore Luxor as they rode north
along the forest road. Luxor did not wish to lose more time than necessary and
didn't mention the matter of the skulkrin until they were on their way. When he
did relate the tale, Corleth remained silent until Luxor had finished. Then, at
last, he spoke.
"I met this skulkrin but an hour past," said Corleth.
"Why did you not say?" asked Luxor incredulously, "We must find it and
silence it."
"At peace, my friend; you must give some quarter even to skulkrin. Are they
not creatures of flesh and blood? His only crime is knowledge and you cannot
slay him for that alone. Who knows? Perhaps he will not tell Doomdark of his
knowledge."
"Perhaps snow is not cold," said Luxor bitterly.
"Perhaps it is not," said Corleth, "Would you believe that I found this
skulkrin in a glade of shadows, singing his heart out to the Moonstar? Would
you believe that he told me truly of his deeds this night? Would you believe
that when I made him a gift of a heartstone, a tear rolled down his cheek?"
"If any but you had told me, I would not." said Luxor.
"Then believe me when I say we must let him live and find his own destiny.
If we do not, why are we fighting Doomdark?"
"Yes, you are right my friend," said Luxor wearily. Then he added darkly,
"The cold wears me down."
"Your heart is strong enough. Believe that too," smiled Corleth.
Luxor fell silent, remembering earlier days when they had ridden together
across the lands of Midnight with cares that seemed as light as falling snow.
He hoped his heart was strong enough. Then hearing the gentle snoring of Morkin
asleep before him, Luxor seemed to hear all the peoples of the Free slumbering
innocently while incomprehensive dangers gathered about them and knew he must
be strong. He shrugged the coldness from him and rode on towards the Tower of
the Moon a little more gladly.
11
CHAPTER FOUR
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| THE TOWER OF THE MOON |
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
Dawn approached stealthily, running swift fingers of light over the Lands of
Midnight. Far to the east, it touched the grim Keep of Utarg with a brief
golden haze; the Targ sentries yawned and looked around only to see if the next
watch approached to relieve them. The dawn moved on, trembling over the Downs
of Athoril, cloaking them in scarlet and saffron. The hills which had seemed
hunched herds of vast menacing creatures in the absence of light, seemed now to
draw apart and unfold.
The daylight spread further westwards, painting the Plains of Dawn first
crimson, then amber, then a deep glowing yellow so that they looked, for a
fleeting moment, as they did at any noon of the Long Summer, clad in wheaten
gold. In lonely hamlets scattered across the broad plains, villagers stirred
and smiled to see the warmth of daylight return, then bent themselves to their
daily tasks.
Over the Forest of Thrall sped the hand of the Sun, shooting bright arrows
of light into the sepulchral darkness of the trees, and then further west to
caress the sheer walls and tall towers of the Citadel of Shimeril. As the first
blaze of sunlight fell into the Courtyard of the Kings, the great horn sang out
over the city. Twelve times the great horn bellowed its simple fanfare, a
short, deep boom followed by a longer, more strident note. A-wake, a-wake, it
sang and then fell silent. The city roused itself dreamily, with creakings of
shutters, rattling of doors and the growing murmur of feet on its cobbled
streets.
The dawn did not linger but hurried on its endless journey, ever westward,
ever westward till the world ceased to spin. Across the Plains of Blood it shed
its own, brighter blood. What men moved there shivered in reluctant remembrance
and did not pause to gaze upon the colours of the sunrise. Then, at last, the
light grazed the edges of the Forest of Shadows, rose up and flew over a sea of
mist-wrapped trees to touch the high stones of the Tower of the Moon.
From its crowning dome of Looking-Crystal, Rorthron was watching. Through
the mists of the forest, he saw a wind of light blow away the darkness and
speed towards him over the leagues and leagues of trees. And though he would
not have cared to count how many dawns he had watched from his solitary post,
he smiled as he always did when the sun rose in full glory over the green rim
of the forest.
Rorthron turned and looked to the west where the light still advanced
inexorably upon the dark army of trees. He sighed. Such a brief summer this
starved Sun brought each day. He had been not much more than a boy at the
height of the Long Summer. Then, the great disk of the Sun seemed to fill the
sky; a day seemed to stretch forever as the languid hours glided by; and people
sought cool shade, not crackling fires. It did not seem ten thousand moons ago.
Rorthron shook his head as if to deny that the Long Summer had ever existed.
He roused himself from his memories and set his gaze beyond the horizon. He
looked first to the north, to Ushgarak, the eye of his mind not seeing pictures
but instead absorbing a crowd of thoughts that clamoured in the far, far
distance.
There was much commotion in the great Citadel. Men, and fouler creatures,
were preparing themselves for war. The captains of Doomdark were tallying
supplies, marshalling their war-bands, bustling to and fro in the Winter Palace
with last-minute orders and requisitions. Their thoughts were only of victory;
already they were exultant at the havoc they would wreak, the vast slaughter
that lay at their command.
The lesser minions of the Witchking were less sanguine. Though they too had
no doubt of the final victory, they knew equally that they might not be granted
the privilege of enjoying it, knew that their lives were the coinage of war to
be spent wantonly as their cold master decreed. Some were filled with disgust
at themselves that their weakness and abject fear had brought them to this,
fighting in the service of the loathsome Doomdark. Others, more pragmatic,
simply counted themselves lucky that they, at least, had a chance to survive
whilst the enemies of the Cold One most certainly did not. And there were some,
of course, who despite their fears for their own wretched lives took comfort in
the knowledge that soon they would be reaping a rich harvest of death and pain
across the battlefields of Midnight and nourished their uncertain courage with
lurid visions of rape and pillage.
