Another Day, Another Dungeon
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Cast of Characters
The Adventurers
Timaeus d'Asperge, Magister Igniti: an aristocrat and fire
mage, financer of the expedition.
Sidney Stollitt: partner in Pratchitt & Stollitt, a firm that specializes in
theft, divorce work, and assembling expeditions into the caverns. She is far more reliable
than her partner.
Nick Pratchitt: Sidney's partner.
Father Geoffrey Thwaite: a priest of the god Dion, patron of drunkards.
Kraki Kronarsson: barbarian and illegal alien.
Garni Ben Griwi: dwarf and experienced adventurer.
The Caverns
Lenny the Lizard: tour guide.
Drizhnakh, Garfok, and Spug: assorted orcs.
Fragrit: orc priest.
Dorog: another orc.
Rog: large person with claws and an unpleasant disposition.
Corcoran Evanish: customs official.
The Boars
Wentworth Secundus Jorgensen, Magister Alchimiae: Master Alchemist and
Fullbright of the Loyal and Fraternal Sodality of the Boar.
Jasper de Mobray, KGF, Magister Mentis: a flying, largely invisible adept
of the mental arts. Member, Order of the Golden Fleece; Order of the Green Flame.
Fullbright of the Boars.
Morglop Morstern: cyclops, Fullbright of the Boars, swordsman.
Manfred: the Grand Boar.
The Court
His Grace, Mortimer, by the Grace of the Gods Grand Duke of Athelstan, Lord of
Durfalus, Defender of the Faiths, etc., etc., etc : enthusiastic mycologist.
Sir Ethelred Ethelbert: his foreign minister.
Jameson: Sir Ethelred's secretary.
General Carruthers: Commander of the Ducal Guard.
Major Yohn: Commander of the Fifth Frontier Warders, recently returned from the
suppression of the Meep Banditti.
University Faculty
Doctor Calidos: Timaeus's don, Senior Professor of the Department of Fire.
Doctor Macpherson: Adjunct Professor of Imperial History.
Bad Guys
The Right Honorable the Baroness Veronee, Magistra Necromantiae: Baroness
of the Realm, necromancer, and spy for Arst-Kara-Morn.
The Lich: powerful dead guy.
Rupert: Veronee's butler.
Cook: Veronee's cook.
Ross Montiel: elven gangster.
Micah: his lieutenant.
George, Fred, and Billy: assorted thugs.
Neighborhood Fixtures
Mrs. Coopersmith: Nick and Garni's landlady.
Elma: mistress of number 11 Cobblers Lane, the house that Montiel commandeers.
Vic: senile old geezer.
Madame Laura: successful madame, in hock to Montiel. Mother of
"Priscilla."
Part I.
ANOTHER DUNGEON
I.
Timaeus d'Asperge was comfortably ensconced in his favorite armchair at the Millennium
Club. One hand held his ancient meerschaum, stuffed with Alcalan black leaf. By his other
hand, on a small serviette, stood a decanter of Moothlayan single malt.
"Now that you have your Master's," the man with the monocle asked Timaeus,
"what will you do?"
"Hah!" said the Colonel. "Go to Ish and join the army, that's what,
eh?" He struck Timaeus on the knee with a clenched fist. "Show those damnable
orcs what for, eh, boy? Good man."
Timaeus cleared his throat with slight embarrassment. "Actually," he said,
"I was thinking about opening a practice"
"Go into trade?" said the man with the monocle with undisguised horror.
"My dear boy, that will never"
"No, no, the military life, that's the ticket," said the Colonel. "By
Dion, I envy you! Marches in blistering heat, hostiles sweeping out of the hills . . .
university makes a gentleman out of you, but the service makes you a man, what,
what?" The Colonel reached over and slapped Timaeus's slight paunch. "Lose that
in the army, that's for certain." His eyes gleamed over his gray mustache. Timaeus
puffed on his pipe to avoid having to respond. "What about adventuring?" said
the man with the monocle.
"Hmm?" said Timaeus.
"A traditional way for a young nobleman to win fame and fortune," the man
with the monocle continued. "Slaying dragons, rescuing damsels in distress, that sort
of thing." He waved a hand airily.
"Well," mused Timaeus, "I had thought about it, but I wouldn't know
where to start. I mean, what, advertise for quests?"
"Start with the Caverns of Cytorax," suggested the man with the monocle.
"They're not far. Scads of monsters down there, I'm told."
"Mmm," mused Timaeus. "But where would I find companions?"
"What about your mates at the university?" asked the Colonel. "Mostly out
of town," said Timaeus. "Back at home or joining the
army. Besides, I'd need more than wizards. Men at arms, spelunkers, clerics . . . you
know."
"You need a staff officer," said the Colonel. "Take care of these petty
problems for you."
"If you don't know how to do it yourself," said the man with the monocle,
"hire it done." He coughed delicately into a handkerchief. "I know just the
firm."
"A group that assembles expeditions into the caverns?" said Timaeus.
"Umm, rather . . . a firm that handlesmatters of delicacy. I should think they
could assemble some experienced adventurers with fair ease. Pratchitt and Stollitt,
Stollitt and Pratchitt. Something like that. I'll give you the address."
Garni was sweating into his beard. Dwarves weren't used to city summers. Their native
mountains were usually cool.
At least it would be cool in the basement apartment he and Nick Pratchitt shared. It
wasn't in the best part of town, but it did have the distinct advantage of being cheap.
Garni walked down the hall to the apartment door. The door was bolted shut. He heard
giggling on the other side.
Garni knocked. "Nick," he said. "It's Garni. Open up."
There was silence for a moment. Then, through the door Nick said, "Uh, Garni? I'm
busy. Could you come back later?"
Damn. "Look, Nick," said the dwarf, "I just want to get some
lunch." "Just a sec," said Nick. There was a shuffling sound, then a bang.
The door opened a crack. Two hands held out a salami, a loaf of bread, and a wine jug.
"Here," said Nick. He didn't have a shirt on.
Garni sighed. He took the food. Nick closed and bolted the door. Garni sat down in the
hallway by the apartment door. At least he was out of the sun down here. He munched on the
salami and listened to the giggles.
Personally, he didn't find human women attractive at all. Too gangly. No facial hair.
Garni wondered what Nick thought he was doing. Sidney would find out. It was only a matter
of time. And Nick certainly acted like he cared what she thought about things.
Oh, well. It wasn't his business. His business was to find a job. Garni
was a decent blacksmith, but the guild here in the city had that racket sewed up.
Manual labor was about all that was left. He wasn't having any luck finding work. And the
rent was three months overdue.
"Mrs. Coopersmith," said Garni. He got to his feet and brushed crumbs off his
jerkin. "How nice to see"
"Where's my money, dwarf?" said the woman. Her arms were floured to her
shoulders. Sweat spread in semicircles around her armpits. "Umm, in just a few days .
. "
The woman scowled. "Dwarves and single men," she said bitterly. "I
should have known."
"I'm terribly sorry, but"
"I want my money Tuesday."
"Of course, Mrs. Coopersmith. We'll . . ."
She turned on her heel and climbed back up the stairway. Giggles came from the
apartment.
Garni sighed and climbed after his landlady. He'd go down to the docks and see if any
ships had come in. Maybe he could earn a few pence unloading cargo.
Kraki Kronarsson leaned on the bar. His dirty blond hair hung down around a face that
hadn't been shaved in days. The bar creaked under his bulging thews. "Ale," he
told the innkeeper.
The innkeeper was walleyed. "Well, honorable," he mumbled, smearing a greasy
rag across a tankard under the misapprehension that this was improving the tankard's
looks, "there's the matter of your tab, sor."
A group of fishermen at one of the tables was singing loudly. Kraki had been listening
to the song and hadn't really heard the innkeeper. He did notice, however, that he wasn't
getting any ale. "Vhat?" he said, touching the haft of the broadsword slung over
his backa nervous gesture.
"Three weeks stay," said the innkeeper. "Sixpence a night. Meals and
drink. You owe"
"You qvibbling little snit," shouted the barbarian, standing away from the
bar.
The fisherman stopped singing.
"Hoy," said a man at the bar. He wore a workman's apron. His thews bulged
almost as much as Kraki's. "No call for such language. Dere's ladies present."
An overage and rather blowsy whore hung on the workman's arm.
Kraki reached across the bar and grabbed the innkeeper by the shirt. "I am Kraki,
son of Kronar," he shouted. "I grace your sty vith my presence. Be grateful you
may show hospitality to so great a lord!"
The workman walked over and put a hand on Kraki's arm. "We do things different
'ere, barbarian," he said. "Yer owes the man."
Kraki punched him in the jaw. The workman stumbled back.
The fishermen rose from their table. The whore dived for the exit. The workman grabbed
a bar stool and broke it over Kraki's head. Kraki didn't bat an eye. "You dare lay
hands on the son of a chief?" he bellowed. He grabbed the workman by the waist and
hurled him onto the fisherman's table. It collapsed. Tankards of ale flew. The fishermen
converged on Kraki.
The innkeeper cowered behind the bar and moaned. Why was it always thugs and
barbarians? Why couldn't he have a nice, quiet clientele consisting solely of spinsters
and maiden aunts?
Father Thwaite stopped singing when they pushed him through the door to the abbot's
office. It was cool in the office. A little chilly, evenat least if you were naked.
"Brother," said the abbot.
Dion help me, I'm in for it now, thought Thwaite. He released his penis. He swayed a
bit. He was drunk. Very drunk.
Well, it had been fun.
"I suppose," said the abbot, shuffling some papers on his desk, "that
you can explain why you were pissing on the chancellery bell?"
"Yes, Reverend Father," said Thwaite. "See, there was this li'l He
hiccupped. He continued determinedly, enunciating clearly. "Little spot of tarnish.
And urine is acidic. So I . . ."
The abbot sighed heavily. "What am I to do with you?" he said. Father Thwaite
hung his head. "I'm sorry, Reverend," he said. "But the spirit moved
me"
"Spirits, rather," said the abbot. "They say you've been into the brandy
again."
"Wine is a susss . . . a sacrament," said Thwaite.
"In vino veritas, yes, Brother," said the abbot. "One of the
precepts of our order. Yet moderation is also virtue. Why are you naked?"
"It was . . . warm in the garden," said Thwaite. "An', I thought, why do
we clothe ourselves? The Creator gave us skin. So . . ."
The abbot took off his spectacles and folded them up. "Since you refuse to abide
by the rules of our older"
"I'm sorry," said Thwaite, suddenly realizing the depth of his predicament.
"I promise I'll"
"It's a little late for that," said the abbot, rubbing his eyes with thumb
and forefinger. "Go to Brother Mortain. He will issue you a begging bowl. Depart
from here into the streets of the city."
Thwaite sat down. The flags were chill on his thin, middle-aged buttocks. "You're
expelling me from the order?" he said, suddenly sober. "Not at all," said
the abbot. "You may return when you have learned moderation."
"And until then?" said Thwaite, head bowed.
"Leave us. Beg for your living. Live only off the largesse of others. If you
obtain more than sixpence, give it to the poor. Drink when you are offered drink; but
purchase none yourself."
Father Thwaite rose, bowed, and shuffled backwards to the door, continuing to bow.
After the door closed, he stuck his tongue out.
He visited the kitchen before he left and stole a bottle of cheap wine. Dion, he told
himself somewhat defensively, permits theft to those who are in need.
The goon's name was George. He looked like a George. His shoulders were nearly as broad
as the doorway.
Sidney Stollitt leaned back in her chair. Surreptitiously, she opened the top drawer in
her desk. She fished around in the drawer for a dagger. She thought there was one there.
She hoped so.
George was picking his teeth with a stiletto. "Nice joint you got," he said,
looking around. The drawer of one of the filing cabinets hung off its rails. A roll of
flypaper hung from the ceiling, covered with dirty specks. "You wouldn't wanna lose
it, huh?" said George.
"All this?" said Sidney. "I'd be devastated." They could torch the
place for all she gave a damn. There wasn't a lot invested in the furnishings. "Ross
says you guys been bad," said George. He wandered into the
office and over to the file drawer. He studied it with apparent interest.
"Sorry," said Sidney. There didn't seem to be a dagger in the desk drawer after
all. Nick had probably done something with it. Where the hell was Nick, anyway? He should
have been here hours ago.
"Ross just wants you to know," said George, turning back to face her.
"Ross says he wants to be friends."
"I know about Ross," said Sidney.
George looked at her. "You don't know nothing," he said. With a sudden,
brutal motion, he punched out the glass in the door. The glass that said PRATCHITT &
STOLLITT. It had cost them several shillings to get it etched. Sidney winced.
"If you're going to rip up the place . . ." she said in a menacing tone.
"Friends help out friends," said George. "That's what Ross told me to
say."
"Sure," said Sidney. "And we know who our friends are." George
shrugged and disappeared.
Sidney slumped back in the chair. Damn.
Last week, she and Nick had robbed a house on Nob Island. They'd gotten away with a
nice little box of jewels. They hadn't fenced the goods through Ross Montiel, who
controlled half the fences in this part of town. He was obviously upset; he expected
Sidney and Nick to take their business to him.
But she was damned if she'd work with the little scumbag. Maybe it was time to take on
an honest proposition or two. Lay low on the burglary. Where the hell was Nick, anyway?
A face peered in through broken glass. It bore an uncertain expression, red hair, and
an unkempt beard. A lit meerschaum pipe stuck out of the middle of it. "I say,"
it said. "Is there a Mr. Pratchitt or Mr. Stollitt about?"
"No," said Sidney. "I'm Stollitt."
"There must be some mistake," said the face. "Are you Mr. Stollitt's
wife?"
"I'm Stollitt," she said. "Sidney Stollitt." The face's accent was
aristocratic. It was probably connected to a mark, Sidney thought. "Why don't you
come in?"
"Ah," said Timaeus. "Thank you. Sidney's an unusual name for a girl,
isn't it?" He turned the doorknob. It came off in his hand. He stated at it for a
moment, then pushed on the door, which opened. He came into the office, set the knob on
Sidney's desk, and looked around.
"No," said Sidney in complete defiance of the facts, "it's not."
The mark wore a red tunic with gold trim. He had sandals on his feet. HE was a little
pudgy, not too old. The tunic and the pipe screamed fire mage. Sidney hoped he didn't get
upset. The building was a firetrap.
Timaeus was dismayed. This Stollitt wench looked tough enough, certainly. She had a
long scar on one cheek. Her black hair was tied back in a silver ring; it wouldn't get in
the way in combat. She was lean and moved as if she could fight.
But the office was dismal. The glass in the door was broken. There were holes in the
plaster. There were mouse droppings on the floor.
"What can I do for you?" asked Sidney, rising and motioning Timaeus toward a
chair.
Timaeus sat on the chair gingerly. It hadn't been reupholstered within living memory.
Horsehair stuck him through his clothes. "I wish to engage
your services to assemble an expedition to venture into the depths of Cytorax
Caverns," said Timaeus.
He wanted to go into the dungeon? What did she know about dungeons? She belonged in the
city.
Still, anyone who wanted to go to Cytorax was clearly a fool. And you know what they
say about fools and their money. "I'm your woman," Sidney said.
II.
"What is all this crap?" asked Nicholas. He lay on an unmade bed, his
boots off and his hands behind his head. The morning sun slanted into the basement
apartment. Clothes were strewn across the floor. On the rug in the center of the room,
Garni had assembled a veritable mountain of equipment.
"This?" said the dwarf, waving at the pile. "Yeah, that."
"The caverns are dangerous, young Nick. One must be prepared." "Prepared
for a six-month siege?" There were weapons, flasks, pouches of stuff, hand tools,
boxes, torches, food, clothing, pieces of cloth. It looked, Nick thought, like the odd
lots from an estate sale. "It'd take a week just to catalog it all. You got anything
to eat?"
"Hardtack and pemmican." "Yuck," Nick said.
"It's all I can justify taking," said Garni. "I need the room for more
important things."
"Like what?"
Garni picked up an item. "This."
"A mirror? What do you want a mirror for?" "I don't know. To see around
corners, maybe."
"Yeah? I'd take a couple of roast chickens instead. How are you going to fit all
this stuff in, anyway?" It was a fair question. The pile stood higher than Garni.
Garni shrugged. He maneuvered objects into his pack, trying to fit everything into the
smallest possible space. He'd put something in the pack, move it around, decide it didn't
fit precisely right, and try something else. "I'll manage," he said.
Nick noticed a long pole sticking out of the pile. He pried it out; other objects slid
and tumbled.
"Be careful!" Garni said.
"Sorry. You'll never get this in, anyway." It was more than double Garni's
height.
"Yes, I will," said Garni, taking the pole. He disassembled it; it came apart
into four segments.
"What is it?" asked Nick, as Garni strapped the segments to the side of the
pack.
"An eleven-foot pole." "Why eleven feet?"
"There are some things I wouldn't touch with a ten-foot pole," said Garni.
Nick chuckled. "You really think all this stuff is necessary?"
"Some of it we may not use. But any of these things might save our lives."
"If you say so, Garni. Tell me something, though." "What?"
"How much does all this weigh?"
Garni hefted his pack. "I'd guess about a hundred pounds, all told."
"You're really going to carry a hundred pounds of kit into the caverns?"
"Yes."
"I thought the whole point was to bring stuff out of the caverns. Treasure.
Jewels. Magic items. How are you going to carry anything out?" Garni ran his fingers
through his beard and smiled. "You'll just have to
carry my share of the treasure, Nicholas."
It was morning in the city of Urf Durfal. The houseboy of the Inn of the Villein
Impaled staggered out into Roderick Square, carrying two buckets. In the center of the
square stood the equestrian statue of Grand Duke Roderick, father of the current ruler of
the city; and around the statue was a fountain, spouting water borne from the hills by the
city's aqueducts. The houseboy went to the fountain and filled his buckets. The floors of
the inn badly needed mopping, as they did every morning: the inn's clientele tended to
carouse in particularly messy fashionnor were they all capable of keeping down the
rotgut the taproom served.
Around the square, merchants put up awnings to protect perishable merchandise from the
fierce sun. The day looked to be a hot one; there was nary a cloud in the sky. Except,
perhaps, for a figurative cloud gathering over the head of Sidney Stollitt.
She stood in the shadow of Roderick's statue. With her was a mule cart and a drover.
The drover was reclining with his straw hat pulled down over his eyes. Sidney, unable to
contain herself, was pacing and scanning the faces of passersby.
Dawn, she had said. And here it was half past seven.
Garni, at least, had been prompt. She'd sent him out after Father Thwaite; Timaeus had
advanced them each a small sum to purchase equipment, and Sidney was reasonably certain
that the cleric had found a way to turn his into booze. Garni was under orders to examine
every body he found in the gutter. Odds were, one was Thwaite.
Nicholas Pratchitt approached. He was wearing black leather-enough to turn a footpad's
blade, but not heavy enough to qualify as real armor. Sidney scowled; that might do for
the city streets but was hardly appropriate for a dungeon expedition. As he neared, she
saw that he had circles under his blue eyes and his black hair was mussed. He looked as if
he hadn't slept all night. He was whistling a sprightly tune.
"Where the hell have you been?" snapped Sidney. "Am I late?" Nick
asked unrepentently.
"Garni was here on time," Sidney said. "Garni's reliable. Garni
keeps his commitments."
Nick winced. The unspoken corollary was that, since he shared a flat with Garni and had
not appeared at the same time as the dwarf, he'd spent the night elsewhere. In another
bed. Someone else's bed. A bed, to belabor the point, that was neither his own nor
Sidney's. With some relief, he saw Kraki lumbering out of the inn. The barbarian held a
large mug of ale in one hand, which he drained in three neat gulps. "Hallo," he
said. "Ve go now?"
"You're late," said Sidney.
"Late?" said Kraki. He looked around. "Vhere is everybody?"
"They're late, too," said Sidney.
Kraki shrugged. "Late," he said, "is if everybody else gets there first.
So I not late." He raised his head and sniffed. One of the vendors at the edge of the
square had fired a charcoal grill and was cooking something. "Am hungry," said
Kraki, and lumbered away.
"Keep an eye on him," Sidney said to Nick. "Keep him out of
trouble." Nick grinned at her and followed the barbarian.
There was an explosion. A brilliant flash lit the square. Sidney Stollitt hit the
ground and rolled across the cobblestones into the cover of the rim around the fountain.
The mules neighed and bucked; the drover came alive and yanked at the reins. Muffled
screams came from the merchants' stalls.
Timaeus d'Asperge, Magister Igniti, stood in the fountain. Smoke bil
lowed about him. The water hissed, quenching the flames of the explosion in which he
had appeared.
"Good morning, Stollitt," he said, peering at her prone form over the lip of
the fountain. "Sorry I'm late." He stepped out of the fountain, shaking his
legs.
Sidney sat up. "Is this how you usually get around?" she asked. "Because
if it is, I may change my mind about this deal."
Timaeus fumbled for his pipe in a mildly embarrassed way. "Mmm, well, no," he
said. "Usually not. Teleportation takes a certain amount of power. I wouldn't have
used it, but . . . well, I overslept, I'm afraid, and I was running a bit late. Where is
everybody?"
"Good question," said Sidney, brushing herself off.
"There's no one here but you and me," Timaeus said, peering about petulantly.
"Nick and Kraki are over there," she said, pointing toward a vendor's awning.
Timaeus looked nearsightedly in that direction; he didn't see them but took her word for
it.
"And what of the others? I commissioned you to assemble a group, and yet I find us
standing here, two hours after we were supposed to have departed, with nary a soul to be
seen."
"You didn't show up," sneered Sidney. "Why should they?"
Timaeus colored. "As to that," he said, "I am financing this
expedition, after all. My hirelings may expect to wait on my presence; but I, hardly, on
theirs. Now"
"Hireling, am I?" said Sidney nastily.
"In a manner of . . . I say . . . is that the dwarf?"
Garni was trundling a wheelbarrow toward the statue. Thwaite lay in the barrow, legs
flopping over the front, his tonsured pate banging against the barrow's metal surface as
the wheel bumped over stones. The cleric was obviously unconscious.
"Here we are," said Garni cheerfully. "Ready to go?"
Timaeus stared at the brown-robed cleric, apparently dumbfounded. He stuck a finger
into Thwaite's ribs experimentally. "What's wrong with the man?" he inquired.
"He's unconscious," said Sidney.
"I can see that," said Timaeus. "Is he subject to regular fainting
spells?" Garni chortled. "Yup," he said. "He regularly faints when
he's downed a hogshead or two of wine."
There was a long moment of silence. "Are you certain," Timaeus asked Sidney
unhappily, "that this potted priest is the only cleric you can find who will
accompany us?"
"Look," Sidney said with irritation, "priests sit in temples and collect
gold from suckers. Why go wander around a hole in the ground looking for more gold?
Especially when the hole is populated by nasty monsters with large, pointy teeth. Sitting
around's a lot easier. Finding a cleric willing to risk the caverns wasn't easy."
Timaeus sighed and shook his head.
"Thwaite's okay," said Garni. "When he's sober."
"Which, judging by available evidence, is never," said Timaeus. "Ah,
well, ad praisens ova cras pullis sunt meliora, as the poet says."
Charcoal smoke swirled into the air and an interesting aroma with it. Several little
pastries warmed on a grill over the brazier. The vendor turned them with his one good
hand; the other arm ended in a cloth-bound stump.
"What's your pleasure, good sirs?" said the vendor.
Kraki pointed to one of the pastries. "Vhat is that?" he asked. "Greep
tart," grunted the vendor.
"Vhat?" said Kraki. "Vhat is greep?"
"Huh," said the man, waving his spatula. "You don't know what greeps
are? Well, when the air goes chill . . ."
GREEP TART
"Well, when air goes chill and the leaves begin to turn, that's when the greep
flocks gather. They turn, turn above the painted leaves, wheeling in their thousands,
their thousand thousands. The sky is dark with them, the flocks, the many greeps. Their
tiny call is magnified so that it becomes a constant honk, the cry of a god, blanketing
the woodland with the sound.
"I remember it still, that constant honk, that bleating, that call. . . . "We
fled, my family and I, from our homestead in the hills of Cordonia. Mayhap we lived
foolishly close to the Eastern Realm, but our homestead was old, ours for generations, and
we farmed rich bottomland we would not readily abandon.
"But when the trolls began to move, we had no recourse but to flee, lest we be
butchered as our neighbors were. So we fled, fled into the Cordon Wood, with naught but
the clothes on our backs and a tool or two. We left our fields, our home, our comforts.
"The elves granted us refuge. They gave us acorn meal, and said that we might live
within the wood if we so wished. We were grateful, for we had nowhere else to go, no way
to win our livelihood. But the conditions they placed upon us, oh, the conditions were
onerous.
"We were not to slay a single animal within the elvenwood, though there
were beavers in the streams and deer among the trees. We were not to cut a single tree,
though we might burn such branches as were already dead. Certain mushrooms and plants,
also, were forbidden us; they were too precious, we were told.
"They stood there in their merry green, their damnable big eyes twinkling, peering
at us, and expecting us to kowtow to them, our protectors; our benefactors.
"We could not sow a crop, for the earth lay in the shade of the trees, and no crop
would grow on such ground. We could not cut the trees to clear a field, for the elves
forbade it. We gleaned a meager sustenance from the forest-mushrooms, berries, acorns, and
nuts. But the deer we could not touch, nor the squirrels, nor any of the abundant life
that flourished about our little hut.
"The winter was cruel. We cleared the forest round about of dead branches; each
day, I was forced to forage farther and father afield for tinder. And our tiny store of
nuts and dried berries rapidly diminished.
"We lost our youngest child that winter, my wife too starved herself to nurse him
adequately. And all of us were lean.
"The spring brought some relief. Ferns sprang up anew, and herbs. We ate the
tender shoots on the trees, anything at all that we could stomach. Gradually, we regained
some semblance of health, though always we were hungry.
"But as the weather cooled toward autumn, and as the greeps gathered for their
migration, we faced another winter, a winter we knew we could not again survive. . . .
"In Alcala, they string nets among the trees. The greep flocks come down to rest
and are caught. Then they gut the birds and roast them. . . . In Alcala, the greep
migration is a festival time, a time for celebration.
"But the elves would not countenance the death of a single bird.
"The flocks darkened the skies, and the honks rang counterpoint to the grumbles of
my stomach, the stomachs of my children. . . .
"And so I fashioned an awkward bow and strung it with my daughter's hair. I shot
seven of the birds, seven small birds, to feed us. And I made them into tarts.
"They were delicious. The gods' ambrosia cannot taste so fine. The flesh was
sweet, satisfying, the finest thing we had ever tasted.
"We slept well that night.
"But the following morning, the elf-lord came: He grinned up at me, his pointy
ears poking beside his crown of laurel, and told us we had been naughty.
"Then his soldiers took me and struck off my hand in punishment for my theft. For
that is what the elves termed it, a theft from nature, a violation of their covenant with
my family.
"They drove us from the elvenwood. Perforce, we found our way to this city. Now, I
make a meager living selling my greep tarts and gain a meager measure of revenge from
knowing that with each tart I sell, another of the birds dies.
"Come, taste the flesh. It is sweet and delectable. There is no taste to compare
with that of the greep, the greeps that sweep the skies above the elvenwood, their numbers
so great that they darken the sun."
"Is good," said Kraki. Nick shuddered. He'd nibbled on one tart, decided it
had all the consistency and none of the culinary attractions of stewed rat, and had
offered the rest to an alley cat. The cat had given him a contemptuous glare and had taken
off for parts unknown.
"Are we all quite ready?' said Timaeus impatiently.
The drover clucked and the mule cart began to move, eastward into the sun, toward the
Caverns of Cytorax.
The mouth of the caverns was blocked by a striped, red and white gate. To one side
stood a small building. The travellers entered it and followed the signs that pointed to
the customs post.
Inside a small chamber, a bureaucrat wearing an elaborate and ill-fitting blue uniform
sat on a stool. He stamped Sidney's papers and motioned her on. Kraki walked up to the
bureaucrat, who held out his hand.
"Your papers, sir?" said the bureaucrat.
Kraki yanked the official half over the counter. "LET ME PASS, PIG, OR YOU VILL
TASTE THE BITE OF MY STEEL!" he roared. His mighty thews bulged alarmingly.
"Let him down, Kraki," Sidney said.
"Guards! Guards!" screamed the bureaucrat, clawing at Kraki's hands. Kraki
threw the official across the room, whirled, and drew his sword. The side door smashed
open. Soldiers poured in. "Drop the sword, barbarian!" shouted one. They spread
out along the walls, ringing the party.
"I am a free man!" shouted Kraki. "I vill not be herded like sheep! I
spit on your papers!"
"Better do what he says, buddy," said Nick.
"No!" shouted Kraki. "I kill them all. Then ve go."
"Impractical," said Timaeus.
"Come on, Kraki," said Sidney. "What happens when we come back?"
Kraki glanced at her, then turned back to keep an eye on the soldiers. "Hah?"
"We go in the caverns. We slay lots of monsters. We come back with piles of loot.
We're tired and beaten up-and we have to fight our way out through dozens and dozens of
soldiers. Why not show him your papers, huh, pal?"
Kraki thought about this for a moment, then sheathed his sword. The soldiers looked
relieved. The bureaucrat got up slowly, checking to make sure nothing was broken.
"Don't got none," said Kraki sullenly.
There was silence for a moment.
"No papers?" said the bureaucrat. "That's impossible."
"In vild North, ve have no need for papers," insisted Kraki. "I say I am
Kraki, son of Kronar; any who say different, I kill for the lying cowards that they are.
That is how ve identify ourselves in Northland!"
The bureaucrat cleared his throat. "Quite. However, all foreigners are issued
letters of transit when they cross the border."
"Yah?" said Kraki. "I valk across border. No vone give me papers. No
vone stop me." He pulled his sword about two inches out of its scabbard and let it
fall back. "No vone try." He glared at the bureaucrat. "You vant to
try?"
"Er . . ."
"Surely, good sir," Timaeus intervened, "there are regulations to cover
this eventuality. The discovery of an undocumented alien within the Grand Duke's realm can
hardly be an unique occurrence."
"Oh, yes," said the bureaucrat happily, "there is a . . . regulation . .
." His voice trailed off. An expression of dismay passed across his face. He backed
toward the soldiers.
"What is it?" asked Timaeus.
"When an undocumented alien is found within the Grand Duchy of Athelstan . .
."
"Yes?" The soldiers tensed. "He must be jailed"
Kraki roared a challenge and drew his sword. Hastily, the soldiers prepared for combat.
"Unless!" shouted the bureaucrat. The tableau held. "Unless
vhat?" said Kraki.
The bureaucrat spoke rapidly. "Unless he is within ten miles of the border, in
which case he must be escorted across it."
Kraki considered this for a moment. "Veil, then," he said, sheathing his
weapon and smiling slowly. "I vill go qvietly."
"Yes," said the bureaucrat unhappily, "but I believe the provision is
intended to apply to raiders or people who wander across the border by mistake-not to
those who have been living illegally in the grand duchy for some time. . . ."
The captain of the guards eyed Kraki's heavily-muscled torso. "If regs give us a
choice between fighting that and escorting him ten feet into the caverns, guess
what my choice is."
There were mumbles of agreement from the other soldiers.
The cavern was a great gash in the earth, far wider than it was tall, like the mouth of
some vast creature. At one end was daylight, blinding compared to the dimness within. At
the other end, the chamber broke apart into shafts and passageways, tendrils extending off
into the depths. Within the chamber, not far from the customs post, lay the village of
Gateway.
"Why did we have to go through customs, anyway?" Nick asked Garni. "The
earth below thirty cubits belongs to usto the dwarves," Garni said.
"That's right," said Timaeus hefting the wheelbarrow containing Father
Thwaite over the rocky floor. "Although the Caverns of Cytorax lie entirely within
the boundaries of Athelstan, by ancient treaty with the Dwarven Kings, the grand duchy
extends only thirty cubits below the surface of the earth. Below that depth is dwarven
territory."
Gateway was built of rock quarried from the chamber walls, limestone loosely mortared
together. The buildings were small, the walls somewhat rickety; but then, no weather
penetrated here, and the cavern remained always at the same chill temperature.
Shops lined the street. An orc wearing an apron stood in one; behind him stood bottles
of liquor and bales of weed. "Duty free?" the orc grunted. Sidney smiled and
shook her head. She had been here before. Since Gateway lay wholly within the caverns, it
was outside Athelstani jurisdiction. It was sometimes convenient to do business beyond the
reach of the grand duke's justice.
A smallish lizardman bounded up and zeroed in on Timaeus, the most prosperous looking
of the group. He tugged on the wizard's robe. "Welcome to cavernth, honored
thir," the lizard said, hopping rapidly to keep up. "Need hotel? Know all good
rethtauranth. Act ath guide? Thee many hithtoric thights? Rent thithter? Hourly
rateth."
"Get lost," Nick said menacingly. The lizardman hopped away from him a
little.
"No, no," said Timaeus. "None of us is familiar with the depths of
Cytorax Caverns. An experienced native guide could prove invaluable." "Yeth!
Yeth!" said the lizardman, hopping closer. "Lenny knowth all
about cavernth! Lenny show you! Lenny take you to good treasure, yeth! Lenny ith good
guide! Reathonable rateth!"
"This is a mistake," Sidney said.
"What do you mean?" said Timaeus a little huffily.
"Just look at the little reptile," said Sidney. "Give him the
opportunity, and he'd sell you as quickly as his sister."
Lenny looked at her with wounded eyes. "Not true! Not true!" he whined.
"Lenny honetht lithard! Honetht!"
"Really," said Timaeus, "I hadn't expected racial slurs from you, Miss
Stollitt. Given trust and support, I'm sure this young creature "Yeth!"
said Lenny. "Trutht Lenny! Lenny find treasure! Big treasure!" "Look,"
said Nick to Timaeus, "forget it. It's a dumb idea. Okay?" Timaeus bristled.
"Nonsense. None of us is familiar with Cytorax. We
need a guide. I'm sure this fellow will do us proud." He patted the lizardman on
the head; Lenny looked back adoringly.
"Twenty thilver pennies per hour?" Lenny said.
Timaeus cleared his throat. "Sidney, please take care of the details, if you
will." He wandered across the street to look at one of the stalls. Sidney gritted her
teeth. She glared at the lizardman. "Two pennies an
hour, you little bastard," she said, fighting to keep control of her voice.
"And not a penny more."
The lizard looked disappointed that he wasn't bargaining with Timaeus.
"Three," he said. "And one perthent of any treasure."
"Two and a halfand no part of any treasure, you reptile. And if you abandon
us down there, I'll hunt you down and kill youand your sister, too. Got
me?"
Lenny looked at her with wounded eyes. "Lenny not do that," he said sadly.
"Lenny good guide. Lenny help. Need three pennieth. Thtandard rate."
Sidney sighed. "Three pennies," she said. Lenny bounced up and down in joy.
He bounded off after Timaeus.
"Thir! Thir! Not shop here. Lenny show you better thtore. Duty free itemth. Good
pritheth."
"What are we getting into?" said Nick.
Kraki grunted and picked up the handles of the wheelbarrow. "Don't vorry," he
said. "If lizard con us, I tvist head off." He strode off down the street.
"That's very reassuring," said Garni doubtfully. He hoisted his gear and
followed.
Sidney shook her head and sighed.
Nick patted her on the bottom. "Don't worry, kiddo," he said. She glared at
him. "And why the hell not?" she muttered.
III.
The passageway, Garni thought, had obviously been a mine shaft at one time. He raised
his lantern and studied the beams that held up the roof; they looked several centuries
old. He doubted they were entirely sound.
Up ahead, Lenny had stopped at a thick wooden door. Light seeped out around its edges.
"Thththth!" Lenny said, putting one finger to his crocodilian snout. The others
joined him.
"Okay," said Garni in a low voice. "Everybody ready?" The others
readied their weapons. Timaeus nodded.
Garni threw himself against the door. It slammed open. He stumbled into the room
beyond, waving his battle-axe and shouting a battle cry. Swords swiped through the air
above Garni's head. Two trolls stood
inside the room, one on either side of the door. They'd been prepared for
intrudersbut obviously expected someone taller than the dwarf. Unable to stop
himself under the weight of his pack, Garni staggered all
the way across the room to fetch up against one wall. One troll turned to charge the
dwarf, while the other kept a wary eye on the door.
Kraki stood blocking the doorway, studying Garni's axe work. "Well?" said
Sidney, prodding him from behind.
"Hah?" Kraki said. "Oh! Ve kill things now?" "Yes, you
idiot!"
"Hokay, hokay," said the barbarian huffily, drawing his sword. "You
don't have to get upset." He hurled himself into the room. "YAH HA!" he
exclaimed, plunging his sword into one troll's torso, whipping it out, and hacking off the
head of the other.
Both trolls fell.
Kraki flexed his muscles heroically, looking pleased. He posed with one
foot atop a trollish body. Garni lowered his battle-axe to the ground and stood
panting, leaning on its haft.
The troll under Kraki's foot reached up and ripped open the barbarian's calf. It rolled
for its sword. Kraki, astounded, stood with one foot in the air, bleeding from his leg
wound. "Vhat going on?" he complained.
"Shut up and fight," panted Garni. The troll stood up clutching its sword.
Snarling, Kraki ran to it and hacked off both its arms, then both its legs for good
measure.
The limbs began to inch across the floor toward the glaring, limbless torso. Garni
fumbled with an arm, trying to keep it away. The other limbs began to heal back in place.
"Vatch out!" shouted Kraki. Behind Garni's back, the other troll, blindly
fumbling across the floor, had found its head. Kraki charged across the room and kicked
the head out of the troll's hands. The head bit him on the foot.
"Ouch!" said Kraki. "I kill you now." He stabbed at the head
gingerly, trying to avoid his foot. He hopped on his free leg. The head gnawed on his
toes.
"Those things can regenerate," said Sidney worriedly from the doorway. She
tossed a dagger at one trollish arm, trying to keep it from getting back to its torso.
