The Simbul's Gift

The Simbul's Gift by Lynn Abbey

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Authors: Lynn Abbey
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successfully, at no small risk to himself. Then, heeding Gweltaz’s demands for filialloyalty, he surrendered what little remained of his own ambitions to his father’s need for revenge.
    Seven times, they’d risked everything in schemes to bring Tam down, and seven times they’d failed so miserably, so early, and so completely that the zulkir never became aware of their plots. Gweltaz came to believe that his son was a half-wit, a fool incapable of executing the simplest plan. Badgered by his father, Chazsinal came to believe the same thing. Succumbing to vice and debauchery, he sired a son on a green-eyed Eltabbaran slave and, watching the infant take its first wobbly steps, suffered a chilling revelation:
    Chazsinal was proud of the part he’d played in creating a new human life. He loved his son, as he understood loving, as Gweltaz had, perhaps, loved him so many years ago. But—with an honesty uncommon in the back alleys of Eltabbar—Chazsinal realized paternal pride, even paternal love, would doom the boy as surely as it had doomed him. No man or woman of Thay, no Red Wizard worth his robes, would ever teach a child enough to threaten his own place in the treacherous world. This would be especially damning for little Lauzoril because, with his father and grandfather in hiding and cut off from all other necromancers, he’d have no other teachers: He’d learn less than Chazsinal knew, which was less than Gweltaz knew, which everyone knew wasn’t enough.
    Chazsinal could have lived with his revelation; he lived comfortably with the greater shame of his own failings. But Gweltaz, using spellcraft he hadn’t shared with his only son, had discovered Lauzoril and had demanded that the boy be brought to the moldering mausoleum they called home.
    Gweltaz wanted a new and presumably more able pupil. Gweltaz wanted a new son, and that was something Chazsinal could not permit.
    So before his son was weaned, Chazsinal took Lauzoril from his mother and placed him with the Eltabbaran enchanters, where the boy’s innate charm along with a sackful of gold secured him a place on the student roster. Then Chazsinal worked his best magic on his own memory to convince himself that his son was dead.
    Chazsinal’s best was never good enough. Gweltaz sawthrough his son’s deception. He struck swiftly and precisely; Chazsinal’s flesh began to putrefy between one breath and the next. Gweltaz regretted his rage immediately, but once done, the magic could not be undone and the best that Gweltaz could do was clutch his son’s spirit to his undead heart.
    They remained together, out of sight and forgotten, caught in the crack between life and death, aware of Lauzoril’s progress through the enchanters’ ranks and aware of Szass Tam as their great enemy’s influence grew to unprecedented heights. Convinced that Tam would move against them the moment he became aware of their continued existence, they denied themselves every opportunity to contact Lauzoril. Then, some thirty years after Chazsinal died, Lauzoril found them.
    Their son and grandson had become a zulkir, albeit of enchantment, a discipline opposed to necromancy and, in their considered opinion, decidedly inferior as well. They restrained their prejudice when Lauzoril transferred Gweltaz’s fragile remains to the Thazalhar estate and, more importantly, saw his father restored with the same spells that preserved Gweltaz. Lauzoril even took up their cause against Szass Tam. But there was no controlling the Zulkir of Enchantment, not as Gweltaz had controlled Chazsinal.
    â€œMy son brings us supper,” Chazsinal said, amber light seeping through his linen bandages. “I can smell the blood.”
    Gweltaz snorted. “Control yourself. He starves us, treats us like beggars and slaves while you fawn at his feet. He brings us farmyard beasts, strangled with a dainty cord. His hands are always clean; he has

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