12
Rorthron turned away. He had seen nothing he had not expected to see, yet
still it filled him with infinite sadness to see the people and creatures of
Midnight used thus. The Wise had failed. So long ago, in the very dawn of the
world, his race had been charged with its guardianship. Now, their complacent
folly had allowed this to happen and all they could bring themselves to do was
to lock themselves securely in their towers and choose to forget that the world
still existed beyond the high stones.
At length, Rorthron turned this mind-gaze south-east to Corelay and the
Citadel of Xajorkith. Here was a different commotion; children playing in the
streets, waggoners foddering their horses, market-sellers calling out to early
customers, inn-keepers pouring the first ale of the morning into great jugs,
blacksmiths stoking their forges. The city was at peace, its people content.
And if there were vague fears for the future itching in the depths of men's
minds, they were forgotten in the brightness of morning, each dawn a new hope,
a new beginning.
One day from the Solstice, Corelay still had an air of summer about it. The
sadness lifted a little from Rorthron's thoughts. While Corelay was free, there
was still hope and goodness in the world and he must bend all his powers to
preserve it. Rorthron walked briskly to the stairway and descended from his
eyrie to greet the riders approaching out of the Forest of Shadows.
Luxor, Corleth and Morkin were greeted warmly by Rorthron. They bathed first
after their long journey and then joined Rorthron to breakfast in the High
Hall. A blazing fire was burning in the great stone fireplace and they sat
before it with Rorthron to eat and drink. There were many tales to be told but
as the day grew older, Luxor turned to more serious matters.
"When does the Council begin, Rorthron? Surely, there is much to discuss."
"My friend, it has already begun. I am guilty of a little deceit; no others
of the Wise will stir themselves. They think I am a foolish old man with a
hopeless dream and will have no part in the coming war against Doomdark. They
wait for better times, as if better times will appear by magic out of nowhere,"
said Rorthron wearily.
"This cannot be so!" cried Luxor, aghast.
"It is so, my friend; I am the Last Council of the Wise."
Corleth laughed. "Then at least we can hope for unanimous decisions.
Besides, one of you, Rorthron, is worth a score of the rest. We should not be
troubled when the hopeless desert us."
Rorthron smiled gratefully, Luxor nodded his reluctant acceptance of the
truth and their talk turned to Midnight and the realms of the Free. In the
east, the Targ still preserved a fiery independence. The Utarg of Utarg would
suffer none to cross his lands. Free or Fey or Foul and though the Witchking
was known to have sent embassies to him, only one ambassador had been returned,
flayed alive. To the north of the Plains of Targ, Kumar had not been invaded
for many moons. On its northern borders, the Forest of Whispers had swallowed
many a doomish war-band and to the west the Marshal of Kumar kept a strong
watch on the Mountains of Ithril.
West of the Targ, Marakith remained free, though war-bands had been spotted
on the western plains scurrying for the cover of the Forest of Thrall. Further
west, the Plains of Blood had become a dangerous place for the lonely
traveller, though still passable by a strong troop. The Marshal of Shimeril
sent frequent raiding parties north into the plains. Many of the Foul had been
slain but with each passing day their strength grew and the Gap of Valethor
could no longer be reached without an army to clear the way.
Around the Forest of Shadows itself, there was little to be seen of Men,
Foul or Free, yet further south on the Plains of Gard, Doomdark kept a strong
raiding band that had even ventured to the walls of the Citadel of Gard. Of all
the lands of Midnight, only Corelay remained untouched by Doomdark's cold hand.
None of them doubted that Doomdark would deploy his main strength on the
plains of Valethor and once again attempt to force a passage south across the
Plains of Blood. To the east the Mountains of Ithril were too formidable a
barrier for the numberless armies of the Witchking to be supplied across, let
alone to march across. To the west, the bleak passage between the Mountains of
Ashimar and Dodrak was too narrow a road for him to risk.
But could they hold Doomdark this time on the Plains of Blood, as they had
done so many times before? If not, Doomdark could choose from many roads after
gaining the Plains; he could strike out at his leisure in any direction and the
armies of the Free would be caught running to one breach after another. Luxor
was not hopeful.
"Doomdark is too strong. How can we hope to hold him now on the Plains of
Blood when we so barely succeeded the last time?"
13
"Perhaps we should not try," said Corleth. "If we let him move his hordes
onto the Plains of Blood and further south if necessary, that would leave the
way open for us to strike at Ushgarak itself."
"To do that. we would need to pass through the Gap of Valethor ourselves,"
said Luxor. "We could not do that with Doomdark camped on the Plains."
"Have you forgotten Ithrorn, my friend? Is not the Citadel of Ithrorn still
free?" asked Corleth.
"Tenuously so," said Rorthron, "The Marshal of Ithrorn is sorely pressed."
"From Ithrorn we could strike north without the Mountains of Ithril to block
our way, then turn west at Droonhenge and approach Ushgarak by its back door."
"And what of Marakith and Shimeril and Corelay? Are we to leave them
defenceless in the face of Doomdark whilst we ride off on a hopeless sortie?
No, Corleth, I will not do that," shouted Luxor.
"Is it any less hopeful than defending the Plains of Blood? Either way, all
may be lost, but if we should take Ushgarak, Doomdark would be finished."
"At what price?" asked Luxor, angrily.
Rorthron got to his feet and stood before them.
