The Shadow Lord, also known as the Enemy and formerly known as Malverlain, is a malevolent force of darkness who rules the Shadowlands to the North of Deltora.
Books (Malverlain) Even when still human, Malverlain possessed great powers. He was able to conjour a boat with a grey sail marked with red.
Tales of Deltora said:
In terror the sorcerer leaped into the silver sea. He conjured up a boat with a grey sail marked with red, and sailed away into the east to find new lands to conquer.
The Sister of the South said:
Long ago, perhaps, he had been a merely a sorcerer, with a cloak of shadows and a boat with a grey sail marked in red. He had felt fear, suffered a bitter defeat, and sailed east across a silver sea to find new lands to conquer.
The people of Tora sensed Malverlain's arrival, and that his darkness was far greater than any storm.
Tales of Deltora said:
So only the fish and the birds of the shore heard the crash as a boat with a broken mast and a tattered grey sail marked in red was blown onto the treacherous finger of rock that stretched deep into the silver sea.
The people slept on as the boat splintered in the waves. They slept on as its sail was torn to rags by the wind. They slept on as the rain ceased and the moon sailed out from behind the clouds.
But when a drenched, cloaked figure crawled out of the sea and sprawled half dead upon the shore, a shiver ran through the white city, and the people woke. The storm had passed, but a shadow had fallen on their land, and they knew it was far more dangerous than any storm.
Malverlain is a mighty sorcerer, but his journey across the seas in a nearly destroyed boat had left him weakened, and he would not be able to survive another journey without his magic staff (which had been lost in the sea storm). Thusly, he teleports himself away with the last of his strength to Emerald territory. Here he meets an emerald dragon and feels it's power.
Tales of Deltora said:
He was a mighty sorcerer, but he had been sadly weakened. The banishing spell was strong. He knew that he could not resist it for long. He refused to be driven back to the sea, which had stolen his magic staff and almost taken his life. He closed his eyes, summoned all that remained of his strength, and took himself from the place of torment, took himself north, instinctively knowing which way to go.
When he opened his eyes he was in a rocky place, and mountains towered above him. The agony of the banishing spell had not merely weakened, but had gone — gone as if it had never been — for the people of the marble city were satisfied. The shadow had lifted from their territory. Where it went after that was no concern of theirs.
The sorcerer straightened his shoulders and smiled. He turned to survey the land that he would make his own.
And crouched before him was a dragon, vast and terrible. Its green scales glittered in the moonlight. Its eyes were like great, flat emeralds, and steam drifted from its dripping jaws. The sorcerer felt its power and knew that he could not destroy it.
Books (the Shadow Lord) When Malverlain became the Shadow Lord, he became so powerful and so evil that he was no longer a person, or even a 'he', but an 'it', becoming an immortal force of evil that fed on power that destroyed & corrupted everything it touched.
The Sister of the South said:
And as Lief drew his sword and screwed his stinging eyes shut, he saw behind his lids words from The Belt of Deltora— words that had always filled him with dread and now had a new and terrible meaning for him.
... the Enemy is clever and sly ... to its anger and envy a thousand years is like the blink of an eye ...
The book called the Enemy ‘it’. The unknown writer had understood something that Lief himself had never quite accepted until this moment.
However he had begun, the Shadow Lord was now far more —or perhaps far less—than a cruel tyrant who was a master of sorcery.
Long ago, perhaps, he had been a merely a sorcerer, with a cloak of shadows and a boat with a grey sail marked in red. He had felt fear, suffered a bitter defeat, and sailed east across a silver sea to find new lands to conquer.
But if he was human then, he was human no longer. Envy, hatred and malice had consumed his humanity long ago, burned it away to dust. All that remained were memories.
‘He’ had become ‘it’—a force for evil that fed on power, that destroyed and corrupted everything it touched. A force that would never die.
The Shadow Lords coming shakes the palace.
The Forests of Silence said:
Endon took the hand in both his own and bowed his head. Then, suddenly, the walls of the chapel trembled as though the palace had been struck by a great wind.
