The End of Magic Read online




  The citizens of Camelot had fled…

  But the city was not uninhabited.

  Shadows of creatures that had once been the Bright Folk of Fairy slunk through its streets, hungering for human prey. Mab had created monsters in Mordred’s honor, monsters enough to haunt the dreams of children for a thousand years.

  The golden stone of Camelot had already begun to crumble, and black weeds had grown up through the blocks of stone. From this place Mab would spread the blackest of her magic, slaying what she could not subvert, until she had destroyed all of mortalkind on the Isle of Britain.

  Unless someone stopped her.

  ALSO BY JAMES MALLORY

  Merlin Part 1: The Old Magic

  Merlin Part 2: The King’s Wizard

  HALLMARK ENTERTAINMENT PRESENTS

  SAM NEILL HELENA BONHAM CARTER JOHN GIELGUD RUTGER HAUER

  JAMES EARL JONES MIRANDA RICHARDSON

  ISABELLA ROSSELLINI MARTIN SHORT

  “MERLIN”

  LEGEND ADVISOR LOREN BOOTHBY

  MUSIC BY TREVOR JONES

  CREATURE EFFECTS BY JIM HENSON’S CREATURE SHOP

  EXECUTIVE PRODUCER ROBERT HALMI, SR.

  PRODUCED BY DYSON LOVELL

  TELEPLAY BY DAVID STEVENS AND PETER BARNES

  STORY BY EDWARD KHMARA

  DIRECTED BY STEVE BARRON

  ORIGINAL SOUNDTRACK AVAILABLE ON VARèSE SARABANDE COMPACT DISCS

  Copyright © 1999 by Hallmark Entertainment, Inc.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.

  Aspect® name and logo are registered trademarks of Warner Books, Inc.

  Warner Books, Inc.

  Hachette Book Group

  237 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017

  Visit our Web site at www.HachetteBookGroup.com.

  First eBook Edition: February 2000

  ISBN: 978-0-446-55918-8

  For Betsy, Jane, Fiona, Jaime, and Russ,

  for all their help and support.

  And to MJ, for the usual.

  Contents

  The citizens of Camelot had fled…

  Copyright Page

  What Has Gone Before

  Chapter One: The Battle of Honor

  Chapter Two: The Battle of Loyalty

  Chapter Three: The Battle of Sorrow

  Chapter Four: The Battle of Shadows

  Chapter Five: The Battle of Mirrors

  Chapter Six: The Battle of Cruelty

  Chapter Seven: The Battle of Deception

  Chapter Eight: The Battle of the Forest

  Chapter Nine: The Battle of Magic

  Appendix A

  Appendix B

  Further Reading

  About the Author

  WHAT HAS GONE BEFORE

  At a time when the wicked King Vortigern rules England, Mab, Fairy Queen of the Old Ways, creates Merlin to become a great wizard who can lead Britain away from the New Religion and back to the Old Ways. She trains him to be a wizard, but Mab’s thoughtlessness and cruelty soon cause Merlin to despise all that she stands for. When Mab kills Merlin’s foster mother, Ambrosia, Merlin vows that he will never use his powers except to defeat her.

  Undaunted, Mab arranges for Merlin to come to the attention of King Vortigern, and makes Vortigern believe that he must sacrifice Merlin so that the fortress he is building will stand. Merlin prophecies a great battle between two dragons, which will end with the destruction of the white dragon, Vortigern’s totem. Furious, the King orders Merlin imprisoned. While imprisoned, Merlin once more encounters Princess Nimue, whom he had loved many years before.

  Mab, still seeking to force Merlin to use his magic in her cause, arranges for both him and Nimue to be offered as a sacrifice to the Great Dragon. Merlin uses his magic to defeat the dragon, but not before Nimue is hideously injured. Fearing for her life, Merlin takes Nimue to Avalon Abbey to recover. Though Nimue will live, she is permanently scarred.