"At peace, my friends. All ways are perilous but we must not exclude any if
we are to defeat Doomdark. His greatest weapon is fear and confusion. We must
not think that any task is hopeless - and it is not! Even Doomdark was once
flesh and blood. Now he is more ice and water, how much easier should it be to
defeat him?" said Rorthron, smiling benignly.
Luxor was still bitter. "I know you are not senile yet, Rorthron. If your
words are meant to comfort us, they are ill-chosen."
"Perhaps you need more than words," said Rorthron calmly. He reached out his
hand towards Luxor and opened it out, palm upwards. "Perhaps you need this."
There, in the palm of the Wise, lay a ring of red gold into which was set a
single jewel, as round and smooth as a pearl but of a clear, sparkling blue
that flashed and flickered like lightning.
"I have rings already, Rorthron."
"Not one like this, my friend," laughed Corleth. Luxor looked curiously at
Corleth, wondering what joke this could possibly be.
"I never thought to see it. I'll wager no Man or Fey has seen it in our
lifetimes. Luxor, this is the Moon Ring, the last of the Great War Rings of
Midnight!"
Luxor turned his gaze again to Rorthron's palm and looked in wonder at the
legendary ring that lay there. The mists of despair that had clung to his
thoughts for many moons seemed to clear and fade away as he watched. Beside him,
Morkin was craning his neck so far forward to get a better view that he almost
fell off his seat. Luxor looked up at Rorthron.
"You know I cannot take this, Rorthron, it is not my right."
"Forgive me, Luxor," said Rorthron. "I have kept this from you too long, but
with good reason. You are not simply Lord Luxor of the Free, you are the last
heir of the House of the Moon. You, my Lord Luxor, are the Moonprince and this
ring is yours by right, to be worn only in circumstances of gravest peril. Once
slipped on your finger, it cannot be removed until you are dead or the peril
has passed. It will give you the Power of Command and the Power of Vision over
those lords and subjects loyal to you, even at great distances. With the Power
of Vision you will be able to see through their eyes what they see. With the
Power of Command you will be able to urge them to undertake any task they would
willingly perform for you. And more than this, it will echo the warmth and
strength of your mind and send forth a tide of hope across the cold lands of
Midnight. It is yours. Take it, and use it with care."
Rorthron the Wise stepped forward and dropped the Moon Ring into Luxor's
hand. Luxor was quite speechless for a while. Then, at length, he spoke.
"Thank you, Rorthron the Wise; this is a gift beyond gifts. Yet, I do not
understand why you have kept all this from me so long. Surely, in the last war
against Doomdark, this ring would have been a help beyond price?"
"Yes, Luxor, it surely would but the Wise have their reasons. The Solstice
is the peak of Doomdark's power. Defeat him before that and he will return as
surely as the snow will fall. Defeat him at the pinnacle of his power and he
will never return, never blight the lands of Midnight again with his foul
schemes. Nor could I tell any of your true ancestry for fear that Doomdark
would gain
14
the knowledge too and hunt you down like vermin. Even now, he suspects nothing
and when the morrow comes, the Solstice itself, he will expect all its glory
for himself. From Ushgarak will issue forth an ice-fear the like of which has
never been seen, rolling its terror across Midnight like a plague. Tomorrow, at
dawn, you must don the Moon Ring and send a blaze of hope winging across the
land, melting his ice-fear, stabbling him with shock that a warmth still exists
that can resist him and filling him with doubt. Then you must ride swiftly to
Corelay and rally all the peoples of the Free to your banner. You must
challenge Doomdark everywhere; leave one pathway unguarded, one chink open and
a flood will pour through. The Moon Ring itself will lend you the power to
guide the forces of the Free and under your guidance they will march against
Doomdark as one. The Captains of Cold will be blind compared to those whose way
is lit by the War Ring of the House of the Moon."
"And a plan?" asked Luxor. "Are we not to have a battle-plan?"
Corleth grasped Luxor's arm firmly.
"Of course, Luxor," he said. "But don't you see? This time, this war, the
Moon Ring lends us the power to change our plans at a moment's notice. No
longer must we stake all upon a single throw."
"Yes, of course," mused Luxor, still dazed at his new-found inheritance.
"There is one matter we have not yet considered," said Rorthron, a note of
warning thrumming in his voice.
"What is that, Wise One?" prompted Corleth.
"The Ice Crown."
Even Corleth seemed to pale at its mention. Morkin tugged gently at Luxor's
sleeve and whispered a question to him. Rorthron smiled and turned to the boy.
"Fashioned of the purest, coldest crystals of ice, forged in the Frozen
Wastes on the bleakest of nights by Doomdark himself, the Ice Crown is the
source of all his power for it enables him to suck from the heart of the Winter
all the bitter forces of cold and bend them to his will. He keeps it in the
Tower of Doom, north of Ushgarak across the Plains of Despair. Few have seen it
and lived, yet all have felt its bitter touch."
"Do you think we could seize it?" asked Luxor. New hope had dawned in him
now and he could almost begin to believe that even such a desperate folly as
this might succeed.
"I think we must try," said Rorthron. "If we succeed and destroy it,
Doomdark's power will be shattered. Even if we fail, the attempt will distract
him and thus help our armies to prevail."
"We cannot spare more than a few for such a perilous task," said Luxor.
"No, indeed. And no more than one for the final journey to the Tower of
Doom, one who can resist the ice-fear that streams from it as sunlight streams
from the sun. It is your choice, Moonprince."
"I cannot lay such a task on another's shoulders. I must go myself."