For more frames of reference, the chapel is located within the palace below ground, and is made of stone (including marble).
The Forests of Silence said:
The chapel was below ground level, in a quiet corner of the palace. It was still and cold. The old king’s body was lying on a raised marble platform in the center, surrounded by candles. Endon was kneeling beside it, with his head bowed.
The Forests of Silence said:
As he did, he at last realized where he was. He was in the chapel. One of the marble tiles that surrounded the raised platform in the center had been pushed aside, and a dark hole gaped where it had lain.
The pillars and floors of the palace of Del are made of marble, while the walls are made of sandstone.
Secrets of Deltora said:
The palace is built of local sandstone & roofed with slate. The floors & internal pillars are of marble.
The palace has 200 rooms, including 25 guest rooms, a great hall capable of accomodating a thousand people and a library big enough to house 100,000 books.
Secrets of Deltora said:
lt has the amazing total of 200 rooms (if you count the storerooms, pantries & lavatories!), including 25 guest bedrooms, a banqueting hall where 250 guests can feast, the Great Hall, which can accommodate 1,000 people, a magnificent library spacious enough to store 100,000 books & a large, warm & friendly Kitchen (which l infinitely prefer to all of the above).
The Shadow Lord's roar shakes the entire palace of Del to its very core.
Return to Del said:
A furious roar shook the palace to its core. Red smoke recoiled, hissing, into the boiling clouds. But the gems of the Belt of Deltora blazed like fire, their rainbow brilliance streaming outward, filling the air, banishing the night, dancing on the faces of the cheering, weeping people. And in the center of the light stood Lief. Lief, the true heir of Deltora, revealed at last.
The Shadow Lord can control the weather, summoning/manifesting as dark red clouds.
Return to Del said:
Without warning, he threw his head back.
“Master!” he screamed. “It is time!”
A clap of thunder shook the earth. Great red clouds began to roll across the sky from the north, blotting out the stars. Dain faced Lief, eyes gleaming.
Return to Del said:
But already some of them were starting to recover. And the red clouds were tumbling, boiling, as they raced towards the city.
Return to Del said:
In moments he was in the open air. The dark red clouds hung heavily overhead, casting an eerie glow over the earth. He could hear Fallow’s voice clearly.
These clouds seem to cover all of Deltora.
Return to Del said:
Throughout Deltora people were seeing their enemies falling, the clouds of evil in flight. The people were throwing down their weapons in joy, creeping from hiding, embracing their loved ones, and looking up at the sky. Knowing that suddenly, amazingly, a miracle had occurred. And at last they were free.
The dark clouds of the Shadow Lord's invasion are seen off the West coast of Deltora.
Isle of the Dead said:
‘For that matter, why is the sky scarlet, so long after dawn?’ grunted Beef. ‘And those clouds to the east—I will knock down the first man who tells me they are natural.’
Isle of the Dead said:
‘At dawn this day the Belt of Deltora was broken,’ he sneered. ‘The seven gems were scattered. The Ak-Baba you now see in the sky carried but one of them. Like the others, that gem will never be found.’
Lief felt a shiver run down his spine. He realised that he and Barda were witnessing events that had happened the very day of the Shadow Lord’s invasion—a time before he was born, when so many lives were changed forever.
His eyes were drawn to the lowering clouds on the eastern horizon. Often he had been told of the darkness that swept over Del with the coming of the Shadow Lord. Now he was seeing it for himself.
Even when banished to the Shadowlands and held back by the Belt of Deltora, the Shadow Lord is still able to send powerful thunder storms & gales, with the intention of sending Lief and the Belt of Deltora far away from the land
Isle of the Dead said:
And suddenly cold wind and spray were beating on Lief’s face. There was dull light, and the sound of crashing waves. He realised that he had been dragged out onto the viewing platform.
The clouds were boiling and rumbling. The wind was howling. Lightning was cracking the sky.
Isle of the Dead said:
Beneath them, the surface of the grey sea heaved like the skin of a vast, angry beast. Above them, dark clouds boiled and tumbled. The Kin struggled against the wind, their great wings beating mightily. But it was hopeless. Every moment the gale was sweeping them further away from land.