  Realizing that he must strike out against both Mab and Vortigern, Merlin goes to the Lady of the Lake for help. She gives him the sword Excalibur, which can only be used by a good man in a good cause. Merlin takes Excalibur to Uther and promises him victory over Vortigern if Uther will take Merlin’s advice. In a great battle fought on a frozen lake, Merlin destroys Vortigern and makes Uther King. But Uther is greedy and lusts after Igraine, the wife of Duke Gorlois of Cornwall. Angered, Merlin takes back Excalibur and seals it in a rock from which only a good man can withdraw it. He leaves Uther’s court to return to Nimue, but many months later he returns, fearful that Uther’s war will destroy the kingdom he has labored so long to protect. Realizing that the child that will be born of Uther and Igraine’s night of passion—Arthur—will grow up to be the great and good King that Britain so desperately needs, Merlin agrees to use his magic to help Uther. But Uther tricks him, killing Gorlois and leaving Igraine a widow. When Arthur is born, Merlin gives him to Sir Hector to raise. Merlin becomes young Arthur’s tutor, and Arthur grows up in ignorance of his heritage.

  When Uther dies, Merlin makes the young Arthur king, but Lot, the father of Gawain and Guinevere, disputes his claim to the throne. Arthur manages to make peace between his army and Lord Lot’s, but in the celebration that follows, a mysterious stranger comes to visit Arthur.

  She is Morgan le Fay, his half sister and Mab’s pawn. Morgan wants to rule England, and tricks Arthur into begetting a son, Mordred. When Merlin explains to Arthur what he has done, the young King is devastated with guilt, and vows to go on a quest for the Holy Grail. While Arthur—now married to Guinevere—prepares for his journey, Merlin seeks out a champion to hold Britain while the King is gone, and finds him at Joyous Gard. Sir Lancelot defeats all of Arthur’s knights at the Easter tourney, and Arthur feels confident about leaving the kingdom in Lancelot’s hands as Arthur rides off in search of the Grail.

  But Mab, scheming to destroy Arthur out of her hatred for Merlin, has caused Lancelot and Guinevere to fall in love.…

  CHAPTER ONE

  THE BATTLE OF HONOR

  It was spring again, and Merlin was always most restless in the spring. The spring breeze ruffled the feathers that trimmed his long cloak, and sunlight flashed off the crystal ball embedded in the head of his wizard’s staff. It was as if the green life of the earth called to him, wooing him to walk through the tall grass and shadowed forest paths. In his soul, he longed to give in to the blandishments of the daffodils and bright butterflies that he could see beyond the castle walls and follow their trackless path. Somewhere out there was the forest hut in which he had been born, the forest in which he had spent so many happy, innocent years before Mab came to claim him as her champion. Later, he had returned to Barnstable Forest to live a simple life as the child Arthur grew to manhood in the home of Sir Hector, safe and loved and secure.

  But there is nothing in life as constant as change, and just as Merlin’s life had been torn apart years before by the revelation of his true parentage, so Arthur’s life had been similarly rent asunder when the time had come for Merlin to tell him that he was not a simple country lad but a prince, King Uther’s son. Arthur had taken the news well, but unfortunately for Arthur, he had possessed a mother as well as a father, and therein lay the seeds of Merlin’s greatest failure to protect his young charge.

  Arthur had not been the unfortunate Lady Igraine’s only child, and Arthur’s half sister, Morgan le Fay, was rotted through with ambition. Morgan had wanted the crown, but couldn’t have it while Arthur lived, so she had schemed to become the power behind the throne. Morg
an’s lust for power had caused her to ally herself with Queen Mab, using fairy magic to trick Arthur into lying with her.

  Now Arthur had a son, Mordred, begotten in sin and raised in malice, a boy who lived for the day when he would tear down all that Arthur and Merlin had painstakingly built together, destroying Camelot and Britain.

  Merlin’s gaze traveled toward Tintagel and the west as the breeze ruffled his untidy light brown hair. How old was Mordred now, and what was he doing? It had been nearly seven years since Merlin had last seen him, and even then the boy had been growing unnaturally fast. Seven years ago the King had not yet been married, had not yet declared his intention to go on this disastrous quest for the Holy Grail.