"Quite so," said Timaeus.
"How can we kill them?" asked Nick, peering intently at the trolls, his face
ferretlike in the torchlight.
"If I recall my natural philosophy," Timaeus said, "only fire or acid
will do."
"Great," said Nick. "I'm all out of Greek fire, I'm afraid. How . . .
?" "Leave it to me," said Timaeus, as Kraki hopped around the room stabbing
at the head on his foot. "Stand back." Timaeus cleared his throat, held his
pipe, and gestured, speaking Words of mystic power. A ball of flame appeared in his hand;
he hurled it into the room.
The ball exploded.
There was a blinding flash.
There was a tremendous, thundering boom.
Flame splashed out of the room, billowing up and down the corridor for dozens of yards.
Sidney, Nick, and Lenny were hurled down the corridor like straws in a wind.
The caverns shook with the boom. Dust and pebbles fell from the corridor roof. Beams
creaked and shuddered.
Father Thwaite fell out of the wheelbarrow. "Where am I?" he said faintly.
"Well," said Timaeus happily. "That certainly did the trick."
The magician was completely untouched by the explosion and breathed the thick smoke
without discomfort. By touch, he found Garni's lantern, which the blast had snuffed, and
relit it.
The room was devastated.
The rug on the floor was burnt to a cinder. The wooden table at the back of the room
was burning merrily. The trolls were charred and motionless. Garni was unconscious on the
floor, his clothing smoking. Kraki's skin was covered with soot. He stood with an idiot
grin on his face, one leg in the air with a charred trollish head on the raised foot. As
Timaeus watched, the barbarian's eyes turned up into his head, and he tumbled to the
floor. The floor shook.
"Oh," Timaeus said. "I say."
Nick stumbled into the room, supporting himself against one wall. His hair was singed.
"I think I've seen the spell before," he said hoarsely. "Fireball, wasn't
it?" He coughed and waved the smoke away from his face.
"Er . . . yes."
"What's the diameter of a fireball?" "Ah . . . thirty feet or so."
"Hmm." Nick eyeballed the room. "I'd say this room is about ten by
ten."
"Er . . . Yes," said Timaeus. "Given the volume of the spell, a certain
amount of splashback was to be expected."
A green snout peered around the edge of the door. Lenny looked in hesitantly.
"A certain amount?" Nick said incredulously. "You're an educated man.
You figure it out. The spell's volume of effect is ten times as big as this
room."
"Ah . . ."
"We're lucky to be alive! Have you looked at the corridor? I just hope the support
beams hold long enough for us to get out."
Timaeus was turning pink.
Sidney pulled herself into the room. She moved gingerly, as if unconvinced that she was
still alive. "Nifty spell," she said sarcastically. "Real neat."
"Look . . ." said Timaeus.
Thwaite staggered into the room. The cleric looked haggard, hung-over, and queasy. He
stopped and peered around. He noticed the charred
corpses, the unconscious bodies, and the gore that had splashed everywhere. Thwaite
looked even queasier. He staggered back out of the room. There was a retching sound from
the hall.
Timaeus sighed. "Look," he said softly, "I'll be more careful next time.
Fire doesn't much affect me, you see, and sometimes I forget what it can do to others.
I'll try to give you some warning. Is that acceptable?"
Nick and Sidney looked at each other. "It's your expedition," said Nick.
"You twit," said Sidney.
Timaeus bristled. "Madam, I've given you my apology" "Don't call
me madam," snarled Sidney.
Thwaite staggered back into the room. He fetched up against a wall. "Hello,"
he asked the wall, "do I know you?"
"As a matter of fact said Timaeus.
Sidney sighed. "It's Sidney, Father," she said. "And this is Magister
d'Asperge, the leader of the expedition I was telling you about." She glared at
Timaeus.
"Hmm?" the cleric said, studying the wall. "I vaguely recall . . ."
"The expedition into the Caverns of Cytorax," Timaeus said. Thwaite shuddered.
"Which you joined by signing the papers of enlistment in my office not forty-eight
hours ago."
"The Caverns of Cytorax?" Thwaite said in horror. "What in Dion's name
did I do that for?"
"You must have been drunk," said Timaeus dryly.
Thwaite cleared his throat. His head was pounding. "A state I much prefer to my
current one," he said. Glancing around the room, Thwaite noticed Garni's sprawled
body. Blisters were beginning to form on the dwarf's face. "Oh dear," Thwaite
said. "Hmm." He pushed off the wall, staggered over to the dwarf, and dropped to
the floor. Timaeus made an abortive gesture to catch the priest, then realized Thwaite had
merely fallen to his knees.
Thwaite studied the dwarf. He held a wrist, thumped Garni's chest, and felt the dwarf's
forehead. Thwaite closed his eyes and concentrated for a moment.
"Yes," he said faintly. From within his robes, he produced a silver
aspergillum and a stick of incense. He leaned over and lit the incense at the burning
table, then wafted the stick over the dwarf's body, murmuring a prayer. He stood the stick
on the floor and sprinkled the body with water from the aspergillum, praying as he did.
Under the cleric's ministrations, Garni's blisters began visibly to recede. Perhaps,
Timaeus thought, the cleric would be of some assistance after all. He scratched an ear and
surveyed the blasted room and his injured companions with embarrassment.
"Idiot," he muttered to himself.
The room was carved from the rock; sedimentary banding along the walls plunged at an
odd angle toward the floor. The table, no longer burning, stood at the rear of the room.
Underneath the table lay a trunk, bound with leather. Straw ticking lay in a clump against
one wall.
Garni was still too weak to rise, but that didn't stop him from directing the search.
"Righto," he said. "Nick, lad, search the bodies. Sidney, take a look at
the chest. If you would be so kind, Magister d'Asperge, do you think you could examine the
table? Father? The straw . . . ? Thank you."
Kraki propped himself up against the wall, put both hands behind his head, and grinned,
watching the others work. Thwaite had bound up the barbarian's leg, but his injuries
excused him from the labor, at least for now.
Nick went over the body of the man the trolls had killed. "A purse," he said.
He poured its contents into his hand. "Four shillings andum-eight pence
ha'penny." Lenny came over and stared at the silver avidly. Nick poured it back and
fixed the purse to his belt. "A daggera cheap one."
"Pockets?" asked Garni. "Are the clothes worth anything?"
"They're sliced up," Nick said, "and kind of bloody." "Never
mind. Slit open the belt."
"Hey, what do you know! A gold sovereign, sewn into the leather." Garni
grinned into his beard.
Timaeus yanked open the table's only drawer. A cockroach crawled out.
"Zounds," he said, and jumped back. He pointed at the cockroach and started
muttering a spell. Before he could complete it, the roach had disappeared into a crack.
Timaeus stopped muttering; smoke curled from his finger as the aborted spell dissipated.
He shook his finger painfully and cursed under his breath, then reached into the drawer.
"Empty," he reported, "save for this paper." He pulled it out.
"It appears to be a note of some kind. Written inI believe it is orcish
script."
"Lenny read! Lenny read!" said the lizardman, bounding up and down. Timaeus
handed it to him. Lenny puzzled over it. "Heat oil in heavy thkillet," he read
slowly. "Fry one pound thalted manthflesh"
"Yoiks," said Timaeus in disgust. "A recipe."
"If you would, Magister d'Asperge," said Garni, "the rest of the
table." "What rest? There's only the one draw."
Garni sighed. "Anything behind the drawer?" "Hmm?" Timaeus pulled
it out. "No."
"Does the drawer have a false bottom?" "Ah . . . no."
"Does the top of the table lift off?" "No."
"Flip it over. That's right. Now, pry out the table legs." "Is this
necessary?"
"Professionalism, Magister! We must be thorough! Does the leg sound hollow?"
"No." "Test it."
"Eh? What do you mean?"
"I've known magic wands to be disguised as table legs," Garni said. "Ye
gods . . . All right." Timaeus pointed the table leg at a wall, and said "Klaathu
. . . Proujansky . . . Moshalu!"
Nothing happened. "The other legs."
With mounting impatience, Timaeus tried the other three legs. Nothing. "Knock all
over the tabletop."
"I say, this is a bit thick."
"Wouldn't you feel like an idiot if we passed up a treasure just because we
weren't thorough?" said Garni.
"I suppose, but"
"Professionalism, my dear Magister! Professionalism! Knock, my good man!"
"Non omnia possumus omnes, " Timaeus mutteredbut he knocked on the
tabletop. It sounded like solid, slightly scorched oak.
"All right, hand me the legs." Timaeus did so. Garni took out his boot knife
and started whittling.
"What the devil are you doing?"
Garni shrugged. "There might be secret compartments . . . items glued into the
wood . . . anything. You never know."
Timaeus rolled his eyes and reached for his pipe. He started tamping it with pipeweed.
"Ah . . ." said Father Thwaite. "Yes, good cleric?" said Garni.
"Ah, this straw seems to be matted together with . . ." "Yes?"
"Well, from the stench, I would venture to guess that it's . . . troll
urine."
"Indeed. Well, persevere, Father! Persevere!" "Yes," said Thwaite
faintly.
"Nick, lad?" said Garni. He'd reduced one table leg to shavings and was
working on the second.
"Yes, Garni?" Nick said, grinning. "The troll bodies."
"What about them? They don't have any clothing . . ." "You never know
what might be in the stomachs." Nick lost his grin. "Stomachs?"
"Yes. Trolls are not very bright, you know. They've been known to swallow the most
extraordinary things."
Grimacing, Nick moved toward one of the trolls, dagger in hand. Timaeus had finished
tamping his pipe. He brought one finger toward the bowl . . .
There was an explosion. Everyone dived for cover.
Flames raged around Timaeus's head for a moment, then dissipated in smoke.
Unscathed, Timaeus puffed contentedly on his pipe. He looked around the room and
noticed that everyone was hugging the floor. "Oh, really," he said. "Can't
a man smoke in peace?" He puffed some more.
"How are you doing with the trunk, Sidney?" Garni asked.
"Just a minute," Sidney said. She pressed an ear to the steamer trunk and
tapped over it with a finger. She drew back, stood up, and took off her pack. She took an
ear trumpet out of the pack and tapped over the chest again, listening with the trumpet.
Then, she brought out a Y-shaped silver wand and, holding the forked end of the wand in
both hands, moved it over the chest and down all four sides. The wand remained stable.
She stepped back and looked at the chest, thinking for a moment. Then she took a coil
of rope from her pack. She looped it around the chest and moved as far across the room as
she could. She gave the rope a tug. The chest moved slightly. Nothing else happened. She
yanked harder. The chest moved a little farther.
She coiled the rope and looked at the chest thoughtfully. "Yust open it,"
said Kraki.
She glanced at him. "It could be trapped." "Bah," said Kraki.
"Everyone out of the room," said Sidney.
"This is silliness," said Kraki. "Ve are vasting time."
Nick stumbled out of the room, green trollish ichor dripping from his sleeves. He
looked rather greenish himself. The others followed him, Kraki last and reluctantly.
Sidney dragged the heavy oak tabletop up to the chest. She tipped it up along its long
edge and crouched behind it. She laid a metal rod, several feet in length, over the
tabletop. The rod had a claw at the end; carefully, she used it to pry open the chest lid.
The lid opened. Nothing else happened.
Sidney peered over the tabletop and into the chest. She probed the interior with the
rod.
Nothing happened.
She stood up and let the tabletop fall with a bang.
Everyone rushed into the room. "Are you all right?" Nick asked.
"Sure," she said, peering in the chest.
Lenny bounded up and down. "Lenny lead you to good treasure! Magic! Thilver!
Jewelth!"
"Two bags of pemmican," she said, "and a jar of" she sniffed,
and took a swig "rather flat ginger beer."
Lenny stopped bounding up and down.
"Well," said Timaeus scathingly. "It was certainly foresighted of us to
bring the wheelbarrow along. How could we ever get this munificent treasure out
otherwise?"
Kraki fingered the edge of his sword and eyed Lenny thoughtfully.
By the time they left the room, they'd reduced everything in it to flinders. "Now
that," said Garni happily, "is what I call a professional job."
IV.
Where water had run into the terrestrial depths, it had left a slantwise crack in the
limestone, a shaft scattered with boulders and pebbles, potholes and minor cliffs. It had
scoured the shaft smooth, burnishing the stone to a yellow luster.
Lenny bounded easily from boulder to boulder, springing down the slope to stand where
rocks gave temporary purchase. "Lenny find better treasure!" he yipped.
"Thecret treasure! Jewelth! Magic! Lenny show you!"
The others found the going more difficult. At times, the slope approached the vertical.
They descended slowly, searching for handholds among the potholes and boulders.
Garni hammered a piton into the groove between a boulder and the streambed, and ran a
rope through the piton's iron loop. Holding both ends of the rope, he backed cautiously
down the slope. The others watched him.
He reached a flatter area where he could stand unsupported and called, "All right,
who's next?"
Sidney spoke to Timaeus. "Are you sure you want to go down there?"
"Absolutely," he said, puffing on his pipe. "Adventure awaits us in the
depths of Cytorax! Forward, my friends! Fortuna favet fortibus!"
"Lenny lead! Follow Lenny!" the lizardman yipped faintly from far down the
shaft.
"Where is he taking us?" Sidney asked. "To fame and fortune!" said
Timaeus.
"More likely to an early grave," Nick muttered.
"I trust him implicitly," Timaeus huffed, and grabbed Garni's rope.
Drizhnakh, Garfok, and Spug were playing cards in front of the fire. They were on guard
duty. No one took guard duty too seriously.
Drizhnakh and Garfok were both cheating. They both knew that they were both cheating.
Spug didn't have a clue, of course.
They were playing Spatzle. For money. If they'd been playing anything else, Drizhnakh
and Garfok might have played honestly. It wasn't too likely, of course, but they might
have. Spatzle is played by orcish children. It is completely mindless-on the same level as
Go Fish or Old Maid. There's no strategy. Both Drizhnakh and Garfok were bored with it.
Which is why they had to spice the game up with some judicious cheating.
The problem was that Spazle was the only thing Spug would play. It was the only thing
Spug could play. Spug was, as his orcish companions would have so charmingly put
it, "a maroon." Not that your run-of-the-mill orc is exactly the world's leading
intellectual light, but you get the idea.
As far as Drizhnakh and Garfok were concerned, cheating was the real game, anyway. It
was a given that Spug would lose. The only question was whether Drizhnakh or Garfok would
win. Skill at cardsharping, not skill at cards, was the requirement for victory.
Drizhnakh and Garfok were tired of Spatzle. For them, it had lost its charm. It was no
longer pleasing. It had become otiose. As Garfok put it, "Dis is a dumb friggin'
game, Spug." He threw down his cards.
Spug looked injured. "I likes it, Garfok," he said. "It's fun."
"I is had enough, ya maroon," riposted Garfok.
"Pick up da hand, Garfok," Drizhnakh said menacingly.
"Piss up yer aunt's leg! I says I's had it wiv dis game," said Garfok.
"Days cause you got a lousy hand, ya dipshit. Pick it up," Drizhnakh said.
"Yeah!" said Spug. "You is just got a lousy hand! You is just upset
cause you is gonna lose!"
"Piss on you," replied Garfok.
Drizhnakh drew his sword and buried its sharp end in the table before Garfok.
"Pick up da cards!" he yelled.
Garfok picked up his cards. "Tree of fangs," he said sullenly, throwing a
card on the table.
Drizhnakh pulled a card out of his sleeve. Spug didn't notice. Garfok did.
"Trump," Drizhnakh said. "Raise two copper."
Garfok sighed. Then he saw a flash of green by the door. He dropped his cards on the
table, then tipped his chair back, keeping his balance by putting his knees under the
table. He reached outside the door, grabbed Lenny by the neck, and pulled the lizardman
into the room.
Lenny's legs windmilled as he tried to break free. "Hey!" said Garfok.
"Look at dis! It's Lenny da Lizard."
Lenny went limp. "Lenny come to thay hello," he said hesitantly. Drizhnakh
smiled; his tusks made it a rather menacing smile. "It's da lizard kid," he said
to Spug, "come to visit." He laid his cards carefully on the table.
"Yeah," said Spug, nodding wisely. "An' just in time for lunch,
too." "I haven't had lizard in months an' months," said Drizhnakh
thoughtfully.
"Say, kid," said Garfok, still holding Lenny by the neck. "Whatcha doin'
down here anyway, huh?"
"Lenny going for thtroll," the lizardman said despairingly.
Drizhnakh poked the fire. "Where's dat roastin' skewer?" he asked Spug.
Spug started pawing through a pile of gear. "It's in here somewheres," he
said.
"You got a load of tourists wiv you, kid?" Garfok asked, shaking the
lizardman.
Lenny nodded.
"Dey is comin' down da shaft?" Lenny hung motionless.
"Found dat skewer yet?" Garfok asked. Drizhnakh grunted and threw another log
on the fire; he stared at Lenny and licked his chops.
Lenny shuddered. "Yeth," he said despairingly. "Five humanth. One
dwarf."
"Youmans? Hey, Drizhnakh, sounds like mansflesh for lunch instead." Spug
nodded enthusiastically. "I like mansflesh," he confided.
"Tell ya what, buddy," Garfok said thoughtfully. "You go back to da
tourists. Take 'em to Rog."
Lenny shook his head violently. "Not Rog," he said. "Lenny not go to
Rog. Rog bad monthter. Kill Lenny."
Garfok sighed. "Listen to me, kiddo. Dese guys, da youmans an' such, dey fight
Rog. You hang back. If Rog kills 'em, dat's fine wiv us. We'll letcha go home. If dey
kills Rog, dat's good, too. Rog is a pain. And den, when dey're all wounded an' stuff from
fightin' Rog, den we attack. And kills 'em."
Lenny considered a moment. "Rog hath big treasure. Gold. Jewelth," he said
craftily.
"Days da beauty of it," Garfok said. "If dey kill Rog, we kill dem and
get da loot."
"Share for Lenny?"
"Sure, kid. Sure. Dere'll be a share for you. Right, guys?" Garfok said.
"You bet," Drizhnakh said.
"Sure, Lenny," said Spug. "We give ya a share."
"Share for Lenny," Lenny said happily. "Gold. Jewelth. Magic!"
"Days right, kid," said Garfok, releasing the lizardman.
"Lenny go back. Take humanth to Rog." "Days da ticket."
"Lenny thay good-bye," said Lenny and bounded from the room. There was
silence for a moment.
Drizhnakh collapsed against the table, shaking. "Ya got him good, Garfok," he
gasped. Garfok grinned.
"'Share for Lenny?' " Drizhnakh said. They both laughed. Spug looked puzzled.
"I don't gets it."
"'Take humanth to Rog!' " Garfok said.
"'Treasure for Lenny!' " Drizhnakh said, rolling on the floor. "C'mon,
guys," Spug said. "I don't gets it!"
Garfok grinned at him. "Does ya really think we is gonna give dat punk a share of
da treasure?"
Spug thought that over. "Days mean," he said in a bewildered tone. While
Drizhnakh chortled on the floor, Garfok took the opportunity to switch his cards with
Drizhnakh's.
Drizhnakh sat up. "We better tell da boss about dis," he said.
Sidney lost her grip on the rope, fell heavily down the slope, and slammed up against a
boulder. She gasped for air.
Father Thwaite, who was crouching on a nearby ledge, gingerly made his way crabwise
across the slope. "Are you all right?" he asked.
"My leg . . . ," she gasped.
He felt her leg. "It's not broken," he said, "but you'll have quite a
bruise."
She stood up unsteadily. "I'll be okay," she said. "I'll heal it when we
get to the bottom."
"No, Father," she said.
"Why not?" he asked, in some surprise. "I . . . I can't."
"I don't understand."
Sidney sighed. "I'm sorry, Father, she said. "I can't explain."
It was warm in Rog's cavern. He liked it that way. He liked his cavern very much. There
was a pool to wade in. There was a comfy pile of gold to sleep on. And there were
crocodiles in the pool for snacks.
Rog was having a snack right now, as matter of fact. He reached one paw into the pool
and fished around. There was one! He grabbed the croc by the middle, lifted it out, and
dropped it into his maw. The croc thrashed, and Rog chewed. It was crunchy. He swallowed.
He'd have a few more crocs, and then he'd go have a nice nap. Later on, maybe he'd go
for a little walk through the caverns. Maybe he'd find an orc or two. It was a long time
since he'd had an orc. Crocs were good, but it was always nice to vary your diet.
Rog was quite looking forward to his day.
From the base of the shaft, the rest of the party watched Kraki descend the last few
feet. His foot slipped. He fell heavily onto the slope. He clutched his sword, and
plummeted . . .
. . . into the pool at the base of the shaft. There was a splash. Garni raised his
lantern high and peered into the water.
Lenny hopped into the circle of light.
"Where the hell have you been?" asked Sidney. "Lenny thcout ahead! Lenny
find big treasure!"
Kraki surfaced with a whoop. "Hoo!" he said. "Vater cold. Feels
good." He slapped some water toward the party.
Timaeus studied the pool and shuddered. "Unhealthy," he muttered. Garni
stepped back to avoid being splashed. Kraki backstroked across the pond.
"What's that?" said Nick, pointing at something floating in the water. It was
barely visible in the lantern's dim light.
Lenny peered. "Ith crocth," he said.
It took Nick a moment to understand. "Kraki!" he yelled. "Get out
of the water! Now!"
Kraki stopped backstroking and sat up, treading water. "Vhy?" There was a
thrashing noise, and the barbarian disappeared.
Timaeus cursed and began to chant, preparing a spell. Sidney drew her sword, then
wondered what to do with it.
Kraki surfaced near them blowing. "Are you all right?" Garni shouted. The
barbarian laughed exuberantly. "Yah, yah," he said. "Look vhat I
found." He held a crocodile by the snout, one jaw in each hand. The crocodile
struggled to free itself, but Kraki was too strong. Kraki disappeared under the water
again-then shot from it, to sit on the edge of the pool, still holding the croc.
"See my little friend?" he said, holding the crocodile toward the others. He
opened and closed the jaws with his hands. "Vant a kiss?" he said,
shoving the crocodile toward Father Thwaite. The cleric backed away. The crocodile's
feet scrabbled, but it got nowhere.
"It's blind," said Garni. It was true; the crocodile's lids were sealed
together. Its coloring was light in comparison to its surface-dwelling cousins.
"Many crocth in cavernth," said Lenny. "Thwimming bad." "Throw
it back," said Timaeus.
"Vhat? Not vant for dinner?"
"I don't think so, Kraki," said Sidney.
"Hokay," said the barbarian, and dropped the crocodile back into the pool. It
swam away as fast as it could.
"About this treasure," said Nick.
"Big treasure, mathterth! Gold! Thilver! Lenny find good treasure thith time! Make
up for trollth! Trutht Lenny!" Lenny said, and bounded off. They followed him down a
brief passageway that opened into a large
cavern. Bats fluttered overhead, moving like leaves whipped in a silent storm.
"I don't like this," Sidney said. "Where was he? What was he
doing?" "You fret too much, my dear," Timaeus said, pulling out his pipe
and packing it. He brought his finger toward the bowl. Everyone else put their fingers in
their ears.
Thunder sounded across the cave. Timaeus puffed contentedly.
They came to a narrow crack, lined with geodes winking orange in the lantern light.
Beyond the crack was darkness.
"Be very, very quiet!" said Lenny, holding a finger to his snout.
"Follow Lenny." He led the way through the crack and into another cavern, as
huge as the one before. They heard a splash off in the darkness. Lenny tiptoed across the
uneven rock. The party followed, the lantern lighting their way.
Rog lifted another croc out of the water, then stopped. What was that noise? It sounded
like a faint jingling. The croc thrashed in Rog's hand. Lenny turned. "Thee?" he
whispered. "Thee? Mathter like treasure?" It was a veritable hill of gold. Well,
maybe not a hill. More like a small
mound. Actually, it was closer to a pile. Look, it was a lot of gold. Enough gold to
set you up for life. Enough gold to make even a dragon's eyes gleam. A lot.
It wasn't just gold, either. There was the occasional flash of a jewel; there were
chalices, swords, suits of armor, and all sorts of other goodies poking out of the pile.
"Whoopee!" shouted Nick, diving headfirst into the pile. He flung coins into
the air. "I'm rich! I'm rich!" he said. "I'm socially secure!"
Kraki smiled broadly. Sidney licked her lips. Garni took off his backpack and started
fumbling through it. He pulled out a bag of hardtack, three small steel balls, a box of
cocoa mix. He pulled out a rabbit's foot, a wooden stake, a mallet, and a box of iron
nails.
"What are you looking for?" asked Nick.
"I've got a bunch of burlap sacks," said Garni. "We'll need them to get
the treasure out. I know they're in here somewhere." He pulled out a compass, an
astrolabe, and a heavy bound book. . . .
"I don't know," Timaeus said.
There was a loud noise. Rog heard it distinctly. It sounded like it came from . . . his
pile of gold! His comfy pile of gold! Those darn orcs. They were always after his gold!
And it had taken him so long to get a nice comfy pile, too. He'd teach those orcs a thing
or two!
The croc still clutched in one hand, Rog ran toward his gold. "Somehow, it seems
too easy," said Timaeus.
Sidney turned white.
"What's the matter?" Timaeus said. Sidney pointed.
Timaeus turned.
Twenty cubits away, there were two feet planted on the ground. The thing about these
feet was that the body to which they were attached wasn't visible. Not that the body was
invisible, exactly; it was just so huge that you couldn't see it all in the dim light of
Garni's lantern. All you could see was a pair of huge, scaled, greenish feet, each with
four toes, each toe sporting a claw the length of a man's arm.
Also visible, hanging about fifteen cubits off the ground, was a pale green crocodile,
clutched in a huge, clawed hand.
"Run," suggested Sidney in a conversational tone.
"Vhat?" said Kraki and turned to see what Sidney was talking about.
"Run!" Sidney said more forcefully.
Nick craned around to look. Garni looked up from his backpack. "RUN!" Sidney
screamed.
"A felicitous suggestion," said Timaeus.
A giant, clawed hand felt over the pile of gold. Nick scurried out of its way just in
time. They ran.
The hand found Lenny. It lifted him high in the air by one leg. "Mathterth!
Mathterth! Thave Lenny! Pleathe thave Lenny!" he screamed.
Timaeus turned and hurled a fireball over his shoulder. It exploded somewhere near the
creature's torso. There was a thunderous shout of anger. The creature dropped Lenny.
The monster pounded after them, the cavern shaking with each tencubit stride.
"Scatter!" Timaeus gasped. "Or it'll get us all!" They scattered.
There was a boom, and something burned Rog. Ooh! That smarted. Now Rog was angry. Where
was the one he had grabbed? Rog felt around for it. Rog would get them for this. Darn
orcs.
Sidney and Nick made for the same hiding placea niche at one end of the cavern.
They squeezed in together, their backs to the cool stone. Nick put his arm around Sidney
and nuzzled her neck.
"Cut that out," she hissed.
"Aw, c'mon, Sidney." He put a hand on her leg.
"Cut it out, you jerk," she whispered. "There's a monster out
there." "Yeah," said Nick. "We could die at any moment. Danger always
adds an element of"
"Do you remember what direction the cavern entrance is?"
"Mmm. Remember the time the town watch was looking for us? And . . ." Nick
slid a hand around her back.
A dagger pricked his ribs.
"Oh, hell, Sidney," he said, drawing back.
"So where the hell were you last night, buster?" she said in a low voice.
"UhI thought we had an understanding"
"Understanding? Understanding!" Sidney's voice was getting noticeably louder.
"You shit! Our understanding was that"
"Sssh!" said Nick.
There was silence for a moment.
"This is a hell of a time to pick a fight," said Nick.
"We're partners, Pratchitt," said Sidney. "That's all we
are." "But Sidney," Nick said, "what about"
"That was then," said Sidney. "This is now. Now listen to me. We're not
going to be able to beat that monster. Right?"
"No chance," said Nick.
"So if we want a part of that treasure, we've got to snatch it."
"Sure," said Nick.
"Let's go," said Sidney.
Suddenly, the space in the niche next to Nick was empty. "Sidney?" Nick
whispered.
"Sidney?" he whispered a little louder, out into the vastness of the cavern.
He couldn't see anything out there. It was as dark as the inside of a casket.
Cursing, he moved out into the darkness. Kraki crouched against the uneven wall.
Kraki didn't care about treasure. Barbarians didn't worry about money. Glory, that was
the thing. Great deeds to be sung in the long-hall, deeds that would resound in his name
for all time to come. Killing a monster the size of a mountain, for instance. Preferably
in single combat. With one arm tied behind your back. Blindfolded. With a hat pin.
Let's not, Kraki told himself, get carried away.
It was dark, as dark as dragon's blood. He couldn't even see himself. He had his sword.
He had the strength of his right arm. The monster was out there.
He had no idea how to kill the thing. It was just too damn big. Without a good look at
the monster, he had no way of knowing where its vulnerable spots might be. External organs
are usually the best bet: eyes and genitals. The throat is good, too.
He felt the wall he crouched against. It was grainy, a little soft. There were a few
cracks, a few holes. And it was soft enough that he might be able to carve a handhold with
his knife if he needed to.
In the pitch darkness, Kraki began to climb. All of the monster's potential vulnerable
spots were well off the ground. He had to gain some height. It didn't look too good, Kraki
had to admit. How could he fight a monster he couldn't see?
He kept on climbing. It never occurred to him to do anything else. Heroes fight
monsters. Monsters fight heroes. It's just one of those things. And I, Kraki told himself,
am a hero. Yah, for sure.
Garni lay flat on his stomach. He was near a pool of water. His lamp had gone out in
the confusion, though he'd hung on to his pack. His dwarven night vision let him see a few
shadowy shapes, but he could make out very little. It was black, as black as an ogre's
heart. He heard a splash from the pool; he hoped the crocs would leave him alone. But
crocodiles were the least of his worries.
He wished he could see what was going on. He considered relighting his
lantern, but decided against it. Doing so would only reveal his position to the
creature out there.
He'd boasted to Nick about being prepared. Well, he might not be prepared to deal with
monsters the size of mountains. But maybe there was something in his pack. . . .
He fumbled through it. Wood axe. Spare socks. Bedroll. Brandy. Nothing useful there.
Oil. Salt. Wolfsbane.
Belladonna. Parchment.
Wait. Belladonna. No, not just belladonna. Essence of belladonna, thin crystalline
needles extracted by some magical process from the root and leaves of the plant. Priests
and chirurgeons used it as a local anaesthetic. The medicinal dose was one hundreth of a
grain; a truly tiny amount. Two grains would kill a man.
He hefted the packet. He must havecall it an ounce and a half. Something over six
hundred grains.
Was that enough to kill the monster? It was damned big. Its body weight must be
tremendous. Still . . . it was the only thing Garni could think of. And even if the dose
weren't lethal, it might slow the monster down.
But how to get the monster to take the poison? He could dump the belladonna into a jar
of pemmican. . . . But no. The monster wouldn't identify the jar as food.
I suppose, Garni thought, I could get it to eat me. He shuddered. For a moment, he
contemplated capturing a crocodile and forcing it to eat the belladonnabut he was
not about to wrestle blind crocs in the dark.
Could he get the poison into the monster without getting him to eat it? Wait . . . To
use belladonna as a local anaesthetic, you dissolve it in alcohol and rub it into the
skin. The alcohol penetrates. . . .
He picked up the bottle of brandy.
Rog was unhappy. He crisscrossed the cavern floor. Those darn orcs had disappeared.
Maybe they were huddling against the walls. Yeah, that's it! They must be huddling
against the walls. Rog began to feel his way around the cavern, patting the walls with his
fingertips.
Timaeus stood uncertainly in the entrance. It was dark, as dark as the seventh hell. He
could see very little. Where had everyone gotten to? Any sensible person would make for
the exit. Wouldn't they? That creature was unbeatable.
Wasn't it?
Perhaps not unbeatable, precisely. Just very tough. Very, very tough.
Wizards no more powerful than he had slain dragons, hadn't they? Admittedly, wizards
far more powerful than he had also been eaten by dragons, but he didn't come on this
expedition to shirk adventure.
Still, those claws . . . He shuddered.
Timaeus reached for his pipe, then stopped himself. Smoke would reveal his whereabouts.
No pipeweed for now.
The monster was so big. And those scales! His fireball had bounced right off-doing a
little collateral damage, perhaps, but nothing major. The monster was just so big . . .
Hmm. What would happen if the thing tripped? At university, he'd learned that the
velocity of a falling object is directly proportional to its weight. The creature was
nothing if not heavy. It would fall fast-and hard.
Perhaps an entrapment spell on one foot . . .
Father Thwaite panted heavily. He crouched with his back to a sizable stalagmite. He
could see nothing; the cavern was as dark as the sins of humanity.
What should he be doing? His companions were out there somewhere in the dark, no doubt
worried, no doubt afraid. He would comfort them if he could, but he had no idea where they
were or where he was, for that matter.
Was there anything he could do about the monster?
He prayed for spiritual guidance. He wished he had a drink.
The monster. Was it truly evil? Few creatures were. Its home had been invaded, and it
had responded accordingly. Might it not be intelligent? Might it possess a soul? Could he,
perhaps, reach it somehow, convince it that the little creatures scurrying about its feet
could become its friends? Could he lead the creature into the path of righteousness and
instruct it in the ways of the gods?
Even if it were not intelligent, perhaps he could calm it, gentle it as holy men are
said to gentle the most ferocious of beasts.
Stop, he thought.
Yes, this is what he must do. He must go forth, unarmed and unafraid, to do battle for
the spirit of the monster.
"Suicide," he groaned. The theology was ineluctable, but he didn't have to
like it.
Father Thwaite closed his eyes and intoned his mantra. He rose and slowly walked
forward across the chamber floor. He tried to gentle his thoughts, rid himself of emotion,
and reach out with his mind to contact the mind of the monster.
It was hard to concentrate. Here he was, wandering out into the middle of an unlit
cavern, trying to convert a fifty-foot monster ravening for human bloodthat he
couldn't even see. Thwaite wished he'd chosen a different god to follow. Dion had his good
pointsincluding a notable fondness for bibulationbut this predilection for
martyrdom was not among them.
Ye gods, he needed a drink. Blind faith was always easier with a few stiff ones under
the belt.
Garni sloshed the poisoned brandy. Now what?
Ideally, he wanted the monster to swallow the vial. Failing that, he'd have to splash
the stuff onto its skin. The thing to do was hurl the brandy toward the creature's mouth;
at worst, it would splash onto the face, and at best the creature would swallow.
How could he hurl the vial so high? The creature was big. . . .
He took out his eleven-foot pole and screwed it together. Maybe he could use the pole
as a kind of sling . . .
Timaeus inhaled deeply and prepared himself. This would take all his skill. First, he'd
need some kind of light spell, to see his target. Then, he'd need to get the monster to
run. Finally, he'd need an entrapment spell-and he'd better put everything into it.
If this didn't work, they were probably dead.
At last. Kraki came to a ledge and pulled himself onto it. He was tired. His leg wound
was throbbing. He needed a rest. He thought he was high enough to reach the monster's
head, although it was hard to tell.
But how would he knew when it was nearby?
Bah. He could always bellow a challenge. No doubt it would come to a hero's call.
Nick knew Sidney was nearby because he could hear her breathe. "Found
anything?" he whispered.
"No," she whispered back. "We should have come to the treasure by
now."
"Let's" Nick began, then broke off.
There was a . . . footstep. The ground shook slightly. The air moved. Dalara and Dion,
Nick thought. It must be standing right above us. That's when the lights came on.
There was a flash and a bang, as of fireworks. That's what it was; streamers of white
drifted slowly toward the cavern floor.
Aha, Timaeus thought, spotting the monster. There's the bugger. He cleared his throat.
"NYA NYA! NYA NYA!" he shouted. "YOU CAN'T CATCH ME! NYA NYA! NYA
NYA!"
Rog heard a bang. Then he heard one of the orcs yell something insulting. Or was it an
orc? He bellowed and ran toward the yell.
Nick knew he was going to die as soon as the monster saw them. All it had to do was
step on them.
It began to move away. He fainted in relief.
Sidney looked about. "Of all the . . ." she muttered, and began dragging Nick
toward the edge of the cavern. If Timaeus was about to start tossing spells around, she
didn't want to be at ground zero.
Kraki sprang to his feet. He was startled for a moment, then realized the light must be
more of the wizard's magic. The wizard yelled, and the monster began to run toward him.
What was the wizard planning? No time to wonder. Kraki was above the monster. It was
not far away, and moving closer. Kraki drew his sword, screamed and leapt.
Aha! Light! Garni was ready. He swung the flask at the end of the pole. The monster
opened its maw to bellow. Garni swept the flask back and let it fly.
It arced through space, directly toward the monster's mouth.
Timaeus shouted the Words of power. He felt the forces of magic work through him. He
reached out . . .
Crimson lines of energy crackled across space and encircled one of the monster's giant
limbs.
The foot stuck. Rog tripped. Slowly, slowly he began to fall. Timaeus held motionless,
pumping all his power into the spell. Kraki's exquisitely timed leap would have
landed him directly on the monster's head . . .
Only, the monster tripped.
Kraki made a grab for an ear as he fell past. He missed. He kept on screaming.
Garni's flask arced highmissed the stumbling monster-and fell. Standing in the
middle of the cavern, Father Thwaite peeled one eye
open. His concentration had gone to hell. Where had all this light come from? Something
hit him in the chest. It fell to his feet. He opened the other eye. It was a flask of some
kind. It looked like brandy. Ah! That should do the trick. He unstoppered it and drank.
Just what he needed. Althoughthere was a rather peculiar aftertaste.
With a splash, Kraki fell into the pool. He stopped screaming.
Rog was unhappy. He was falling over. This was turning out to be a bad day. Why did
everyone always pick on him?
He hit the cavern floor. Everything shook. Timaeus collapsed in exhaustion.
Everything was silent for a moment. Rog lay still. Garni lit his lantern. Sidney limped
up to the giant form. It was breathing, but "It's unconscious," she reported.