Tossed helplessly in Prin’s pouch, Lief watched in bewildered dismay as the slim white shape of the lighthouse grew smaller behind them.
I have caused this, he thought. It is because I tried to open the light chamber door that we were driven from the lighthouse into the storm.
But the storm... How had it come upon them so quickly—so quickly!
His heart gave a great thud. Cold certainty settled upon him like a shroud.
The Shadow Lord had found them at Bone Point and seized his chance. He had summoned up the storm. He had sent the wind racing from beyond the mountains to sweep them away.
Away from the land. Away from Deltora. So that...
The Shadow Lord no longer has a physical form, manifesting as dark red-tinted clouds or smoke.
Return to Del said:
But Fallow did not see him. He was looking much higher — to the tower. Seven huge birds perched on the tower roof, their cruel, curved beaks outlined against the scarlet sky. Inside, where once the Belt of Deltora had lain in its glass case, red smoke swirled. And a shadowy figure stood motionless. Watching. Waiting...
Return to Del said:
There was a roaring, rushing sound above. Lief looked up. Red smoke was gushing from the tower. Red smoke, thick and edged with grey, heavy with menace. Grey light circled and swirled in its depths. And in its center a huge shape was forming. Hands, reaching. Eyes, hungry for revenge.
These clouds are almost certainly stormclouds, as they emmit thunder and lightning.
The Forests of Silence said:
The room darkened and thunder growled outside the tower. Prandine’s eyes glowed with triumph. “The Shadow Lord comes,” he hissed.
The Forests of Silence said:
Thunder growled outside, threatening as an angry beast. Black clouds edged with scarlet were tumbling towards the tower.
Return to Del said:
Lightning flashed again, and again. Roaring thunder shook the trembling earth. And out of the thunder swooped the seven Ak-Baba, their unearthly, wailing cries chilling the blood.
The Shadow Lord sends a gale down with such force that it bends the wheels of the tires of the cage the heroes are trapped in, and pushes everyone to the ground.
The Shadowlands said:
Lightning cracked the boiling clouds. A thunderous gale crashed downward, throwing Lief and the others off their feet, pinning them down. The cage shuddered, its wheels bent by the force of the blast. Gasping for breath, unable to move, pressed down, down by the howling wind, Lief heard the screams of the slaves writhing helplessly in the Arena, the cries of Tira and Hellena, the grunts of the Baks and the Perns on the platform as they struggled to rise.
The Shadowlands said:
Emlis was babbling of crawling under the cage in the tunnel, of clinging to the cage’s underside as it was rolled to the platform. He was telling of being trapped when the cage’s wheels bent beneath the force of the wind. Of being pinned, helpless, unable to scramble free, unable to make anyone hear him, until now…
When Lief plays the Pirran Pipe for the first time, the Shadow Lord recoils with a thunderclap that shakes the ground.
The Shadowlands said:
Then he had the Pipe to his lips. He blew. One pure, clear note.
The piercing sound rose and echoed around the walls of the Arena, and on to the mountains beyond.
And with the sound, the stream of worms halted. The worms thrashed, twisting and dying like leeches of the Forbidden Way exposed to the light.
The red smoke recoiled in a clap of thunder that shook the ground. The gale died, and the Ak-Baba lurched in the skies. The Ols lowered their grasping hands and stood, swaying. The beings on the tiers of seats bent and groaned. The vraals howled in their cages.
In the ancient battle in which the Shadow Lord was first banished from the Land of Dragons (which would later come to be known as Deltora), the Shadow Lord brings clouds in from the horizon, and within these clouds are thousands more Greers (Greers being the precursers to Grey Guards).
Tales of Deltora said:
As he spoke he looked again out to the plain. And then he saw a low, grey cloud on the horizon, ringed and pierced with scarlet light. The cloud was touching the ground. It was sweeping towards the city very fast, and seven fearsome shapes wheeled above it.