"Bravely said," said Rorthron. "But that cannot be; the Moon Ring throws
forth mindwarmth - that is its boon and its bane. Doomdark would sense your
presence before you got within fifty leagues of the Ice Crown. You must choose
another. I would go myself but the Wise have too much knowledge of each other;
I could not hide myself from Doomdark any more than he can hide himself from
me."
"Then there is only Corleth," said Luxor reluctantly. "No other than he can
resist the ice-fear at its coldest, no other that I know of."
Luxor turned to Corleth. The Fey looked troubled. He turned his eyes away
from Luxor, then rose silently and wandered towards the colonade that circled
the High Hall. He stopped by a slender column and gazed out through the
Looking-Crystal over the Forest of Shadows. The others remained silent, waiting
for him to decide. After a long while, Corleth returned and stood before them
all in front of the great fire. His eyes were heavy and his face drawn.
"There is another," he said, "One stronger than I could ever be in the face
of the ice-fear."
"Then who?" asked Luxor, puzzled and frustrated by the riddles of the Fey.
"If I could keep this from you, my friend Luxor, I would, but in truth I
cannot. The old songs say that one will be born, half-fey, half-human, whom the
ice-fear cannot touch; armoured with the laughter and lightness of the Fey and
the wild fire of Men, the ice-fear will roll from him like drops of rain in a
summer shower."
Corleth paused and his eyes glazed over as he tried to imagine what such a
summer, what such
15
a shower would be like. Then he blinked and forced himself to continue.
"My Lord, my friend, Luxor, Moonprince - he sits beside you!" The Fey bent
his head and gazed at the floor; he cauld not bring himself to look Luxor in
the eye. The silence was profound.
"Me?" whispered Morkin. "How can it be me?"
Corleth lifted his head and turned his deep eyes towards the boy.
"Tell me what you know of your father and mother, Morkin," said the Fey
gently. The boy looked startled.
"I know nothing, my Lord. I was only a babe when my Lord Luxor found me,
while hunting boar in the Forest of Thimrath. He gathered me up and took me
home and cared for me, as he has cared for me ever since; he has been like a
father to me all my life."
Corleth smiled and looked up towards the distant ceiling of the High Hall.
"It was many moons ago," he said. "We had prevailed over the foul hordes of
Doomdark on the Plains of Blood, but the price was heavy. Many were slain, more
were shattered in mind by the last tide of ice-fear he sent against us. After
the battle, a host of our faithful warriors wandered lost and demented across
the bloody fields, their hearts empty, their minds full of horror. There were
so many that those who had survived unscathed could not hope to find them all
before they took their own path to peace or simply wasted away in the cold,
bitter nights."
"Such a man, wounded to the quick in body and mind, found his way into the
depths of the Forest of Thrall. It was there, exhausted and close to death,
that one of the Fey, the fair Aleisha, found him. She dragged him on a trestle
of branches to her tree-home and there she nursed him to health again. As his
strength grew, so did his enchantment with Aleisha and so did her enchantment
with him."
"When he was fully strong again, his mind healed by her comfart and words of
peace, his body mended by her subtle, feyish skills, they made their love
complete. Yet Aleisha was troubled. She knew their love, however strong, could
not last, for he was a mortal Man and she a Fey. She said nothing to him but
let the days and nights of their love linger on until she could bear it no
longer. Then, gathering all her courage, she freed his mind of every memary of
her, not wishing him to bear the pain of their impossible love. She led him to
the southern edge of the Forest of Thrall and watched him dwindle into the
distance as he walked out across the Plains of Iserath towards the Mountains of
Morning and his distant home."
"Some moons later Aleisha bore a child, a rare child, his child as well as
hers. Her delight almost overwhelmed the pain of parting but even in this
moment of joy she thought only of him. Out of love had she made him forget yet
she knew she wauld not forego her own memories, however painful. She was
determined that he too should keep something of the harvest of their love. And
so, barely a moon later, she journeyed south with her babe across Iserath and
Rarath to the borders of Corelay."
"How many times had he told her of hunts he rode in the Forest of Thimrath,
how many times had he pictured in her mind its winding paths and gentle glades.
She knew where he would be.
16
As dawn approached, she listened for the hoofbeats of his horse and when she
was sure, she bundled the babe in warm furs and laid him by the path. She dared
not linger for fear that she would cry out as he approached and run to his
arms. So, with a parting kiss for her child, she turned back to the north,
never to see her son or her lover again."
"That son was you, Morkin. Your father is my friend, Luxor."
Rarthron the Wise sniffed loudly and dabbed at his eyes with the long
sleeves of his gown. Luxor, for the second time that morning, was dumbfounded.
But Morkin, brimming with joy, leapt to his feet and flung his arms around the
Moonprince.
"You always have been and now it's true," he said. In some confusion, Luxor
smiled and returned his son's embrace.
"It is all I cauld wish, Morkin," he said, then added, "Save that all
secrets were as happy as this when revealed - and revealed sooner."
Suddenly, Morkin whirled round on Corleth.
"Yes! Why did you keep this secret from . . . from my father? You are his
friend."
"And yours too, Morkin. The Fey have long suspected that the House of the
Moon still survived. The Wise are not the only guardians of knowledge. I could
not be sure until today when Rorthron held forth the Moon Ring, but since I
have known him, I have harboured a secret hope that your father was the
Moonprince. I did know, as Rorthron did, that Doomdark suspected nothing. To
have revealed your kinship would have placed you both in double jeopardy as it
does even now. My words may yet be your death, Morkin. I pray you will forgive
me. These are dark times."