She stared at the monster. It had no eyes. "And there we were, creeping around in the
dark like mice," she said disgustedly.
Garni let out his breath and turned to help Kraki out of the pool. "Vater
cold," Kraki said. "Brr. Enough svimming for one day." The two walked
toward the treasure, where Sidney and Thwaite joined them.
"Where are the others?" Thwaite asked.
"Nick's unconscious," Sidney said. "I left him over"
Garni stared in horror at the open flask in Father Thwaite's hand. "Did you drink
any of that?" he said urgently.
"Why, yes," said Thwaite.
Garni dived into Thwaite, knocking him over. The flask went flying. He tried to shove a
finger down Thwaite's throat. Thwaite fought back. "The dwarf's gone mad!"
yelled Thwaite. "Help me!"
Sidney and Kraki exchanged glances. Kraki shrugged. "That's poison!" Garni
shouted.
Thwaite sat up with an alarmed expression on his face. "Oh, dear. Dear, me."
A human would have found the chapel grim. To an orc, it was pretty normal. Guttering
torches lit a garishly painted state of a multilimbed female deity with big fangs. She was
clutching the severed limbs of several victims. The altar was a stone slab with a
depression in the middle and blood runnels down the side. The walls of the chamber were
soot-stained limestone. Orcs were prostrate on the stone floor, muttering prayers into the
rock as Fragrit finished the sacrament.
Fragrit was a devout believer, yet he knew that whatever power this ceremony lent him
did not come from the goddess Szanbu alone. Beneath the altar was an object which emitted
a surprisingly strong magical field. The goddess' ceremony allowed him to tap some small
part of the object's magic and use it himself. He shuddered to think what might happen if
the spirit he was thus exploiting were ever to escape-and therefore prayed to Szanbu,
Mistress of Madness, with fervor.
The screams of the sacrificial victim died away. Fragrit turned to his congregation. He
raised the knife and beating heart over his head and said, "An' now, we is going to
sing da Hymn of Propitiation, number twenty-seven in yer hymnals."
As Fragrit cleansed the knife and burned the heart in a brazier, strong orcish voices
rang out with the time-honored words of the sacred song: "Oi, Miz Szanbu, please
don't hang us,
Or have us burned alive.
Please don't whip us or filet us, Other victims we'll provide.
"Cries of fear, an' cries of anguish Rise up to da heavens high;
Oi, Miz Szanbu, please don't eat us, We'll bring more blood bye an' bye."
The ceremony over, Fragrit stationed himself by the exit and shook the hands of his
parishioners as they filed out. "Nice ceremony, Padre," said one.
"Tanks, Dorog," said Fragrit. Others murmured their respects as they passed.
Drizhnakh, Garfok, and Spug bustled into the temple. "Oi!" said Drizhnakh.
"Boss!" The worshippers stopped drifting out and waited to see what was up.
"Yes, Drizhnakh?" responded Fragrit.
"Well, yer worshipfulness," said Drizhnakh, "we caught dat Lenny da
Lizard skulkin' around, and he says dere are a buncha youmans comin' our way. . . ."
Fragrit listened carefully to Drizhnakh's story. "Ah," he said. "Five
youmans an' a dwarf. You done good, Drizhnakh." He turned to the congregation.
"Awright, youse," he said. "Get yer weapons. Drizhnakh, Garfokget
Fifi."
Garfok looked at Fragrit, startled. "Not a chanst," he said. "Whaddaya
mean, not a chanst?" said Fragrit menacingly.
"I ain't gettin' Fifi," said Garfok. "No way. Unh uh. Get yourself some
udder sucker."
"You is gettin' Fifi," said Fragrit, "unless you maybe wanta be da next
sacrifice. Right, boys?"
Several of the other orcs- muttered agreement. They didn't want to be the one to
get Fifi, that was for sure.
Garfok looked with dismay from green orcish face to green orcish face. He swallowed.
"Awright," he said faintly.
Timaeus lay prostrate on the rocks, unconsciousand naked. The others stared at
him, more than a little puzzled. His lack of consciousness might be a side effect of the
spell or the result of backlashbut his nakedness was harder to explain.
Sidney shook Timaeus's shoulder. "Magister!" she said. "Magister! Wake
up!"
Timaeus groaned and flung one arm over his eyes. "Two lumps, Randolph," he
said. "And a kipper or two, if you'd be so kind." He sat up suddenly and looked
at his companions. "Oh," he said. "The monster . . . did I . . . ?"
"Yah," said Kraki. "Monster fall over. Knocked out. Good yob."
"Thank you," said Timaeus. He looked quite pleased with himself. Then, he
realized the state of his dress-or lack thereof. He blushed and positioned his hands
strategically. "Er . . . My clothes . . . What happened . . . ?"
Garni began looking through his pack. "Just a minute," he said. "I have
a spare blanket. Somewhere." He hauled out a small club, a piece of flint, a silver
spoon, a packet of needles.
"Lenny," said Nick to Sidney. "Eh?" said Timaeus.
"He rolled you," said Nick bluntly. Timaeus looked upset.
"Nonsense," he said.
"Yah," said Kraki. "Vhere is the little bugger, anyvay?"
"Don't you think it's kind of suspicious that he's not around?" Nick asked
Timaeus.
"Granted," said Timaeus, "but"
"If you'd been found by a bunch of orcs, say, you'd be dead. Who else would take
your clothes-and your purse, I betwithout offing you?" asked Sidney.
"My purse," said Timaeus somewhat dazed. "My . . . my pipe! Good lord,
the conniving little devil has stolen my pipe!" He looked genuinely upset for the
first time.
"Here's the blanket!" said Garni triumphantly from behind a pile of stuff.
Timaeus draped himself in it.
"Douse dem torches," Fragrit ordered. The orcs obeyed. That left his lantern,
with its closable door, as their only light. He surveyed his orcs; there were a good
forty, all males with weapons. "Guys wiv swords an' such in da front row," he
said. "Bows in da rear." They formed up.
Fifi stood in front of the orcs. All Fragrit could see, really, was her two hind legs
and her massive, scaled rear. Atop her perched Garfok.
It was an uncomfortable perch. The huge lizard's spine was, well, spiny. Garfok
shifted, trying to find a way to sit that didn't make his backside ache. He studied the
reins in his hands.
In theory, it was simple. If he yanked on the left rein, Fifi's head would pull left,
and she'd turn in that direction. If he yanked on the right rein; she'd turn right. There
was a smaller rope tied to one of her spinal knobs; if he pulled on the rope, the hood
covering Fifi's eyes would slip off. If he let the rope loose, the hood would drop back
over her eyes.
There were only a few problems with this, Garfok knew. First, Fifi was a lot stronger
than he was. If she wanted to turn left, all the yanking in the world wouldn't stop her.
Second, the hood was supposed to drop in place if he let the rope go-but it didn't look
any too secure to him. Third, he'd never ridden Fifi into battle before; training is all
very fine, but there was no predicting what she'd do when spells started zipping past her
and people started bellowing war cries. Fourth, Garfok was awfully visible to the enemy,
perched as he was on top of the lizard.
Fifth, Fifi's neck was long and flexible enough that if she wanted to look back at
Garfok-or at the orcs following hershe could do so pretty easily. The thought made
Garfok distinctly uneasy.
Fragrit walked to Fifi's hooded head and scratched behind the spikes. "My widdle
popsy," he crooned. "My widdle Fifi. Fifi wanna treat?" The massive, scaled
tail wagged sluggishly. Fragrit held out a handful of unrefined sugar; Fifi sucked it up.
Garfok was tempted to pull the hood up. "Awright!" shouted Fragrit.
"Forward!"
Thwaite was either in a coma or a meditative trance; it was hard to tell which. He lay
by the pile of gold, shivering violently.
"I vill carry priest," said Kraki patiently.
"Ye gods, man, do you realize what you're saying?" said Nick. "He must
weigh a hundred and fifty pounds if he weighs an ounce. That's a hundred and fifty pounds
of gold we won't be able to take out with us. ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY POUNDS OF GOLD! Do
you know how many pints of mead a hundred and fifty pounds of gold buys?"
"Are you saying we should dump him?" said Sidney.
"Tempting idea," said Nick. "I mean, he has sucked back enough
poison to kill a dozen men."
"But the priests of Dion are able, so it is said, to detoxify any poison . .
." said Timaeus.
"Yeah, maybe. Okay, okay. But if he dies on us, we're going to feel awfully
stupid."
Nick, Sidney, and Timaeus had loaded themselves with as much of the treasure as they
could possibly carry. Kraki could carry a fair amount, even burdened by the priest, but
that still left a heartbreakingly large pile of gold. "We've already got a king's
ransom," said Sidney.
"And suppose we had to ransom a king," muttered Nick. "Then we wouldn't
have anything left."
"Not much danger of that," said Garni. He had emptied his backpack and was
sorting his equipment into two piles: objects to be abandoned to make room for treasure,
and things he still wanted to carry. "Since there hasn't been a human king in two
millennia."
"Are you done yet?" asked Nick. "Yes," said Garni.
"You're throwing that much away?" said Nick, impressed.
"Eh? No, no. That's the necessary pile. I'm throwing away the other one."
"Gimme a break," Nick moaned. "Every ounce you can carry is worth a
pound argentum . . ."
"Nick, lad," said Garni, "we'll never get back up that shaft without my
mountaineering equipment. And any of these items"
"Could save our lives. Garni, you're killing me."
"Ve come back later," said Kraki. "Get rest of gold."
"No chance," said Nick. "There's no way we can beat that monster when
it's awake."
"Hokay," said Kraki. "I kill now."
Nick thought about that. "No," he said finally. "The odds are, you'll
wake it up. And if you do kill it, someone else will rip off the gold before we get
back."
"Yah," said Kraki. "Also, no glory in killing sleeping monster."
"Speaking of which," said Timaeus, "I'd just as soon get going before it
decides it's finished its nap." Garni nodded and began repacking his supplies.
"A little under two million," said Nick. "Vhat?" said Kraki.
"I figured it out," Nick said. "At sixpence a pint, a hundred and fifty
pounds of gold buys a little under two millions pints of mead."
Kraki patted Nick on the back. Nick stumbled under the impact. "Don't vorry,"
Kraki said. "Vith my share, I buy you all the mead you vant."
Fifi moved slowly, slowly down the corridor. Blindly, blindly, her head swung back and
forth, back and forth. Members of her species were not fast; they didn't need to be.
There was a scurrying noise down the corridor. Fragrit held the lantern higher.
Lenny came running around a corner, peering back over his shoulder. He had what looked
like a wizard's robes clutched in his arms.
Lenny turned, saw Fifi and the orcs, and stopped dead in his tracks. He was nonplussed.
"Look, guys," said Drizhnakh. "It's our pal Lenny."
"Lenny . . . Lenny come to find palth," the lizardman said nervously.
"Whatcha got dere, Lenny? C'mere," said Drizhnakh.
"Nothing," said Lenny, trying vainly to hide the robes behind his back.
"Lemme see dat," said Fragrit, snatching Lenny's burden. "Wizard's
robes," he said. "Coupla daggers. Underwear. You steal da guy's underwear,
Lenny?"
Lenny hung his head.
"A pouch wiv miscellaneous crap. Nice pipe," Fragrit said. "A
purse!" He opened it. "Looks like a coupla quid." He pocketed the purse.
"So where is dese guys at, Lenny?" said Drizhnakh. "Humanth beat up
Rog," Lenny said.
"Dey did, did dey? Dey must be pretty tough. Good thing we got Fifi along,"
said Fragrit, patting her flank.
Lenny looked at the creature and shuddered.
"Dey'll head for da shaft wiv da treasure," Garfok said from atop his mount.
"Right!" said Fragrit. "We'll nab 'em dere."
The passageway that led from the cavern ended in a sharp right turn. Beyond the turn
was a corridor that led past the pool, the shaftand, at the moment, Fifi and the
orcs.
"I'll scout ahead," Nick said, dumping his treasure. Silently, he moved into
the passageway. He turned.
"Somefing's down da corridor," Garfok hissed.
Fragrit opened the lantern door. Nick froze in the light, startled. He turned back. . .
.
Garfok pulled off Fifi's hood.
The lizard squinted in the light. Her eyes focused. She saw Nick. With a crackle of
energy, Nick Pratchitt turned to stone.
The adventurers watched Nick walk forward and turn. He was startled. He turned back to
call to them. He turned to stone.
They were stunned.
"Nick!" shouted Sidney and ran toward him.
Timaeus grabbed her. "No, you fool!" he said urgently.
Sidney stood, gulped, and eyed the statue. She looked at Timaeus and nodded shakily.
Garni set down his backpack. Cursing under his breath, he pawed through it rapidly,
tossing objects heedlessly, until he found the mirror.
"Da hood!" Fragrit said. Garfok dropped it in place.
They stood silently for a moment. Fragrit closed his lantern door. "He's right in
da entrance," Garfok said thoughtfully from atop Fifi. "I bet dey saw him when
Fifi stoned him."
"Now what?" said Drizhnakh.
"Dey're warned," said Garfok. "Da thing to do is attack while dey're
confused."
"Only, if we get ahead of Fifi we can't use her. Cause she might turn us to
stone," said Fragrit.
"So's we either lose our best weapon," said Garfok, "or we sit here
until dey figger out how to beat us."
"Right," said Drizhnakh. "Fragrit, you is a friggin' military genius, ya
know dat?"
"Shaddup, you two!" said Fragrit menacingly. "I is beginning to think I
know who is gonna be da next sacrifice."
They stood in the darkness, wondering what to do.
Garni tied the mirror to his eleven-foot pole and extended the pole down the passage.
He juggled the mirror until he could see around the turn. "Can't see a thing,"
he said. "It's dark down there."
"Here," Sidney said. She lit a torch and threw it toward the turn in the
passage. Garni studied the mirror.
A torch rolled into the corridor. There was some kind of pole. And a shiny thing . . .
"Keep da hood in place!" Fragrit shouted.
Garfok was just about to pull the rope but stopped.
Drizhnakh looked at the packed orcish formation. "If dey use a fireball on us,
we're goners," he told Fragrit. Fragrit glared.
"Awright!" Fragrit yelled, coming to a decision. "Garfok! Get Fifi
movin'. You udder guys; move forward, behind Fifi. Bowmen! Nock yer weapons."
"Boy," said Drizhnakh caustically, "dis'll be a speedy charge."
Slowly, slowly, the lizard moved forward.
"Oy," Garni said, peering into the mirror. "At least twenty orcs. All
armed. And some creature I've never seen before, some kind of lizard. One of them is
mounted on it."
Timaeus peered over Garni's shoulder at the mirror. "I believe it's a
basilisk," he said. "They're quite rare. That would explain what happened to
Nick."
"It would?" said Sidney.
Even without his pipe, Timaeus managed to give the impression of pontificating.
"Yes. Their glance turns living creatures to stone. They're herbivorous, actually;
quite an effective magical defensive sys"
"They're coming this way!" Garni said.
Timaeus sighed. "My friends," he said, "I am sorry. My powers are
exhausted, and in their absence, I fear we have little hope of victory. A basilisk is a
fearsome foe indeed."
Kraki slapped him on the back. "Is hokay," he said. "You defeat big
monster. No vonder nothing left."
"And yet," said Timaeus, "it is I who have led you to this evil hour,
and I who must bear the responsibility for our failure."
Sidney looked at Nick's statue and sighed. "We could run," she said.
"Where?" said Garni.
Kraki flexed his muscles and drew his sword. "Is hokay," he said. "Ve
kill many to serve us in undervorld. It vill be glorious."
Garni looked up. "It isn't over yet," he said. He pulled the pole in and
untied the mirror.
Garni stood by the lip of the passageway. To see around the corner without risking
himself, he held his mirror out with one hand. The others stood flat against the cavern
wall.
Slowly, slowly, the basilisk turned the corner. Fifi's eyes were unhooded; she was
going into battle. She brushed against Nick, who fell over with a clunk. She turned. The
orcs trailed her.
Fifi trundled forward. On her long neck, her head was the first thing to come through
the entrance and into the cavern. It swayed back and forth with every step. Fifi didn't
notice the humans and the dwarf crouched along the cavern walls.
Fifi's head swung toward Garni. He grabbed it, turned it toward him . . .
And held the mirror before the basilisk's eyes. Fifi regarded herself dimly. She
probably never realized what she was looking at.
Crackle. Fifi turned to stone.
Kraki roared and swung into the entranceway. He charged the orcs. Clad only in a
blanket, Timaeus stepped next to Fifi's statue and began to chant.
On her hands and knees, Sidney scrambled under Fifi's belly toward the orcs, a knife in
her teeth.
Garni charged, waving a battle-axe.
"Fire!" yelled Fragrit. A swarm of arrows shot forward.
One bounced off Garni's helm. One hit Kraki's good leg. Unconcernedly, he pulled it
out, shouted "YAH HAH!", and charged, flourishing his sword. Heads and limbs
flew. He was always happiest when killing things.
Timaeus ducked behind Fifi to avoid the arrows, then stepped back out and began
chanting again. Fragrit was chanting, too.
Sidney scrambled out between Fifi's front legs and buried her dagger in the throat of a
surprised orc. She drew her sword and engaged two others. Garni killed two orcs before the
rest withdrew around him, unwilling to
face his whirling axe. He stood with his back to the corridor wall. "Come here,
greenie," he said to one. "Think you can kill me just by being ugly?"
Timaeus conjured a ball of flame in his hand and hurled it at the orcs . . .
It fizzled. He cursed.
A ray of blackness shot from Fragrit's pointing finger and enveloped Timaeus. The
wizard fell.
Three orcs fought Sidney. She took a wound to her sword arm and dropped the weapon. One
of the orcs clubbed her in the temple with a spear. She fell to her hands and knees.
Quickly, they tackled her and bound her arms and legs.
"Sidney!" yelled Garni. He tried to go to her, but the orcs moved in, and he
was forced back to the wall.
Kraki fought all the way through the orcish horde, from one end to the other. He was
covered in green gore and grinning maniacally. "Some fun, hah?" he asked an orc
as he chopped him open from shoulder to breastbone. The orc did not reply.
Lenny was cowering in the rear.
"You!" yelled Kraki. "I kill you now, lizard pig!" The sentiment,
however zoologically absurd, was at least heartfelt.
Lenny ran. Kraki ran after him.
"Get da bowmen up here," said Drizhnakh. They stood behind the orcs facing
Garni and fired at the dwarf. An arrow hit Garni in the shoulder. His axework faltered. He
spat at Drizhnakh.
The orcs moved in. He wounded one before they bashed him unconscious.
The orcs stood panting. Slowly, they realized the battle was over. Fragrit hugged the
head of the basilisk. "Fifi," he moaned. "Dey gots ya, Fifi."
Drizhnakh snorted and turned away. "Listen, youse," he said to the orcs.
"Pick up da youmans and da dwarf. An' da treasure. We'll take it
back to da temple. An' take da youman statue, too; it'll make a nice souvenir." He
smiled and tugged on his tusks.
"Poor widdle Fifi," Fragrit said forlornly, petting the stone head.
"We better get out of here before dat guy wiv da sword comes back," said
Dorog. "He's tough."
Timaeus was wrapped tight in the bonds of a glowing black net. He struggled but could
not break Fragrit's spell. Three orcs picked him up like a sack of potatoes. "Release
me at once!" shouted the wizard. "I am an Athelstani citizen!"
The orcs chortled.
Kraki stopped and leaned against the cool wall of the corridor. He couldn't keep up
with the lizard, not with the wound in his leg. He panted. He began to realize that he'd
made a serious mistake. His friends were in
danger back there. He hit his forehead with the heel of his hand. "Stupid,
stupid," he told himself. He had to get back.
Onlywhich way was back? Where were they? Where was he, for that matter?
It was dark. He couldn't see anything. The stone was cool. The only sound was the slow
drip of water somewhere in the middle distance.
VI.
"I sez sacrifice dem now," said Drizhnakh. "Dat way, we can have
mansflesh for din-din."
"Yeah!" said Spug enthusiastically. "Mansflesh. Yum!"
"No way," said Fragrit. "Szanbu is already had a sacrifice today."
The three humans and the dwarf lay tumbled together in the odiferous cell where they'd
been tossed. Filthy straw covered the stone floor. The orcs argued outside the barred
window. Thwaite still shivered in the throes of belladonna poisoning.
"Garni?" asked Sidney.
"Yes?" the dwarf replied. His head hurt like the devil. He was seeing double.
"Are you all right
"I think I have a concussion," he said. "And you, Magister?"
Timaeus cleared his throat. "I'm fine, save for a bruised ego," he said.
"We need to get them to open the door," said Sidney.
"Why?" asked Timaeus.
"So I can escape," said Sidney.
Timaeus wiggled, trying to find a more comfortable position in the straw. "And how
are you going to manage that, my dear?" he said. "I'm out of magic. The two of
you are wounded. Thwaite is poisoned. We're all tied up. Nick is a piece of garden
statuary, and the gods only know where Kraki is."
Sidney chuckled. "Show a little faith," she said.
"Right," said Timaeus. He sighed, then yelled: "We have a recipe!"
There was silence from outside the door. "What da hell?" said Fragrit. "We
have a recipe," said Timaeus, "for mansflesh."
"What is you blabbin' about?" said Drizhnakh.
"We took it off some trolls," said Timaeus. "It really sounded quite
good. If you must cook us, I would appreciate it if you'd take some care in the
preparation."
"Shaddup in dere," said Fragrit.
"I mean, bad enough to be eaten by orcs. But if that is one's fate, one much
prefers to go as a meal fit for kings, don't you think?" "Shaddup," said
Fragrit.
"How about some nice thigh steaks au poivre?" said Timaeus. "I
have no idea whether human diaphragm will double for brisket, but my mother's cook had the
most marvelous"
The door slammed open. "Shaddup you," said Fragrit, driving a boot into
Timaeus's aforementioned diaphragm.
A small black cat slipped out the open door. It limped on two legs. Sidney, thought
Garni. I had no idea.
The orc kicked Timaeus again. "Don't play with your dinner," gasped the
wizard.
"Yah," Kraki said to himself. "This is basilisk." There was no
mistaking the stony scales and the skinny neck, even in pitch darkness. "But vhere
did they go from here?"
"Mrowr?" said Sidney inquisitively.
"What's that?" said Kraki. Sidney came up and brushed against his legs. Kraki
gave a start, then reached down and pet her. "Is kitty-cat," he said.
"Pretty pussy." He stroked the length of her and scratched behind her ears. She
purred. "How does pussy-cat get in caverns?" he asked.
"Mrow, " she responded and walked away from him. He followed a little,
then stopped.
"Now vhat?"
"Mrowr!" Sidney said insistently. She came back to rub up against his
legs again, then walked away in the same direction as previously. "Pussycat vants
Kraki to follow?" he asked.
"Mrow, " Sidney said, and walked a little farther away. "Is
crazy," Kraki said.
Sidney hissed, then meowed again. "Mrowr!"
Kraki sighed. "Hokay," he said. "Vith magic, anything is possible. And I
got no better idea vhat to do."
"Orcs an' fellow believers," Fragrit intoned, "we is here today once
again to propitiate Mistress Szanbu, Goddess of Madness, she whose curses roil da world,
she who loves to torture small, furry animals. Oi,
Szanbu, hear me now; we tanks you for our victory over da youmans." Fragrit
motioned toward a large, leather-bound chest that stood by the altar. "We tanks you
for da treasure dey was carryin', an' we promise dat a goodly portion will be spent to
purchase further victims. Accept from us dis sacrifice, in place of our own miserable
lives. Let us live, so dat we may bring you further sacrifices.
"Awright, fellas," he continued. "Let's have da cleric first."
Garfok and Dorog swung Father Thwaite's limp body up onto the altar and fixed the manacles
in place.
"I don't want to watch this," Garni said. Timaeus looked sick and made no
reply. He eyed Nick's statue, now occupying a niche to the right of the altar. He prayed
that somehow Kraki would find them.
Who is that?
Victims of belladonna poisoning do not enter a coma. Father Thwaite was unconscious
only because he was deep in a meditative trance. His mind travelled the veins and byways
of his body, helping his liver extract the poison from his bloodstream, calming his
rapidly beating heart when the belladonna's stimulus threatened to make it burst. An
untrained man would have been dead many times over. Only Thwaite's powers stood between
him and death.
Still, his body shook with the poison. It stimulated his heart, his lungs, his muscles;
he twitched, his heart beat madly, he breathed in short gasps. Were he not meditating, he
would have been conscious: indeed, he would have been preternaturally alert.
The voice in his mind broke his concentration, as being hauled around the caverns by
the barbarian had not, as the battle with the orcs had not, as the stench of the cell had
not.
No one belonged in his mind. Who? he screamed silently. What?
A human, said the voice. Beware, kinsman. You are in danger. Thwaite's eyes
flew open. Above him stood an orc with a knife; and beyond the orc, a wooden carving of
Szanbu. Thwaite's own limbs were manacled to an altar. He knew enough about the goddess to
know a human sacrifice when he was one.
"Dion," gasped Thwaite, calling on his god, "aid me now!" It was an
expression of despair; he had no hope that anyone would answer.
And then, something happened that Thwaite had problems remembering later. Something
very strange. Suddenly, he no longer felt the belladonna in his veins. Instead, he
feltgood. Happy. Wonderful, in fact.
The orc was heating a sacrificial blade in a brazier. The blade glowed red. Well, maybe
not wonderful, Thwaite thought.
But the feeling was familiar, somehow. He felt likelike he'd just had six pints
of stout, he realized. But without the need to pee.
The orcish priest backed away, a look of horror on his tusked face. Thwaite didn't know
it, but his entire body was englobed in brilliant, golden light.
Father Thwaite looked at the niche to the right of the altar. It held Nick Pratchitt,
now a hunk of stone. Thwaite knew, somehow, that he must touch the statue's toe.
With a crack of thunder, Father Thwaite sat up from the altar, pulling the manacles
right out of the rock. His muscles no longer twitched. However, his nose was red, and he
was grinning happily.
"Boo," he said to Fragrit, who gulped, backed away some more, and fell off
the stage and into the congregation.
In the distance there was thunder.
"Thunder?" said Kraki. "Vhy is there thunder in cavern?"
Sidney would have shrugged her shoulders if she'd had any. At least in this form, she
could see in the dark. "Mraow, " she complained and led Kraki toward the
orcish temple.
Thwaite touched the toe of Nick's statue.
Power thrilled through Thwaite's body. He could feel it pouring out of the altar,
through him, and into the statue. The golden glow about Thwaite gradually diminished, and
an equally golden glow spread across Nick Pratchitt. The orcs watched in awe.
Fragrit peered over the lip of the altar. In sudden fear, he realized the power he'd
tapped for so long was free.
As suddenly as it had started, the power stopped flowing. Thwaite fell back on the
altar. He felt wonderful. The room spun about him. He knew he should get up and do
something, but it felt so much nicer just to sprawl there.
The statue looked down and opened its hands, the glow suffusing its form.
Sidney transformed. "Kraki," she said.
The barbarian whirled in the darkness. "Vhat?" he cried. "Sidney?"
"Yeah," she said. "We're almost there."
"Vhere?" "The temple. Do you have an extra weapon?"
"Yah, a dagger. Here. Vhere did you come from?" "Thanks. Never
mind."
Standing still, Nick Pratchitt rose out of the niche and floated across the temple.
Nick touched Timaeus, then Garni. The bonds slipped from their bodies. Garfok and
Dorog, who'd been holding the prisoners, were forced away as if by invisible hands.
Garni's wounds closed.
"My . . ." said Timaeus wonderingly, "my magic has been restored."
The tableau held for a long moment. Then, the golden glow about Nick Pratchitt
disappeared. He fell heavily to the ground, unconscious and, to all appearances, a normal
human being.
"Dey have defiled da temple!" screamed Fragrit. "Get 'em!" With a
roar, the orcs boiled toward the altar.
Timaeus began to chant.
The temple door slammed open.
"Die, foul vights!" said Kraki. He charged in, waving his sword. Sidney,
naked, kept close to him, holding a dagger. The orcs, threatened from both the front and
rear of the temple, milled confusedly.
"Vights?" one orc said to another. "What does he mean, vights?"
"I think he means wights," said the other.
"But we isn't wights," said the first. "We is orcs." "Beats
me," said the second.
Kraki sliced both their heads off.
The orcs divided. Some charged Timaeus and Garni; others turned to face Kraki and
Sidney.
"Duck!" yelled Timaeus. Sidney and Garni dropped prone. "Vhat?"
said Kraki. Sidney pulled him down.
"Duck?" said an orc. "What does he mean, duck?" "I
dunno," said another. "We is orcs, not Timaeus's fireball exploded.
A handful of orcs survived, huddled at the side of the temple. All were scorched.
Fragrit was dead, Garfok and Drizhnakh among the survivors. "YAH HA!" yelled
Kraki and waded into the orcs, whipping his sword back and forth. He was in his element.
Orcish gore flew.
"Oi, Garfok," said Dorog. "Dat guy wiv da sword is gonna kill us
all." "Parley!" yelled Drizhnakh.
"YAH HA!" yelled Kraki again. He was happy. He was killing things.
"Parley! Parley!" the orcs yelled, scrambling to get out of Kraki's way.
Kraki paused, a little puzzled. "Come back," he yelled. "Fight like
orcs, damn you!"
"Can we please surrender?" pled Drizhnakh. "Pretty please?"
"YAH HA!" shouted the barbarian, oblivious, as he killed three more orcs.
Drizhnakh had a brainstorm. He threw his sword against the temple wall with a clang. He
walked up to Kraki, lay down, and exposed his throat. "Awright," he said.
"G'wan. Kill me."
Kraki drew back his sword, then paused. "No fun," he complained. "Too
easy. Get up and fight like orc."
"No," said Drizhnakh. "If ya wants to kill me, it's gotta be like
dis." All the remaining orcs tossed their weapons away.
"Bah," said Kraki.
"Oh, let them go, Kraki," said Timaeus. "They're no threat."
Kraki pouted. "Hokay," he said reluctantly, hooking a thumb at the door.
"Get lost."
The orcs scrambled out of the temple.
If the temple had looked grim before, it looked even grimmer now. Torches continued to
gutter along the wall. Szanbu glared from behind the altar. Bits of orc lay hither and
yon. Kraki sat down heavily on the dais. "Whew," he said and stretched out.
Nick rose groggily, Sidney supporting him. "Are you okay?" she asked.
"Yeah, I guess so." He noticed Sidney's state of undress. She was smeared with
gore. "You've looked better, doll," he said.
Sidney looked at herself. "Uh, yeah," she said. "Garni! Do you have
another blanket?"
"Aye," said the dwarf reluctantly. He was beginning to get a little tired of
unpacking and repacking and unpacking . . .
Timaeus was trying to get sense out of Thwaite. Thwaite wasn't being terribly
cooperative. He was singing bits and snatches of drinking songs. "What happened there
on the altar?" Timaeus demanded.
"Hmm? Feel wonderful! Wonderful. And a hey down to the well, me lad, and a hey
down to the well . . ."
"You glowed golden."
"Golden? Golden? Golden the ship was, oh oh oh . . ." Thwaite staggered away
from Timaeus, beaming broadly.
Timaeus wondered somewhat irritably how the cleric had managed to find booze while
poisoned, comatose, and bound to an altar.
Kraki sat up and wandered over to the altar. He grabbed the edge and pulled. It moved
slightly. "Top comes off," he reported, and made to remove it.
"Wait!" shouted Garni.
Kraki looked down at the dwarf. "Vhat?" he demanded.
"It could be trapped," said Garni. "Leave the job to
professionals." Kraki scowled. "Bah," he said.
"I'll do it," said Nick. He motioned Kraki away; the barbarian stepped off
the dais reluctantly.
Nick borrowed Sidney's ear trumpet and tapped over the altar, listening carefully. He
frowned. "Magister," he said to Timaeus, "do you detect any magic within
the altar?"
Timaeus raised his eyebrows, shrugged, and chanted briefly. There was a flash before
his eyes. The wizard jumped back, blinking furiously. "My dear Nicholas," he
said slowly, "that altar virtually exudes power. I've rarely encountered a magical
field of such intensity."
Nick's eyes went wide. "We'd better be careful then," he said. "Yust
lift the damn top off," Kraki said impatiently.
Nick studied the altar for a moment, then looked at the statue of Szanbu. He took a
coil of rope and tied it through the holes in the altar where the manacle pins had
penetrated. He looped the rope through the brackets that held Szanbu's statue in place.
He motioned everyone away from the altar, moved as far away himself as the rope would
let him, and pulled on the rope, using the brackets as a primitive pulley.
The rope strained. The altar top moved slightly. The brackets pulled free from the wall
and Szanbu's statue crashed onto the floor.
Thwaite winced. Szanbu was far from his favorite goddess, but desecration was
desecration.
Nick moved up to the altar and, crouching by its side, stuck a knife under the altar
top. Carefully, covering his eyes, he pried the top up a crack.
Nothing happened.
He moved away from the altar and picked up the rope again. Standing as far away as
possible, he pulled on the rope. The altar didn't budge. Kraki joined him and pulled too.
The altar top slid off and hit the floor with a crash. It broke into several pieces.
Nothing else happened.
"Hoo boy," said Kraki sarcastically. "Big trap in that vone, for
sure." He and Nick went forward to peer into the altar.
Nick gasped.
Lying in the altar was an exquisitely detailed, minutely rendered statue. The artistry
alone was breathtaking. It was a life-sized depiction of a human male, wildly mustachioed,
clad in pants and a leather harness, unarmed. His head was raised, as if he were looked
upward; although he held himself proudly, his expression was one of trepidation.
But it was neither the artistry nor the subject of the statue that caught the eye. It
was the material.
The statue shone richly, redly in the torchlight, shone with the unmistakable rosy tint
of athenor.
Athenor: chiefest among the magical metals. Athenor: which cannot be termed pink, nor
red, any more than gold can be called yellow. Athenor: from which the greatest, most
legendary objects of power are formed. Athenor: ounce for ounce and grain for grain, far
more valuable than gold.
Cautiously, Nick reached into the altar and rapped the statue. "Solid," he
whispered. They were looking at a fortune; several fortunes; wealth beyond imagining.
"Who is it?" Garni asked.
Timaeus fingered his beard. "I don't know," he said. "But his garb is
archaic. It must be immensely old."
Garni ran his hand along the statue and peered at it closely. "No tool
marks," he said. "I can't imagine how it was cast."
"Let's get it out," said Nick.
Kraki reached in and pulled. The statue barely budged. "Must veigh a ton," he
grunted.
They strung ropes under the statue and, pulling together, managed to haul it from the
altar.
"How in blazes are we going to get this thing up the shaft?" asked Timaeus
plaintively.
"Look," said Garni, "we'll worry about getting it out later. We still
have other things to worry about. The chest, for one. And we still have wounded."
The others fell silent.
"Okay," said Nick. He walked to the chest by the altar and began to tap it.
"Not again," muttered Kraki.
"Right," said Father Thwaite, still dangerously red-faced but less obviously
inebriated than before. "You're hurt the worst, Sidney, me lass . . ."
She shook her head, "I'm sorry, Father."
Garni took the priest by one arm. "She can't let you cure her," he said
quietly.
"Why not?"
"She has . . . the taint of chaos." "She's a sh-shapechanger?"
"It isn't widely known."
"You bet. People don't like shapechangers. Why doesn't she do something about it?
Therianthropy can be cured."
"Yes, Father. But in her occupation, it comes in handy." "Oh? What is
she?"
"A cat. Who moves silently and sees in darkness. And can get places a human
can't."
"A pussycat," said Thwaite. "That's nice. But . . . ," he furrowed
his brow, "if she dies unsanctified"
"That's her risk."
While they talked, Nick fiddled with the chest. He listened with the ear trumpet. He
pressed all over the chest for buttons or moving panels. He tied a rope around it and
tugged. He cut one of the leather straps that bound the chest, and began to work the strap
free.
Kraki watched Nick with increasing impatience. "Bah!" he said finally.
"Enough vith this silliness. Vhen you go through a door in a tavern, do you check it
for traps?"
"No," said Nick, "but"
"It's yust a chest. Vaste of time. I show you how." He muscled Nick aside and
yanked open the lid.
There was an explosion. Three steel darts shot forth and buried themselves in Kraki's
chest. There was a faint hiss as a greenish gas spurted out the side. Smoke rose from the
lid.
Kraki inhaled the gas.
"See?" he said hoarsely, bleeding from the dart wounds. "Is how varrior
opens chest." He pounded his chest, coughed vigorously, and keeled over with a crash.
Thwaite stumbled to the barbarian, pulling out his incense and aspergillum.
"Thoroughly unprofessional," Garni muttered, shaking his head.
Nick grinned bemusedly and peered inside the chest. "Looks like most of the
treasure the orcs took off us," he said.
"More stuff to get up the shaft," Timaeus grumbled, wandering over to look.
"My pipe!' he yelped happily, diving into the chest. He pulled out his pipe and wiped
it with his blanket, then started pawing through the chest, looking for pipeweed.
VII.
Just dragging the statue to the base of the shaft was exhausting. They were all
sweating, and Kraki, who'd borne the brunt of the labor, was panting heavily. The shaft
itself was daunting. Their lantern lit only the first twenty cubits, but that was quite
enough. They could see a five-foot cliff, thirty-degree slopes of smooth, water-worn
rocks, and boulders blocking what would otherwise be the obvious path. They knew full well
that the traverse became no easier at higher elevations.
"Can we set up some kind of pulley system?" Sidney asked Garni. The dwarf
considered.
"I don't see how," he replied. "I only have about fifty feet of rope. To
bear the weight of the statue, I'd have to quadruple it up-that only leaves a length of
about ten feet. If we can find someplace to rest the statue every few feet while we move
the pulley, we might be able to do itbut you remember what the shaft is like.
Slanting places, cliffs, boulders . . ."