  But Mordred was surely still a child. There would be years in which to decide how best to deal with his menace. And today, Merlin faced other problems. He sighed, resting his weight on his staff. The stone walls of Camelot that he lived within so much of the time seemed to cut off all light and air—even when, as now, he stood upon the highest battlements, gazing toward the northern horizon and feeling the warm spring sun soak into his bones.

  Old bones, and older every year, Merlin thought ruefully. I was a grown man when Arthur was born, and now Arthur is a man grown in his turn. Where is he today, I wonder?

  The letters that came from Arthur and the little band of knights that he had taken with him upon his quest to find the Grail were few and far between. One had come to Camelot three months before, written three months before that, so the freshest news was six months old now. Six months ago Arthur had still been in France; who knew where he might be now? Wherever he is, I fear he is no closer than before to what he seeks. The Grail seems always to elude him, glimmering just out of reach like a will-o’-the-wisp. And he has sought it for so many years.…

  As always, thoughts of the Grail led Merlin to thoughts of Avalon, and Nimue.

  He had loved her from the moment he had first seen her, more than half his lifetime ago. He loved her still, though he had not so much as spoken to her since that night many years ago when he had learned of Arthur’s disastrous liaison with Morgan le Fay. While Mab schemed to destroy Merlin and all he loved, even a letter between the lovers might be too dangerous.

  For a moment Merlin’s shoulders drooped with weariness. All he had ever asked of the world was bound up in Nimue’s smile, but Merlin was not an ordinary man who could allow himself ordinary joys. He had been created by the Queen of the Old Ways to be her champion, to destroy the rule of the New Religion in Britain, and to return Queen Mab to supreme power. Half human, half fay, caught between both worlds and never at home in either, for most of his life Merlin had battled toward a goal that daily seemed to be slipping farther out of reach: freedom for Britain from the tyranny of the Old Ways, and peace and happiness for her under the reign of a good King.

  He had held such high hopes of Arthur, and Arthur was a truly good man. But somehow Merlin’s dream had slipped away with Arthur’s decision to quest for the Holy Grail. For centuries, Christendom’s great treasure had reposed at Avalon Abbey, but it had vanished on the night that Merlin was conceived, and had not been seen since. Arthur believed that Britain could not truly begin to heal from the carnage and treachery of three bad kings until the Grail was restored to Britain, but the king’s abrupt departure left his new-wed queen, Guinevere, alone to rule the country in his absence.

  Guinevere was barely a bride when Arthur’s quest began, and he had never lain with her to make her his wife in more than name. There was trouble brewing in that corner, for Guinevere was of royal blood, raised as a princess of the Iceni and only lately converted to the New Religion that Arthur followed. She could not understand Arthur’s motives in searching for the Grail and leaving Britain behind.

  What she could understand was that she was left alone in Camelot year after year while the memory of Arthur grew ever more distant in her mind.

  Merlin sighed tiredly, and somehow the sunlight seemed less warm and inviting than it had when he’d climbed all the way to the top of this tower to enjoy the solitude and the view. He could not blame the young Queen for her increasing attachment to her Champion, Lancelot of the Lake, but no good could come of it. And with Mab hatching her plots in Tintagel, raising up Arthur’s bastard son Mordred to be her willing accomplice in damnation, they must all be eternally vigilant.

  Merlin did not know if Arthur had confided to his Queen the exact nature of the transgression that caused him to seek the Grail so passionately, but he suspected she was unaware of what it was. Should he warn Guinevere of Mordred’s existence? Merlin hesitated. Arthur’s conscience had long since passed out of his keeping. If Arthur had not told his wife, it was not Merlin’s place to reveal so painful a secret. And perhaps the Queen need never know at all.…

  The ravens who lived in the tower took to the air, cawing and complaining. Someone had entered below, and Merlin suspected who it was, and on what errand she was bound. Drawing his cloak around him and clutching his staff tighter, Merlin descended the long winding stair that led to the ground floor of the White Tower.