Morkin looked subdued.
"I suppose you did right, my Lord Corleth. It is I who should be sorry, not
you," he said grudgingly. "I hate Doomdark. He spoils everything."
"He does indeed, Morkin, my well-named son," said Luxor. "Corleth the Fey,
you have given me a hard choice. How can I send a boy, even if he is my own
son, on such a perilous quest? He may be able to scorn the ice-fear - that I
can well believe - but there are many other dangers on the road to the Tower of
Doom."
It was Morkin who answered first.
"You must send me, Father. If you do not, Midnight might be lost anyway and
then what would become of me?"
"The boy is right," said Rorthron. "We must take every chance. It has come
to that."
Luxor nodded slowly. He clasped Morkin's hand.
"If you wish it Morkin, seek the Ice Crown and attempt its destruction. I
will not send you, but you may go if you wish."
There was fire in the boy's voice and a gladness shining in his eyes.
"Of course I will go, Father! Don't wish me luck; it's Doomdark who will
need it!"
17
CHAPTER FIVE
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| THE SOLSTICE |
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
It was a strange dawn. The Sun seemed reluctant to shake off the shackles of
night and soar over the rim of the world. When it did, the rays it sent
spinning across Midnight seemed cold and pallid. From the north a frozen mist
was seeping over the hills and forests and plains and the dawn was silent, the
air empty of birds, the earth untrodden by the chattering creatures of day.
Even to Corelay the coldness spread and a nameless chill gripped men's hearts
as they rose to greet the new day. Old warriors, in dread, whispered of
Doomdark, for they had been touched like this before, but the rest simply
shivered and tried, with small success, to shrug off their unreasoning fear.
This was only the vanguard of the ice-fear that gathered in the north.
Around Ushgarak, the mist was so thick and high that the city still lay in
darkness, though the rest of Midnight was bathed in light. Then, like a storm
driven by the winds of the tall sky, the great mist began to roll south over
the Plains of Despair. Even Doomdark's creatures quailed and shivered as it
passed. The mist fanned out as it moved ever southwards but it did not seem to
thin or diminish; rather, it grew thicker and taller as it devoured the waking
landscape.
From the Tower of the Moon, Luxor the Moonprince rode out to meet the dawn.
At one side of him rode Morkin, his face eager and shining with the fire the
dawn seemed to lack. At the other side rode Corleth the Fey, a hint of unbidden
laughter playing round his lips. Luxor turned first to Corleth.
"My friend, we must part now but I will be with you. I know your people are
loathe to fight but this is more than a war of Men. Ride north to the forests
of the Fey and gather those you can to our banner; we will have need of you and
all your kin before this war is done."
"The Fey will fight, my Lord Moonprince, though at times you may not notice
how. I will raise more than a war-band, I promise you. Fare thee well, my
friend."
Then the Moonprince turned to his son. He placed his hand on the boy's
shoulder.
"This parting has come too soon. I fear your task may be the hardest of all,
Morkin; take no risk without need. You risk enough already."
"Have no fear, Father. I will return. You risk more than I and it is you who
should take care; do not orphan me again."
Luxor smiled.
"I will try not to! Farewell, my son."
The Moonprince turned to the south-east, towards Corelay. He took the Moon
Ring and slipped it on his finger. In his mind, the distant murmur of battle
seemed to grow and a warm fire burned in his blood. Suddenly, the horizon
seemed to expand and fly away into the distance as into his mind flooded all
the hopes and fears of the peoples of the Free. He drew his sword from its
scabbard and held it aloft, then spurred his white stallion towards the Forest
of Shadows and distant Corelay.
"Arise, Midnight!" he called as he rode, "Arise the Free! Peril and doom lie
at our gates. Waken your valour, arm yourselves with courage! We ride to
conquer Doomdark forever! Arise Midnight, arise!"
His war-cry rang out across the still dawn, flying over the forests and
hills, whispering over the plains. In the distant citadels of the free, in
Ithrorn, in Marakith, in Shimeril, in Kumar and in Gard and in Xajorkith, men
paused and looked about themselves, imagining they heard a faint echo whose
words they couldn't quite catch yet which quickened their hearts and made their
blood race.
Then, as if swept away by a sudden wind, though the air stayed as still as
the mountains, the dour mist that lay over Midnight vanished northwards,
shrinking back towars Ushgarak. The full dawn broke suddenly over the land,
showering it in a blaze of warmth and light. A wave of hope rippled outwards
from the Forest of Shadows across the country of the Free, to far Corelay, to
the Plains of Dawn, to the Mountains of Morning, warming chill hearts and
bringing a glimmer of gladness to Midnight that had too long been absent.
18
In the Winter Palace of Ushgarak, the frozen mist that should have been
flowing out in an endless stream was rushing back in. Doomdark flailed his arms
through it as it thickened about him.
"Back!" he cried, "Back! Fly out, out!"
It was to no avail. The ice-fear rushed homewards and sank back into his
cold flesh. When all had returned and the air cleared, there was worse; a
warmth, an exexplicable warmth seemed to touch his mind. The Witchking
grimaced. He had almost forgotten what pain was like. A spore of doubt buried
itself in his thoughts and like a canker, began to grow.
"A Moonprince?" he mused, "No! It cannot be."
But far to the south, already Luxor the Moonprince sped through the Forest
of Shadows to rally Corelay and the Free. The War of the Solstice had begun.