"Yeah." She turned to Timaeus. "How about magic?"
He puffed on his pipe. "Madam, we've been over this. The statue weighs close to a
ton. The shaft is at least fifty feet high. The amount of energy I'd have to expend to
lift a ton that far against the natural tendency of earthly objects to fall is simply
prohibitive. Besides which, I am no polymage; my idiom is fire. Now, if you could find me
a supply of magical energy to tap . . ." Timaeus took out his pipe and held it,
staring into space. "Hmm."
"How about the statue itself? You said it holds a great deal of magical energy. .
. ."
"Yes, bound in some way I cannot begin to fathom. But I have another idea."
"What the hell are they doing up there?" said Sidney impatiently. Timaeus and
Kraki had disappeared up the shaft thirty minutes ago to prepare some spell the wizard had
in mind. They'd left the rest of the party with the statue. Sidney eyed the pool
suspiciously and worried about crocodiles. And about orcs. "What if those orcs come
back?" she asked.
"Calm down," said Nick. "Everything'll be fine."
They stood by the base of the shaft. There was nothing to be heard but the occasional
splash of a croc or squeak of a bat. And . . .
"Ssst! I hear something," Nick whispered. Walking on his toes, he moved out
into the darkness.
There was the sound of a brief struggle.
"Well, well, well," Nick said. "What have we here?" He came back
into the circle of light cast by the lantern, clutching Lenny by the neck. "Lenny run
away from bad orcth," Lenny said, studying possible escape routes. "Come to find
friendth!"
Nick chuckled.
"What did I tell you, lizard?" Sidney said coldly. Lenny said nothing. He
looked forlorn.
"You betrayed us," she said.
"No! No! Lenny alwayth faithful. Bad orcth capture Lenny. Torture Lenny! Thay bad
thingth. Make Lenny tell about friendth. Lenny want to help! Bad orcth make Lenny do bad
thingth!"
"I told you that if you betrayed us, I'd hunt you down and kill you, lizard,"
Sidney said.
"No! No! Don't kill Lenny! Lenny alwayth faithful! Lenny found good
treasures!" His legs windmilled desperately.
"I think he'd make a nice pair of boots," Nick said, studying the lizardman,
still holding Lenny by the neck. Lenny whimpered.
"You can't just kill him out of hand," said Father Thwaite. He was sitting on
the rocks, clutching his head. He was in the unhappy state between drunkenness and
sobriety, when one is neither entirely sober nor free of the pains of hangover.
"Why not?" said Nick.
"He does have a soul," said Thwaite, "and he is no immediate danger to
us."
"If we let him go, he'll just screw someone else," said Sidney.
"No! No! Lenny reform! Lenny thee light! Lenny join monathtery! Lenny thpend retht
of life repenting thins!" He began keening hymns, slightly off key.
"Shut up, you," Nick said.
Garni cleared his throat. "I have a practical consideration to offer," he
said.
"What's that?" asked Sidney.
"We need to get an awful lot of stuff up the shaft," said Garni. "He's
an extra pair of arms and legs."
"True," said Nick, grinning. "Oh, all right. You live, Lenny, old
pal." "Lenny very, very grateful. Lenny love human friendth. Lenny do anything
for humanth!"
"Stop grovelling!" snarled Sidney.
Timaeus was puffing. Kraki's torso was covered with a sheen of sweat. The pile of rocks
was turning into a sizable hill.
They had scavenged the tabletop from the room where the trolls had been killed.
Currently, it was standing between two outcroppings, a little way down the slope, holding
the pile of rocks in place. "I hope this is enough," Kraki said. "Board is
bulging." He was right. The inch-thick oak was visibly bending under the weight.
"I believe this will do," said Timaeus. He paused to think, filled his pipe,
andBang!lit it. Flames enveloped his head, then gradually dissipated.
"How does this vork, anyvay?" Kraki asked.
"It's quite an elegant spell, really," Timaeus said enthusiastically.
"All we do is establish a magical similarity between these rocks and the statue. But
we reverse the sign on the position vector. That way, the potential energy of the rocks
lifts the statue! We don't have to invest much power ourselves, except to establish the
identity."
"Hah?" "Er . . . in layman's terms, eh? Ah, we make the boulders and the
statue like two sides of a pulley, all right? Then, we release the boulders."
"They fall."
"That's right. And the statue rises."
"If you say so. Sounds like silliness to me."
"Don't worry, it'll work," Timaeus said. He turned to call down the shaft:
"Fore!" he shouted.
A voice echoed back up. "What?"
Timaeus began to chant in a language Kraki didn't know. Timaeus waved his arms, chalked
runes on the ground, and moved in a kind of dance. The smoke from his pipe formed patterns
about his head.
"Now!" he shouted. Kraki yanked on the tabletop. With a roar, the boulders
hurtled down the shaft.
"What is keeping those bozos?" said Sidney.
Suddenly, the statue leapt upwards, as if yanked by a string.
The spell may have been elegant, but its effects were not. The statue flew up the
shaft, bounding off obstructions, clanging off walls, and spinning violently. The racket
was tremendous.
"Good thing it's made of athenor," muttered Garni. "Anything else would
be mashed shapeless."
The noise of its passage died away. Then, there was another noise, like the roar of the
sea.
"What's that?" asked Nick. It got louder.
"I don't know," said Garni.
A rock nearly hit Thwaite. He dived for cover as it bounced down the corridor.
"Run!" yelled Sidney. They all ran for the cavern. A veritable avalanche
thundered about them.
The statue narrowly missed Kraki as it flew up the shaft, spun past him, bounced off
the ceiling, and ricocheted violently down the corridor. It clanged to a stop. The
barbarian swore.
Timaeus smiled around his pipe and went to examine the statue. It was unharmed.
Although the statue's expression had not changed, Timaeus got the distinct impression it
was glaring at him. "Sorry, old bean," he muttered. He rather hoped they had no
further adventures. His powers were just about exhausted once again.
Sidney panted as she pulled herself up the rope to the top of the shaft. "You
could have killed us!" she yelled.
"I called a warning down the shaft," Timaeus said huffily. "
'Fore?"' said Sidney. "You call that a warning?"
"Er . . . well, it did seem appropriate. Besides, I told you what I was going to
do before Kraki and I climbed the shaft."
"You babbled something about rocks and kinetic energy! You didn't say you were
going to start a landslide!"
"Sidney," Nick said, joining them, "cut it out, okay?" "We
could have been"
"Look, it worked, all right? And nobody was hurt. You asked him to do the
impossible, and he did it."
Sidney sighed. "Okay," she said. "I'm sorry. But, dammit, explain what
you're going to do next time, all right?"
Timaeus puffed on his pipe with mild embarrassment.
Crouching in hiding, Garfok elbowed Drizhnakh in the ribs. "Did ya see dat?"
he asked wonderingly.
"Yeah," said Drizhnakh. "Dat statue's gotta be worth a friggin'
fortune."
"Yeah. Too bad we isn't strong enough to ambush dem again."
"Uh huh," said Drizhnakh thoughtfully. "But I knows someone dat might be
innerested. . . ."
"Pay Lenny now?" said Lenny.
"You're lucky we don't kill you, you little jerk," Garni said. "Get
lost." "Three pennieth an hour! You thaid tho!"
"If you're still here by the time I count ten, you're a dead lizard."
It was an exhausted troupe of adventurers that staggered into Gateway, pulling the
massive statue of a man by its shoulders. The low stone buildings and dingy shops looked a
lot like paradise. Or at least one of paradise's lesser suburbs.
"Hello, gents," said an orcish shopkeeper. "Had a good haul, huh?"
"What's it to you?" said Garni.
The shopkeeper wiped his hands on his apron. "Nuffing much," he said,
"'cept dat I gots da finest duty-free merchandise in dis whole burg." "My
good fellow," said Timaeus. "We are, as you see, overladen with
recent acquisitions. Why should we wish to burden ourselves further?" "Well,
buddy, dere's a simple answer to dat. Ya see, da grand duke takes ten percent of anything
you take trough customs."
"Ten percent? Gadzooks!"
Sidney nodded. "That's right," she said. "Standard tariff for
treasure." "An'," the orc continued, "each individual can take up to a
gallon of booze, two ounces of pipeweed, and tree quid of miscellaneous goods into da
grand duchy duty free."
"I see," said Father Thwaite, eyeing the orc's floor-to-ceiling racks of
bottled goods. Remembering his oath, he turned to Nick. "Perhaps you would be so good
as to purchase me a bottle, lad," he said.
While the others loaded up on duty-free goodies, Timaeus conferred with Nick. "How
are they going to take ten percent of the statue?" he worried. "It's worth the
rest of our treasure several times over."
Nick smiled. "Leave it to me," he said. "It'll be a snap. I wonder if
they've got a hardware store around here?" He wandered down the street. Timaeus
stared after him, then shrugged and went to look at the pipeweed. The variety was
astonishing. "Quite a little racket," he mused, looking the store over.
Somewhere, Nick had found two mules and a cart, which certainly made hauling the statue
easier. He sat in the cart, twitching the reins. Father Thwaite, already well lubricated,
lay in the back on top of the tarp that covered the statue. Kraki sat with him. The three
passed an open bottle of brandy back and forth; it was already a good third empty.
Timaeus puffed on his pipe and fretted. "I do wish Nick weren't drinking," he
told Sidney.
"Why?" she said, somewhat surprised.
"I haven't the slightest idea how we're going to get the statue through customs.
Nick says he has a planbut if he's drunk . . ."
"Don't worry," Sidney said, smiling slightly. "He'll manage."
"Why do you suppose he painted it brown?"
"It was kind of obvious unpainted, wasn't it?"
"I tell you I got no papers, pig!" Kraki roared, shaking the official by
his tunic.
"Kraki," said Nick, "you really ought to learn how to deal with
bureaucrats. This is getting us nowhere."
"Hokay," said Kraki disgustedly, dropping the customs official and turning on
his heel. "You talk to him."
"Sir," Nick said, "what is the procedure used when an individual from an
ungoverned area enters the realm?"
The bureaucrat rubbed the back of his neck and swung his head back and forth, checking
to make sure nothing was broken. "He's issued papers of transit, unless there's
reason to believe he's an undesirable, in which case he's turned away at the border."
"So shouldn't you issue him letters of transit?"
The bureaucrat sighed. "It's highly irregular," he said. "Anyone who
goes into the Caverns of Cytorax is supposed to have papers already." Nick flipped a
large gold coin in the air and caught it. The bureaucrat's
eyes followed the sovereign hungrily; it was as much as he was paid in a week.
"I'll bet you're saying it'd be illegal for you to issue Kraki papers."
"Well, no, actually I do have that authority. . . ."
"Huh," said Nick, flipping the coin again. "I guess it's not my lucky
day. You win that bet." He flipped the coin to the bureaucrat, who neatly caught and
pocketed it, looking around to make sure no one else was watching.
Customs was a long, low room with a half-dozen tables. They brought the cart and their
equipment up to one table and began dumping the treasure onto it. A customs official stood
by; his eyes bugged as he saw the quantity of gold they unloaded. Other officials were
busy checking travellers at other tables; Gateway had apparently been doing a brisk
business in duty-free items this morning.
The official made a quick division of the treasure, expertly appraising some of the
jeweled weapons and chalices and taking a rough ten percent for the crown. Then, he
pointed to the cart.
"What's in there?" he asked. The tarp covered the statue.
"A, ah, religious reliquary," said Timaeus nervously. "Of little
intrinsic worth. Artistic value only."
"Let me see," said the official, twitching back the tarp. The brownpainted
statue did not look particularly impressive. He took out a pocketknife and scraped a small
area free of paint.
His jaw dropped. "Guh," he said expressively.
Smoothly, Nick took one of his arms. "Keep your cool, my friend," he said.
"What's your name?"
"Corcoran Evanish," the official said. "Why?"
"Well, Mr. Evanish," said Nick, "you've just become a rich man."
"What?" said the official.
"That statue, as you must realize, is worth considerably more than the rest of our
treasure put together."
"I wouldn't doubt it," Evanish said fervently.
"I believe you'd normally confiscate the item, auction it to the highest bidder,
and forward ninety percent of the auction price to us."
"Yes," said the bureaucrat. "That would be the indicated
procedure." "But you know how things are. The highest bidder would be some crony
of the grand duke's. We'd be lucky to realize a few percent of the statue's actual
value."
Evanish harrumphed. "That's no concern of mine," he said, "and I
certainly have no doubts about the integrity"
Nick interrupted him. "So," he said, "you see, we have a mutuality of
interest."
"I beg your pardon?"
"We desire to get this statue through customs in order to realize the full value
of our discovery. You can help us do so. We are prepared to be extremely generous in token
of our gratitude for your assistance."
"Are you proposing a bribe?"
"No, no, certainly not. Nothing of the kind. Think of it as a gratuity, an
expediter's fee, a little . . . lagniappe."
Evanish licked his lips and looked cautiously around the room. The brown-painted statue
had attracted no particular attention. "Ahthere is my job to consider," he
said.
"Ah, but a man of sufficient means need hardly labor at this dreary occupation.
May I offer you-a full pound of gold? In archaic coin, no doubt of even greater value to
antiquarians."
Evanish pursed his lips. "Not here," he murmured. "We're searched at the
end of the shift. I will require one hundred pounds argentum, to be deposited in
the Royal Bank of Dwarfheim. I will supply you with an account number."
Nick choked. "One hundred . . ."
"Ninety. And don't think about backing out. I have your names, and I'll turn you
in if the money isn't deposited within three days."
Nick did a rapid calculation. "Seventy-five quid," he said.
"Eighty."
"Done." This time, all six rode in the mule cart. The brandy flowed like
water. The cart was more than a little cramped. The two mules were clearly unhappy, but no
one much cared.
Nick was reading Kraki's papers. "Hey, Kraki," he said. "Says here
you're a dwarf."
"VHAT?" said the eighteen-stone, six-foot eight-inch barbarian.
Garni chuckled. "Sure," he said. "You entered the grand duchy from the
Caverns of Cytorax, which, by international law, are dwarven. You must be a dwarf."
Kraki shook his head. "I vill never understand civilization," he said.
"Who's got the brandy?"
Part II.
ANOTHER DAY
I.
The sky was azure overhead. The fields were tan with stubble. Birds wheeled, gleaning
discarded bits from the recently completed harvest. It was quiet, or nearly so. There was
bird song,- the susurrus of the wind; the clink of harness; the low, muttered conversation
of ten thousand men. It was a good day to die.
There's no such thing as a good day to die. Why do all these heroic cretins sound the
same?
There was something on the hill, a point of darkness. Then, there were a thousand.
Suddenly, I was alert; it was the advance guard of the enemy army. I could see the
standard now, a crimson rag and a green, grimacing, tusked orcish face.
Great. In fifteen minutes, it's going to be like a meat grinder here. Why don't we run
like the dickens?
Drums sounded and a hundred voices bawled orders. And there was another standard, and
another, and another-
The crest line was dark with the enemy.
Gah. I bet if we work fast, we can find a horse and . . . "My liege, "
said a voice from my right. "You must not go. "
"Aye, I must. The Royal Horseguard is our only reserve. Should their charge
falter, our cause is lost. I must lead them."
No, no, bad idea. Bad idea. Listen . . .
The general said, "My lord, if we lose this battle, something may yet be salvaged.
The wizards of the White Council hold out yet. But you are the land; your health is our
health. We cannot afford your loss . . ."
Good advice. Listen to this guy.
"None may call me coward, " I said. "Where my soldiers go, so go I.
" Oh shit.
He sighed and held a horn out to me. "If you must go, at least fortify yourself
beforehand."
"What is that?" I asked. "Strong spirits, " he said.
Good idea. If we're going to get ourselves killed, at least . . . "No, " I
told him. "I will need all my wits about me. "
Who is this jackass?
"Then I will send for tea, " he said.
The smell of my mother's kitchen as she baked. I sat on a stool and drank the tea,
waiting for the cookies to be done. . . .
No! No! I called my batman to me, and called for my horse . . .
She pulled out the baking sheet, and there they lay, bubbling a little yet in the heat,
roughly circular blobs of doughthey smelled wonderful. Dion take it! Listen to
me, you fool . . .
I bit into one. It burned my tongue a little, but the taste of the raisins and
Men dying . . . Cinnamon . . .
Nick sat up. The blanket was on the floor. Someone was pounding on the door. Something
about cookies . . .
"I say!" said the door. "Is anyone about?"
"Just a goddamn minute," shouted Nick. He pulled on his pants and stumbled
over to open the door to his flat.
The man in the hallway was slight of build. He wore a waistcoat, hose, and a ruffled
shirt; his pale blond hair was drawn back in a ponytail. He raised a monocle to his right
eye and studied Nick's bare chest and sleepfogged face without approval. "How do you
do," he said. "I am Wentworth Secundus Jorgesen, Magister Alchimiae."
"Already got one," said Nick, and tried to shut the door.
Wentworth stuck one elegantly shod foot in the jamb. "Ahem," he said.
"Perhaps I should explain my presence."
"Perhaps you should get lost," said Nick.
"I conducted a simple magical scan of the city this morning," Wentworth said,
leaning on the door. "I do it frequently, to recalibrate my equipment. I use the
powerful magical loci of the city to orient things, you see."
Nick stopped pushing. Garni wandered up, wearing nothing but underwear. His beard was
mashed flat against his face on one side, and his hair was a mess.
"What did you find?" asked Nick.
"An extremely strong magical field is emanating from your flat," said
Wentworth.
Nick and Garni exchanged glances. They both began to push on the door.
"Damn it!" shouted Wentworth, as his foot was squeezed against the jamb.
"I just want to know what'sOW!"
"Go away," said Garni.
There was silence for a moment.
"Look," said Wentworth. "Let my foot out. Please?"
"Okay," said Nick. He let up the pressure. Wentworth snatched his foot away.
Nick slammed the door shut and put his back to it. Garni worked the lock.
"I'm willing to pay for the information," said the door plaintively.
"Sorry," said Garni. "Go away."
"You're a mess," said Nick. "What?" said the door.
"Not you," said Nick. "The dwarf. Get lost."
Nick and Garni waited. After a while they heard footsteps. Garni went to the window and
looked out, squinting in the bright morning light. "What do you see?" asked
Nick.
"He's leaving," said Garni. "But he looks kind of . . ."
"What?"
"Determined." "Hell."
"It occurs to me, young Pratchitt, that we have a problem. If our friend can
detect the statue"
"So can every other third-rate wizzo in the city of Urf Durfal." Nick went to
the thundermug and pissed into it.
"Right you are," said the dwarf. "What are we going to do about
it?" "Beats me," said Nick, buttoning his fly. "We'd better tell the
others, though."
Garni crouched in the middle of the room and pried up a floorboard. Beneath the
floorboards of their basement flat were timbers, supported at the edge of the building by
the foundation; and below them, about three feet of crawl space. Lying on the dirt was the
brown-painted statue. It still looked like it was waiting for something unpleasant to
happen.
Garni let the board fall back. "Still there," he grunted. "I think one
of us should stay while the other goes to the inn. To make sure nobody nabs it while we're
gone."
Nick went to the basin, poured out a little water stored in a jug, and splashed his
face. He began to develop lather from a bar of soap with a brush. "Good idea,"
he said. "I'll go."
"You just want breakfast," Garni grumbled, moving back to make his bed.
Nick stropped the straight razor. "Yup," he said cheerfully.
It felt nice in the gutter. Thwaite had no desire to move. The sun was warm on his
skin. His mind hung somewhere about three cubits up and a bit to the right of his head.
The world whirled about in a familiar manner.
"We'd been on campaign for monthsh," said Vic. He lay in the gutter, too, a
few feet from Father Thwaite. Vic was old, toothless, white haired, his face and hands
weatherbeaten and worn. "Sho when we found that the villa's pantry wash shtocked with
pickled quailsh eggs, crottled greepsh, and caviar, we were pretty excited, as you might
imagine."
Thwaite had trouble believing that Vic had ever been a soldier. The oldster had lived
on the streets of Urf Durfal for as long as Thwaite had known him. He had, as far as
anyone knew, always been white haired, shrunken, and more than a little senile.
"When was this, Vic?" Thwaite asked.
Vic raised his head a little and seemed to regret the motion. The two of them had
imbibed a truly impressive quantity of alcohol in the last twenty-four hours. "During
the reign of Shtantiush," he said. "Haven't you been lishtening?"
"Yes, yes, Vic. Stantius the Third?"
"That'sh right, heh heh," Vic cackled. "How old do you think I am,
anyway?"
Thwaite contemplated this while Vic continued with his interminable story. Stantius III
had ruled close to two millennia ago. No one was that old. Thwaite smiled woozily and took
another slug of his Chateau d'Alfar '08. It was good wine, one of the finest white
Linfalians on the market, a premier cru of the elvish appellation-not the usual
beverage of your gutter-dwelling wino.
The wine was all that was left of his fortune. He'd been rich, twenty-four hours ago.
That was how long it had taken him to blow his share of the treasure. A fair portion had
gone on the booze he, Vic, and half the neighborhood had downed over the night; but the
bulk had gone to better cause. Many a poor family would wake up this morning with a coin
or two that had none the night before. Many a starveling cat napped contentedly, the
remnants of a fish head in its stomach. Two urchins now had apprenticeships with
respectable artisans. And the temple had funds enough to sponsor at least four feasts.
All, of course, in humble obedience to Thwaite's ecclesiastical instructions. He had
precisely sixpence left.
A boot shoved him in the ribs. "I might have known I'd find you here," said a
voice. "Drunk in the gutter."
Thwaite dimly made out a face. "Good morning, Sidney," he said. "Come
on," she said. "We've got to get to Kraki's inn."
"All right," said Thwaite. He rose, stumbled a few paces, and fell to his
knees.
"Going, Geoffrey?" said Vic.
"I'm afraid so, Vic," mumbled Thwaite, trying to get on his feet again.
"There wash shomething you shaid lasht night," said Vic, sitting up on one
elbow. "Shomething about . . ."
Sidney helped Thwaite up and steadied him on his feet. "What? "Shomething
about . . ."
They began to walk off, Thwaite quite unsteadily, Sidney half holding him up.
"About a shtatue!" said Vic, triumphant at remembering.
"What?" demanded Sidney, turning. "Father! You know you're not supposed
to"
"A shtatue. What wash it you shaid?" said Vic.
"I'm sorry, Sidney," said Thwaite, not particularly repentently. "I must
have been"
"Drunk," she said. "That's not much of an excuse, Father, given that
you're drunk almost all the time."
"You have to tell me about the shtatue!" said Vic, clawing at Thwaite's robes
from his position in the gutter.
"Forget it," said Sidney, shoving him away with her boot. "It'sh
important," Vic said.
"What could be important to a bum in the gutter?" she said. She flipped him a
ha'penny coin. "Shut up and forget about it." She frog-marched Thwaite away,
giving him what for.
"Shtatue," Vic muttered to himself, sitting on the slate curb. He shook his
head, trying to clear it. My memory ishn't what it ushed to be, that'sh the problem, he
thought. Why, I remember when . . . Remember when . . . Well, anyway, my memory ishn't
what is ushed to be.
There was a shtatue once, a shtatue. And I was . . . Wait! Vic looked up and blinked.
There, in the center of the fountain, was a statue. No, that'sh not it, he thought. It was
only Roderick II, the father of the current grand duke, caught in heroic bronze (as well
as, it should be said, Roderick's charger, Valiant, a horse every bit as notable as the
grand duke). The statue had been there for decades, gradually turning green and gaining a
thick coat of bird droppings.
A pigeon stood on the cobblestones in front of Vic. It turned its head aside and
studied Vic out of one eye. Vic pulled a crust out of his pocket and extended it to the
bird. The pigeon hesitated, then made a grab for it. "Unh uh," said Vic.
"Shay pleashe."
The pigeon studied him. Vic waggled his fingers and said a Word. "Shay
pleashe," he repeated.
"Please?" said the pigeon. Vic gave it the crust.
"Thanks, mac," said the pigeon, pecking at the bread.
Corcoran Evanish blinked. The maitre d' was a cyclops. Evanish hadn't expected a
nonhuman, but the creature looked suitably impressive in formal attire. Corcoran felt
quite out of place. The foyer was elaborately decorated, the walls covered with murals,
the ceiling adorned with plaster friezes.
The cyclops studied the man's drab velveteen cloak and worn shoon. "May I help
you, sir," he said, his tone clearly intimating that the only help likely to be
forthcoming was a foot to the seat of the pants to assist Evanish out the door.
"Yes," said Evanish hesitantly. "I'm here to see Ross Montiel."
The cyclops raised one eyebrow. This was only natural, as he had but one. "Yes,
sir," he said dubiously. "Follow me, if you will, sir." He led the way into
the restaurant beyond.
It was of unusual construction, built of large sheets of glass held together with
black-painted cast-iron frames. The impact was light, airy, perhaps dangerously
insubstantial. The novel architecture was permitted by a recently discovered alchemical
process for the manufacture of flawless sheets of glass.
The morning sun shone brightly through the glass roof; from the floor rose plants,
gaudy flowers, whole trees shading tables. Lizardmen bounded about the floor, clad in
black coats, bearing platters of food and dirty dishes.
"Hi, Corky," said Montiel in a high-pitched, piping voice as he looked up
from his menu. He sprang to his feetall three-foot six of himand said,
"Sit down, sit down." The elf smiled in the usual goofy elfin fashion; despite
himself, Evanish smiled back.
Montiel had always been a cipher to Evanish; his mannerisms were typically
elvensweet, merry, a little twee. Yet he had become one of the biggest crime lords
in Urf Durfal, intimately involved in prostitution,
smash-and-grab operations, fencing, and the numbers. Evanish found it difficult to
reconcile the image of sweetness that the elvenkind seemed determined to maintain with
Montiel's vicious reputation. How the creature himself managed to live with the conflict
was beyond Evanish's comprehension.
They sat. Corcoran studied the menu. "How are ya?" piped Montiel. "Fine,
fine," said Corcoran, buried in the folder. "Customs duty isn't the most
challenging job in the world."
"Oh, but you're good at it," said Montiel enthusiastically, waving over a
lizardman. "And how's the missus?"
Corcoran peered over the menu in some surprise. "I'm not married," he said.
"Oh, sorry," said Montiel vaguely. "Why don't you stop by Madame Laura's
sometime? Tell them I sent you."
Corcoran colored. "Er, I'll keep it in mind," he said. "Yeth,
thir?" said the waiter.
"I'll have the oat bran with assorted fruits," piped Montiel. "And some
of your yummy herbal tea."
"Yeth, thir," said the waiter, scribbling on a pad. "And you,
thir?" "Ah, two eggs. Over easy. And a rasher of bacon, please," said
Corcoran.
"Tea?" asked the lizard.
"Please." The lizard bounded away.
Montiel peered at Evanish with wounded eyes. "Oh, Corky," he said sadly.
"Your diet is going to be the death of you."
"What?" said Corcoran with some embarrassment.
Montiel shook his head. He stood on the table, and leaned over to poke Corcoran's
stomach. "You need to get some fiber in there," he said. "You're eating
nothing but fat. Fat fat fat."
Corcoran rubbed his stomach. "I'm not fat," he said.
"No, but you will be," said Montiel, retaking his seat. "Look at the
typical middle-aged human. Overweight, gouty, ruddy jowls. Years of poor diet."
"Well . . ." said Corcoran, but Montiel was not to be interrupted.
"Animal flesh is poison!" he squeaked. "Do you know how they raise pigs in
this country?"
Corcoran had a fair idea, but preferred not to think about it.
"There's a practice knows as `pigs following cows,' " piped the elf,
"Cows aren't very efficient about turning feed into flesh. There's still a lot of
nutritional value in their dung."
Corcoran began to turn green. "Please," he said.
"So they feed it to the pigs, which are much more efficient. Pigs can not only
survive on the stuff, but thrive."
Corcoran swallowed and rubbed his eyes. The food arrived. The bacon was still sizzling.
Montiel stabbed in the direction of the bacon with his spoon. "Bullshit," he
squeaked. "That's what you're eating." He began to spoon up his oat bran.
Corcoran pushed his bacon around with his fork. "I have some information that may
be of value to you," he said.
Montiel swallowed a mouthful of peaches and said, "Uh huh?"
"A . . . highly magical object of considerable value was taken out of the caverns
yesterday."
"Oh, yeah?" said Montiel, his attention firmly on Corcoran. "How much
value?"
Corcoran cleared his throat and took a swallow of tea. "Immense value," he
said. "I couldn't begin to estimate."
"What do you want for the information?"
Corcoran considered. "Five pounds argentum, " he said. "Does
anyone else have this information?"
"Other than the party which found the item? I don't believe so."
"Okeydokey." They settled on four pounds ten.
Kraki stumbled into the taproom. He went to the bar, leaned over, grabbed a glass, and
filled it with porter. He drained the glass, filled it again, and sat heavily down at a
table. He leaned back in the chair. It creaked under his weight.
The innkeeper approached. He was walleyed. Both eyes seemed to do their best not to
focus on Kraki. The man crouched a little and wiped his hands repeatedly on his apron.
"Excuse me, honorable," he said in a quaver, ready to run if necessary.
"Yah," said Kraki and took a gulp of the beer.
"Please, sor," said the innkeeper miserably. "I hate to bring it up,
really I do, but it's been weeks and weeks, and this inn were not too profitable, you
know, my wife and I"
"Stop vhining," said Kraki, looking at the innkeeper for the first time. The
man cringed. "Sorry, sorry, forget I said a thing," he said and began to scuttle
away. He still bore bruises from the last time he'd mentioned Kraki's tab.
Kraki nabbed the innkeeper by one arm. "Vhat is it?" Kraki said, shaking the
man.
"It . : ." said the innkeeper. Then, he drew a deep breath. "It were
your bill, sor."
Kraki hurled the innkeeper to the floor.
"Bah!" he shouted in disgust. "This is vhat civilization is all about.
Money money money!" He hurled a purse at the innkeeper. It hit the man in the head
and raised a lump. "Here," he said. "Have your damn money."
The innkeeper grabbed the purse and, blubbering, crawled for the kitchen. He noticed
that the purse was rather heavy. He stopped, opened it, and peered within.
It was filled with gold coins. He gaped. Slowly, he poured the contents on the floor
and began to count.
It was a bloody fortune. It would buy the tavern several times over. He gulped and
looked at Kraki, who was getting more beer from the bar. The innkeeper swallowed and put
the gold back in the purse.
He went to Kraki and patted the barbarian on the back. "Thank you, sor," he
said. "Thank you." He leaned closer and said, "You can stay as long as you
bloody like." Then, he scuttled away.
Kraki shrugged, watching the man go. He would never figure out why these people did
what they did. He drained his glass.
II.
The foreign minister and the ambassador from the County Palatine of Ishkabibble were
gabbling about something, but Grand Duke Mortimer paid them no attention. He frowned at
his plate and peeled the egg away with his silver fork. He peered at the mushroom thus
revealed through the magnifying glass he kept on his watch fob. It was a simple mushroom
omelet, prepared with the dreadfully plebeian Agaricus campestrisbut the
crown of the mushroom, he could see, had receded noticeably from the stem. He pursed his
lips. How vulgar, he thought. This was a sign of age. The mushroom must have been picked
several days previously. As such, it was perfectly suitable for use in a sauce or soup,
but no longer quite delicate enough for direct consumption, as in an omelet. There was no
excuse for this, Mortimer thought; before the chef sliced the mushroom, he must have been
able to see the dark gills of the campestris, themselves a clear signal of age. I
will have to have a chat with the chef de cuisine, he thought.
He turned to the Baroness Veronee, who seemed uninterested in her own omelet. "I
do wish you'd join me this morning," he said. The baroness was ravishing in a
high-collared red velvet dress, which set off her pale skin most wonderfully, as did the
black lace veil that covered but did not hide her aquiline features. "I have a most
unusual Amanita, " he said. "Grown from spores imported from Far
Moothlay. I had difficulty establishing it at first, but it seems to do very well on horse
dung." To the joy of Urf Durfal's criminal class, the Grand Duke of Athelstan's only
abiding interest was mycology, the study of mushrooms and other fungi. The dungeons
beneath Castle Durf were now largely given over to his studies, packed full with dung,
humus, and pale fungal growth. Whenever the grand duke needed room for a new variety,
another dozen criminals were pardoned.
"It does sound wonderful, Morty," said the baroness, resting one
crimson-nailed hand on his arm and hiding a yawn with the other, "but I've been up
all night at the most ennuyeux ball. I really must retire shortly."
Sir Ethelred Ethelbert, the current foreign minister, sighed heavily and pinched the
bridge of his nose. "If you please, my liege," he said, "the
situation in Ishkabibble is most grave."
"Sorry, sorry," said the grand duke, a little guilty that he hadn't been
paying attention. "What exactly is the problem?" he said.
The ambassador threw up his hands and began to eat his omelet, which had grown cold
while he waited.
Sir Ethelred smiled grimly and spoke through his teeth. "The Great Evil
Empire," he said, enunciating carefully, "is on the move. After centuries of
quiescence, it has once again invaded human lands."
"Yes, yes," said Mortimer, taking off his glasses and polishing them with his
handkerchief, "but what has that got to do with us?"
"The County Ishkabibble is fighting valiantly against a combined force of orcs and
trolls," said Sir Ethelred. "The capital city of Ish is under siege."
"We will fall," said the ambassador through his omelet. "And soon."
"Unless," said Sir Ethelred, "help is forthcoming from other human
realms."
"You frighten me," said Baroness Veronee, placing her right hand above her
left breast. The grand duke watched both hand and breast avidly. "Surely we are in no
danger here."
The foreign minister shook his greasy locks. "No immediate danger, I assure you,
my lady. Nonetheless, should the forces of darkness go unchecked . . ."
"What have our military men to say?" said Mortimer.
Major Yohn looked up, a stricken expression on his face. He commanded the Fifth
Frontier Warders, recently returned from the suppression of the Meep banditti. He was
thoroughly enjoying his time at court: he'd spent close to two years in the field,
sleeping in mud and picking fleas out of his hair, and Urf Durfal was heaven by
comparison. There was superb food, wine, women . . . his only real problem was keeping his
battle-hardened men from getting out of hand. Carousing was one thing, but they'd nearly
destroyed a tavern three days ago.
Yohn was no courtier. He was a potter's son. He'd joined the army because he'd been
taken in by all that guff about visiting exotic places and rising rapidly through the
ranks. The idea of talking directly to the grand duke filled him with dismay.
He was thankful, therefore, when General Carruthers spoke up. Carruthers commanded the
Ducal Guard. The Guard was permanently stationed at Castle Durf; the only action it had
seen any time in the last three decades was against the citizens of the city, who rioted
from time to time, usually around Carnival.
"Hah!" said Carruthers, and snorted through his mustache. "Orcs and
scum. Send us to Ish, my liege! We'll put the blighters down in no time." Yohn rolled
his eyes. The force besieging Ish was the largest army any
one had seen in centuries. The average age of the Ducal Guard was thirty-five. Most of
them had a hard time squeezing into their breastplates. Membership in the Guard was a
sinecure for successful bourgeoisie and petty nobles. Faced with anything but unarmed
rabble, they'd probably turn tail and flee.
"Good, good," said Mortimer. "What about the others?"
Sir Ethelred closed his eyes briefly. "What others, Your Grace?"
"Hamsterburg, Alcala, Stralhelm-you know."
"Ishkabibble is appealing for aid to all of the human lands, Your Grace. And to
the elves and white orcs as well."
The ambassador sighed heavily but did not speak.
"War." The Baroness shuddered and took a sip of red wine.
Mortimer watched her red lips part and licked his own. He shook his head. "Let the
closer lands bear the burden," he said.
"Your Grace," said Sir Ethelred, somewhat distressed. "I must
advise"
"No," said Mortimer petulantly. "Enough of this. If there's a grand
alliance or something . . . But for now . . ."
Yohn mulled this over and took a sip of the grand duke's superb Alcalan red. Mortimer
kept a good cellar. Gods knew, Yohn had no desire to see action again any time soon. But
any idiot could see that Sir Ethelred was right. Yohn toyed with the idea of resigning his
commission and heading for Ish himself.
A page boy charged into the room. Two guards intercepted him. He ran headlong into the
breastplate of one. "Sorry," he gasped, rubbing his head. "Message for the
minister." The guards let him through, and he went to Sir Ethelred. Ethelred took a
piece of paper from the boy, put on pincenez, and peered at the message.
"Most extraordinary," muttered Sir Ethelred. "What is it?" said the
grand duke testily.
Sir Ethelred peered at him over the glasses. "My liege, the Sceptre of Stantius is
glowing."
"What?" asked Baroness Veronee in a low voice.
Sir Ethelred looked at her. "Just came over the news crystal," he said.
He cleared his voice and read. " `Oyez, oyez, oyez. Chief Herald, Free City
Hamsterburg. Let it be known throughout the human lands that the Sceptre of Stantius,
symbol of the True King of Mankind, glows once again, foretelling the imminent accession
of a new king. More to follow. Thirty.' "
"Thirty?" asked Mortimer. "What's that?"
"It means, `the end,"' explained a minor counsellor.
"If they mean `the end,"' complained Mortimer, "why don't they
just say . . . My dear! But we've just finished breakfast."
"I am sorry, Morty," said Baroness Veronee, rising to leave, "but I must
go.
While they argued, Sir Ethelred and the Ishkabibblian ambassador conferred. Yohn
eavesdropped. "What does this mean?" asked the ambassador.
"Gods only know," muttered Ethelred, rereading the message. "There
hasn't been a king in two thousand years. Since Stantius the Third. Deuce of a time for
this."
"No," said the Ishkabibblian ambassador with dawning hope. "The timing
may be excellent."
Thwaite's head and forearms were splayed on the rudely hewn wood table. He was snoring.
Nick had one arm around the serving wench, a grin on his ferretlike face. "Got any
hotcakes?" he asked.
She giggled and bobbed her head. Sidney rolled her eyes.