A chill ran down Adin’s spine. He drew a sharp breath. “Az-Zure!” he shouted. “Beware! Ak-Baba!“
He heard the Dread Gnome’s answering cry and saw torches flame along the walls. He rang the bell of warning to alert the troops on the ground of coming danger. But as he did, he knew it was too late — too late for the soldiers to withdraw and too late for flight.
The cloud was already rolling across the plain. Adin could smell the stench of the Ak-Baba as they soared above the confusion of the battle. The foot soldiers at the rear — Mere folk, Dread Gnomes, and Greers alike — were turning, screaming, falling to their knees. Horses were rearing and shrieking in terror, their riders desperately trying to calm them. Black swarms of bees were swirling in confusion.
And now he could see shapes within the cloud— gleams of green, and bulky figures in metal helmets and breastplates. He caught his breath at the power of the sorcery that could sweep new and terrible forces into the battle in the twinkling of an eye. Then he felt the presence at the cloud’s centre, felt the malice streaming from it like cold breath, and it was as if his blood had turned to ice.
Beside him, Padge drew a long, shuddering breath. Az-Zure and her archers seemed frozen where they stood.
The Ak-Baba swooped, snatching and tearing at screaming soldiers on the plain, then soaring back into the air with dripping beaks and talons, screeching in triumph. The cloud lifted from the ground. Thousands of fresh Greers stood blinking in the sunlight for a split second, then sprang into the attack. Seven green-scaled beasts leaped forward with them, snapping their terrible, grinning jaws.
The Shadow Lord is immortal.
Return to Del said:
Shrieking, panic-stricken, the Ak-Baba wheeled away, soared upward to the tower. But the tower was empty. And already the red clouds were rolling back to the Shadowlands, a raging malice growling in their depths. A malice that would not die, but which knew that this battle, at least, it could not win.
The Shadow Lord has been around for thousands of years.
The Forests of Silence said:
The magic Belt of Deltora. The crowd gave a hissing sigh, and Jarred, too, caught his breath. He had heard about the Belt since his earliest childhood, but he had never seen it before.
And here it was, in all its beauty and mystery — the ancient object that for thousands of years had kept Deltora safe from invasion by the evil Shadow Lord who ruled beyond the Mountains.
The Shadow Lord's presence in Deltora increases the Sorceress Thaegan's power tenfold.
The Lake of Tears said:
“Thaegan is ten times more powerful now than she ever was!” exclaimed Jasmine. “Evil loves evil, and the Shadow Lord has increased her strength so that now she is swollen with vanity as well as wickedness. If we travel through the north we are doomed!”
The Shadow Lord's presence sustains the lives of many of its underlings, such as Ols and Greers (although this is not the case for all of the Shadow Lords creations, such as Grey Guards and Grade Three Ols).
Return to Del said:
The remaining Guards were tearing blisters by the dozen from the boxes and hurling them into the celebrating crowd. But the people had already learned that water and Boolong sap were not harmful. Soon, the Guards would realize their own danger.
For they had been ruthlessly abandoned. As had the Ols, who, their source of power withdrawn, lay with burst and shrivelled hearts in the market square, where at last Steven was climbing from the pit. As had Ichabod, sprawled like a drained sack of red skin over the gnawed bones of his last meal.
Tales of Deltora said:
Red light cracked through the cloud. There was an ear-splitting sound like a shriek of baffled rage. The grey mass seemed to shudder, to shrink. Then it began tumbling back, back towards the north, the mountains, and the safety of the Shadowlands, as if blown by a raging wind.
The Ak-Baba followed it, screeching like lost souls. The opal dragon, injured though it was, found the strength to chase them for a time, then decided it was wiser to retire and lick its wounds instead.
The new Greers, their master’s strength withdrawn, began falling where they stood.
In the Shadowlands, the Shadow Lord is at its strongest. Millenia ago, the Shadowlands used to be a beautiful country called Pirra, where someone called the Pirran Piper played the Pirran Pipe all day to keep the forces of darkness at bay and Pirra beautiful. By tricking the people of Pirra into splitting the Pipe into three parts, the Shadow Lord was able to slowly invade, turning the beautiful lands of Pirra into the barren & twisted Shadow Lands. Even back when the Shadow Lord was still human, he was able to force himself to stay despite the playing of the Pipe (though it clearly had an effect on him).