19
THE LORDS OF MIDNIGHT
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| GUIDE TO PLAY |
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
Loading Instructions
Reset the computer by holding down [CTRL] [SHIFT] and [ESC] keys together in
that order. If using a cassette version, place cassette into the datacorder and
rewind tape to the beginning. Press [CTRL] and small [ENTER] keys
simultaneously then press [PLAY] followed by any key. If using a disc version,
place disc into the disc drive and then type:
run " disc
the program should now load.
The Keyboard Commands
Number Pad
1 = North 2 = North-East
3 = East 4 = South-East
5 = South 6 = South-West
7 = West 8 = North-West
Keyboard
Q = Move E = Look
R = Think T = Choose
U = Night A = New Game
S = Save D = Old Game
G = Yes J = No
C = Luxor V = Morkin
B = Corleth N = Rorthron
M = Select
Saving a Game In Progress
The data for the Lords of Midnight can be saved at any stage of the game. To
save a game in progress, you must first press the [s] key at a time when the
computer is waiting for you to press an option key, if it is doing something
else, it will simply ignore your key-stroke.
Having chosen this option a screen will appear instructing you what to do
next. Place a blank cassette into the datacorder, depress the [REC] and [PLAY]
keys, then press [ENTER] start saving the game. The data for the Lords of
Midnight is saved without a header so don't forget to label the cassette you
are saving it on. We recommend that you keep separate saved games on separate
cassettes. Having loaded the main Lords of Midnight program, your saved game
can be loaded at any time by pressing the [d] key (old game).
We hope that you will never need to abandon a game of the Lords of Midnight
but if it should come to pass that your situation is beyond all hope, you can
abandon the game and start a new game by pressing the [a] key.
If you feel you are going to need a lot of fresh starts, we recommend that
you make a copy of the early stages of the Lords of Midnight by pressing [s] at
the very start of the game or during your first few moves.
The Role You Play
You the player, take the role of Luxor the Moonprince, Lord of the Free. By
virtue of the Moon Ring, which lends you the Power of Vision and the Power of
Command, you can control
20
other characters that are loyal to you, move them through the landscape of
Midnight and look through their eyes. Some of these characters are simply
individuals, others are commanders at the head of whole armies; when you move a
commander, his army moves with him.
The computer plays the part of Doomdark, the Witchking of Midnight and
controls the characters and armies loyal to him. In addition, the computer also
governs the actions of the independent characters and forces in the land of
Midnight.
A choice of games
There are two distinct ways of winning a victory over Doomdark. The first is
by war, by sending armies north to the Plains of Despair and seizing the
Citadel of Ushgarak from whence Doomdark commands his foul hordes. In such a
strategy, Luxor himself will play a major part as a commander in the field.
The second way of winning is by quest, by guiding Morkin, Luxor's son, to
the Tower of Doom to destroy the Ice Crown, the source of Doomdark's power.
Morkin can have no army to help him on his journey, for the Ice Crown sends
forth the ice-fear which withers men's minds. By virtue of his birth,
half-human, half-fey, only Morkin can resist the utter coldness of the Ice
Crown's power.
If you prefer a pure adventure, just concentrate on the quest of Morkin. The
armies of Doomdark will still march south to conquer Midnight but the armies of
the Free will defend themselves without your guidance, even though they will
not make any counter-moves.
If you prefer a pure war game, ignore the quest of Morkin and concentrate on
the assault of Ushgarak.
To play the complete epic, however, you should place equal importance on the
war that Luxor directs and the quest that Morkin journeys on. Naturally enough,
the complete epic takes the longest to play. Of the other options, you will
find the quest the quicker game.
There are no keys to press to choose which sort of game you play - you
simply choose, move-by-move, which characters you want to guide. At any stage,
you can alter the balance at will, abandon the quest and take up war, or admit
defeat on the battlefield and turn to seek the Ice Crown.
If you want to play the Lords of Midnight with your family or friends, we
suggest that each player is given control over a particular character or group
of characters, and that you play as a team against the evil Doomdark.
Victory for Doomdark
To win, Doomdark (or the computer, if you prefer) must achieve two
objectives. First, he must eliminate Morkin; as long as Morkin is alive, the
game will continue. Second, he must subdue the armies of the Free. This can be
done in two ways, either by eliminating Luxor the Moonprince who is their
commander or by taking the Citadel of Xajorkith in the land of Corelay, the
home of all their hopes.
If Luxor is killed, you, the player, lose all control over the other
characters in the game except for Morkin, his son. If, by any chance, Morkin
manages to find the Moon Ring that Luxor wore and which was the source of
Luxor's Powers of Vision and Command, he can put it on and you will regain
control over those characters still loyal to the Free. However, once he does
this, Morkin will immediately become known to Doomdark and his quest to seize
the Ice Crown will become almost impossible.
If Xajorkith is taken by Doomdark but Morkin is still alive, Luxor can
continue the armed struggle against the Witchking. For Doomdark to win,
Xajorkith must be Doomdark's and Morkin must be dead, OR both Luxor and Morkin
must be dead.
The Ice-Fear and the Moon Ring
The ice-fear is Doomdark's greatest weapon, sapping men's courage and
reducing armies to rabble. If strong enough, it may even cause characters once
loyal to Luxor and the Free to desert to Doomdark's control. He can use it
either as a general effect, spread equally over the lands of Midnight or
concentrate it in particular places.
The only shield against it is the Moon Ring that Luxor wears; this radiates
the strength and warmth of his mind. The closer a character or army is to
Luxor, the less will be the demoralising effect of the ice-fear. The same
applies if Morkin is the wearer of the Moon Ring. There is one drawback; the
Witchking can sense the warmth of the Moon Ring and so, at any stage of the
game, he knows the precise whereabouts of its wearer.