The innkeeper wiped his hands on his apron. "And you, honorable?" he asked
Timaeus.
"I say," said Timaeus. "Didn't I note a kettle of greeps on the
fire?" "Yes, sor," said the innkeeper. "Freshly crottled."
"Excellent. Three fried eggs and a side of greeps, if you will."
"Yuck," said Nick.
"Some kind of fish, aren't they?" said Sidney.
"Oh, no, ma'am," said the innkeeper. "That's not true. When I were a lad
. . ."
GREEP STEW
"When I were a lad, I lived in the mountains of Far Moothlay. Me ma had died in
childbirth, and we livedme da, and me seven brothers-in a little croft down by the
river. I were the eldest, and so I bore the brunt of things. It were I me da made go and
fetch the water on the coldest days, and it were I he made keep t'others in line.
Wintertime was cruel, most cruel.
The wind whipped off the mountaintops and fair froze our croft through and through, the
moss in the chinks between the building stones not enow to hold back the draft. Me da
spent half the day cutting logs to keep the fire burning, and were it not for the wee
greepies we ne'er would have made it through to spring.
"For lying in our rude straw bed, the greepies crowded round, their poor
white-haired bodies chill in the cold. And between the eight of us and the many, many
greeps, we stayed warm through the bitter night.
"And when the last of the yams were gone and the pottage running low, we'd take a
little one round the back, and butcher it. It were not my favorite task, but it were
needed, and so I took care to strike straight and firm to spare the greepie from pain.
"And then, it were haggis time. Aye, well I remember the cold winter nights and
the haggis o' greep a-roasting on the flame. Oh, we ate the flesh as well, aye we did, but
we were not rich folk, and did not discard the entrails. I know it be not high cuisine,
but the liver and lights we chopped and mixed wi' the last of our oats, and boiled it to a
pudding. And we stuffed it with the rude seasonings, plants that grew about our croft,
into the stomach of the poor little creature, and let it turn over our wood fire.
"And then at last the spring would come, and the little stream by our croft would
run strong. Then would I go up in the mountains with all our greeps, up to the gray stone
peaks and the brilliant meadows. The heather would come a-blooming, and the ewe greeps
would drop their greeplets. Aye, gladsome was it to watch the young greepies, a-bounding
with the joy of spring through the flowers of the moor.
"And though I have made my home in the city nigh these twenty years, and though me
da lie long in his shallow grave, still I remember the wee white greeps frolicking in the
cool mountain air; and still I remember the peppery taste of haggis o' greep, that king
among all puddings."
"I'll skip it," said Sidney. The innkeeper turned to Kraki.
Kraki's eyes were glazed, and he was harrying one massive black tooth with an equally
black and massive thumbnail. He took his hand out of his mouth and said, "I have
fried liver."
Timaeus began to tamp his pipe. "Now," he said, "to business. I asked
around at my club"
"Wait a minute," said Sidney. "I thought we agreed not to mention the
statue."
Timaeus paused, pipe in the air. "I merely inquired as to the name of a discreet
dealer in antiquities and rare objets, " he said. "Besides which, the
members of the Millennium are gentlemen all. I have no fear of indiscretion."
"Yeah, yeah," said Sidney. "Fine. Unfortunately, our comatose friend
hasn't been so good." Thwaite gave a snore.
"What's he been up to?" asked Nick.
"The usual," said Sidney. "He got drunk last night, gave away his
treasure, andwell, I don't know what he said, but I found him in the gutter with
some geezer called Vic, who wanted to know more about a statue."
"Typical Father Thwaite," said Nick. "Hey, sugar, is that all you're
bringing me? Ham and eggs? No perfumed notes? A lock of your hair?" The serving wench
giggled so hard that the myriad dishes she'd managed to pile onto her arms, hands, and
chest threatened to fall.
"You owrtn'ta make me laugh, sir," she said, piling dishes on the table.
Timaeus, bored with this byplay, brought his forefinger to his pipe.
"I only do it to see your glorious smile," said Nick.
There was a thunderous explosion. A flash lit the room. The wench shrieked and dived
under a nearby table. Kraki's liver went flying across the room.
Timaeus puffed happily. Sidney sighed.
"Is . . . is it all right, gentles?" came a tremulous voice from beneath the
table.
"Yes, yes," said Timaeus testily. Nick clearly wanted to say something but
was having trouble containing his laughter.
The wench crawled out from under the table. Woebegone, she fetched Kraki's liver and
dusted the sawdust off. "I'm awfully sorry, sir," she said, and plopped it
before him, then fled toward the kitchen.
"I say," yelled Timaeus after her, aghast. "You can't expect him to
eat"
Kraki picked the liver up in his hands and gave it a hefty bite. "Ha?" he
said through a mouthful.
"Never mind, never mind," said Timaeus. He puffed for a moment while everyone
else ate. "Who is this Vic fellow, anyway?" he asked Nick. "Hmm? Oh, don't
worry about him. He's an old guy, lives on the street
around Five Corners parish. Been there for years. Mumbles a lot, tells stories to the
kids. Senile as hell. Everyone'll just figure he's telling another of his stories."
"It's not Vic I'm worried about," said Sidney. "It'sif he told
Vic, who knows who else he told?"
"Well," said Nick, "if you want something to worry about, worry about
this: an alchemist showed up at our apartment this morning. Got us out of bed. He said
he'd detected strong magic coming from our place and wanted to know what was up. I got rid
of him, but Garni stayed to hold down the fort."
Timaeus dabbed at his beard with a napkin. "I expected the magical community to
start noticing eventually," he said. "However, I had hoped it wouldn't be quite
so soon. This reinforces my belief that we must find a buyer as soon as we can. Which
brings me back to Jasper." He harrumphed, and picked up a forkful of greeps.
There was a silence for a moment, save for the clinking of cutlery. "Who?"
said Nick.
"Eh? Jasper, Jasper de something something. Dealer in antiquities and rare objets.
He has a shop on Jambon Street, so I'm told," said Timaeus. "We don't
exactly have papers proving we own the statue," said Sidney. "You sure this
guy'll deal with us?"
"We can but try. I was assured as to the gentleman's discretion." "I'd
feel happier talking to a fence."
"We've been over this ground, madam. The item is so precious that a dealer in
stolen goods would be hard-pressed to obtain even a fraction of its true value."
Timaeus pushed aside his plate, which was polished, and took up his pipe again.
"Relax," he said.
"All right," said Sidney. "But I'm coming with you. And everyone else
had better go visit Garni. We don't want someone nabbing the statue while we're out."
"Don't vorry," said Kraki. "Anybody take, I kill." He burped
loudly. The coach of Baroness Veronee pulled directly into the coach house adjoining the
main part of her mansion, obviating the need to exit into the painfully bright daylight.
The mansion was modest as baronial residences go, a small sandstone town house, decorated
in the dark style that had been popular during the reign of the current grand duke's
father. Veronee's official residence was off in Barony Filbert, a decaying old pile of
stones that had been in the family for centuries. She hadn't been back to Filbert in
years; she much preferred the social whirl of life in the capital. Moreover, there was
little scope for espionage in the dank hills and gloomy orchards of her barony.
Rupert, the butler, met her in the parlor. The drapes were, as always, tightly drawn.
"An exhausting night," she said. "Is my bed prepared?" "Yes, my
lady," said the butler. "However, we have . . . visitors." He spoke as if
their presence pained him.
"Visitors?" "Yes, my lady. Orcish visitors." "Where are they,
Rupert?"
"In the pantry, my lady. I thought it best to restrict them to the servants'
quarters." He led the way.
Baroness Veronee surveyed the wreckage with dismay. Orcs in my pantry, she thought.
They were worse than roaches, ants, mice, and raccoons combined.
There was flour and sugar all over the floor. Unable to read any of the labels, the
orcs had opened everything in the pantry to make sure they weren't passing up some rare
delicacy. One was chewing on a huge smoked ham he'd cut loose from the rack overhead, his
tusks ripping away massive chunks, which he masticated messily. Another was peering into
an empty bottle of cooking wine, apparently hoping to find a last drop or two within. The
third had a jar of honey between his legs. His right hand was stuck in the jar.
"Good morning," said the baroness.
They jumped. "Oi, miss!" said one. "Nice grub ya got here!"
"Where's Cook?" said the baroness to Rupert.
"I don't know, my lady." "Better go console her."
"My lady," he said hesitantly, "do you think it advisable that I leave
you alone with these . . ."
She gave a low, throaty chuckle.
"Yes, yes, of course," said Rupert and left hurriedly.
"Now, then, my green-skinned friends," said the baroness. "Why are you
here?"
They looked at each other. "Well, miss, word is dat you is innerested in things
dat goes on in da caverns."
"Important events, yes."
"Well . . . do ya mind if we siddown?"
She inclined her head and led them into the kitchen. The one with the jar of honey was
still trying to get his hand out. She stayed on her feet. "Thanks, ma'am. An . . .
dere's also da li'ul matter of payment." "Indeed? And will you pay me for the
mess you've made of my pantry?" The orc with the jar of honey tried to hide it behind
his chair.
The first orc was not abashed. "We isn't gonna tell ya nuffing if we don't get
paid."
"How do I know that what you've got to tell me is worth money?" The orc's
face fell. He conferred briefly with the others.
"Awright. It's about a statue." "Yes?"
"A statue made out of dat red metal." "Copper?"
"No, no, dat magic stuff."
She raised an eyebrow. "Athenor?" "Yup. Solid, an' dat's a fact."
"Two pounds," she said.
"Ten quid," said Garfok.
There were seven cellars beneath the town house of Veronee. There had been two when she
bought ita wine cellar and one for roots. Only the baroness and her servants knew
about the others, for the simple reason that the earth mage who had built them was dead.
The baroness had seen to that.
The house above was for show. She held dinner parties there; from time to time, she put
up a guest. But she never slept there. Her workrooms, her living quarters, and her
livestock were kept below.
She stripped off her veil and her red velvet dress and donned a simple cotton shift. By
the light of a single candle, she surveyed her study. Wood and metal held back the sandy
walls. The bookcases stood a good foot from the soil, lest they be destroyed by contact
with wet earth and insects. One whole wall was given to her menagerie: small animals in
cages. There were cats, dogs, rats, pigeons; she paid small boys to trap them for her. The
cost was negligible.
In the country, she used farm animals, but in the city, she made do with available
resources. From time to time, she needed greater power; then, she had one of her servants
buy a horse and lead it here through the tunnels that connected her domain with the outer
world.
For the most powerful spells, only sapient beings would do. It was usually possible to
lure a derelict with promises of food and money.
Her masters would want to know about the Sceptre of Stantius immediately. And there was
also the peculiar matter of this athenor statue to report.
She went to a cage. The droopy-eared dog within sprang to its feet upon her approach..
Its tail began to wag. The wagging rose to a frenzy. The dog gave tiny leaps as she opened
the lock. She picked it up and removed it from the cage. "Nice doggie woggie,"
she said.
As she carried it to the table, it licked her face and tried to get down. "Arfy
warfums," she said.
She put it on the table and rolled it onto its back. It yipped playfully and tried to
get to its feet, but she held it in place. She spoke a Word, and another.
She spoke softly, but her Words resounded in the chamber.
The dog looked at her with trusting brown eyes as she raised the knife.
She struck. And she raised the pumping neck to her mouth. Blood spurted over her face
and her shift. She swallowed hungrily.
The life force gave her power. She shaped it with her spell. And when the Right
Honorable the Baroness Veronee, Magistra Necromantiae, spoke again, her words were
heard far across the world, on the plain of Arst-Kara-Morn.
Corcoran Evanish stood in the street outside an imposing structure whose pillars were
demons carved in stone. His meeting had gone well. Evanish was now another five pounds
richer; and a powerful demonologist now knew about the statue.
Corcoran Evanish studied his list. He crossed the demonologist's name off. There were
twenty-three names to go. He pursed his lips, put the list away, and strode off down the
street.
III.
The plate-glass window was lettered in gold leaf: JASPER DE MOBRAY, KGF, it said, and
below that, "DEALER IN ANTIQUITIES * RARE OBJETS * DIVERS ENCHANTMENTS. " To the
bottom right was a carefully painted sigila boar's head and the motto `Adiuvo Te.
"
"What's KGF?" asked Sidney.
"Knight of the Golden Fleece," said Timaeus. "One of Athelstan's more
modest honors." His tone was mildly disapproving.
"Where does the name come from?" she said.
Timaeus cleared his throat. "The primary qualification is the contribution of
large quantities of gold to the ducal fiscus."
"In other words," Sidney said, "the grand duke fleeces you of your gold
. . ."
Timaeus grinned around his pipe. "And then he knights you," he said.
"Precisely."
Sidney chuckled, and they entered. One expected shops on Jambon Street to be orderly
and elegant; commercial rents in the district were far from low. Nonetheless, the place
was a positive jumble, more reminiscent of a junk-yard than an art gallery.
An entire wall was given over to shelves bearing potions and dusty alembics. Stuffed
creatures of various sorts hung from the ceiling: there were alligators, giant crayfish,
several boars, a basilisk's head, and the eight-legged body of a truly gigantic spider. In
one corner were piled at least a hundred swords, several of which glowed. A sign above
them said, UNTESTED MAGICAL SWORDSЈlO EACH, Ј100 THE DOZEN. One wall bore the
stuffed head of a unicorn. There was a locked glass case filled with rings and assorted
jewelry. There were carved ivory statues. There were carefully painted metal figurines.
Considerable floor space was given over
to furniture: bookstands, armoires, secretaries, and cases. Another whole section
contained weaponry of every conceivable type: knives, swords, axes, mauls, morningstars,
war hammers, pole arms with blades of a plenitude of shapes and styles, and more exotic
weapons Timaeus failed to recognize. There were innumerable religious relicsstatues,
icons, aspergers, prayer mats, and sacrificial stones. And the booksthe books could
fill a library.
It was to the bookshelves that Timaeus went. He studied spines and pulled down a
volume, one bound in some black, shiny substance he could not identify. It caught his eye
because it bore no title.
He opened it at random. A mist rose from the page and began to form into a purplish
tentacle, complete with suckers. Timaeus stared at the volume, unaware.
The book closed with a snap. "No, no, sir, you don't want that one," said a
voice. "I should say not, heh." The voice emanated from a point of green light
that hung right above Timaeus's shoulder. "Very dangerous volume," said the
light, "full of unusual and heterodox concepts." The light zipped over to
another volume, which came down from the shelves, apparently on its own, and thrust itself
into Timaeus's hands. "Now here's something better suited to the man of adventure,
which I perceive you to be."
"Thank you," said Timaeus, somewhat bemused. He studied the cover, which
proclaimed the contents Shrood's Bestiary, Being an Universal and Compleat Cyclopoedia
of the Fauna, Monsters, and Mythological Creatures of the Known World, Both Factual and
Legendary, Newly Revised in Light of Recent Discoveries.
"And you, miss," said the green light, zipping across the room to Sidney.
"I perceive that you, too, are an adventurer. Perhaps you would be interested in one
of our many magical swords? We are having an especial offering this week, ten pounds for
untested weapons. All are guaranteed to be magical, but we have not tested further; you
may be purchasing a weapon of truly legendary power or, conversely, one with a simple
bladesharpening enchantment. I'll thank you to return the brooch in your frontleft
trousers pocket to the display on table three."
Blushing, Sidney did so.
The light paused in midair and rose slowly toward the ceiling. "But I sense . . .
I sense that these goods do not meet with your approval. I sense . . . I sense marital
discord in the flat above. Damnation." There was a thump from overhead and the muted
sound of shouting voices.
The light abruptly dropped about two feet. "Let's try that again," it said.
"Hmmph. Perhaps you're in the market for somewhat more sophisticated goods." It
zipped across the room.
"Sir Jasper," said Sidney.
"No, no, don't tell me," the light said. "Adventurers both, eh? How
about seven-league boots? Almost new, only used by an amateur giant killer on alternate
Tuesdays. No?" It zipped to another table. "How about this;" it said, and a
bundle of yarrow sticks rose aloft. "Damsel-in-distress locator. Very useful for the
questing knight. No?" The sticks tumbled back to the table.
The light zipped to a display case, which opened. A ring rose from it. "How about
this? Just got it in. Reputedly, it turns color when in the presence of a god or
goddessvery useful, what with all these damned deities wandering around incognito
and exacting horrible punishments on those who treat them discourteously."
Timaeus snorted and looked the bookshelf over further. He pulled down a heavy tome,
entitled An History of the Hamsterian Empire.
"Damn," said the light, and zipped back to Sidney, hanging about two feet in
front of her forehead. "Let me see . . ."
"Actually, we're not here Sidney began.
"No, no," interrupted the light petulantly. "I need the practice. Let me
see. You're upset with your partner . . . Oh, really? Hmm. Oh, my dear! I am so
sorry."
"Look," said Sidney loudly. "Stop it. Stop fumbling around in my
mind."
The light backed off. "Oh, dear, oh, dear," it said. "This is most rude
of me. I hadn't intended to go quite so deep."
Timaeus looked up briefly, then returned to his book. Its prose style was quite
archaic. He flipped through it, studying the color plates, chewing on his pipe stem.
"It'd be a lot faster for me just to explain," said Sidney.
"Yes, yes, of course," said the light, somewhat abashed. "Please go
ahead."
"Okay," said Sidney. "We have this statue. It's of a full-size human
male. It's made of athenor."
The light made a fast circle around the room and stopped before her again.
"Athenor?" it said. "Yes," she replied. "Solid?"
"Yes." "How much does it weigh?"
"We haven't weighed it," Sidney said, "but it's damned heavy."
"It would be."
There was a sudden choking sound from Timaeus. His pipe hit the floor. The light zipped
over to the wizard. "What's this?" it said, hovering over Timaeus's shoulder.
Timaeus looked up and slammed the volume shut. "Nothing, nothing," he
muttered. "How much do you want for this?"
"Three pounds ten," said the light. As Timaeus fumbled for change, it went
back to Sidney.
"Who's the artist?" it said. "Don't know."
"Hmm. Do you know who is depicted?" "No."
"Is it enchanted?"
Timaeus cleared his throat. "It puts out quite a magical field," he said,
"but it doesn't respond to any of the standard tests. If it has a function, we
haven't been able to divine it."
"Mmm," said the light, "that may be a problem. I suspect the statue is
worth more for its metal value than for either its artistry or magical function. But if it
was created for some magical purpose, dissipating the mana so that it may be melted down
may be difficult. Can you supply a provenance?"
Timaeus and Sidney exchanged glances. "I'm afraid not," said Timaeus. "I
don't deal in stolen goods . . ." said the light. "Ah, so that's it, eh? Evaded
customs, what?"
Sidney swallowed. Timaeus moved toward her. "Nonsense," he blustered.
The light cackled. "Don't worry, old man," it said. "Not the first
adventurer to cheat old Mort of his due. Nor the last, I should think." It cackled
again. "And I could tell you a story or two of my own adventuring days . . . but they
are long behind me." The light whizzed around the room again.
"Now then," it said. "We do have a few problems selling this object. Imprimis,
artist, subject, and provenance are unknown. Secundus, it's highly magical, and
no one knows why. Tertius, it's a damned lot of athenor to put on the market at
onceif we melt it down and sell the metal in ingot form, the local market for the
metal will certainly crash.
"And quartus, I could buy the thing myself, but it would take more of my
fortune than I care to commit. So I must either find a buyer and simply take a cut as a
go-between, or find investors to share part of the risk.
"So here's my offer. Sight unseen, I'm willing to pay ten thousand pounds argentum,
subject only to the proviso that the object must prove to be as you have described
itthe life-size statue of a human male, cast of pure athenor. If you are willing to
provide additional information, to let me test the object, and to give me a few weeks to
line up investors, I may be able to offer a considerably greater sum."
Timaeus's yearly income was two hundred pounds. He considered the amount exiguous, but
many a petty nobleman or haut bourgeois survived on considerably less. He choked
again and grabbed for his pipe as it fell.
Smoothly, Sidney said, "Well, it is a little less than we'd hoped to get. But it's
a reasonable offer."
"Ten th-thousand . . ." stuttered Timaeus. Sidney glared at him. "We'll
have to confer with the other members of our group," Sidney said hurriedly. "And
we'll think about your other offer, too." She hustled Timaeus outside as fast as she
could.
"You idiot," she said as soon as they were beyond the door. "You nearly
blew that." She walked him briskly down the street.
With shaking hands, Timaeus packed his pipe. "Ye gods," he said. "That's
enough to buy my father's demesne several times over."
"How do you think I feel?" she said. "Until the caverns, I'd never seen
more than ten pounds in a single place. But only an idiot accepts a first offer."
Timaeus bristled. "These mercantile considerations," he said airily, waving
one hand, "are beneath one of noble blood."
Sidney snorted. "Okay, okay," she said. "Let me do the bargaining, all
right?" She leaned away from Timaeus as he lit his pipe.
Thunder filled the street. Passersby dived for cover. A horse reared and whinnied,
overturning a cart. Sidney and Timaeus marched on innocently. Timaeus puffed deeply.
"Perhaps I'd better, madam," he said softly.
"And you'd better look at this." He opened his newly purchased book to a
color plate.
They stopped, and Sidney studied the painting. It depicted a man in his thirties
wearing archaic military dress and a prominent mustache. He had a rather silly grin on his
face. The legend underneath the portrait said, "Stantius III of the White Council,
last human king, captured by the forces of darkness at the Battle of Durfalus, 3708 of the
Modern Era."
It was the man depicted by the statue. There was no mistaking the mustache.
Sir Jasper de Mobray, KGF, whizzed about his shop, polishing things invisibly and
absentmindedly. He judged that he'd hooked them. A minor
nobleman and a thief; ten thousand quid was so far beyond their experience as to be
staggering. Oh, they'd bargain a bit, but they'd bite.
On the other handthere was many a slip 'twixt cup and lip. It was hard to hide an
object as valuable as the one they described. They might elicit an offer from someone
else. Or someone else might steal it.
That could not be allowed. Under no circumstances could he permit the statue to fall
into the wrong hands.
It depicted Stantius III. He was certain. Timaeus's reaction upon viewing the color
plate had been unmistakable.
And the Sceptre of Stantius was glowing, in far-off Hamsterburg.
Sir Jasper was unsure of the import but certain there was a connection. Once, he had
been an adventurer himself. He had stories to tell, that he did; one didn't become a
nearly invisible, flying wizard of the mental arts, an adept of the Cult of the Green
Flame, and a Fullbright of the Loyal and Fraternal Sodality of the Boar by accident.
He had a sixth sense about these things. And he knew that the forces of darkness were
on the march. He had a vague feeling that the statue of Stantius was considerably more
valuable than its metal content implied. He had the feeling that it could move nations.
A small spark split off from the green light that was Sir Jasper. "Damon!"
said Sir Jasper.
"Yeah?" said the spark.
"Go to the Grand Boar. Tell himthe hunt is on." "Yeah, yeah.
Whatever."
"Get going, you!"
"All right, all right, you don't have to get testy." The spark zipped through
the plate-glass window.
Kraki stood in the doorway of Nick and Garni's flat, the body of Father Thwaite slung
over one shoulder, his free hand poised to knock. Nick had asked the barbarian to go to
the flat with Thwaite to make sure Garni was all right. "I'll meet you later,"
Nick had said.
There wasn't, Kraki noted, much point in knocking. There wasn't any door to knock on.
Whoever had broken in had not been a skilled locksmith. He'd simply smashed the door
open. Kraki approved.
"Hallo?" he said. "Garni Dwarf?" He walked into the room and
deposited Father Thwaite on a pile of rubble.
The apartment was a shambles. Whoever had searched it had broken the furniture up by
slamming it into the walls. Huge clumps of plaster lay on the floor; sections of wall were
down to the lath. Clothing and bedding were strewn about. Straw from the ripped-up
mattresses was everywhere.
The thundermug had been smashed; its smelly contents puddled in one corner.
Garni's equipment was hither and yon, most of it broken. Garni was nowhere to be seen.
"Fine thing," muttered Kraki to himself. He wandered over to the center of
the floor and pushed aside some rubble. Nick and Garni had said they had a secret
compartment in the floor. Kraki didn't really know where, but . . . Yes, the cracks around
those floorboards looked a little prominent. He pried them up with his fingernails.
The statue was still there, peering up uncertainly. Kraki put the floorboards back.
"Bad guys come," he said to himself. "Take dwarf as hostage. Search for
statue. Don't find."
He surveyed the room.
"Not very good searchers," he muttered. "Vhy not look under
floorboards?" He shrugged.
He looked around the room. There were only two ways inthe exterior door and a
window. He pulled the remnants of a bedstead to one end of the room, a position that gave
him a clear view of both apertures. He drew his sword, sat down, and laid the sword across
his knees. And waited.
Father Thwaite rustled. A moment later, he sat up, rubbing his eyes. He surveyed the
room. "Good lord," he said. "What happened here?" Kraki sighed.
IV.
"Hey," wheezed Vic. "Give an old man a peach?"
The fruit vendor glared at him and continued to pile apples onto the table.
Vic stood in the shade of the fruit stand awning and contemplated the statue of
Roderick II. Old Mad Roddy looksh good on horsheback, he thought. It was a brilliant
summer morning, already hot, the square redolent of dried horse dung and the smells of
fresh food. The women of the neighborhood went from stall to stall, stocking up on
produce, fresh-killed chickens, the occasional piece of meat.
A matron wearing a loose-fitting dress and sensible shoes flounced up. "Good
morning, Jeremy," she said. She had a serving boy in tow, with a small wooden wagon.
"Morning, ma'am," the vendor replied. "What'll it be today?" She
looked over the display. "Are those peaches fresh?"
"Aye, yes, ma'am," he said. "Just in today. Heard about the Sceptre of
Stantius?"
"I'll take three dozen," she said. The serving boy began to load them onto
his wagon. "In Hamsterburg? What about it?"
Vic coughed directly into the apple display. Neither seemed to notice. "It's
glowing," said the vendor. "News is all over town. They say there's going to be
a king again."
Vic placed both hands on the apple table and put his back into the cough. He gave a
tremendous, racking wheeze.
The matron laughed scornfully. "Some people will believe any . . . What is that
man doing?"
Vic noticed their attention. He redoubled his efforts. He wheezed, hacked, and choked.
He wheezed some more. Spittle flew into the apples. The matron was appalled.
"Shorry," gasped Vic. "Just my conshumption acting up." He coughed
again.
"Martin," said the matron in a faint voice. "Put those peaches
back." She walked rapidly away, giving Vic an uneasy glance. Somewhat embarrassed,
the servant boy began to take the peaches out of the wagon and put them back on the table.
The vendor cursed, thrust three peaches at Vic, and said, "Get the hell out of
here."
Vic cackled and grabbed them. He wandered out into the square, the sun warm on his
back. He gummed the overripe fruit toothlessly. He tore off bits of skin and tossed them
to the pigeon. "How do you like that?" he asked the bird.
The pigeon pecked at the peach skin. "It's okay," it said.
Glowing, eh? Vic thought. He stared up at Roderick again. I remember a shtatue. Long
ago, sho long ago. There was a shtatue that disappeared. And then . . .
He scowled. I ushed to be able to remember these things, he lamented. Lived beyond my
time, that'sh the problem. Hanging on too long. He wandered in a circle around the statue,
gumming his peaches, juice running down his chin, trying to remember . . .
And then it came to him. He almost swallowed a peach stone and doubled over, coughing.
Shtantiush! he thought in triumph, hawking spittle into the street. It'sh Shtantiush!
Someone kicked Garni in the ribs. There was a high-pitched giggle. His eyes still
closed, he shook his head. It felt fragile. This was the second time he'd been knocked
unconscious in a single week. Much more of this, and I'm in for irreparable brain damage,
he thought.
"I know you're awake, dork," said a high-pitched voice. Someone kicked Garni
in the ribs again.
He peeled open one eye. The foot that had kicked him was small. It was shod in a green
cloth boot with a curly toe. The foot belonged to an elf. Garni had never seen the elf
before. "Goodness gwacious," said Garni nastily. "It's a fearsome
elfy-welfy." He sat up.
The room was smalllittle more than a cubicle. It was bare of furniture. Garni sat
on the pine-plank flooring. There was a single, tiny window at the back of the room.
The elf sneered. "Gosh, Garni, old boy," he piped. "Guess you're in for
a rough time."
In addition to the elf, the room contained two mountains. At least, that's what they
looked like: they were human, but they were narrow at the top and wider farther down. They
had the false-fat look of goons everywhere: their stomachs and torsos were huge-with solid
muscle, not with fat. Garni didn't recognize the elf, but these guys had snatched him from
the apartment. They were grinning.
Outside the room, there was hubbub. It sounded like a marketpeople talking,
something clanging, the clop of horses. Garni could smell water and old, undisturbed dust.
"Where's the statue, dork?" said the elf.
Garni perked up. That meant they hadn't found it. "What statue?" he said.
That was a mistake. One goon picked him up, twisted an arm painfully, and threw him to
the other goon. Goon number two slugged Garni in the stomach several times. Hard.
Garni fell to the floor and retched. He wished he had a war axe. The elf giggled.
"Permit me to introduce myself," said Garni to the pine boards. "We
already know who you are, dork," chirped the elf.
"And who the hell are you?"
"I think maybe I'll ask the questions. Where's the statue, dork?"
"Gawrsh," said Garni. "The widdle elfy-welfy is twying to act tough. Ain't
he cute?"
Goon number one picked him up again. Garni's abdomen was starting to become rather
tender. "Cute," he gasped into the goon's face.
"Duh, boss?" said goon number one. "Yeah?"
"I don't think he's gonna talk, boss."
"Probly not," sang Montiel. "But I like watching dorks crawl."
"Okay," said the goon. Both thugs played kick the can with Garni's ribs for a
while.
"That's enough," said the elf after several minutes. Garni lay on the floor,
blood running into his beard. The elf sounded disappointed. "All for nothing,
dork," he said to Garni. "You're a hostage, anyway. Your friends will give up
the statue, I betafter we start sending 'em pieces of dork."
Garni tried to think of something witty, but his brain wasn't working too well just
then.
"You guard the room, Fred," said the elf as he minced out the door. All of a
sudden, the room was empty. "I hate pointy ears," said Garni to the air.
The Grand Boar was in full dress. His face was completely masked by a boar's head,
tusks curving skyward, glass eyes staring glassily, bristles bristling impressively. His
eyes peered out through the boar's mouth. He wore the robes of office and dark green
cummerbund that befitted his rank. He was sweating heavily.
Jasper, old man, delighted to see you," he said, despite the fact that all he saw
was a greenish glow. He offered the forefinger and pinky of his right hand in the ritual
Boar handshake. He felt something grab them and perform the shake.
"Manfred, it's been a while, hasn't it? And how is your darling Amelia?"
"Growing up too quickly for my taste," said the Grand Boar, shaking his
tusks. "Things have changed since I was a boy, I must say."
"The way of the world, old thing. The way of the world. Have some sherry?"
"Don't mind if I do." They wandered over to the side-board. A carafe of pale
brown liquid rose and poured two drinks. Both glasses rose into the air; one pressed
itself into the Grand Boar's hand.
The room was filling up with others, many wearing boar masks, though most far less
elaborate than Manfred's. They greeted one another with glad cries, gave the ritual
handshake, and talked of the latest news and the jokes in current circulation.
The room itself was luxuriously appointed, with overstuffed armchairs, footrests, and
heavy oaken tables piled high with books. At the back of the room was an elevated stage,
and behind it, the coat of arms of the order: a boar's head, and the motto of the Loyal
and Fraternal Sodality of the Boar, Adiuvo Te"I Aid Thee."
The Grand Boar laboriously climbed the short stairway to the stage and walked to the
lectern. The three Fullbrights of the Urf Durfal chapter sat on the couch behind him. They
were Jasper de Mobray, KGF and Magister Mentis; Wentworth Secundus Jorgensen, Magister
Alchimiae; and Morglop Morstern, cyclops, and a landsknecht of renown.
The Grand Boar cleared his throat. Silence grew as the members of the order noted his
presence at the lectern and seated themselves. The herald put a horn to his lips and blew.
The last vestiges of conversation died away at the sound.
"The hunter's horn sounds," said the Grand Boar. "And we prepare,"
responded several dozen voices.
"Ahem," said the Grand Boar. "I called this meeting in response to an
urgent summons from Brother Jasper. I thank you for responding so promptly. Actually, I
don't have the slightest idea what's up. Jasper?"
"Wait a minute," said an argumentative voice from the audience. It belonged
to a dour-looking dwarf in the back. "What about the reading of the minutes?"
"Oh, bother," said the Grand Boar. "I'll entertain a motion to dispense
with the reading of the minutes."
"So moved," said a bored-looking woman in black leather garb, wearing an
eyepatch.
"Second," said several voices. "Is there any dissent?"
The dwarf said, "Yes!" in a firm voice.
The Grand Boar sighed. "All right, all right," he said. "All in favor,
say aye."
There were scattered ayes.
"What are we voting on?" asked a puzzled voice.
Testily, the Grand Boar said, "All right, we'll do that again. All in favor of
dispensing with the reading of the minutes, say aye."
There was a chorus of firm ayes. "All opposed?"
The dwarf was the only one who said "Nay." "That's that, then,"
said the Grand Boar. "Jasper?"
The green glow moved from the couch to the front of the stage. "Wait a
minute," said the dwarf.
"Yes, Brother Horst?" said the Grand Boar irritably. "Whatever the
Fullbright has to say is new business." "So?"
"Old business comes first," said the dwarf in a satisfied tone. There were
groans from the audience.
"Really, Horst," said the Grand Boar. "Things would go so much faster
if"
The dwarf shook his head determinedly. "Rules is rules," he said.
"Bloody hell," the Grand Boar muttered under his breath.
"Knew we should have blackballed the blighter," said a voice in the audience.
"Move to dispense with the old business and move straight to the new
business!" said the woman in black.
"Second!" "Right!" said the Grand Boar. "All in favor?"
Lots of ayes.
"Opposed." "Nay," said the dwarf. Everyone glared at him.
"Finished, are we?" demanded the Grand Boar. The dwarf folded his arms and
jutted his beard.
"Well, then. Jasper, if you please"
"You're supposed to open the floor," said the dwarf. "Someone sit on
him, please," said the Grand Boar.
There was a scuffle at the back of the room. The dwarf shouted something
incomprehensible as several members sat on him.
"Sure you don't want to be Grand Boar?" Manfred whispered to Wentworth.
"I'd resign in an instant."
"Not a chance," Wentworth whispered back.
"Thank you, Brother Manfred," Jasper said loudly. The Grand Boar seated
himself. "As you may have heard," said the point of green light, "the
Sceptre of Stantius, a relic of the long-lost human empire kept in the safekeeping of the
Lord Mayor of Hamsterburg, is reported to be glowing."
"Aye," said a white-beard from the rear of the room. "And legend has it
that this foretells the accession of a new true king of the human realms." There was
a skeptical buzz.
"Be that as it may," said Jasper. "This morning, I was visited by two
adventurers, one Timaeus d'Asperge, a fire mage, and his associate, Sidney Stollitt.
Neither is a member of our society.
"They reported to me that they had acquired a life-size statue of a human male,
cast in solid athenor."
My words and Good lords rose from the assemblage.
"They did not tell me, but through my magical powers I divined, that the statue
depicts Stantius the Third, the last human king, the last to hold the Sceptre of Empire,
now known as the Sceptre of Stantius. They also reported that the statue emanates strong
magical power, the source and purpose of which they do not know . . ."
There was a stir from the couch.
"Yes, Brother Wentworth?" said Jasper. That worthy rose and came to the
lectern.
"There may be a connection," he said. "This morning, I did a magical
scan of the city, a simple alchemical process I use to calibrate my equipment. I noted a
strong source of magical energy that I had never previously detected. Extraordinarily
strong, Brother Jasper; only the magical protections about the grand duke's castle
register more strongly at the present time."
"Hmm." "I traced the emanations to a flat in the Five Corners parish-an
unlikely area to find such powerful magic, you'll agree." There were
murmurs of assent; Five Corners might not be the worst slum in Urf Durfal, but it was
not far from it. "The inhabitants of the flat, a human male and a dwarf, refused to
permit me entry or to provide any explanation. Their landlady told me that their names
were Garni ben Grimi and Nick Pratchitt."
"Yes?" "Further inquiries revealed that Pratchitt is a partner in
Stollitt and Pratchitt, a firm that does guard work, assembles expeditions into the
caverns, and, per rumor, dabbles in theft and the sale of smuggled goods."
"The selfsame Stollitt who visited me this morn?" "I do believe
so."
"Then the powerful object you detected may also be this statue." "It
would seem so."
"If the object is as powerful as you indicate "It must be of
world-shaking import."
There was silence in the room.
"I venture to suggest," said Jasper, "that there is some connection
between the appearance of this statue and the reports from Hamsterburg. Precisely what
this connection may be, and what this may mean for the free peoples of the globe, I cannot
say. I believe it important that we obtain this statue for further study."
The cyclops spoke from the couch in a deep, grating voice. "Ish is at war with
Easterlings," he said. "Is connection? Do trolls move to prevent human
king?"
There was silence as the Boars considered this.
"What do you ask of us?" the Grand Boar said to Jasper.
"I have opened negotiations with d'Asperge and Stollitt toward the purchase of the
statue," said the green light. "They're well aware of the mere monetary value of
that much athenor. . . . I may need to call upon the Sodality's financial resources to
close the deal."
"Would you care to phrase that as a motion?" said the Grand Boar. "Er .
. . I'm not up on the niceties of the rules of order," Jasper said sheepishly.
A man clad in forest green spoke: "I move that Brother Jasper de Mobray, a
Fullbright of our assemblage, be permitted access to all the treasure and wealth of the
Urf Durfal chapter of this order for the purpose of purchasing the athenor statue of
Stantius the Third, subject to an accounting of all expenditures." There were several
seconds.
"Any opposed?" said the Grand Boar.