Tales of Deltora said:
A man in a hooded cloak stepped forward. He was tall, but bent with weakness, as though the long day and night of music had been almost beyond his endurance. Each section of the crowd thought that he was one of its own, for he had spent time with all three, urging its members to hold firm.
“I have a solution, my friends!” he cried. “Let the contestants share the honour of being Piper. The Pipe is made from three parts that fit together. Let Plume, Auron, and Keras each take one part of the whole.”
And so tired, so angry had the people become that they agreed. They gave Plume the mouthpiece of the Pipe, Auron the middle stem, and Keras the end piece. Then, because they still had bad feelings for one another, the three groups went their separate ways, each group following its own favourite.
The hooded man rubbed his hands, well satisfied, and slipped away like a shadow before the rising of the sun.
The dawn broke with no sound of music and the long day passed in silence, for the three rival groups were far apart, and no one piece of the Pirran Pipe could play alone.
Shadows crept into Pirra. Trees withered in their shade, and flowers wilted. Little by little the shadows swallowed up the green fields, the pleasant villages, while every moment the dread power cloaked within them grew stronger.
Too late, the three groups realised their danger. Shadows now rolled dark between them. They could not reach one another to make the magic Pipe whole. And at last, seeing that their land was lost, they were forced to use the last of their magic to escape and save themselves.
So it was that the green land of Pirra became the Shadowlands. Its people, still blaming one another for their ancient loss, dwell to this day on three separate islands in a strange and secret sea.
And the Pirran Pipe, forever divided, is heard no more.
Within the Shadowlands, the very air itself literally carrying despair on it (known to the inhabitants of the Shadowlands as the Sadness).
The Shadowlands said:
There was a sudden, terrifying stillness. A bleak, bitter smell. A rapid, thumping sound, very close, mingled with the moaning wail of wind. And Lief opened his stinging eyes, took his first, gasping breath, in the Shadowlands.
The Shadowlands said:
She nodded shortly. ‘I have been trying to fight it, but it is impossible,’ she muttered. ‘It is as if…’ She swallowed painfully. ‘… as if I take in fear with every breath. As if the very air of this place is poisoned.’
With a start, Lief remembered the strange, bitter smell he had noticed on the wind when first they reached the Shadowlands. He had grown accustomed to it, and had not thought about it for a long time. But now he realised that Jasmine had hit upon the truth. The wind was the Shadow Lord’s way of sapping the will of those who entered his realm. The bitter scent it carried was the stink of despair.
One way to counter the Sadness is drinking water that flows from Deltora.
The Shadowlands said:
‘When I came to this place, it was a mere hollow under the rock, just large enough for me hide in like a wounded animal,’ he said
softly. ‘Then I heard water trickling below. Mad with thirst, I dug. I found the cave, and the water. The water comes underground from Deltora—from Dread Mountain, I think—for it fights the Shadowlands despair we call the Sadness. This place has been a refuge to me for a long time.’
The Shadow Lords evil has sunk deep into the very land itself over the centuries, saturating the Shadowlands with darkness so that they may never be reclaimed. What's more, the Shadow Lord's power has grown far greater since taking over Pirra and turning it into the Shadowlands, and the power of the Pirran Pipe will no longer drive the Shadow Lord away, but only be enough to keep the Shadow Lord back for a time, and even then only if taken by surprise.
The Shadowlands said:
‘Very well.’ Tirral’s voice was rigidly controlled now. ‘I have one piece of advice for you, and I urge you to attend to it, for I feel its
worth in every bone of my body. Shadows have sunk deep into the soil of Pirra now. Whatever the Plumes and Aurons may think, Pirra is lost forever. It can never be reclaimed.’