21
The strength of the ice-fear also depends on Doomdark's confidence. As the
Witchking takes citadel after citadel of the Free so does the ice-fear grow,
but where he suffers defeat or doubt, the ice-fear dwindles. The Ice Crown has
a cold intelligence of its own and as Morkin comes closer towards it, it will
feel the approaching danger and bend a greater and greater part of its force
towards its own protection. So, as Morkin approaches the Ice Crown, more and
more of the ice-fear will be directed at him alone but it will not affect him.
Instead, the burden of its terror will begin to lift from the armies and
commanders of the Free.
Controlling a character
As stated in the introduction, the Lords of Midnight is not a standard
adventure game and controlling the characters does not require you to guess at
the right phrase of command. Instead, you have four basic options, each
available at the press of a single key:
1) Look (Press the [e] key)
On screen will appear a landscape corresponding to the view that the
character sees in the direction he is looking at the time. There are also a few
lines of text, giving details of where he stands as well as an heraldic shield
which identifies him. During the LOOK option, you can turn the character to
look at another direction by pressing one of the following compass keys on the
number pad:
[1] = North [2] = North
[3] = East [4] = South-East
[5] = South [6] = South-West
[7] = West [8] = North-West
2) Move (Press the [q] key)
The character will move forward in the same direction he was looking. When
he reaches his next location, he will continue looking in that direction and
the LOOK option will reappear with a new landscape.
3) Think (press the [r] key)
When the character is told to THINK the screen becomes largely text and
you are given more details regarding the character, any army he controls and
the place he is in, than could be included in the short text of the LOOK
screen.
4) Choose (Press the [t] key
The CHOOSE screen presents you with a list of special options not covered
by the basic LOOK and MOVE options. It also lists the key you must press for
each of these options.
What special options are open will depend upon the situation the
character finds himself in but will include such choices as searching,
hiding, attacking the enemy, repairing defences and so on.
The CHOOSE screen will also reflect the personality of the particular
character. All the choices you are presented with are only those the
character would be likely to choose by himself. So, the choices open to a
cowardly character will seldom include brave deeds, the choices open to a
greedy character will seldom include acts of generosity.
You can press the LOOK, MOVE, THINK and CHOOSE keys at any stage during
any of the four basic options and the new screen will appear at once.
Selecting a character
At the beginning of the game, you have four characters under your control.
These are LUXOR the Moonprince, MORKIN his son, CORLETH the Fey and RORTHRON
the Wise. You can select any of these by pressing the following keys:
[c] = Luxor [v] = Morkin
[r] = Corleth [n] = Rorthron
When selected, the display will switch immediately to the LOOK option for
that character. To select other characters (which you must recruit to your
cause during the course
22
of the game), you must press the [m] key for SELECT. When you do this, a list
of the other characters you control will appear, together with a list of the
keys that will select them. Press one of these selection keys and the display
will switch immediately to the LOOK option for that character.
Once you have selected a character, your control will remain with that
character until you select another. Selection can be done at any stage of the
LOOK, MOVE, THINK and CHOOSE options.
How the Game Works
The game begins on the day of the Winter Solstice. Initially, you control
Luxor the Moonprince, Morkin, Corleth the Fey and Rorthron the Wise. These
characters all start the game at the Tower of the Moon in the Forest of
Shadows. The game proceeds by day and by night.
During the day, you can move any or all of the characters you control and
any armies that are with them. The distance a character can move in one day
depends on the difficulty of the terrain and whether he is walking or riding as
well as his state of health. You must learn by experience precisely how far you
can travel under given circumstances. However, there is one important thing to
remember; when you travel directly north, south, east or west you are moving
just one league at a time; when you move north-east, north-west, south-east or
south-west you are moving along the diagonal of a square one league by one
league, a distance of approximately 1.4 leagues.
Therefore, this will take you longer and leave less hours of daylight for
the rest of your journey.
When a character has exhausted his hours of daylight, night will fall for
him, and unless there are exceptional circumstances (the THINK screen will tell
you if there are), he will not be able to do any more until the following day.
You can still, however, move other characters under your control.
Once you have moved all the characters you wish to, you must press the [u]
key, this is the NIGHT key. This lets night fall everywhere and signals the
start of activities for the forces of Doomdark. During the night, Doomdark will
move his characters and armies across Midnight and there will be a pause as he
'thinks'. Soon, however, a new day will dawn and you can command your
characters afresh.
Do not forget to press the NIGHT key (the [u] key) when you have finished
your day's movement and action. If you do not press the night key nothing
further will happen at all!
Engaging in battle
Minor skirmishes involving individual characters and small warbands are
quick affairs and can take place at any stage throughout the day. Battles
between armies, however, that will not be decided until the day is over.
Because a battle between armies is such a major event, you will not be able
to move an army to the same location as an enemy army by using the simple MOVE
option (the [q] key). Such a move is always one of the special actions you can
opt for during the CHOOSE option (the [t] key). Some of the commanders you
control may be so afraid that the choice to move them into battle does not even
appear as one of the possibilities.
During the course of the day, you can move as many armies into battle as you
wish. If you move more than one army into the same battle, the program will
keep track of their times of arrival (which may influence the outcome of the
contest). However, once an army or a character has been moved into a battle, it
will not be able to move again until the following day.
At dawn on the following day, the outcome will be known to your commanders.