There were sounds of struggle from the back of the room. Horst the dwarf rose to his
feet and managed to shout, "Nay," before several others dragged him back down.
"Carried by acclamation," said the Grand Boar. "Also," said
Morglop.
"What's that?" asked Jasper.
"This statue, it must not go to ones who would misuse it. We must protect
it."
"Good idea," said Jasper. "Will you take on that task?"
"If you wish," said the cyclops, resting one hand on the hilt of his
broadsword.
"I'll go too," said Wentworth.
"Good fella," said the cyclops and slapped Wentworth, not the beefiest of
men, on the back. The impact propelled him off the stage and into the first row.
"Many sorrows," said the cyclops, peering over the edge of the stage.
V.
Timaeus and Sidney stood in the shattered doorway. "Boy," said Sidney,
"Nick is messy, but this is ridiculous."
"Dwarf is gone," said Kraki, rising, his sword in his hands.
"Beg pardon?" said Timaeus. He and Sidney came into the room and looked at
the chunks of plaster and smashed furniture with bemusement. Father Thwaite stood up a
little unsteadily. "The place was like this
when we got here," he said. "Kraki believes that someone came, searched for
the statue, failed to find it, and snatched Garni as a sort of consolation prize."
"The statue's still here?" said Timaeus.
"Yah," said Kraki, stamping on the floorboard. "Is here."
"This is most upsetting," said Timaeus. "Sidney, perhaps we ought to
sell the statue before"
Timaeus broke off. There were footsteps and giggles from down the corridor. "Hold
that thought, doll," said Nick Pratchitt's voice, "just let me get my keys. . .
."
Nick stood in the doorway, the servant girl from the inn under one arm, keys in the
other hand. Openmouthed, he surveyed the wreckage. "Holy maloney," he said.
"Good morning, Mr. Pratchitt," said Sidney icily. "Perhaps you would
introduce us to your companion."
"Ohmigawrsh," said the wench, looking at the rubble.
Nick cleared his throat. "Iah, hadn't expected you all back so soon,"
he said.
"Clearly," said Timaeus, enjoying himself. "Garni's gone, you
know." "Huh?" said Nick.
"Bad guys snatch," said Kraki. "But statue still here."
"Nickie?" said the wench. "Are we stayin' here? Cause I gotta be back at
the inn by"
" `Nickie'?" said Sidney in a dangerous tone, advancing toward Nick
Pratchitt.
At that instant, the window shattered with a shocking clash. A multilimbed, ochre body
tumbled into the room. It righted itself on batlike wings and thrust a sword toward Kraki,
the closest figure in the room.
The barbarian ducked, raised his own sword, and faced off against the demon.
There was a clap of thunder, the noise of a teleporting body displacing the air. In the
center of the room, another demon floated, this one a sharktoothed furry little creature.
It darted toward Sidney, snarling.
She drew her own blade and backed toward the door.
The wench screamed and scrabbled back down the hall, tripping over debris. Yet a third
demon, yellow eyes glaring from within a cloud of dark smoke, appeared, right behind Nick.
"Watch out, Nick," yelled Timaeus. Nick spun and backed into the room drawing
his own blade, a simple dagger.
Father Thwaite searched desperately through the rubble. He needed brandy . . . brandy .
. . He knew Nick had some, and it must be somewhere in all this stuff.
Caught between two demons, Nick and Sidney fought back-to-back. The toothy creature
darted for Sidney's leg, but she struck it a glancing blow, and it backed off, bleeding a
yellow fluid. The smoky demon gave a disconcerting, hollow laugh, and spat a line of flame
toward Nick. He dodged. "I told you to go back to the apartment!" screamed
Sidney. "To protect Garni and the statue . . . And look what you"
Nick spat at his opponent, hoping that the demon's use of flame meant it was
fire-aligned and that water would harm it.
His spittle did no apparent damage. "I sent Kraki and Father Thwaite," he
said defensively. "Anyway, I"
Timaeus released his spell. A dart of flame shot across the room and through the body
of the smoky demon. The dart passed through the smoke, leaving a hole-but smoke expanded
to fill the hole again. Flames shot through the doorway to start a fire in the stairwell.
The demon repeated its strange, bass laugh.
"You jerk!" yelled Sidney, dodging her demon again. It bit her in the
shoulder. She stabbed at it gingerly with her sword, trying not to injure herself.
"The point is, what the hell were you doing?"
Father Thwaite was chanting now, shouting some prayer across the room.
Nick's demon was closing, moving slowly across the space between them; Nick swiped at
it with his dagger, but the weapon had no effect on the discorporate creature.
"What's it to you?" shouted Nick angrily. "You've made it clear
that"
"We're sitting on trouble," said Sidney, "and you're crawling into some
tart's skirts. OW!"
Father Thwaite sprinkled brandy over the toothy demon, brandy that glowed with blue
light. The demon screamed and dissolved into nothingness. Some of the brandy entered
Sidney's wound, stinging terribly.
Thwaite flung the rest of the brandy toward the smoky demon. It disappeared with a
snap.
The last of the demons climbed out the window into daylight, Kraki thrusting after it
with his sword, a long, ragged tear in its wing.
For a moment, there was peace in the room.
"I'm tired of your constant carping," shouted Nick, turning to face
Sidney,'his dagger in his hand. "All I get from you is"
"Carping! Is that what you" Sidney yelled.
"Someone had better do something about that fire," said Timaeus. The
stairwell was still burning. Sidney and Nick continued to yell at each other.
"Hokay," said Kraki, walked into the hall, unbuttoned his fly, and urinated
onto the flames.
"Yes!" shouted Nick. "Carping! `I don't like this, I don't like that.' I
remember when you used to think that we"
"Ahem," said Timaeus.
"You're the one that screwed it up, Nicholas Pratchitt!" yelled Sidney.
"I was quite content to be your partner and not your"
"Good day, goodwife," said Timaeus loudly.
Nick looked at the wizard. Timaeus pointed toward the doorway.
A plump, middle-aged woman stood there. "Mrs. Coopersmith," Nick groaned. It
was his landlady.
She entered the room and looked around. She grew grim. "I knew I should never have
rented to a dwarf and a single man," she said. "More of your wild parties, I
suppose."
"What? Mrs. Coopersmith! This isn't our fault. We"
She turned to him and shook her finger. "I don't care whether it's your fault or
not, young man! I want you out! Now!" she shrieked.
"But Mrs. Coopersmith, the lease says"
"The lease doesn't say anything about smashing the walls! And fires in the hall!
And huge men urinating in the stairwell!"
Kraki came into the room and gave her a sheepish grin.
"Disgusting is what it is," she said. "There's an outhouse out back, you
know."
"We're paid up through the end of the month," Nick said defensively. It was
true. He and Garni had paid her from their share of the treasure.
"I want you out!"
Nick sighed heavily. "We can't," he said. "Not now."
"Out!" she yelled.
"Mrs. Coopersmith," said Sidney, "Nick has a legal lease. You want him
out, you've got to buy him out."
Mrs. Coopersmith wiped her hands on her apron and scowled. "We'll see about
that," she said with determination and flounced away. Thwaite bound up Sidney's
wound. "Where did those things come
from?" Timaeus wondered, fumbling through his pouch for some pipeweed.
Nick frowned. "First someone snatches Garni, then demons show up," he said.
"I get the feeling that too many people know about this statue. Maybe we should move
it. . . ."
"Where?" said Sidney. "How are we going to get it out of the
neighborhood without attracting attention?"
"Don't worry," said Kraki. "I am here. I protect statue."
"Of course, of course, thank you, Kraki," said Timaeus, packing his pipe.
"Perhaps we should simply accept de Mobray's offer. It does seem as if the statue is
becoming too hot a potato for us to handle, and . . . Hello? Can we help you?"
Someone stood in the doorway. He (she? it?) wore a brown monk's robe that fell to the
floor. The robe's cowl was deep, so deep no hint of a face could be seen. The cowl turned,
scanning the room. Silently, the figure held out an envelope.
"What do you want?" said Sidney.
The figure wafted the envelope back and forth. "Say something," Sidney said.
Thee was a faint, dry whisper, like a distant wind. "Something," it sighed.
"Everyone's a comedian," Sidney snarled and grabbed the note. She sniffed.
The envelope was perfumed and tied with a ribbon. It was addressed to Magister Timaeus
d'Asperge, No. 12, Cobblers Lane, Apt. 1.
"For you," she said, handing the letter to Timaeus. The wizard raised an
eyebrow and opened it.
It was written in a delicate hand on expensive rag paper. The ink was
the color of dried blood. Timaeus scanned a few lines, then read the whole letter
aloud:
To Magister Timaeus d'Asperge:
My dear boy! I cannot tell you how thrilled I was to hear of your daring escapade in
the Caverns of Cytorax. When first we met, I thought you rather unprepossessing, I am
ashamed to admit. I should have known that there was more to you than met the eye. After
all, a scion of the House d'Asperge must of necessity be destined for greatness! Athelstan
needs more young men of your fortitude and enterprise.
Timaeus preened. Sidney snorted.
Per report, you acquired a certain remarkable piece of statuary in the course of your
expedition. An individual whom I have the honor of representing is interested in acquiring
this item. In fact, he was quite forceful in expressing his eagerness to me. He has
authorized me to make an offer of Ј20,000 argentum for its delivery.
Timaeus stuttered over "twenty th-thousand."
The offer strikes me as more than generous, and I trust that it will meet with your
approval. In the spirit of friendship, however, let me say that my principal is not a
gentleman who brooks refusal. When frustrated, he has a tendency to become quite petulant.
To speak of such things is painful, yet I believe it is my duty to say that, should this
offer be refused, we may be compelled to take more forceful steps toward the object's
acquisition.
Under the circumstances, I believe it best to preserve a certain air of mystery. Hence,
I will say only that
I remain, your faithful and loving friend,
. . . And there it broke off. There was no signature, only a drop of dried blood at
bottom right.
"Twenty thousand pounds is a lot of money," said Nick.
"I don't like the tone," said Thwaite. "And I don't like that." He
pointed to the robed apparition. The cowl turned to face the priest, but the figure had no
other reaction.
"The note is obviously not from Garni's kidnappers," said Sidney. "Or
they'd mention him."
"Yah," said Kraki. "If ve sell statue, kidnappers be upset."
"I would dearly like to be rid of the damned thing," said Timaeus. "I
say we accept."
Thwaite moved faster than Sidney would have believed possible for a middle-aged wino
with a hangover. He darted to the doorway and threw back the creature's cowl.
Where the figure's head should have been, a bleached skull grinned. It turned atop a
bony spine and studied each of the room's occupants in turn. Skeletal fingers reached up
and flipped the cowl back in place.
"Do you want to deal with that?" Thwaite hissed. There was silence for a
moment.
"I'll deal with anyone whose silver clinks," said Nick.
Timaeus eyed Nick skeptically. "Under the circumstances," Timaeus said,
addressing the cowled figure, "I believe we must refuse the offer." The cowl
faced him and nodded once. The figure glided away.
The cowled lich glided down Cobblers Lane. It was annoyed. It was terribly annoyed.
This idiot idea of wandering about the city had been the damnable baroness's notion.
"The entire population will flee in terror," it had told her. "Skeletons
just don't walk the streets of this city, not in broad daylight."
"You'll wear a robe," she had said, "with a cowl."
"Oh, fine," the lich had whispered. "A robe with a cowl. Dandy. And
suppose some religious nut wants to confess to me, eh?"
"You'll handle it," she had said impatiently.
"I'll handle it," it had said. "No doubt I shall. I don't see you volunteering
to gad about in the daytime."
"I've had a bad night," she had said, "and I don't want any back
talk." "I'll stick out like a sore thumb."
"You'll do as you're damned well told."
It gave a soundless sigh and hesitated in front of an alley opening. It looked up the
street to make sure it wasn't observed.
But it was observed. A peasant in an oxcart was gawping at it. The oxcart was
filled with dead fish and was moving slowly down the street. Damnation, thought the lich.
It put its back to the nearest building and
tried to act nonchalant. It didn't feel in the least nonchalant. No one goes around in
full robes on a hot summer day, it thought to itself bitterly. Not even the devoutest of
monks. Damn the bitch.
The oxcart moved down the street, slowly, slowly. The damned peasant's head swivelled,
his eyes tracking the lich as his oxcart moved, his
mouth agape. It's a wonder flies don't crawl down the damned man's throat, the lich
thought.
Finally, the peasant turned the corner. With relief, the lich glided into the shadows
of the alley. From here, hidden by shadows, it had a good view of the door to number
twelve. It waited to see what the humans would do.
Really, it told itself, I wish they had accepted the offer. It's going to be so much
more work this way.
It sighed again. The baroness was a harsh mistress, it told itself. She made her
servants work their fingers to the bone.
Literally. It chuckled dryly.
VI.
Kraki had a broom. He was sweeping energetically. Plaster dust flew about the room.
"Cut it out," said Nick.
"Ve clean up, yes?" said Kraki.
"Why bother?" said Nick. "I have a suspicion I'm going to be moving
soon, no matter what we do." Kraki shrugged and dropped the broom. Timaeus lit his
pipe. The explosion knocked more plaster loose from the
walls. After the flames died down, he said, "And now what shall we do?"
"You said you wanted to sell," said Sidney.
"On reflection," said Timaeus, "I deem that inadvisable. We can expect a
ransom note for Garni to show up sooner or later. I suspect it will demand the statue.
Would you rather have the money or the dwarf?"
"Now you mention it" said Nick.
Father Thwaite stared at him. "Garni ben Grimi is your friend," he
said pointedly.
"All right, all right," said Nick. "But look . . . tracking people down
is something Sid and I do all the time. We ought to be able to find Garni and spring
him."
"Oh yeah?" said Sidney. "We don't have much in the way of clues."
"I want to start with Jorgesen," said Nick.
"Who?" "Wentworth something Jorgesen, the alchemist who showed up at the
apartment this morning," said Nick. "It's the only name we've got to work with.
If he isn't involvedand I bet he is, somehowthen maybe he'll help us. And it
looks like we'll need help, if demons and stuff keep on showing up and trying to grab the
statue."
"A reasonable supposition," said Timaeus. "I, for one, want to find out
more about this statue."
"What do you mean?" asked Sidney.
"My dear, are you aware of the magical properties of athenor?" "Huh? I
know they make rings and stuff out of it."
"Athenor is one of the few metals that can hold mana, the essence of magic.
Consequently, it is used in the creation of magic rings, amphorae for the imprisonment of
djinn, magical arms and armor, pentacles for demonologists . . . the list is endless. A
ton of the stuff is an inconceivable quality. There must be some record of
the statue's creation, some hint of its purpose. At the university, I can"
"Okay, sure," said Sidney impatiently. "But here we sit on top of the
damn thing, and you want to run off and do research? I say we get Garni back, sell the
statue, and"
"Jasper said it himself," said Timaeus, puffing deeply. "If we can
supply a provenance and some idea of the object's intended function, we can command a
considerably greater price."
"Look," said Sidney, "we're going to have to send people off looking for
Garni, right? And some are going to have to stay here to protect the statue. Judging by
the fact that Garni's been snatched and we've been attacked by demons, all in the space of
a couple of hours, whoever stays here is going to have plenty of things to worry about. I
don't like the idea of splitting our strength further. And you're our only wizard . .
."
"Thwaite can stay," said Timaeus with irritation. "He handled the demons
quite well, I thought."
"Thank you," said Father Thwaite in surprise.
Timaeus waved a hand in acknowledgment. "And who other than I could do the
research? Shall we sent Kraki?"
"Yah, I go," said Kraki.
"He'd probably burn down the library," muttered Sidney. "I don't like
it, butgo. Get back here as quickly as you can."
"You going to come with me?" asked Nick.
"N-no," said Sidney, "I don't think so. You've got about the same skills
and contacts as Iwhy don't you take Kraki for muscle?"
"Good," said Kraki, flexing his pectorals. "Ve kill people until they
tell us vhere dwarf is, yah?"
"Something like that," said Nick with a grimace. "Come on." The
lich was doing its best not to think.
It was bored. Mortally bored. Bored beyond human comprehension. Bored as only the
millennia-dead can be bored.
It must be hot, it thought, then suppressed the thought. Empty the mind, that was the
trick. Empty the mind, let time pass without notice. Bored.
It thought the day was hot. But it had no way of knowing for sure. The sun was
bright. The sidewalk shimmered. But the lich had no body to feel warm or cold.
Bored. A fly landed on its robes. A flicker of interest passed through the lich, then
died. The fly walked into the cowl and around on the lich's skull. The lich felt no
disgust, no squeamishness. It had no stomach with which to feel disquiet.
Noon was approaching. The lich felt no hunger. Bored.
An attractive woman walked by. The lich felt no attraction. Bored.
Nick and Kraki left the building across the street. At last, thought the lich. It
waited until they turned the corner. Then, it began to follow. The cowled robe glided down
the street. Small children gaped. The
religious bowed their heads in respect. Some of the more magically sensitive felt a
chill and made a gesture of warding.
I do stick out like a sore thumb, thought the lich in mortification. Damn damn damn
the bitch.
It worried that Nick and Kraki would spot it. It hung back. It could feel the life
force burbling through their bodies, the fragile taste of life in the distance. It allowed
itself, briefly, to feel a desire to crush that life, to drain it to fuel its own
half-living existence-then followed, followed its life sense, followed with no need to
keep its prey in line of sight.
It glided on.
Garni was getting hot. The room was stifling.
He studied the room's only window. It was pretty small. On the other hand, he was
pretty small, too. He just might be able to squeeze through it. He leapt up, grabbed with
both hands, and pulled himself onto the sill. He peered through the window.
There was a river down there. It passed underneath the building . . . Aha! He must be
on the Calabriot Bridge. It was one of four over the River Jones, six if you counted the
two bridges to Nob Island. Of the four, it was the only one with buildings along both
edges. There were shops all up and down the bridge, mostly goldsmiths and jewellers.
The door opened suddenly. One of the goons stood there-Fred, the elf
had called him. "Hey!" said Fred. "Get away from there!" He ran
into the room and pulled Garni away from the window.
"I'm not going to jump," Garni said. Fred put him down heavily. "Sure
you ain't," said Fred. "I ain't gonna let ya. Chow time." He went back to
the door and fetched a bowl of stew.
It looked unappetizing, but Garni ate anyway. Gods only knew when he would get another
meal. Fred, Garni reflected, was obviously not too bright. Dwarves are heavier than water.
Jumping from the window would have been suicide.
"Dja year about the scepter?" said Fred, watching the dwarf eat. "The
what?" said Garni.
"The scepter thing. In Hamsterburg. They say it's glowing or something."
"So?" said Garni.
"Means there's gonna be a new king. Or something."
Garni stared at the goon suspiciously. "So what's that to me?" he said. Fred
colored. "I dunno," he said defensively. "Just tryna make conversation.
Sheez."
"Okay, okay," said Garni. "I'm done."
Fred took the bowl and left the room, muttering to himself. He locked the door behind
him.
Garni went back to the window and stared down at the river. A new king. Garni scowled
into his beard. His grandfather had been the dwarven king. But upon his death, the gods
had chosen another, not of Garni's line. That's the way it happened, the mantle of
kingship descended on someone's shoulders, someone chosen by the gods. It could be anyone.
But Garni's family had been forced to leave Dwarfheim. There was nothing personal in
the deportation order; it was just good political practice. You didn't want to leave
potential malcontents lying around.
A barge passed under the bridge. Garni wondered if he could leap into the
bargebut it was to his right, not directly beneath the window. Too bad.
The elves had a king, too. So did the cyclopes. So did all the free peoples, except for
the humans. Garni had always wondered about that. They'd had one, long ago. And if the
goon was to be trusted, they'd have one again soon.
Garni wondered what that might mean.
The sign overhead said YARROW'S ALCHEMICAL EMPORIUMMORE POTIONS FOR THE PENCE!
Nick pushed the door open. A bell tinkled. "Be with you in a minute, Nick," said
Mike Yarrow. He turned to an old woman with a head scarf. "These leeches will suck
those bad humors right out, Mrs. Anver," he said. "Just put the little bastards
right on the boil and let them leech away."
"Oh, thankee, Master Yarrow," she said bobbing her head. "Thankee
kindly." Clutching her package tightly, she hobbled out the door.
Kraki wandered the shop and stared at shelves full of vials, bottles, alembics, paper
packages, and tubes. He picked up a small bottle and stared into it. A gnarled homunculus
hung in a brownish liquid. Kraki wondered what it was but was unable to read the label. He
shook the bottle, but the homunculus remained motionless.
"Sold any elixirs of youth lately, Mike?" asked Nick Pratchitt. Yarrow
laughed. "Nothing like that," he said. "Business is pretty slow."
"Too bad," said Nick. Mike Yarrow was a self-taught alchemist; he had
neither the money nor the connections to gain a place at the university, nor the
brilliance to win a scholarship. Without a degree, his clientele was restricted to the
poor and the miserly. Business was always pretty slow. "I'm trying to find an
alchemist," Nick said.
Yarrow raised an eyebrow. "You've come to the right place." "No, a
different alchemist."
Kraki leaned on the counter. It creaked dangerously. "Ve looking for this guy,
Ventvorth something."
"Wentworth Jorgesen. Master alchemist," said Nick.
"Oh, sure," said Yarrow. "He's got a shop on Fen Street. Good
reputation, pretty swank clientele. Comes from County Meep originally. I'm told he used to
be an adventurer."
"Do you know where he lives?" asked Nick.
"Afraid not," said Yarrow. "He probably has a villa someplace."
Nick gave a whistle. "He's rich, huh??"
"I guess so," shrugged Yarrow. "He's one of the better-known wizards in
the city."
"Well, I guess the shop is a place to start. You have the address?"
"Sure, got it right here." Yarrow pulled out an address book.
The bell on the door tinkled again.
"Yes, sir?" said Mike Yarrow. "How can I help you?"
The lich picked up a straight razor from the counter. It leaned over and opened
Yarrow's throat.
The alchemist fell back against a shelf. Bottles crashed to the floor. His hands
scrabbled. Blood pumped out onto the counter.
The lich spoke a Word. It tapped Yarrow's ebbing life force and used it to fuel the
spell. A shame, really, the lich thought. It bore the man no
animus. And killing innocents was a messy business. Dangerous. The authorities tended
to get upset. Unfortunately, it knew no spell to compel the living to tell the truth. The
dead, nowthat was a different matter.
It spoke another Word. The corpse behind the counter rustled. "Do you hear
me?" whispered the lich.
A sepulchral voice responded. "Yes."
"What did your last customer want?" whispered the lich. "Leeches,"
said the corpse tonelessly.
What? "What did they want leeches for?" "For her husband's boils,"
said the corpse.
The lich gave a silent sigh. Truth spells have their drawbacks, it thought. "You
were visited a few minutes ago by two men," it whispered. "Were you not?"
"Yes." "What were their names?"
"Nick Pratchitt andI don't know the other." Good. "They wanted
leeches?"
"No." "What did they want?"
"The address of an alchemist." "Were you not an alchemist?"
"Yes."
The lich was beginning to get irritated. "Whose address did they want?"
"Wentworth Jorgesen."
"And the address?" "Seventy-six Fen Street." Excellent.
With the last of Mike Yarrow's life force, the lich shaped another spell and reported
to its mistress.
VII.
Wentworth Secundus Jorgesen locked the door to his shop and put up a `Closed' sign.
"Ready?" asked Jasper.
"Righto," said Wentworth. He opened a door and led Jasper and the cyclops up
a flight of stairs.
"Really," said Jasper, shedding a dim green light on the wallpaper, "I'm
looking forward to this. I haven't done anything adventurous in, oh, ages." They came
to the roof. Most of it was sloping orange tile, but there was a small landing area.
"Taxi!" shouted Wentworth.
"We not walk?" asked Morglop, a little uneasily.
Off in the distance, a black spot moved among the clouds. There was no response to
Wentworth's shout.
"Why waste the time? Hoy!" yelled Wentworth. "I say! Taxi!" He
waved his arms wildly. The black spot moved on, oblivious. "Damn," muttered the
alchemist.
There was another moving spot, this one a little larger and lower, barely clearing the
minaret of a nearby temple. Morglop sighed, then put two fingers in his mouth and gave a
loud whistle.
The flying carpet swooped down and landed on the roof.
"Hah-doh," said the driver. It was a small, monkeylike being with wings. It
wore a turban. "Where be going, sahib?"
The Boars got onto the carpet and sat down. Morglop looked distinctly unhappy.
"Cobblers Lane, between Jameson and Thwart. Chop-chop." "Two
shillingi," said the creature, holding out a paw.
"One shilling sixpence," said Wentworth briskly.
The creature bowed its head meekly. "Honest afreet mek honest bargain," it
whined. "Small one at home ver' hungry. Two shillingi."
"What cheek," said Wentworth. "You creatures don't have children, and
Cobblers Lane is a zone six destination. The fare is one shilling sixpence, and you'll be
paid when we get there. Cobblers Lane, and yarely now, or I'll have you up before the
licensing board."
The creature chattered in rage as the carpet swooped away. Morglop closed his eye.
The lich stood in the basement of Wentworth's Fen Street shop. It was dark, gloomy, the
only illumination a thin line of brilliant sunshine, shining through a crack in the metal
doors that lay flat in the sidewalk above. A stair led to those doors; they were opened
only during the morning, when deliveries were made to Wentworth's shop.
About the lich lay bundles and bales, shelves stocked with bottles and packages. And
with it stood twenty-four zombies, in varying states of decay. One was Mike Yarrow's
corpse. No point in wasting a perfectly good deader, the lich thought to itself.
It was irritated. It was beginning to develop a headache. Why are humans always so
unreasonable? it thought. Ј20,000 was a substantial sum of money. And the baroness was
not a woman to cross lightly.
It sighed a soundless sigh. It's going to be so much more work this way, it thought.
For a moment, it longed to be in its grave. For just a decade or two. A little rest,
that's what it needed. A little rest.
Aha, it thought. It sensed Nick and Kraki's life force approaching. They were drawing
nearer.
It gestured. The zombies readied their weapons.
"Damn," said Nick. The door to the shop was locked and the sign said
`Closed'.
"Look," said Kraki, pointing up as a shadow passed over them. It was a flying
carpet. There were a number of figures on it. Nick recognized Wentworth by his monocle and
long, blond hair.
"Hey!" he shouted. "Wentworth! Hey!" There was no response.
"Now vhat?" said Kraki.
"Taxi!" shouted Nick.
A carpet swept to the street and came to a halt a dozen cubits away. Nick and Kraki ran
for it. "Follow that carpet!" yelled Nick to the afreet. He and Kraki tumbled to
the weave as the carpet yanked into the sky.
"Ah, now, sahib," said the afreet. "This be costing you."
"Ten shillings if we catch them," Nick promised the creature. "Two if we
fail."
"Ver' good, sahib, ver' good! We catch for sure," said the afreet
delightedly, bobbing its turban.
The carpet sailed through the azure sky, bright sun warm on their necks, a stiff breeze
blowing past. Slowly, they closed on the carpet ahead. "Ahoy!" shouted Nick.
"Ahoy the carpet!" He waved.
The lich swept the steel door back and sprang to the sidewalk. Its prey swooped into
the sky on a flying carpet.
The zombies halted, still in the cellar dimness.
For a long, long moment, the lich stared skyward. Finally, it got a grip on itself.
Frustration, it thought savagely; after five thousand years, you'd think you'd learn to
deal with frustration.
"I say," said a voice from behind. "What's all this?"
The lich turned. The speaker was a stout man in formal dress, carrying a walking stick.
"What's it to you, meat puppet?" the lich whispered harshly.
The man turned red. "Now see here," it said. "Merely because you're a
man of the cloth, you can't expect"
The lich threw back its cowl. Its skull grinned in the daylight.
The stout man's eyes bugged, then turned up in his head. He tumbled to the sidewalk,
his walking stick rolling into the gutter.
The lich reentered the basement and pulled the steel door closed. It felt faintly
better.
Definitely a headache, it thought. The pain was worse than ever. It wondered why these
ailments of the flesh still plagued it.
"My word," said Jasper. "Look behind us."
Wentworth turned and peered at the carpet following them. "Gadzooks!" he
said. "I believe that's Pratchitt. Who's the muscle boy?" "Don't
know," said Jasper.
Morglop emitted a faint moan. He was lying flat on the carpet, his hands clutching
desperately at the fringe.
"How'd they know we planned to spy on them?" asked Jasper. "Bloody
mysterious," said Wentworth, "but we've got to lose them. Afreet! We must lose
that carpet."
"No, sahib, is not possible." "Don't give me that, you monkey!"
It shook its turban sadly. "Reckless flying bad. License be yank. Against
regulation."
"One pound argentum if we lose them, you pirate."
"Now sahib be talking!" said the afreet. Suddenly, the carpet yanked into a
sharp turn. Morglop moaned a little louder.
Wentworth's carpet turned suddenly and increased speed. "Follow them!"
ordered Nick.
"Aye, sahib, aye," said the afreet, and their carpet turned, too. Nick and
Kraki leaned into the turn and clutched at the carpet edge.
"Vhat is problem?" grumbled Kraki. "Ve yust vant to talk to them."
Nick was tight-Tipped. "Evil flees where no man pursueth," he said.
"Vhat?"
"I wasn't sure Wentworth was involved, but he is. Otherwise, why would he run from
us?"
"Yah," said Kraki. "Maybe is demon summoner?" "Maybe,"
said Nick grimly.
The carpet swooped and turned sharply, dogging its prey. "They're still
following," said Jasper.
"This calls for strong measures," said Wentworth, pulling a flask from inside
his tunic. "Driver, loop back over them."
The afreet looked at him. "One shillingi."
With a curse, Wentworth tossed the creature a coin.
The carpet went into an immediate inside loop. For a long moment, the city was below
their heads. Morglop moaned again. "Bravo," said Jasper. Wentworth dropped the
flask. It tumbled toward their foe. . . .
Nick and Kraki looked up as the Boars' carpet flew overhead. A flask tumbled toward
them. "Evade!" shouted Nick.
Their carpet darted right. The flask exploded with a whump!
Kraki stood up. "Bastards!" he shouted, waving his fist. "Cowards!"
The carpet turned sharply, and he almost fell over the side. Nick grabbed him and pulled
him back.
"Be careful," Nick said.
Kraki drew his sword with a snick. "Fly under them," he told the afreet. The
afreet glanced at the sword worriedly. "I try, sahib," it said. They swerved
after the Boars' carpet. The Boars tried to lose their
pursuers. Their carpet swivelled around the minaret of a temple and climbed sharply
toward a cloud.
Suddenly, thick white fog hung around them. It was cool in the cloud. They broke out of
the mist. The other carpet was above and to the left. "Hah!" said the afreet.
"In blind spot."
"Where are they?" said Wentworth. He and Jasper scanned the sky. "We
lose," said the afreet confidently.
A sword came stabbing up through the carpet. It missed Morglop's thigh by inches. It
disappeared and stabbed up again, in a different place. "My carpet!" wailed the
afreet. Chattering in rage, it zoomed into a climb.
Everyone clutched the fibers desperately. Morglop's green skin couldn't turn white, but
it was definitely turning pastel.
The carpet zigged and zagged, almost tossing them off with each swerve. It dived
directly toward a temple dome and veered aside at the last instant. Doggedly, Nick and
Kraki followed. "Bad thing," said the afreet. "You pay if this carpet be
damage." Nick nodded.
The enemy carpet dived straight at a dome. Their own afreet anticipated the enemy's
last-minute swerve, turning before the other carpet did. Unfortunately, they turned left,
while the enemy carpet turned right.
When they rounded the dome, they saw the Boars flying off toward the east. The enemy
had gained distance in the trip around the dome. Nick and Kraki followed grimly. The enemy
carpet began to climb. The speeds of both carpets dropped as they gained altitude.
"Uh oh," said the afreet. "What's the matter?" said Nick.
"Heading for Morning Temple." "What's that?" asked Kraki.
Wentworth turned white. "No," he said. "Not there." The afreet
glared at him. "You want I lose?"
"Yes, but"
"Get flat on carpet. Minimize wind resistance."
"Ahem," said Jasper. "Sorry, brothers, but I believe it best that I meet
you at Cobblers Lane. . . ."
The point of green light flitted away from the carpet and headed north.
"Coward," muttered Morglop.
"You'd do the same, if you could fly," said Wentworth.
The cyclops peeled his eye open to see where they were heading. He shut it again with a
shudder.
The Boars' carpet broke into a sudden dive. It gained speed rapidly as it headed toward
a vast temple complex. White-domed buildings stretched
for nearly a mile by the River Jones, with manicured gardens among them. A wall kept
out the rest of the city.
"I follow?" said the afreet hesitantly.
"No," said Nick after a long pause. "Too risky." Their carpet broke
away.
"Vhat is problem?" asked Kraki. "Watch," said Nick.
The Boars' carpet was a mile up when it passed over the wall of Morning Temple. It
started to plummet.
"The whole temple's a null-magic zone," said Nick. "The Sons of the
Morning think magic is wrong. Unnatural. They won't use it."
Kraki watched, speechless. Only the momentum of the Boars' carpet kept it sailing over
the temple. It flapped in the breeze as it fell in a parabola.
"If they don't clear the far wall, they're dead," said Nick. They fell.
Wentworth pulled a flask from one of his many pockets and took a sip. They fell.
Morglop opened his eye and, mesmerized, could not shut it again. He stared grimly at
oncoming death.
They fell.
The wall approached. The afreet keened a prayer. They fell.
The wall was growing larger. Morglop made a choking noise. They fell.
They were going to hit. Wentworth began to turn transparent at the edges.
They cleared the wall. The magic came back.
The carpet snapped rigid. They slammed into its surface as it pulled upward. At the
bottom of its arc, it scraped the ground, but then they were aloft again.
"Grab me!" yelled Wentworth. Morglop took his arm.
The alchemist fluttered in the breeze like a flag. Only Morglop's grip kept Wentworth
from flying into the sky.
"What is it?" said the cyclops, surprised.
"I took a potion of weightlessness," said Wentworth, somewhat shamefaced.
"I didn't think we were going to make it."
"Nice of you to offer me sip," said Morglop, more than a little nastily.
"I only had the one dose," said Wentworth defensively. "There wasn't
time."
"Yah, sure." Morglop suddenly noticed that the buildings below looked awfully
tiny. He gripped Wentworth tight enough to make the alchemist squeak and closed his own
eye equally tight.
"They make it?" said Kraki.
"Think so," said Nick after a moment. "Where take sahib?" said the
afreet.
"Tell you what," said Nick slowly. "What say we ransack Wentworth's
shop? Since he's gone and all."
The barbarian grinned. "Sounds like fun," he said. "Back to Fen
Street," said Nicholas Pratchitt.
The lich stood in the basement, staring motionless at the ray of light that shone
between the steel doors. I need a drink, it thought. Or a smoke. Or a hallucinogenic drug.
Or anything. It really didn't matter.
Of course, it thought, I couldn't do anything with a drink. Except wet my robe.
If it didn't capture the humans, the baroness would use its skull for an ashtray.
Perhaps I ought to make a break for the city limits, it thought. No, that was a stupid
idea. The baroness would track it down. And outside the city, it was so much harder to
find victims.
The zombies stood around, motionless. They're no help, thought the lich, they're
brainless. Well, actually, not brainless. Their brains were rotting into mush, but they
did have brains of a sort. What I mean is, thought the lich, they don't have any
intelligence. They make me sick.
Well, not sick, exactly. It didn't have anything to feel sick with. They made it
feel as if it wished it could feel sick.
Or something like that.
All I have left to look forward to, thought the lich, is a bleak future of unremitting
labor in the cause of villainy.
Work, work, work.
It makes me sick, it thought. Well, not sick, it thought.
It wished it had thought these things through before it rose from the dead.
It wondered where Pratchitt was. It wondered what the hell it was supposed to do.
s x
The carpet deposited Nick and Kraki on the roof of Wentworth's shop. "I said two
shillings if we didn't catch them," said Nick. "But here's five."
"Thank you, sahib," said the afreet, kissing Nick's hand. "Thank you,
oh, thank you." It kissed his hand some more.
"Yeah, yeah, sure," Nick said; withdrawing his hand and wiping it on his
pants. The carpet zoomed away.
"Door is locked," reported Kraki.
"I'll open it," said Nick. He pulled a leather case from his coat pocket.
Inside were his lock-picking tools.
Kraki looked at them, grunted, and tore the door off its hinges. "Come on,"
he said, bounding down the stairs.
Footsteps sounded in the shop above. The lich looked up at the floorboards
speculatively.
It went to the interior stairway and floated up the steps. It opened the overhead
hatch.
"Hmm," said Nick, looking about the shop. "Quite a supply of healing
draught." He pocketed several small bottles.
"Bah," said Kraki. "Vhat are ve looking for?"
"Anything suspicious," said Nick. He sniffed. Was that the smell of rotten
meat?
"I think ve find it then," said Kraki. "What?" said Nick. He
turned.
A hatch in the wooden floor was open. The lich was rising up the stairs, its cowl
thrown back. Behind it, zombies followed.
"Mike!" said Nick, recognizing Yarrow's reanimated corpse. Kraki drew his
sword with a scritch of steel.
Nick backed toward the stairs to the roof, but the lich sped past him to block escape.
Kraki advanced on the zombies. "Yah hah!" he shouted. He whapped off Yarrow's
head. It tumbled to the floor.
"You killed Mike," Nick accused the lich, drawing his own blade. "Do
surrender, won't you?" whispered the lich. "I have the most splitting
headache."
Kraki chopped another zombie through the waist. It fell into two halves. Yarrow,
headless, put his pig-sticker through Kraki's shoulder. Kraki twirled, and chopped Yarrow
in half, too.
"Bah," he spat in disgust as he watched both halves squirm. "How can you
kill the dead?" He retreated, keeping his sword moving to ward off attack while he
considered the problem.
"No dice," said Nick to the lich. "Don't suppose you'd consider
surrendering to us?"