‘We know this,’ Lief said. ‘And neither the Plumes nor the Aurons expect—’
‘I have not finished,’ Tirral snapped, speaking over him. ‘Listen! The Shadow Lord’s power is far greater now than when the Pipe kept him from Pirran soil. Played well or ill, the Pipe will stay his hand only for a time, and only if he is taken by surprise. Keep its magic for
when it is most needed.’
Instead of a Moon, the Shadow Lord causes a giant mark of the Shadow Lord to appear over the Shadowlands.
The Shadowlands said:
Then, suddenly, a shiver seemed to run through the savage horde and it stopped dead. There was a long, low rumbling like distant
thunder and at the same moment the dim light brightened.
Instinctively, Lief looked up, and a cold shiver ran down his spine. Instead of the rising moon, which he had expected to see, another shape was forming in the sky. Huge and menacing it shone like cold white fire against the greyness of the clouds.
This giant mark burns with cold white fire.
The Shadowlands said:
Lief stood beside them and peered out onto the plain. It was flooded with light, but no moon, no stars could be seen through the thick cloud. The mark of the Shadow Lord dominated the sky, burning with cold white fire.
A huge Shutting Spell surrounds the Barrier Mountains (possible all of the Shadowlands), allowing those to get in, but not to get out (however, there are loopholes around this, such as using the Secret Sea below).
The Shadowlands said:
He heard Emlis waking, protesting, demanding to be put down. Well, that was one good thing. Barda would have his hands free to climb, at least. Lief swerved around the first of the grey boulders that lay at the edge of the plain and began to scramble rapidly upward, aiming for the shelter of the larger rocks he could see further ahead.
Then, suddenly, a white flash of pain exploded behind his eyes as something slammed against his brow with shocking force. He staggered backwards, arms spinning wildly, fighting to keep his balance. Through the ringing in his ears he heard muffled cries of alarm, then, with relief, he felt a firm hand on his back. Barda was supporting him, pushing him back on his feet.
Trembling, he sank to his knees. Barda, Jasmine and Emlis crouched beside him, pressing closely together so that the great boulder hid them from the plain.
‘Lief, what happened?’ he heard Jasmine whisper.
‘Did you not see?’ he mumbled, pressing his hands to his aching head. ‘Something hit me.’
‘No!’ she whispered back. ‘There was nothing there. You just jerked backwards, suddenly, for no reason. One minute you were running, the next—’
This works on both living creatures and inanimate objects.
The Shadowlands said:
Barda drew breath sharply. He picked up some pebbles and threw them at the empty air in front of them. Astounded, Lief saw the
pebbles stop short in mid air, bounce slightly back, then fall to the ground.
‘An invisible wall!’ Jasmine breathed.
‘Yes,’ Barda said grimly. ‘I thought it strange that the mountains were unprotected. The Shadow Lord has sealed the border in his own
way, it seems.’
The Shutting Spell allows one to enter the Shadowlands, but not to escape it.
The Shadowlands said:
As he spoke, they saw movement near where one of the pebbles had fallen. A small, brown striped lizard with bright eyes had scuttled into view.
‘But it came from uphill!’ whispered Jasmine excitedly. ‘From behind the magic wall. I saw it! Is it only humans who are stopped by the shutting spell?’
Lief felt ill. He had thought of another explanation, and he could see by Barda’s grim face that Barda had thought of it too.
The lizard’s tiny forked tongue flickered in and out for a few moments. Then, abruptly, it turned and scuttled back uphill. When it reached the invisible wall it stopped dead and fell back.
‘Yes,’ Barda said slowly. ‘That is what I feared. The spell does not stop people or creatures coming in. It only prevents them getting out.’
Anyone passing through or trying to escape through the shutting spell will alert the Shadow Lord to their presence.
The Shadowlands said:
‘You will not admit that you have come freshly from Deltora, my friends, but I am sure you have,’ he said. ‘You have passed through the shutting spell that guards the mountains. The Enemy has been alerted. At any moment Grey Guards will be here in swarms, sniffing you out. The sooner we leave here, the better.’
Anime The Shadow Lord was shown to be able to wipe out armies by stomping over then and firing beams of energy from its eyes.
(Episode 1)