If the enemy has lost, his armies will have been destroyed in the night or have
fled, leaving your armies and characters free to move. If the enemy has not
lost, you have the choice of retreating with what is left of your armies or
continuing the struggle for another day, possibly throwing in more forces. If,
however, the enemy has won a decisive victory, when dawn breaks you will find
your armies destroyed and your surviving commanders scattered; the enemy forces
may have advanced far beyond the battlefield.
Many things will influence the outcome of a battle: the number of troops,
the type of terrain, the quality of the commanders and, of course, the strength
of the ice-fear. But, as any warrior must, you must learn by experience.
23
The map of Midnight
The map of Midnight (see back) reproduced in this booklet depicts the major
features of the geography of Midnight, but like any map it does not show every
single detail. You will find surprises wherever you roam. It will serve well,
however, as a guide to your journeys through Midnight and be a good helper when
you become lost. But do not forget that the landscape has its own secrets!
The free and the foul
On the day of the Solstice, at the start of the game, Doomdark's forces hold
the north whilst the Free hold the South. Few of Doomdark's armies will be
found south of the Mountains of Ithril and the Plains of Valethor. Of the major
citadels, Doomdark holds Ushgarak, Grarg, Vorgath and Kor. The only armies of
the Free to be found north of the Mountains of Ithril and the Plains of
Valethor are in Ithrorn and the Plains of Ithril. Of the major citadels, the
Free still hold Ithrorn, Kumar, Marakith, Shimeril, Gard and Xajorkith. In the
east, the barbarian tribes of the Targ remain independent of both Doomdark and
the Moonprince. In the west, save for the Citadel of Gard, the lands lie mostly
empty and under no one's sway.
The Fey are in loose alliance with the Free. They do not seek war but
neither do they relish the thought of Doomdark overrunning Midnight. Their part
in the War of the Solstice will be mostly passive. Their homes are the forests
of Midnight and Doomdark's armies will not willingly be allowed passage through
these. Corleth the Fey, however, should be able to rally enough of his people
to his banner to form one army.
The Wise have isolated themselves from the world and live like hermits in
their tall towers. Doomdark will not bother them so long as they remain
withdrawn from the affairs of Men and most certainly, they will not aid him. In
the right circumstances, it may be possible to seek their help and be granted
it. Rorthron the Wise could prove a useful ally in this.
The Utarg of Utarg may be persuaded to bring the Targ into the war against
Doomdark, especially if the armies of the Witchking are tempted or forced to
trespass on his lands. If the ice-fear grows too strong, however, he may lend
his loyalty to Doomdark.
Of the Free themselves, there are many Lords. Luxor should first set himself
the task of seeking their loyalty, thus gaining control of many armies. Most
powerful are the Lord Marshals of the great Citadels but the Moonprince will
find other Lords who will also bow to his command. He should not, however,
waste too much time seeking out allies; there are others who will make fine
ambassadors.
24
[Illustration]
25
Looking around
During your travels through Midnight, you will see many different scenes.
This is a traveller's guide to some of the things you will see. All of these
features of Midnight's geography may offer cover to an army.
------MOUNTAIN------
Moving across a mountain will take many hours of travel and leave you exhausted
at the end of your journey.
------CITADEL------
A strongly fortified city which may harbour enemy forces or offer shelter to a
friendly army. Storming a citadel will be a hard task.
------FOREST------
Movement through a forest will not be swift. The minions of Doomdark, however,
will find it doubly difficult for forests are the homes of the magical Fey who
hold no love for the foul creatures of the Witchking.
------TOWER------
The refuges of the Wise, the Towers of Midnight are almost impregnable from
attack but help may be sought at one of these. It may not always be granted.
26
------HENGE------
Built in the dawn of the world, these ancient temples have strange powers, not
always benign.
------VILLAGE-----
A village can offer warmth and shelter to the lonely traveller if its people
prove friendly.
------DOWNS------
Gently rolling hills, the downs slow a traveller only slightly but they may
hide unseen dangers.
------KEEP------
The fortress of a minor Lord, a keep will offer protection against occasional
raids but will not withstand a determined assault for long.
------SNOWHALL------
Built by the wandering peoples of Midnight during the long winter, snowhalls
are quite large structures which can offer shelter to many hundreds if need be.
------LAKE------
The remaining lakes of Midnight are fed by warm springs. They have powers to
revive and heal those who oppose Doomdark and the forces of cold.
------FROZEN WASTE------
Surrounding the land of Midnight are the Frozen Wastes. They cannot be entered
by any, Free, Foul or Fey.
------RUIN------
Abandoned fortresses of former wars, ruins may harbour dark and dangerous
things but may, in times of need, offer some protection against attack.
27
------LITH------
These ancient standing stones often have magical powers.
------CAVERN------
A cavern can provide shelter and a hiding place but it may already have done so
for fouler creatures!
As well as these features, you will also see the flat expanses of the Plains of
Midnight. It is only on the plains that you will actually see the banners and
ranks of the armies that march across the land.
------ARMY------
A friendly army offers no hindrance to the traveller, but an attempt to go
through the midst of an enemy army offers the gravest of peril, by day or by
night. Armies in mountains, forests or any of the other places to be found will
hide themselves well and not be seen.
As you look around during your travels, large figures may appear in the
foreground of each panorama you see. These are the warriors, characters or
creatures that lie immediately ahead of you on the borders of the next domain.
You do not always, however, see all that lies ahead. The wise travellers must
be both bold and wary.
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© COPYRIGHT BEYOND SOFTWARE LTD.