The lich made no reply, but gestured ritually and spoke a Word.
Nick thrust his epee into the brown robe. The blade bent into a curve as it grated
against bone.
Kraki waded forward, slicing the arms off the zombie facing him. He'd decided to chop
them up into bite-size pieces. They couldn't do much harm that way.
Nick's blade was useless, a thrusting weapon against a creature with no flesh to thrust
into. He threw the epee away and grabbed for the lich's arm, intending to break it. When
he touched the lich, he realized he'd made a mistake. Suddenly, he was weaktoo weak
to stand. He fell awkwardly to the floor.
Nick could feel weakness spreading from his limbs toward his vital organs, feel life
slipping away as the lich drained life force from his frame . . .
But apparently the lich wanted him debilitated, not dead. The creature moved away from
Nick, and strode toward Kraki's back.
"Watch out!" yelled Nick.
Kraki whirled and sliced into the brown robe. The lich's ribs shattered. Its skull went
flying.
A zombie arm grabbed Kraki's ankles and tripped the barbarian. He fell and hit his head
on the counter. While he was more or less defenseless, three zombies jumped him. Kraki
rolled around on the floor, ripping at rotting flesh, but more zombies joined in.
One zombie went and picked up the lich's skull. It carried the skull to Kraki and
touched it to the barbarian. Kraki went limp.
"Idiots," whispered the lich harshly. "Look at me! I've fallen all to
pieces." The zombies combed the room, searching for fragments of lich. Nick and Kraki
watched, weak as kittens, as zombies tied them up.
"Can I give my friend a healing draught for his shoulder wound?" asked Nick.
"No," whispered the skull petulantly. "Don't you fools know when to give
up?"
The zombies shouldered the two humans. They filed down the stairs and into the
basement.
As his eyes adjusted to the darkness and his nose to the stench, Nick marvelled. He had
never known these tunnels existed beneath the city.
"Foul unearthly vights," muttered Kraki sleepily. "I vill destroy you
all." He wrestled weakly with his bonds.
The living, reflected the skull, are a royal pain in the neck. Well, not in the neck,
perhaps, since it didn't seem to have one right now. A pain in the coronal suture or maybe
in the lower part of the parietal bone. Its headache was worse than ever-which was quite
distressing, considering that all it had left to ache was its head.
"There," said Wentworth. "Land there."
The carpet swept down to the flat slate roof of number eleven, Cobblers Lane. Morglop
staggered off and collapsed.
A point of green light was already hovering over the chimney pot. "There you
are," said Jasper. "Glad to see you made it."
"No thanks to you," muttered Morglop.
The upper stories of the building, like those of many in Urf Durfal, protruded out over
the street. Property taxes were based on a building's lot size; this was a way of gaining
extra room without paying higher taxes. The slate flags that covered the roof sloped
gently toward the edge of the building, but the shape of the building itself hid the Boars
from viewers in the street. Conversely, by peering over the gutter, they could watch
people going in and out of the building across Cobblers Lane-number twelve, Nick and
Garni's building.
"One pound, sahib," said the afreet, holding out a paw.
Wentworth, still weightless, was hanging by one arm from the chimney. "Oh,
bother," he said. "I don't have that much cash on me."
The afreet chattered its anger. "Sahib promise! Say one pound if lose pursuit!
This one lose bad persons! One pound!"
"I'll have to write you a check. Morglop, give me a hand, will you?"
"What?"
"Just hold on to me, will you? I need both hands."
While Morglop kept Wentworth from blowing away, the alchemist found a bottle of ink, a
slip of paper, and a quill. He trimmed the quill with a penknife. He put the bottle of ink
on the chimneyand it blew away. "Oh, bloody hell," said Wentworth.
"The ink's weightless too."
Not to be denied its payment, the afreet pursued the tumbling bottle and retrieved it.
"How can this be?" asked Morglop. "You drank potion. Ink bottle not drink
potion."
"It's magic, you twit," said Wentworth irritably. "That's part of the
enchantment. Covers ancillary items. Otherwise, to be truly weightless you'd have to strip
buck naked. Not the sort of sorcery a gentleman would practice, eh?"
He dipped his quill in the ink and began to write the check. After a few strokes, his
pen went dry.
He examined the tip of the quill and tried again. It went dry again. "I'll be
damned," he said. "The ink won't draw because it's weightless nothing to
push it down the quill. I'm sorry, my good, er, entity," he told the afreet,
"but I'll have to ask you to come to my office to pick up your money."
The afreet bared its teeth. "Is cheat! Is fraud! Carpet badly damage! Sahib be bad
man!"
Wentworth rolled his eyes. "Oh, really," he said. "Here's my card. Just
come to the office any time tomorrow, there's a good creature, and I'll pay you the
pound."
The afreet stared uncomprehendingly at the piece of pasteboard. It hopped up and down
on the carpet with its bandy and rather hairy little legs. "Pay now! Pay now!"
it screamed.
"Better pay," advised Jasper, hanging out over the edge of the roof.
"People in the street are beginning to stare."
Wentworth had a total of nine weightless shillings and four pence. Jasper had three
shillings eightpence. Morglop had four shillings sixpence ha'penny.
They dumped all this loose change into the afreet's outstretched paws. The creature's
lip's moved as it counted the money, snatching after one or another of Wentworth's coins
as the wind threatened to blow them away.
"I'm afraid that will have to do," said Wentworth in an injured tone. The
afreet glared at them, then took off, muttering to itself.
There was a sausage vendor in the street, Jasper noticed. The sausages smelt wonderful.
"I say," he said. "What are we going to do for lunch? We're flat broke,
now."
Morglop, who was feeling rather peckish, scowled.
VIII.
Being carried by zombies was not, Nick thought, particularly comfortable. One of his
bearers had no remaining flesh to speak of; its shoulder bone stuck painfully into Nick's
back. And the smell of rotting flesh was something awful.
The tunnel led to a chamber where torches flickered. Nick craned to see where they were
going.
A woman waited for them. She wore a flared, black dressan expensive one, Nick
judgedand a veil that obscured her features. The orcs that stood next to her wore
rusty armor and had large, ugly tusks. Given a choice, Nick thought, he'd rather look at
the woman.
They stood together next to an unlighted pit. Nick had a feeling he was going into the
pit. He hoped there wasn't anything nasty down there. Snakes, say.
"Hello, gorgeous," said Nick. "Hell of a way to pick up men."
The orcs chortled and elbowed each other. "Oi, Garfok," said one. "It's
da big guy."
"You," said Kraki weakly. "I should have killed you in caverns."
Nick glanced at Kraki. "Friends of yours?" he asked.
"Hah? Ve have met, yes. These are orcs who turned you to stone." "What
happened to you?" the Baroness Veronee asked the skull. "Don't ask," it
whispered.
"Take it to the house," she ordered one of the zombies, meaning the lich.
"And its bones, too. I'll fix you up later."
"As you wish," the lich whispered despondently. Some of the zombies departed.
"What am I going to do with you fellows?" she asked Nick and Kraki.
"Several possibilities spring to mind," said Nick.
The veil hid her smile. "You'd enjoy it less than you think," she said in a
throaty voice.
"We can have din-din," suggested Drizhnakh.
She glanced at the orcs. "Oh, no," she said. "They're far more valuable
as hostages."
"We doesn't have to kill them," said Garfok. "We can just whack off a
coupla arms. Da big one looks like he's got a lotta meat on him."
The stench of the zombies was strong in Nick's nostrils. "How can you guys think
of food with all this rotting flesh around?" he said.
"Don't bother me," said Drizhnakh. "How 'bout you, Spug?"
"I likes it," said Spug. "Makes me think of my mum's home cookin'."
Even the baroness looked faintly disturbed at that. "Throw them in the crypt,"
she said briskly.
Nick groaned inwardly. He'd been right. The orcs swung him up-then he plummeted down .
. . and smashed into damp stone. Experimentally, he struggled with his bonds. Nothing
seemed to be broken. Kraki landed with a thud nearby.
"Kraki," Nick gasped. "You okay?"
"No," said the barbarian. "Am very depressed."
By the dim light of the torches they saw a veiled face peer into the hole. "By the
way," said the woman, "in the unlikely event that you should escape, please tell
your companions that I shall not rest until the statue is restored to its rightful
owner."
"Who's that?" gasped Nick, still starved of air.
She gave a low chuckle. "Well may you ask," she said. "In the meantime,
please rest assured that you will again see the light of day-at least, if your friends act
reasonably."
"I vill kill you," said Kraki.
"That would be difficult," she said. "You won't die of thirst or
starvation. You'll find plenty of sewage and a more than adequate supply of live
prey." Somewhere, a rat squeaked. "See?" she said. "Ta, now."
Rats, thought Nick with relief. It's only rats.
The orcs gave a disturbing, rattling laugh as they pulled the massive stone slab over
the opening. It grated as it shut out the last vestiges of torchlight.
Nick and Kraki lay in darkness.
"Why do I get talked into these things?" said Nick. "Instead of spending
the afternoon in bed, I'm lying in a sewer with orcs standing guard." "Don't
vorry," said Kraki. "Soon, a maiden escaping from an evil
prince to whom her father has promised her in marriage vill flee through
the sewers and stumble upon us. Smitten vith my charms, she vill free us both."
"What?" said Nick.
"Or else," Kraki said, "a vizard, seeking to hire me to kill another
vizard who has been his enemy for a thousand years, vill summon us to his vizard's tower
by magic and free us from these bonds."
"I see," said Nick, struggling with the rope around his wrists. "What
makes you so confident?" A rat scampered over his body.
"Is inevitable," said Kraki philosophically. "Happens in all the best
sagas. First, you get thrown in pit. Then, you become king. Or something. You take the bad
vith the good. Don't vorry, Nickie. I am hero. Heroes don't die in sewers."
"Thanks, Kraki," Nick said. "I feel much better now."
Timaeus strode purposefully across the Common, puffing on his pipe. It was a pleasure
to be back in familiar surroundings, amid the Imperial architecture and carefully tended
greenery of the university. It hadn't been long since he'd left, but somehow the place
already seemed a little foreign.
Halfway across the green, he noticed that the sky ahead was filled not only with
gathering clouds, but with a pillar of smoke. He frowned and redoubled his pace toward
Scalency Hall, where the Department of Fire had its offices.
The pillar of smoke was rising from a window on the side of the building. Doctor
Renfrew, in the blue-tinted ermine and preshrunk silks of the Department of Water, stood
outside, amid a crowd of gawking undergrads. He was directing three water elementals,
dousing the surrounding grounds and nearby buildings to prevent sparks from carrying the
fire. Scalency Hall itself, built wholly of granite without supporting timbers, was
virtually indestructible, at least to firea necessary condition, given the number of
literally hot-tempered academic disputes that arose among the faculty whose offices it
contained.
"Good afternoon, sir," Timaeus addressed Renfrew. "What is
happening?"
Renfrew eyed, then ignored Timaeus. He shouted Words of power at his elementals;
clearly, keeping the playful undines about their tasks was occupying his full attention.
"Old Calidos has combusted at last," said an undergraduate gleefully.
"No test of the convolutions today!"
"Good heavens," said Timaeus, and broke into a run through the line of spray
about the hall.
"Wait!" yelled the undergraduate. "Come back. You could be
killed"
Timaeus muttered Words of power as he ran, puffing between syllables. He was damnably
out of shape. He could be killed; but it was not likely. Fire was his element,
after all.
The door to the halla slab of slate on brass hinges, wood being far too ephemeral
for the tastes of fire mageswas noticeably hot to his touch. As he entered the
foyer, Timaeus could feel his heat-resistance spell kick
in; the air in the foyer felt almost cool. As he sprinted up the steps, he could feel
the heat beginning to rise again.
Timaeus paused at the door to Magister Ardentine's office. The adjunct professor of
thermal philosophy was busy stuffing books and papers into a heavy leather bag.
"How is he?" Timaeus panted.
Ardentine looked up nearsightedly. "Terminal burnout," he said. "Shame,
really."
"We knew it was coming," said Timaeus.
"Certainly," said Ardentine irritably. "What's the temperature?"
Timaeus peered at the thermometer at the back of Ardentine's office. The professor was too
nearsighted to see it. "Halfway between water and paper," he said. It was marked
off with the boiling, melting, or burning temperatures of various materials.
"Bother," said Ardentine, redoubling his efforts to save his books before the
temperature in the office rose too high. "I'm going to lose some of these. Lend a
hand, won't you . . . ?"
But Timaeus was gone.
Calidos's office was like a blacksmith's forge. The air shimmered, the metal chair in
which the elderly mage sat glowed red. Calidos himself was a dancing flame, human form
still discernible. He looked white, shrunken, even older than Timaeus remembered.
"Doctor Calidos," Timaeus sputtered. "You mustn't . . ." "Ah,
d'Asperge," said Calidos in some surprise.
"Sir," said Timaeus in distress, "you must be aware that"
"I'm in terminal burnout, yes indeed," said Calidos almost happily. "And
it does these old bones good to feel warm at last."
Timaeus gulped unhappily. This was the fate of all too many a fire mage. Repeated
manipulation of the element increased one's own similarity to fire. When Timaeus had taken
courses with Calidos, the old man had left scorch marks on exam papers. He'd heated his
own chambers nearly to the boiling point of water, but even so complained about the cold.
Undergrads, lacking strong heat-resistance spells, dreaded meetings with Calidos; few were
willing to accept him as their don. Timaeus had done so, partly from bravado and partly
from a genuine desire to learn as much of his discipline
as he might; Calidos's mind might no longer be as sharp as it had been in his youth,
but he was still highly respected, widely acknowledged as one of the giants of his field.
"Why is no one here to control this?" demanded Timaeus.
"This is the fourth time this semester," Calidos said. "The signs have
been gathering for weeks. My time has simply come, my boy. I choose to go as gracefully as
I may. Come, 'tis not so bad; I go to immortality, of a sort."
"As a salamander," grunted Timaeus, "not in the Lady's bosom"
"Pshaw," said Calidos. "Infantile religious maunderings. Far better to rise
to the sphere of flame, to burn incandescently for all time"
"But without a mind," said Timaeus sadly. "Elementals have no
"And do the gods promise immortality in the same mind? The philosophers believe in a
duality of mind and body, while the religions add spirit, creating a trinity of self. The
spirit may survive death, but the body clearly does not. Spirit and body are separable;
hence, one may conclude, spirit and mind are separable also."
The heat was rising further, and Calidos's voice was becoming fainter. It was hard to
make out his form now, he was glowing so brightly. "Doctor," said Timaeus.
"Do not go. I need"
"You're a fine mage," said Calidos faintly. "You do not need my aid. A
bit hasty and hot-tempered, perhaps, but this is characteristic of our discipline, those
aspects being similar to fire. I"
"Doctor Calidos!" shouted Timaeus. "I am not speaking generally, but in
specifics. Please hang on; I need help researching"
"Farewell, lad," whispered Calidos, now so bright that Timaeus was forced to
avert his eyes. "Good of you to come and say good-bye to an old man."
And suddenly, the glow began to fade, like fireworks in a dark sky, quickly diminishing
from white to red to orange, a collapsing ball of flame. "My true name," came a
faint whisper, "is . . ."
But it will not be repeated here, lest it be misused by the unscrupulous. Timaeus was
astonished. Knowledge of Calidos's name would allow him to summon the elemental Calidos
had become from its place in the Sphere of Flame. And the elemental formed from the spirit
of a master mage would be powerful indeed.
He would have to use this power sparingly. So powerful a salamander would be difficult
to control; it would be foolish to risk its wrath.
The sphere was gone now. The chair had melted down to slag, and the granite walls still
emitted a somber glow. Timaeus realized he was expending power to maintain his
heat-resistance spell; no point in that now. He withdrew from the room and sadly descended
the stairs.
No time for mourning, he chided himself. What to do now? "I done good, huh, Ross?
Huh?" said Fred the goon.
Fred stood six foot six and weighed more than twenty stone. He filled a substantial
portion of the tiny maid's bedroom. Unfortunately, Fred wasn't alone in the room. There
were three other goons, all of approximately equal stature. There were also two
elvesMontiel and a subordinate-and a rather weedy human water mage. Judging by the
wizard's odor, his enthusiasm for the substance he manipulated magically seemed not to
encompass actually immersing himself in it, at least, not on any regular basis.
The seven of them stood cheek by jowl. They'd had problems getting the door closed. The
day was hot, and the room was stifling. The water mage's bathing habits did nothing to
improve the atmosphere.
"Gee, Fred," chirped Montiel. "I just don't know what to say."
"That good, huh, boss?" Fred beamed.
Montiel scrambled over one of the goons and made his way to the room's single window.
He peered out. Below was a courtyard, bordered by the block's other buildings. Montiel
shook his head sadly. "It's my fault, Fred," he piped.
A look of uncertainty passed across Fred's face. "Huh?" he said.
"I should have known better than to trust an important job like this to a complete
imbecile!" Montiel shrieked. The elf hopped up and down on the tiny bed.
"But, boss," said Fred unhappily. "You said I should rent a room."
"A room, not a closet! And I told you I wanted a room across the street!"
"Well, gosh, boss. We're in number eleven, right across the street from Sidney
Stollitt . . . just like you said!"
The elf threw up his hands. "Explain it to him, Billy," he said to one of the
other goons.
Billy threw a hand across Fred's shoulder. "Duh, look, here, Freddie," he
said. "The window don't look out on the street. It looks out the back. How we gonna
keep an eye on the building across the street if we can't see it? Huh?"
Fred's face scrunched up, as if he were about to cry. "Gosh, I'm sorry,
guys," he said. "I'm awful sorry."
"And it's in somebody's house, too," said Montiel. "How're we gonna keep
it a secret if the people in the house see us come and go all the time?"
Fred buried his head on Billy's shoulder in shame.
There was a knock on the door. Billy and the third goon drew swords, nearly
decapitating each other. Ross pointed at Fred.
"Yeah?" said Fred hesitantly.
"Uh . . . will your friends be staying to dinner?" said a timorous female
voice. "I mean, my husband doesn't even know we have a boarder, and"
"Hell with this," piped Ross. "Billy, take 'er."
Billy opened the door. As soon as he turned the knob, he staggered into the hallway,
propelled by the pressure of the others in the room. He tripped over a blond woman,
smashed through the railing which ran the length of the hall, and fell down the stairs.
The woman shrank back and put both hands to her mouth. Montiel sighed. "Your turn,
Georgie," he said.
The third goon walked out the door, casually tossed the woman to the floor, and stood
over her, his sword at her throat.
Montiel smiled and walked out the door himself. "Oh, Georgie," he said in a
sorrowful chirp, "you know how I hate brutality." The goon grinned and stared
directly into the woman's frightened eyes.
"Hiya!" said Ross Montiel. "My name is Ross. What's yours?"
"El . . . Elma," whispered the woman, eyes wide.
"Elma! That's a nice name," said the elf. He motioned to George, who sheathed
his sword. "Gosh, I just know we're going to be friends." Montiel held out a
tiny elfin hand.
She swallowed and looked at George uncertainly. "C'mon," said Montiel.
"Shake!"
She grabbed his hand and gave it a tentative shake. She sat up and shuffled on her
bottom until her back was against the hallway wall. She stared at Montiel.
"That's better," said Montiel. "I'm glad we're going to be pals, 'cause
we're going to be staying over. Just for a little while."
"How . . . how long?"
"Is that any question to ask friends who've come to stay? C'mon, Elma, you'll make
me think you're unfriendly. If you're unfriendly, I'll have to give you to George to play
with."
The goon stared at Elma and licked his lips.
"So let's keep this on an elevated plane, okay? Do what you're told and, who
knows, you might even live. How 'bout that?" Montiel said brightly.
"Please," she whimpered. "Please, Mr. Elf. We're simply folk, we don't mean
anybody any harm"
"Oh, Ross, Ross, Elma, call me Ross," said Montiel. "Mr. Elf sounds so,
I don't know, formal. Now, don't worry about a thing. We promise to treat your house just
like it was our own. Right, boys?"
"Right, boss," said a chorus.
"And we absolutely promise not to steal anything we can't physically carry.
Georgie, toss her in the cellar."
"Do I get to play with her first?"
"No, no," said Ross. "Only if she's a bad girl." The goon pouted.
"Now, Fred," said Ross, putting a tiny hand on the huge man's shoulder. He
had to go onto tiptoes to reach. "I'm going to give you a second chance. I need a
note delivered . . ."
The lich glided through the catacombs. It waggled its neckbones; they felt reasonably
secure. The baroness seemed to have done a good job sticking it back together again.
Once, it told itself, I was the terror of the Cordonian Plain. Strong men blanched at
my name. The skulls of children decorated my parapet.
It mulled over the past for a moment. And now, it thought scathingly, I'm to be the
baroness's messenger boy. Again.
Any urchin in the city would be more than happy to deliver her missives in exchange for
a copper or two. But no. It had to be it.
It sighed.
Bitch, it thought. It wondered whether this headache was permanent. Just what I need,
it thought, a migraine for the next millennium.
IX.
Sidney stared out the window. Her shoulder wound was smarting. It looked like it might
rain.
Thwaite sat by the hearth, munching on a sausage he'd bought from a vendor down the
street.
"Do you ever get the feeling that we don't know what's going on?" said
Sidney.
"Mmphm?" said Thwaite through a mouthful of meat.
"It's been too long," she said. "Nick and Kraki should have reported
back by now."
"Mmrphl. "
Sidney watched as a goon left the house across the street, and grew alert as he came
directly to their own building. She drew her sword and walked quickly but quietly across
the room to the door. She stood next to the door, flat against the wall.
Thwaite watched her, became alarmed, and dived behind what was left of Nick's bed, the
remnants of his sausage flying.
The goon appeared in the broken doorway. His lips moved. ("Ross said to
knock.") He tried to knock on the door, but it wasn't there. He looked puzzled.
Sidney sprang into the doorway and put her sword to the man's Adam's apple.
"Who are you?" she hissed.
His eyes were saucers. Ross hadn't said anything about girls with swords. "I . . .
I'm Fred," he said. "Pleased to meetcha." He held out a hand, which Sidney
made no move to take.
Thwaite peered up from behind the bed. He eyed his sausage, now on the floor, rather
sadly.
"What do you want?" said Sidney.
"I got a message for you," said the goon. "From R-from somebody."
He reached into his pocket.
Sidney's sword scraped his chin. It drew blood. The goon froze. "Move
slowly," she said.
Moving glacially, he took a folded piece of parchment from his pocket. "Out of the
way, mortal," hissed a voice from behind the goon. Sidney peered around Fred. A
brown-robed figure with a deep cowl stood there.
Fred scanned his eyes as far to the right as they could possibly go without turning his
head.
"Begone, fiend!" shouted Thwaite, springing from behind the bed. He made the
sign of the god and his hands began to glow with white light. "Oh, do save your
energy," whispered the lich wearily. "I'm only the
postman today." Two skeletal fingers extended past Fred, holding an envelope.
Fred saw the bones. He gulped loudly. Sidney's sword bobbed with his Adam's apple.
"Fine," snarled Sidney, stepping back but keeping her sword aloft. "Just
leave your ransom notes on the floor. They are ransom notes, aren't they?" The lich
merely let its envelope go. It drifted lazily into the room and
toward the floor. Fred dropped his note and stepped back. He whirled, stared at the
cowled figure, and fled, whimpering to himself. The lich stood in the doorway, impassive.
"That it?" said Sidney.
"I'm to take a response," whispered the lich. "Tell them," said
Thwaite, "the answer is no."
"Don't you think we ought to read these first?" said Sidney. "No,"
said Thwaite. "I will not traffic with undead."
"Is that your response?" whispered the lich. "For now," said
Sidney. "Get out of here."
Wordlessly, the lich glided away. Sidney went to pick up the letters. "I'm going
to check on the statue," Father Thwaite said, and began to pry up the floorboards.
Fred's letter was a folded piece of parchment. Sidney unfolded it and began to read.
Priss: Golly, Priss. It's real tough having to do this kind of stuff: I mean, I
remember when you used to be smaller than me. You were so cute. You thought I was pretty
neat, too. I still remember that time you nearly pulled my ear off . . .
Anyway, it's funny how things work out. But, look, we need to make a deal. I got
something you want, and you got something I'd really like to have. So hey! Why don't we
trade? One dork for one statue. The dork's slightly used, but I guess he has kind of a
sentimental value for you guys. And you know I think blood is really icky, but, golly, we
might have to whack off a few bits to close the deal. Know what I mean?
Listen, drop me a line by sundown. Or, well, you know. If you want to talk, just wave
from the window and someone'll come. Sorry about this. No hard feelings, huh, sugar?
There wasn't any signature. "Montiel," Sidney said. "Ross Montiel's got
Garni." She didn't know whether to be relieved or upset. God knew, the dippy elf was
capable of anything. But at least he was a known quantity.
That skeleton guy, now, that was another thing. Its letter was much like the one it had
delivered before. The letter was written, apparently in blood, on expensive paper; the
envelope was perfumed. Sidney opened it.
To Master Timaeus d'Asperge:
My dear Timaeus, I write you again, but this time in trepidation rather than
admiration. I wish for you the greatest of worldly successes; yet I fear that your
stubborn resistance may instead bring you low. Please heed my warnings, dear boy! You do
not know what forces you deny.
Rejecting my monetary offer was unwise. I have been reluctantly compelled to take
stronger steps to acquire the statue. Specifically, I have taken two of your companions
captive-a thief known as Nicholas and a large and terrifyingly well-endowed barbarian.
Dear child, please be advised of the seriousness of this matter! The principal I
represent will acquire the object in question; preferably in peaceful wise, but, if
necessary, over the prostrate bodies of you and your companions. To speak of such things
is distasteful, but the facts must be faced; please accept my assurances that all
concerned would far prefer a less sanguinary resolution.
Should this offer, too, be spurned, the next step in our negotiation is clear. As much
as it would distress me to do so, I would be compelled by your refusal to treat your
friends harshly. Please be assured that there will be no tasteless brutality; I am quite
skilled in these matters, and should I be called upon to exercise my skills, your comrades
will endure memorable and exquisite agonies.
You have until day's end to accept.
I remain, sir, your loving and devoted friend,
And again, there was no signature; only a drop of blood at lower right. "Where the
hell is Timaeus?" she muttered. "Just my luck, someone snatches him too."
She turned to survey the room. "Father?" she said. No one was there.
The floorboards hiding the statue had been pried from the floor and laid aside.
Quickly, Sidney went to the hole in the floor and peered inside. The statue was gone.
Thwaite was gone.
Where there had once been only dirt and timbers, a tunnel led off into the earth.
"Father?" she called forlornly down the tunnel.
"I don't like the look of their visitors," said Wentworth. He held onto the
gutter. Every once in a while, the breeze threatened to blow him out over the street. He
had to clutch the gutter to remain hidden on the roof.
"Odd group," agreed Jasper. "That thug returned to the house below us,
you know."
"Did he?" said Wentworth. "Hmm. I wonder who's down there."
A large drop of rain hit Morglop on the head. The cyclops looked up. "Damn,"
he said. "Should have oiled sword."
"What should we do?" asked Jasper.
"Wait," said Wentworth. "We've seen no immediate threat to the
statue."
"Going to get wet," complained Morglop, looking upward.
It was a gray noon in the city of Urf Durfal, capital of the realm of Athelstan.
Atop the great volcanic pipe called Miller's Seat perched the many towers of Castle Durf.
Within, His Grace the Grand Duke Mortimer was sitting down to lunch: a magnificent
specimen of Lycoperdon giganteum, stuffed with bitoks de pore in a delicate
paprika cream sauce. The grand duke eyed the stuffed puffball mushroom with anticipation.
In the courtyard of the castle, Major Yohn drilled the Fifth Frontier. He drilled them
dailybut not, any longer, at dawn. The last time he'd roused his men that early, two
thirds had been staggeringly drunk.
General Carruthers, watching from the battlements, made snide comments about the
low-born soldiers below.
Across the city, workmen downed their tools and called for buckets of ale to chase
their bread and cheese. Housewives took a break from scrubbing kitchen floorboards or
boiling the wash or plucking chickens or darning clothes, and heated up a bit of tea. The
shops on Jambon Street continued a brisk trade, tradesmen sneaking a sausage or an apple
from under the counter.
Barges passed up and down the river. Farmers who had brought produce to market this
morning eyed their stock, hoping they'd be rid of it by nightfall. Wizards, by and large a
late-rising group, yawned, stretched, and called for their servants. Cats prowled the
alleys looking for mice, and urchins lifted purses. Remarkably, no one was actually
murdering anyone else at the stroke of noon, although three burglaries and an assault were
in progress.
Thunder sounded. It began to rain.
In the markets, vendors put up awnings to protect their wares. Shoppers scuttled for
cover. The town watch decided this was a good time to forget about patrolling and visit
the pub. Thieves cursed and headed for doorways. Cats crouched miserably in whatever
shelter they could find.
The grand duke took a bite of his repast. His look of delight turned instantly to pain.
The chef had not taken kindly to criticism of this morning's omelet and, in revenge, had
over-peppered the bitoks.
In an alley off Cobblers Lane, the lich examined its robe. The soaking cloth draped
itself revealingly over the lich's naked bones. It didn't mind the wet, but worried about
the uselessness of its disguise.
In number twelve, a woman wearing black peered into a subterranean tunnel, wishing
these things happened to someone else.
And down in the catacombs, two men lay bound in darkness, oblivious of the weather.
Kraki was chanting sagas to himself. He'd gotten to a long genealogical
sectionsome hero was reciting his lineage for the edification of a foe: ". . .
Sired he Gostorn, gap-toothed one;
Gostorn the mighty eater of mince, Apples ate also apricots too, Mighty pie eater eater
of pies . . ."
It passed the time, Nick supposed. He spent his own time trying to work his way out of
his bonds. The knots were not particularly well tied. It was hard, Nick thought, to tie
good knots when your fingers were half rotted away.
The stone slab grated aside. Dim torchlight glinted into the crypt. Even this faint
glow was enough to make Nick squint.
"Oi," said an orcish voice. "Either of you bums play Spatzle?"
"Vhat?" said Kraki.
"Spatzle?" said Nick, grinning. "I think I've heard of it. Isn't that
the one you play with a stripped deck?"
"You hasn't never played?"
"Sorry," said Nick. "I'm not much of a card player. But I wouldn't mind
learning."
"Bah," muttered Kraki. "Such games are for children and vomen."
"He says he's willin' to learn," said Garfok over his shoulder. "Come on,
guys," said Spug. "Let me owe ya."
"No chanst," said Drizhnakh. "You is broke. You is lost all yer
dough." "Oi!" said Garfok to Nick. "Gotny money?"
Nick thought quickly. He had about ten shillings on him. "Kraki!" he
whispered. "How much money have you got?"
"Don't know," said the barbarian. "Most of treasure."
"You're carrying most of your share?" asked Nick incredulously. "Yah. I
leave in inn, it get stolen."
He was probably right, Nick reflected. "Yes," he called up to the orcs.
"I've got a few pounds."
"I says we let 'im in," said Garfok.
"Not much point in playin' wiv ourselves," said Drizhnakh. Cheating Spug was
profitable; with him out of the game, it was more than a little pointless.
"Not da big guy, though," said Spug. "He's mean."
"Right," nodded Drizhnakh. "Don't wanna let him loose."
"Jake by me," said Garfok, then turned to call down to Nick. "You is
in."
After a momentary scuffle, the orcs extended a short ladder into the crypt. Garfok
climbed down to collect Nick. Kraki struggled wildly with his bonds. He cursed. "If I
can yust get loose," he muttered.
"Never mind that," whispered Nick urgently. "Give me your purse!"
He rolled over so he was back-to-back with Kraki.
The barbarian pressed his purse into Nick's bound hands. "Vhat you going to
do?" he said.
Nick grinned in the darkness. "We'll see."
Garfok grabbed Nick, flung him over one shoulder, and started back up the ladder. As he
reached the top, Drizhnakh took Nick, stood him up, and cut the ropes tying his hands.
"What about my legs?" said Nick.
"You isn't going anywheres," said Drizhnakh.
"Here," said Garfok. "Siddown." He pointed at a spot by a wooden
crate the orcs were using as a card table.
Nick sat down. He smiled at the orcs. "Okay," he said. "Why don't you
tell me how this game is played?"
"Right," said Drizhnakh, sitting down and picking up the deck. "Dere is
four suits-fangs, ears, axes, and greeps." He dealt four cards in illustration.
"Greeps?" "Greeps." "What are greeps?"
"Don't get him started!" warned Garfok.
Mrs. Coopersmith strode determinedly down Cobblers Lane, flanked by six tough-looking
men. One carried a sock full of sand. Another carried a rough-cut stick of lumber.
Wentworth peered at the men from the roof of number eleven, hanging on to the chimney
by one hand and screwing his monocle into an eye with the other. "I say," he
said. "What do you suppose they're after?" Morglop only grunted.
"I sense . . . ," began Jasper. "I sense . . . a discontented sausage
merchant with a surplus of product. Damnation, Jorgesen, why did you have to give that
afreet all our silver? I'm half starved. And half drowned."
"Never mind that," snapped Wentworth. "What is that woman doing with
those thugs?"
Mrs. Coopersmith barged through the doorless doorway. Several meanlooking men barged in
after her. "This is it," she said. "I want them out today."
Sidney backed toward one wall and drew a sword. The man with the stick of lumber faced
her. "Let's 'ave none of that, missy," he said. "Let's make this a peaceful
eviction, eh?" Two of the other goons flanked him. The rest of the men started
grabbing objects, carrying them down the hall, and dumping them in the street.
"Stop it!" yelled Sidney. "You bitch. We got rights!"
"You don't got no right to tear the place up!" the landlady shouted back.
"You're out! If you don't like it, you can bitch to the grand bloody duke!"
"Good lord," said a familiar voice from the hole in the floorboards.
"What's going on here, Sidney?"
She glanced toward it, then did a double take. "Father!" she said.
"Where the hell have you been?"
Thwaite clambered out of the hole. "The statue's gone," he said. "I can
see that. Where were you?"
"Eh? I scouted down the tunnel a bit . . ." "Find anything?"
"No. It goes on for quite a distance."
Satisfied that Sidney wasn't going to turn violent, the goons continued carrying
objects from the room and dumping them in the street. One of them grabbed a bundle of
Garni's miscellaneous stuff-eleven-foot pole, several steel cylinders, a heavy book.
"Hey!" yelled Sidney. "Put that back!" She grabbed the book and
wrestled with the goon.
"My son," said Thwaite to another thug. "Do you feel comfortable with
what you're doing? Do you feel justified in the eyes of the gods in tossing a fellow
mortal into the street?"
"Sorry, padre," said the thug, bowing his head in respect. "There's ther
sacred rights of property ter consider. And besides, I gots ter earn a living."
Bedding, bits of straw, and an amazing variety of possessions began flying into the
street.
Morglop was instantly alert. "They after statue!" he shouted. He leapt over
the edge of the roof, fell three stories, and absorbed the impact with a crouch.
"Have you noticed," said Wentworth conversationally, "that brainlessness
seems to be a uniform characteristic of swordsmen?" He picked up a piece of slate to
give himself some weight, dragged himself to the edge of the building, and drifted toward
the street, pulled by the slate. As soon as he had a direct line of sight, he hurled a
flask through the basement window of number twelve. The force of the throw pushed him back
into the parlor window of number eleven as he drifted past. Montiel, who was peering
through the window, drew back as the floating wizard's body pressed against the glass.
The flask exploded in the basement flat. Flames splashed about the apartment. Several
of Mrs. Coopersmith's crew hit the floor. None was more than slightly injured. A fire
began to grow in one corner of the room.
"Now look what you've done!" Mrs. Coopersmith screamed at Sidney. She beat at
the fire with a blanket.
Morglop lumbered down the hall. The goon with the stick of wood blocked his way.
"What the bloody hell do you" shouted the goon. Morglop bellowed,
"Surrender or die!" He swept his sword back.
The goon dropped the stick and ran.
A point of green light flew through the broken window and into the apartment. A green
ray shot from Jasper and struck a goon. The thug's eyes rolled up in his head. He tumbled
to the floor.
Morglop strode through the doorway, waving his sword. The goon with the sock of sand
stood by the wall and tried to kibosh the cyclops. Morglop stepped aside; the sock
whistled past; Morglop sliced the goon through the pancreas.
"Jasper!" Sidney said, recognizing the green glow and jumping to the
conclusion that the dealer in antiquities was attempting to steal the statue himself.
"Bastard!" She backed toward Thwaite and the hole. "Let's get out of here,
Father," she said.
"I concur," said the cleric. They dived into the hole.
"Hey, boss," said George. "A buncha wizzos is attacking the
apartment."
"Oh, phooey," said Montiel. "I can see that, George. Micah," he
said to his elven subordinate. "Get back to headquarters as fast as you can and get
reinforcements."
Micah took off out the back door and ran, zigzagging past the outhouses.
Ross turned back to his goons. "Okay, guys!" he said. "Time to earn your
pay." George, Fred, and Billy ran out the front door and down the stoop, swords in
hand. "You too, pal," said Montiel to the water mage. He shoved the odiferous
fellow outside and locked the door after him.
The water mage stood uncertainly in the rain, then followed the goons unhappily.
Montiel watched from the parlor window.
Morglop killed two of Mrs. Coopersmith's men. The rest fell to their knees. "We
surrender!" yelled one.
"I got a wife an' three kids," yelled another.
The landlady picked up Garni's umbrella and used it to beat the cyclops about the head
and shoulders. "Now, miss," said the cyclops, fending blows off with his sword
and forearm.
"Ruffian!" she shrieked. "Brigand! Murderer! I'll have the watch on you!
Get out of my building!"
She chased him around the apartment. The thugs, still on their knees, watched bemused.
Wentworth pulled himself in through the door and, hanging in midair, screwed his
monocle into an eye. "Gadzooks," he muttered. A fire burned merrily in one
corner. Trash and bits of plaster were all over the place. There was a large hole in the
floor.