  Guinevere, Princess of the Iceni and Queen of Britain, stood on the ground floor, peering up toward the light that spilled down from the windows above. The years had ripened Arthur’s child-bride into a magnificent woman, strong-willed and regal. She had never quite lost her distrust of Merlin, a pagan wizard at a Christian court, but she had come to accept his presence, and sometimes she even took his advice. But Merlin knew that to Guinevere he would always remain half-unreal, a creature out of fable. A Wizard of the Old Ways in a land that was rapidly forgetting that Magic had ever existed at all.

  She did not come here looking for me, Merlin reflected, and when the Queen recognized him, his guess was confirmed.

  “Oh,” Guinevere said. “I was just… good morning, Master Merlin. I did not expect to see you here.”

  Her cheeks were flushed and she would not meet his gaze. Merlin thought he could well guess who the Queen had come here alone so early hoping to meet.

  Lancelot.

  Lancelot of the Lake had been Merlin’s own choice to guard the Queen while Arthur was gone. Mab’s sister, the Lady of the Lake, had sent Merlin to Joyous Gard to find a champion to preserve Camelot in Arthur’s absence, and there Merlin had found the best knight in the world—Lancelot. When Lancelot had returned to Camelot with Merlin, he had easily defeated all of Arthur’s knights on the field of honor and been named the Queen’s Champion. In the few weeks they had known each other, Lancelot and Arthur had become fast friends, and Arthur had willingly entrusted his dream of Camelot, a shining city of peace and charity, to his friend.

  Merlin knew that Lancelot had only the highest ideals and the most honorable intentions, but sometimes it seemed to Merlin that all those principles weren’t quite in Camelot’s best interest. The city should have been finished years ago, but Lancelot was forever tearing things down, redrafting Arthur’s plans, trying to force Camelot to match a perfection that was simply inhuman. It never occurred to the knight of Joyous Gard that some dreams were not meant to become real.

  “Were you looking for someone, my lady?” Merlin asked Guinevere. “I fear I am the only one here.” Did you ask Lancelot to meet you here? Was he wise enough to refuse? My children, what am I to do with you?

  “No, of course not,” the Queen answered, a little too sharply. Bright color flamed in her cheeks. “I was only… looking around.”

  “You should go back to your women,” Merlin told her as gently as he could.

  “I shall,” Guinevere replied, with a haughty jerk of her chin. She swirled her heavy skirts about her and walked quickly away, the silk making a hissing sound against the stone.

  Merlin sighed quietly as he watched her go. Her distrust of him made her temperamental; for all that it had been seven years since her wedding day, the Queen was still very young. But perhaps it was wrong of him to still treat her as a child. For better or for worse, in Arthur’s absence, Guinevere rule
d Britain, and her word was law here. If the choices she made sometimes seemed foolish to him, then it was no more than her right to choose her own path.

  Merlin leaned upon his staff, drawing what solace he could from the smooth surface of the gnarled wood. They would all endure somehow—he, Guinevere, Lancelot, Britain. And Arthur would return.

  Someday.

  The Queen strode out of the tower and into the bustling streets of the town. She blinked at the brightness of the sunlight after the dimness of the tower, but stumbled determinedly back to where she had left her attendants. It had been a foolish notion really, to go off looking for Lancelot like that. He would not thank her for interrupting his morning’s work for a bit of inconsequential chatter. Lancelot was a busy man, and despite all his efforts, the building of Camelot went more slowly every year. Sometimes she thought that Arthur might even be back before it was finished.

  As always, thoughts of the King—even after seven years, Guinevere found it hard to think of him as her husband—brought an unhappy, guilty twinge. How could Arthur have chosen to leave if she hadn’t failed him somehow? Would he have felt such a need to gain the Grail if she’d been a better person?

  What did you want from me, Arthur-the-King? Why wasn’t I good enough—or just enough for you, damn you?

  She’d repeated the unanswerable questions to herself so often down the years that separated sixteen from twenty-three that they’d almost become a litany, but the answer was always the same. Silence, from her heart and in his letters. Though he wrote of his many adventures and always sent his love, there was never any hint in his letters of a longing to return—to Camelot or to her. There were times when Guinevere could not imagine why Arthur had married her at all. He seemed to have no earthly need for a wife or a Queen.

  But no matter how little Arthur needed her, there were others who did. Lancelot needed her. She could see it in his eyes.