It was a world where magic worked within a logic of its own. And it was a world where the loathsome Dark were again ravening, after they had lain almost forgotten in underground lairs for three thousand years.
Gil Patterson and Rudy Solis are portal transferred from California to the world of Darwath by a wizard named Ingold Inglorion. Marooned in these dangerous lands, Gil and Rudy try to help the surviving population against the attacks of the Dark – wraith-like monsters coming up from underground caves to ravage the cities and enslave the population of Darwath.
All of this takes place in the first volume, The Time of the Dark, a not very original but very well written portal fantasy from the 1980s, a period that marks the start of my own growing passion for the genre.
This second episode suffers a little from the middle book of a trilogy syndrome, but it continues to hold my interest due to the quality of the writing, the fast paced action and the careful characterization that first attracted me to the works of Barbara Hambly.
How come just when things look blackest, I turn around and they get worse?”
Things were already grim in the first book, and the trend continues in this sequel. The forces of the dark have total control over the night skies while the few survivors hide in an ancient fortress built with magic forces after the first invasion from the Dark.
Gil, a post doctorate historian on Earth, has joined the King’s Guards and is training heavily in sword fighting while she tries to navigate the perilous power games between monarchy, church, magic practitioners and refugees inside the fortress. She makes friends with the queen regent Minalde and together they explore the lost chambers inside the fortress for answers about the technology or the magic that makes it function.
Rudy, a decal artist for motorcycles and a drifter while on Earth, is discovering he has a natural talent for magic on Darwath and that he is secretly in love with queen Alde.
Together with wizard Ingold, Rudy sets out on a perilous quest to traverse the continent in winter, in search of the fabled city of Quo, home of the wizards and of the Archmage who might provide the answers about the origins of the Dark and about how to defeat the monsters.
The journey is terrible enough, with the frequent ice storms, feral beasts attacks, the Dark patrolling the night skies and the ever present danger of White Raiders attacks. Ingold uses the time spend together to teach Rudy the rudiments of magic:
“Wizardry is knowledge.”
Yet the greatest challenge awaits the wizard and his young apprentice when they reach the foothills of the mountains that hide the city of Quo. When the Dark started to rise from their catacombs, the magicians in the city raised a maze-like barrier of enchantments and traps known as the Walls of Air, impassable even for one of their own. Ingold and Rudy must fight for every inch of the treacherous path, often being driven back to their starting point after long days of struggle.
And inside the magic walls, even greater dangers and disappointments await.
Things always get darker in epic fantasy before the courageous fellowship of underdogs has a chance to bring down the evil overlord bent of total world control. Tolkien’s imagination casts a very long shadow over the realms of fantasy and few were the aspiring writers or publishers who dared to cut new storytelling paths.
Barbara Hambly remains firmly within the established canon of the genre, but she does bring her own sharp tools for atmospheric setting, tight plotting and, in particular, believable ordinary people who are forced to extraordinary deeds by circumstances and yet, will hold on to their humanity, their compassion, their need for love and companionship.
Well, what the hell, he thought. We’ve all changed. Even old Ingold.
Her characters are never cardboard or static. They tend to learn from experience and to strive to do better for their companions.
The last book in the series will probably hold little real surprises in terms of plot or world-building, but I am looking forward to spending more time in the company of Gil, Rudy, Alde, Ingold and the rest of the cast.