Jasper zipped up to the alchemist. "They were apparently evicting Pratchitt,"
he said. "Don't seem to know anything about the statue." "Fine," spat
Wentworth. "Dandy. I hate swordsmen, truly I do." George, Bill, and Fred charged
into the room. George stabbed Went
worth in passing. He yanked his sword back to remove it from the floating alchemist.
Wentworth stayed on the sword. Weightless, he wafted back and forth as George shook the
sword, trying to get Wentworth off. His eyes glazing, Wentworth grabbed the blade and
pushed himself off the point.
Astounded, George studied his sword for several moments before returning to the fray.
Morglop engaged Bill and Fred. Either one he could probably have killed instantly, but
together they were reasonably well matched against him. Swords rang and sparks flew.
Since no one was paying them any attention, Mrs. Coopersmith's eviction crew took the
opportunity to escape out the broken window.
Wentworth's weightless blood drifted in globules about the room. On the verge of
unconsciousness, he pulled out a healing draught and gulped it greedily. He floated,
semiconscious, as the potion began to do its work.
Jasper shouted a Word. A ray of green light struck George. George froze.
The water mage peered in through the basement window. He, too, spoke a Word. Blue
energy began to glow about his hands.
At the back of the room, the fire raged merrily.
Mrs. Coopersmith battered Morglop from behind with her umbrella. "You try my
patience, woman!" yelled Morglop. He reached behind and yanked the umbrella from her
grasp. While he was off balance, Billy struck him a glancing blow.
Jasper spoke another Word. Under Jasper's mental control, George attacked Billy from
behind.
The water mage released the blue glow about his hands. A sphere of water smashed across
the room, tumbling Morglop and the three goons to the floor.
The fire hissed out. The room filled with the smell of wet charcoal. "Trouble at
the flat," gasped Micah. Montiel's lieutenants crowded round.
Soon, messengers spread out across the city, carrying Montiel's summons to the
underworld.
Sounds like a battle zone, thought the lich. Explosions, bolts of energy, and the clash
of weapons sounded from down the street. It peered around the corner to see a brilliant
green flash shine from the window of number twelve.
It pulled back into the alley. A bedraggled cat peered out from under a heap of trash.
"Puss, puss, puss, puss," the lich whispered. "Here pretty pussy." It
held out its sleeve, taking care to hide its bones, trying to give the impression that it
was holding a treat.
Hesitantly, the scrawny cat came forward. The lich grabbed it and broke its neck. The
lich felt the life force flow through its frame. It spoke a Word. The spell seized the
cat's expiring spirit and placed a compulsion on it. The spirit flew out of the alley and
across the city, toward the town house of Baroness Veronee, carrying the lich's message.
She would come, it reflected, daytime or no. And she'd come with all her resources.
Corcoran Evanish stood in the shelter of a doorway, out of the pouring rain. He studied
his list. He crossed off the fifteenth name. Eight more to go. He patted his burgeoning
purse with satisfaction.
His work was well done:
In a lonesome garret, a wizard clad in red spoke to her familiar. "Come, my
pet," she said. "Solid athenor; think of it."
In a filthy inn, a huge, bearded man drained his tankard and spat out the lees.
"Awright, gents," he said. "There's a job we can do that'll make us all
rich."
Down by the harbor, the captain of an elvish ship spoke to his crew. "And after we
have it, it's away and downriver for us," he said.
In a study in Old Town, the ambassador from Hamsterburg spoke to his spymaster.
"There may be a connection with the sceptre," he said, "which, as you know,
is the embodiment of our claim to rightful rule of the human lands."
A dozen groups plotted, and the battle raged.
Major Yohn prowled the battlements of Castle Durf. He was restless. It was too early to
start carousing, his men were fine, nothing much was going on at the castle.
The view from Castle Durf was spectacular. It was an eminently defensible spot, a
volcanic pipe that loomed over the city. Cliffs fell away on three sides to the city
below; the only approach was a long, low ridge leading to the castle. From the
battlements, it was possible to see the entire city and a good portion of the region. The
rain reduced visibility, but the gray skies and wet streets lent a certain somber grandeur
to the town.
Yohn passed a member of the Ducal Guard. The man's mail was rusted in spots. Yohn
scowled.
"What's that?" said Yohn. Out over the city there were flashes of light. A
brief explosion revealed people flitting around on a carpet.
The guardsman yawned, scratched himself, and looked. "Beats me," he said.
"Give me your spyglass," said Yohn. The guard shrugged and handed it to him.
Yohn peered through it.
Ye gods. Looked like a battle over there. "Five Corners Parish, isn't it?"
Yohn said.
"Huh?" said the guardsman. "Yeah, sure. Guess so."
It was obviously no riot. Rioters wouldn't have access to that much magic. Yohn handed
back the spyglass and hurried away. If he knew his men, most of them were sleeping,
preparing for the night's revels. He'd
better get them organized, send out some scouts, find out what was going on. They might
be sent into action at a moment's notice.
Nick raked in the coins. He grinned from ear to ear. Spug stared, roundeyed and
gape-tusked.
"You is sure you hasn't played dis game before?" said Garfok.
"Oi, Garfok," said Drizhnakh disgusted. "He's a bloody cardsharper,
ain't it as plain as da boil on yer face?"
"Another round, boys?" said Nick. He squeezed the deck with his right hand.
The cards shot across a cubit of space to be caught in the left hand. He performed three
quick poker cuts with his left hand alone.
"I is down to da last copper," said Garfok, fumbling the coin.
"Tell you what," said Nick. "I'll advance you a shilling for every
question you answer."
"What?" said Garfok suspiciously.
"It's not like I'm asking you to let me go or anything," Nick explained.
"I know you're too sharp for that. No, I realize I can't win my way to freedom.
"
"Days for sure," said Drizhnakh. "Da baroness would moider us if we let
ya loose."
"She's a baroness, huh?" said Nick. "That's interesting. For
instance," he said to Garfok, "I'd give you a shilling of silver if you'd tell
me her name. Now, what could be the harm in that? I'm not going anywhere, after all."
The orcs glanced at each other, then moved away. They conversed in low voices.
"It's a shilling each," said Garfok. "Sorry?" said Nick.
"We'll go fer it," said Garfok, "but we decides how many questions you
gets to ask, and we gets one shilling, each of da tree of us, fer every question."
Nick raised an eyebrow. "You're a hard . . . er . . . orc, Garfok, but it's a
deal."
He shoved three piles of silver across the floor. "Veronee," said Drizhnakh.
"Da Baroness Veronee."
XI.
A toothpick nearly embedded itself in Timaeus's eye. He ducked behind the door. When he
peered back into the room, a wild-haired face stuck up from behind the gaming table. It
was wearing an archaic Imperial helmet. "Damnation!" it shouted. "Arbalests
are bloody worthless."
A dark-skinned man stood up on the right. "They're siege machines," he said.
"What do you expect at a field battle?"
"No," muttered the man in the helmet. "It's the damned rubber bands.
Musn't wind them so tight."
The two leaned over the table. Rank upon serried rank of metal soldiers stood on little
hills of sand. There were infantry, cavalry, a dragon or two elevated above the fray on
sticks. Stands of orcs stood slavering, their officer's whips measuring out command radii.
The arbalests were on a ridge to the rear. The man in the helmet turned a tiny crank on
one of the siege machines and laid a toothpick against the rubber bow string.
"Professor Macpherson?" said Timaeus.
The man in the helmet stared briefly at the intruder. "Yes? My office hours are
ten to . . . d'Asperge, isn't it?"
"Yes, sir," said Timaeus.
"A year may not seem long in the geologic scale of things," said Macpherson
scathingly, "but it's too long to wait for a term paper. Your failure stands."
Timaeus blushed. Damn, but the man had a memory. "I haven't come about that,"
he said. "I need your help."
The dark-skinned man studied the table. "I do believe the II Cobatrix can see my
hill trolls," he said. He produced another stand of minatures, and placed them on the
table.
"Gadzooks!" said Macpherson. "Well placed. I shall have to commit the
reserve." He pushed several stands of soldiers about the table with a sort of
miniature rake.
"It's about Stantius," said Timaeus.
Macpherson snapped to attention. "Ave!" he shouted. `Ave Stantius!"
The dark-skinned man bellowed, "Ash nazg thrakataluk!"
"None of your damnable orcish gibberish!" yelled Macpherson. "The
Imperium shall prevail. The vexillation from the V Victrix attacks the Severed
Hand-Standard orcs, over here. I make it a seventeen to twenty-four assault."
The dark-skinned man studied the table. "Looks right," he said. There was the
clatter of dice. Macpherson frowned and removed several figures from the tabletwo
Imperials and six orcs. He laid them to the side. The dark-skinned man picked up one of
the figures and studied it idly.
"I'm sorry to intrude," said Timaeus, "but it is rather important. You
see, I've acquired this statue"
"I say, Macpherson, old man," said the dark-skinned man. "You've got the
uniform of the V Victrix wrong."
"What?" said Macpherson. "Devil I do!"
"Look here," said the dark-skinned man. "The coat buttons are
blue." "Yes, that's right," said Macpherson.
"Yet the Edict of 2837 specifies buttons `dyed in the color of the
Cataphringians'-a sort of muddy ochre," said the dark-skinned man.
"A statue of Stantius the Third" said Timaeus.
"Nonsense!" said Macpherson. "Nobody knows quite what color is
`the Cataphringian,' and I have a monograph somewhere about that maintains it was, in
fact, identical with the Imperial purple. But that's all irrelevant, as the V Victrix was,
by order of the Emperor Sculpine, entitled to adorn its buttons with the crest of the
Blessed Bodepredominantly cobalt blue in color."
"Entirely cast in athenor," said Timaeus.
"But Sculpine antedates the Edict of 2837," said the dark-skinned man.
"Surely the V Victrix would have adopted the new standard uniform." "Surely
not!" said Macpherson. "Does one abandon a mark of distinc
tion, merely because some general order-?"
"Absurd! Would one dare to defy an Imperial edict . . . ?" said the
dark-skinned man.
"I was wondering what you could tell me about Stantius's capture, and if you might
know anything about" said Timaeus.
"Fool!" shouted Macpherson. "What do you know, anyway? The Early
Successor States is your period! I'm the authority here, and if I say the buttons were
blue, then they're damned well blue!"
"Are not!" "Are so!" "Are not!" Timaeus sighed.
A steady stream of mud-brown water flowed into the tunnel opening. Beyond was a
weed-covered lot, perhaps two acres in extent. Not far away, tenements rose. On the far
side of the lot stood a shanty townlean-tos and shacks made of scrap wood and pieces
of trash.
"Where are we?" Sidney said.
Father Thwaite pulled himself out of the tunnel, depositing a layer of mud on his robes
in the process. He looked around.
"We're about three blocks from Roderick Square," he said.
Sidney clambered up beside him, likewise smearing herself with mud. The heavy rain
began to wash it off, simultaneously drenching her.
"I don't suppose the statue is hidden in the underbrush," she said. "Not
a bad hiding place," said Thwaite. "People wouldn't expect to find a valuable
object in a place like this."
Sidney knelt and examined the soil around the tunnel. "I'm no tracker," she
said, "but the statue is awfully heavy. I don't see any wagon tracks or the kind of
path you'd expect if several people carried it. It's like it was spirited through the air
when it got here."
Thwaite shrugged. "Not impossible," he said. "Demons could do it."
Sidney nodded slowly. "Yes. But could demons have dug that tunnel?" "Maybe,
Sidney; demons come in a fantastic variety of shapes. Look, if we're going to chat, can we
get under cover?"
"I'm going to look around," said Sidney.
Thwaite headed for the cluster of shacks. He bent over and scuttled under a lean-to.
There was a snore; Vic was lying on a pile of straw. "Vic," said Thwaite
softly.
The old man woke up with a snort. "Geoffrey," he said. "What are you
doing here?"
"I might ask the same of you." "I shleep here a lot," said Vic.
"Oh." There was silence. The rain drummed on the canvas overhead. The lean-to
was in a spot with good drainage, but a rivulet of water ran down Thwaite's back. He
realized he was pressed up against the canvas, and water was leaking through. He leaned
away.
The old man rested on one elbow and eyed Thwaite keenly. "Sho what're you up to
today?" he inquired.
"Nothing much," said Thwaite vaguely, looking at the rain. "Sho where'd
you find thish shtatue, anyway?"
Thwaite sneaked a guilty glance at Vic. "Sorry, Vic," he said. "I'm not
supposed to talk about that."
Vic's mouth tightened. "Play it your way, then," he said, rolled over, and
made as if to go back to sleep.
With some startlement, Thwaite noticed that a pigeon was standing in the shelter of the
lean-to, close to one end. It eyed him beadily.
Thwaite stared out into the rain.
Sidney was glad it was warm. She was drenched; if it had been cold, she'd have been
miserable.
She searched the lot carefully. She walked clear across it, moved to the right a few
cubits, and traversed the lot again. She was determined to search every square foot. The
statue could be hidden anywhere, buried in underbrush.
But it wasn't.
She did discover a mound of dirt about six cubits from the tunnel. It was vaguely
humanoid in shape, as if someone had made a snowman from dirt. The rain was gradually
pounding it into mud.
Sidney stared at it, sighed, and then attacked it with her hands. It was just possible
that the statue was hidden inside. She got dirt under her fingernails. She got mud all
over her clothing, her face, and her hair. It took her a few minutes to convince herself
that the statue wasn't there. It wasn't.
She went to look for Thwaite among the shacks and lean-tos. "Father?" she
called.
"Here, Sidney," he replied. She found him by the sound of his voice. He was
with some old guy-the same geezer he'd been with in the gutter this morning.
Vic gave up pretence of sleep and sat up. "You," she said to him.
He stared at her with the bright-eyed gaze of senility. "Hello?" he quavered.
"We met this morning," Sidney said, bending over and moving into the lean-to.
She hunkered down by the cleric.
"Thish morning?" the old man's brow furrowed. "Let'sh shee . . ."
His voice trailed off, and he muttered inaudibly to himself.
"He's gone," said Thwaite. "It comes and goes. What happened to you?
You're a mess."
"Never mind," said Sidney with some embarrassment. She swiped futilely at her
face, dirtying it further. "It's not here."
"Did you expect it to be?"
"Not really. You know, I'm getting tired of being pushed around."
"Hmm?"
"No statue; everyone a hostage; Nick and Garni's flat trashed by jerk wizards. And
I've just been sitting around waiting for things to happen." "Well, Nick and
Kraki tried to do something"
"And just wound up in a closet somewhere. The hell with it." She stood up in
the rain determinedly. "Let's go get Garni."
"How the devil do you propose we do that?" "Come on."
Vic continued to mutter to himself.
The guard at the gate looked Sidney up and down. She was dripping wet, her hair was
plastered to her head, her pants were covered with burrs, and there were smears of mud
across face and shirt. "If you're here for a job interview," he said, "the
answer's no."
"Very funny, jocko," she snarled. "I want to see Madame Laura." The
guard laughed in her face. "But she doesn't want to see you," he said.
Sidney slugged him, hard, in the stomach. He bent over. She knocked him on the back of
the head with the pommel of her dagger. He fell to the brick paving.
She walked briskly through the gate and toward the door.
Thwaite went briefly to the guardhouse door. "Sorry," he said, and blessed
the guard, who was sitting up, groaning.
Sidney took a key from her pocket, unlocked the heavy wooden door, and flung it open.
She strode into the foyer.
All motion in the room stopped. Everyone stared at her.
A nobleman of middle years, clad only in a leather harness, was on his hands and knees
on the rug. A bit was in his mouth. A flame-haired, softskinned lovely rode on his back,
holding the reins. A look of horror passed across the nobleman's face.
One of the chief officers of the town watch lay on a couch, his coat off and his shirt
unbuttoned to the navel, a glass of whiskey on the table beside him. A dark-haired girl
who could hardly have been older than sixteen sat next to him, legs drawn beneath her, one
hand inside his shirt.
On the long staircase with its patterned rug stood a dark-skinned woman wearing the
helm of a Ducal Guard and not much else. Sidney headed for the stairway.
Thwaite trailed her, goggling at the girls and the sumptuous furnishings. The room was
lit with small fire elementals, trapped in globes affixed to the walls. That was expensive
and, should a globe be broken, quite dangerous.
"Hey!" said the woman wearing the helm, standing with hands on hips halfway
up the staircase. "Where the hell do you think you're going? And you're getting mud
on the carpet."
"Out of my way," said Sidney. The woman moved to block her. Sidney faked
right, then left, and the woman scrambled to keep in front.
"You can't come in here," she said.
"Actually," said Sidney, "that's why people visit this place."
"What?"
"N-never mind. Get out of my way, bitch, or I'll get more than mud on you."
Thwaite peered over Sidney's shoulder from down the stairs. "Try not to actually
kill anyone," he pleaded.
Sidney pulled her sword. The woman's eyes went wide, and she backed up the stairs.
Sidney pursued. The woman halted, took a breath, and screamed loudly.
Sidney grabbed her and pushed her over the bannister. The woman caught the edge of the
stairs and dropped, unharmed, to the floor below. She glared at Sidney. "Have you
considered a career on the stage?" Sidney asked, trotting up the stairs to the
landing, Thwaite close behind her.
Several hall doors opened. A dwarf wearing nothing but trousers and carrying an axe
came into the hall. His chest was amazingly hairy. Two human women peered over his
shoulders.
A thin man, naked as a jaybird, rushed out. He stared at Sidney and her sword, and
transformed into a hawk. He fluttered past her, toward the main door.
At the end of the hall, a door smashed open. Madame Laura strode forth. "What is
the meaning of this!" she shouted.
Madame Laura was a stout woman whose age, beneath copious makeup, was difficult to
discern. Her nails were close to six inches long, each painted a slightly different shade
of red. Her dress had more frills and ruffles than you can shake a stick at. She eyed
Sidney's mud-smeared form severely and reached back through the door for a loaded
crossbow.
"'Lo, Mom," said Sidney:
Thwaite stared from Madame Laura to Sidney and back, agape.
They sat in comfortable armchairs in Madame Laura's office. Laura sat behind the desk
and wafted a lady's fan. The windows were open a crack, to let in the air but not the
rain; but the room was still rather warm.
Thwaite and Sidney wore robes. Servants had taken their clothes away to be cleaned. The
silk evening gown Thwaite wore, decorated with needlepoint dragons and fish, was worth a
small fortuneand heavily perfumed.
"My dear," Laura remonstrated, "I do wish you'd chosen a less dramatic
entrance. The Baron of Montrance was beside himself. And Magister Prescott, fearing
discovery, apparently transformed into a bird and flew the coop-without, I might add,
paying for services rendered." "Sorry," said Sidney shortly. "I . . .
I need your help."
Laura sighed and eyed the ceiling medallion. "Of course you do, my dear," she
said. "We could start with a manicure. And your hairstyle is too, too outrй. Now, I
have in mind the most eligible young man" "Mother! Stop it."
Laura looked her daughter over and sighed. "Of course," she said gently.
"Of course you need my help. I don't hear from you for two and a half years, except
when Ross complains that you refuse to use him to fence your goods. Really, Prissy, you do
go out of your way to alienate people who'd be happy to help. . . ."
Sidney stood up abruptly. "This was a mistake," she said. "Where's my
sword?"
"Priscilla," said Laura. "Sit down. I've got your clothes and you're not
going anywhere until I find out what's wrong."
Sidney sat down and glared at her mother. "What is it, dear?" said Laura.
Sidney sighed. "Ross has kidnapped a friend of mine," she said. "I'm
going to rescue him. I need to know where he's being kept."
Laura pushed herself back from the desk. "Darling!" she said, appalled.
"Ross owns half this place, dear, you know thatI . . ."
"The elf says he'll start chopping pieces off by nightfall."
Laura shook her head repeatedly. "What in the world have you done to drive him to
such extremes?" she asked.
Sidney looked out the window. "It's a long story," she said. "Basically,
he wants a statue we took out of the caverns. Everyone and his brother wants it,
too."
"I'll call Ross in," said Laura with decision. "We'll talk this out. I'm
sure"
"Mom! You don't understand. I don't have the statue."
"Oh, my," Laura said. "Oh, my. That does put a different complexion on
things. Who does?"
"How the hell should I know?" Sidney snarled.
"Don't get all high and mighty with me, young lady!" shouted Laura,
waving her fingernails. "You disappear for close to three years, show up asking
for help, and you're just as impossible as"
"Oh, come on."
Laura gave an irritated sigh, opened the desk drawer, took out a flask, and downed a
slug of something. Thwaite eyed the flask and licked his lips. Laura noticed. "Oh, my
good sir," she said. "I am most dreadfully sorry. I have been shirking my hostly
duties." She rang a bell. "Can I get you something? And you, Priscilla."
"I wish you'd stop calling me that." "It's your name, isn't it?"
"My friends call me Sid," Sidney said defensively.
Laura shuddered delicately. A boy of about eight flung the door open and charged in.
"Hi, Laura!" he said.
"Monty, we need something from the bar. What would you like, Father?"
"Er . . . your house whiskey will do fine," he said.
Madame Laura hid a smile. "Nonsense," she said. "Monty, fetch a snifter
for Father Thwaite, and tell Frederico to give us four fingers of that single malt the
baron brought last week, he'll know the one. Scilla?" "Tea," Sidney said.
"And a pot of tea," Laura said with distaste.
"Okay, Laur'," said the boy. "Can I keep a frog in my room? Mom
says"
"What your mother says goes," said Laura. "But tell Cook to give you a
mason jar, and you may keep it in the wine cellar, if you promise to feed it every
day."
"Gee! Thanks, Laura." The boy disappeared. The door slammed shut behind him.
"Now, then," said Laura. She waited expectantly.
Sidney knew what was next. She gritted her teeth and resigned herself to the
inevitable. "I'm sorry, Mother," she said, as gracefully as she could.
"Look, I know it's probably half my fault, but every time I see you . . ."
Laura waved a crimson-nailed hand carelessly. "Never mind, my dear, never mind.
Ross will have my derriere in a sling if he learns I've helped you pry your friend loose,
you know."
"I'm not planning on telling him." "You did barge in here in a
rather"
"Look, I doubt anyone down there recognized me."
"In your state? Quite possibly." Laura sighed. "All right then. You are
my daughter, and it is my devoir to aid you. Can you supply particulars?"
"Thanks," said Sidney. "Okay. The guy is a dwarf. Garni ben Grimi. He was
taken from a flat in Five Corners. Number twelve, Cobblers Lane. At about eight o'clock
this morning, some goons nabbed him. They searched the flat for the statue, which was
there, actually-but were too stupid to find it, even though they smashed the place up
pretty badly."
"I have spoken to Ross about his tendency to employ the less than capable."
"Yeah. Anyway, that's about it." "No other leads?"
"Not right now."
"This is not much to go on. However, I will provide you with a list of those of
Ross's safe houses I know about: Obviously, he may have ones I don't know about. However .
. . hmm." Laura leaned back, and tapped one ruby fingernail against her chin. "I
recall that he has a shop on the Calabriot Bridge. A goldsmith's, used as a front and also
to launder funds. He has several rooms in the back. Knowing Ross's sense of humor, I would
venture to guess that he's got the dwarf there."
"What? Why?"
"Makes disposal easy. Just drop the creature off . . . dwarves are heavier than
water, you know. And it's a good way to torture the poor lamb, too. Just hold him over the
river . . ."
"I get the picture. Do you have the address?"
"Yes, of course. I will ask you to memorize the list before you depart, as I do
not want it widely circulated."
"Thanks, Mom," said Sidney. "There is one other thing."
"What?"
"Why do you never write or come to call? We've had our differences, but, really,
Priscilla, two whole years . . ."
"Okay, okay."
"It's not that I ask much from you. You've gone your own way, and although I
shudder to think of the life you must lead"
"Mom!" "Still, it doesn't seem like a great imposition to ask you to
stop by occasionallymore than once a decade would be nice"
"All right, already! Mother, you're driving me nuts."
The door smashed open. Monty staggered in, carrying a tray. "Here we are,"
said Laura.
They rode Madame Laura's carriage through the streets with the blinds tightly drawn.
"Priscilla?" said Thwaite.
"Don't you start in," said Sidney. "I was just wondering . . ."
"That's my real . . . I mean, that's the name she lumbered me with."
"Ah," said Thwaite. "May I inquire . . . ?"
"What is it?" Sidney said irritably, holding the blind aside and peering into
the rain.
"Does your mother also bear the taint?" "What? Oh, you mean, is she
therianthropic?" "Yes," said Thwaite.
"Yes," said Sidney. "It's inheritable."
"As are most diseases of the blood," said Thwaite. "I do wish you'd
consent to let me"
"No," said Sidney.
For a moment, there was only the clop of the horses' hooves and the patter of
raindrops. Then, Thwaite chuckled. "I assume her alternate form is the same as
yours," he said.
"Yes," said Sidney, puzzled. "Appropriate," said Thwaite.
"What do you mean?"
"That she should run a cathouse," said Thwaite. "We're pinned
down," said Wentworth.
Morglop stood up, brought his crossbow to his shoulder, aimed through the basement
window, and fired. The bolt went through the stomach of one of Montiel's men. Morglop
ducked back down. A dart of flame shot through the window and splashed against the far
wall. Plaster fell from the ceiling at the impact.
While Morglop cranked the crossbow to ready another shot, Jasper looked out the window
himself, trusting to his partial invisibility for protection. Through pouring rain, he saw
demonic forms flitting overhead; occasionally, they'd make a foray to the street below or
drop rocks on unwary combatants.
"Where did all these blasted fools come from?" muttered Wentworth. He was
drooping noticeably toward the floor as his potion of weightlessness wore off.
"Oh dear," said Jasper.
"What?" said Morglop, risking a peek himself. Down the street, a massed
formation of zombies, perhaps forty in all, marched toward the: flat. They were still half
a block away.
"Zombies," said Wentworth. "Demons. Thugs. Where did they all come from?"
"I would guess," Jasper said, "that they're after the statue."
"Haven't seen action like this since Ishkabibble Front," said Morglop. He
snapped another bolt through the window. A demon flew past with the arrow in its forelimb,
chittering in rage.
"You'd think even those idiots in Castle Durf would notice something was up,"
said Jasper. "If this gets any worse, the whole parish will be in ruins."
"I believe that it's time to initiate a strategic withdrawal," said
Wentworth.
"You mean, run?" said Morglop. "Er, well, yes."
"Good idea," said Morglop.
"What do you propose?" asked Jasper. There was an orange flash through the
window. When they looked out, a tentacular demon was eating zombies and screeching
merrily.
"That tunnel," said Wentworth. "The statue must have been taken down the
tunnel. With luck, it's a safe way out."
"Tunnel?" said Morglop uneasily.
"Don't tell me you're claustrophobic, too," said Jasper.
"No, of course not," said Morglop defensively. "I like midwinter
holidays."
Wentworth eyed the cyclops suspiciously.
XII.
Feeling exposed and wet, Sidney crouched on the rooftop. The rain-laden breeze blew
past her. The bridge hung out over the river; there was no shelter up here to cut the
wind.
To the left and below her was the street that ran the length of the bridge. She
crouched atop one of the buildings that lined it. Even in the rain, there was some
traffic-a nobleman's carriage travelling to the suburbs on the far side of the River
Jones, a scurrying jeweller returning to work, jacket held overhead to provide some meager
shelter.
She peered into the street and tried to read the sign over the shop immediately below
her. Montiel's front was Samuel Berber, Goldsmithy. She wasn't having much luck; letters
frequently looked distorted through a cat's eyes, and she was reading the sign from an odd
angle. She thought she had the right building.
She padded up the sloping roof to the peak and down the other side, to look at the
river. Below her was a window, and another below it. Both were shut. She could leap to the
sill of the upper window-but she doubted she could leap back, at least as long as the
window was shut. The sill was quite narrow.
While she contemplated it, a head stuck out from the window below, the one on the
bottom floor. It peered down at the river. The head looked as if it might be dwarven.
"Meow?" said Sidney.
Garni looked up. "Sidney?" he said in a low voice. "Is that you?" "Mrowr!"
Sidney transformed and clutched at the roofing tiles. In human form, she suddenly
realized just how far down it was to the river. And she had no faith in her clumsy body's
ability to retain its purchase on the rain-slick tiles.
"Garni?" she called softly.
"Yes!" said the dwarf, craning for a glimpse of her. "Are you
okay?" asked Sidney.
"All things considered," said Garni. "I'm still in one piece, at any
event. I've been hoping a boat would go under the bridge below my window, so I could
jump."
"Forget that," said Sidney. "That's suicide."
"I wasn't thrilled by the idea," said Garni. "Can you bring a
rope?" Sidney considered. As a cat, she couldn't carry much-but if she got Thwaite to
tie a rope to her, perhaps she could manage. "I'll try," she said. "Back in
a while."
Thwaite glanced up and down River Road. The cobbled street curved along the River
Jones, one side lined with expensive houses, the other with the rocky wall that had been
built to contain the river. At intervals, small piers extended into the water; this was
not a dock area, but people came here to fish, and the wealthy inhabitants of the houses
along the road kept pleasure boats. No one was watching.
To Thwaite's left, the Calabriot Bridge extended out over the river. Thwaite hiked up
his robe and, cradling Sidney and the rope in one arm, climbed up onto the railing that
ran along the river. He teetered atop the railing, then stood upright and stabilized
himself by leaning against the side of the first building on the bridge.
He couldn't quite reach the building's rain gutter.
Sidney stood on his hands and stared at the roof. A loop of the rope was around her
neck; the rest, tied in a coil. She was to drag it along the rooftops behind her. But she
didn't trust her ability to leap from Father Thwaite's hands to the rain gutter, not with
the rope to load her down.
Thwaite almost toppled from the railing, then leaned against the building again. He
pulled Sidney back down to his chest. "Too far?" he said. "Mrow, " she
said, looked at him, and pawed at the loop around her
neck. She grabbed the rope with a claw and shook her head, trying to drag it off.
Thwaite got the idea and removed the loop. "Mowr!" Sidney said
urgently.
He tucked the rope between his legs and lifted her up again. She leapt lightly to the
roof.
She peered back down at him. He took the rope and tossed it up to the roof with her. "Rowr,
" she said, thanking him.
Gingerly, Thwaite stepped back into the street. An urchin was watching him with wide
eyes.
"And who might you be, my child?" said Father Thwaite.
The grimy girl eyed him suspiciously, then ran off down the street. The cleric sighed
and went back to the shelter of a doorway.
Sidney nuzzled the loop and tried to get it over her head. Not having hands had its
drawbacks. If she transformed, she could easily manipulate the rope; but the loop was too
small to fit around a human neck.
She hooked a claw into the rope and dragged the loop onto her head. Then, she couldn't
get her claw out of the fibers. Her paw dragged the loop to the side. It fell back onto
the roof. She gave a small meow of frustration.
She tried again. This time, she got it. The loop slipped down around her neck.
She trotted off, pulling the rope. It was heavy sailor's cable; Thwaite had gotten it
at a pier a few blocks downriver. It was a good half-inch thick and twelve cubits long; it
must weight close to a stone, probably more than she herself did in cat form.
It was hard work, dragging the rope.
She was two-thirds of the way down the bridge to Garni's building when something odd
happened. Suddenly, the rope didn't seem so heavy. She stopped and turned around.
The coil had come undone. The main part of the rope was three cubits behind her, in a
loose clump; she was unravelling it as she moved. Thwaite had purposefully tied the coil
with a loose knot. The idea had
been that she could undo it with teeth and claws when she got to Garni. But this way,
she'd be forced to drag the rope in a long line. It might get hung up on some obstruction
along the way.
She decided to transform and retie the coil. Then, she realized that she couldn't get
the loop off her head. It had tightened under the strain. This was bad news. But it left
her no alternative. She started forward
again. The coil gradually unwound as she pulled the rope along.
She wished it weren't quite so wet. She walked forward ten feet, twenty . . .
Suddenly, Sidney was yanked off her paws. She tumbled down the rainslick roofing tiles,
toward the edge of the roof and the river below. It was a long fall to the water, down
there . . . and she couldn't swim. And she was weighted down by rope
Her claws skittered over the tiles. The rope around her neck was pulling her down, down
. . . she felt her speed gathering-
A claw hooked under a tile. The claw was almost yanked out of her paw -but it held. She
came to a halt.
She lay on the tile in sodden fur for a long moment, panting. She peered down the
slope.
The rope ran directly down the slope from her, over the edge of the building. She
puzzled over that; before she had been yanked off her paws, the rope had run behind her,
along the roof. Gradually, she realized what had happened. The rope behind her had slipped
down the slope of the roof. The loose end had plunged over the edge, pulling the rest of
the rope with it. The rope had continued to slideuntil it yanked her off her paws.
If she hadn't caught that tile, the rope would have pulled her into the river.
How was she going to get the rope to Garni now?
She scrabbled her way back up the sloping roof. Then, leaning away from the edge, she
paced carefully forward.
For a while, the rope followed smoothly, running along the edge of the building. Then
it got hung up on the edge of a tile. She moved forward, and the rope began to pull up
over the obstruction and onto the roof-until something suddenly gave. The section of rope
she'd dragged onto the roof plummeted back over the edge, and she was nearly yanked off
her paws again.
At least she was prepared this time-and she wasn't yanked as hard. She kept her
footing.
Sidney hoped no one in the building below would look out his window and see the rope
dangling. He might be tempted to lean out and pull on it. . . .
She came to Garni's building at last.
Now what? She had planned to transform and, in human form, tie the rope around a nearby
chimney. But with the loop over her head, there was no way to transform without killing
herselfand it was now too tight to be removed.
If she could get down to Garni, he could remove the loop. But once down there, she
couldn't get back up; there was no way she could jump two stories, even as a cat.
It was a conundrum. Up here, she couldn't get the rope off; down there, she couldn't
tie the rope to the chimney. What was she going to do? She meowed.
A moment later, Garni stuck his head from the window. "What took you so
long?" he said in a low voice.
She flicked an ear. "Mrowr. "
"This is the rope?" he said, and grabbed it.
She hissed violently and backed away. If Garni tried to climb now"Not ready
yet?" Garni asked.
"Mrow!" she said.
"Okay," he said. "Meow when ready."
She sat back on soggy haunches. Her fur was wet through and through and wasn't getting
any dryer. She'd gotten this far, and she wasn't going to give up now. But how was she to
tie the rope?
She studied the chimney. Perhaps if she just wrapped the rope around it three or four
times, that would do . . . yes, that sounded plausible.
She ran around the chimney four times, pulling the rope after her. She tried to keep it
tight against the bricks. Then, she studied her work. It looked reasonably sturdy. Faint
heart never won fair lady, she thought to herself, then realized how ridiculous that
sounded. "Mrowrorw!" she said, as loudly as she could.
Garni grabbed the rope and, using it to steady himself, stood on the windowsill. He
began to climb. Sidney could see the rope go taut.
The chimney was not in direct line with the window. The rope held against a tile for a
moment-and then the tile broke off. Garni swung at the end of the rope along the side of
the building. Sidney heard him grunt. She envisioned the dwarf scraping along the stucco,
losing his grasp and falling. . . .
But the rope continued to swing gently back and forth, like a pendulum. "Mrow?"
said Sidney.
"I'm okay," the dwarf gasped. He climbed gingerly.
Sidney was suddenly yanked forward by the loop around her neck. The rope had slipped
around the chimney an inch or two. Garni gave a yelp as he dropped an equal distance.
Sidney felt a momentary panic. The loop was tighter than ever.
Uncomfortably tight. "Sidney?" said Garni.
"Mrow!" she said, hoping he'd hear urgency in the sound. He began to
climb again.
The rope slipped again. It slipped a third time. Desperate, she hooked claws under the
tiles and held on, hoping that the little resistance she could add would stop the rope
from giving.
It helped, but she could feel the loop tightening . . . tightening. . . . Breath rasped
in her throat.
Garni pulled himself over the gutter and onto the roof. Sidney was choking.
He came to her. She clawed desperately at the loop. She could barely breathe. He sized
up the situation quickly. While Sidney choked, he worried at the loop and the knot that
held it. . . .
The loop loosened. Sidney panted for air. She stood up wearily, and rubbed up against
the dwarf.
"Thanks, Sid," Garni said, and stroked her wet fur.
On hands and knees, he followed her across the sloping, rain-slick tile. The grand duke
stood on the battlements of Castle Durf. "I see what you mean," he said,
lowering the looking glass.
Flying creatures whirled in the skies over Five Corners parish. Several buildings had
collapsed. At least one building was in flames. There was a flash of green and then a red
line that hung in the sky for a second or two.
"Still," said Mortimer petulantly. "I hardly see why you needed to drag
me away from my studies. If there's unrest in the city, put it down. Eh?" "My
men stand ready, Your Grace," said Major Yohn.
"What? You puppy," said General Carruthers contemptuously. "Your Grace,
I hardly think a passel of backwoods bandit fighters are what we need here. My men will
make short work of whatever's out there."
"Fine, fine," muttered the Grand Duke. He itched to get back to his
mushrooms. "See to it."
Carruthers smiled nastily at Yohn, then turned and strode off. Carruthers would
probably make a botch of things, Yohn reflected. He'd better restrict his men to the
castle. He expected a summons to arms before the night was out.
Nick's legs were stiff. It was uncomfortable, sitting on the floor with ankles bound.
He scooted forward and pulled in the coins.
Garfok's ears were drooping. Drizhnakh looked upset. Spug was grinning tusk to tusk.
"Dis is a dumb friggin' game," said Garfok.
"You is just pissed cause you is losin'," said Spug. "So is you, ya
maroon!" said Garfok.
"Ya got anything better to do?" said Drizhnakh. There was no response, save
the crackling of the torch.
"Another round?" said Nick.
"Yeah, sure," said Garfok resignedly.
"Good," said Nick. "What can you tell me about the statue?"
Garfok and Drizhnakh exchanged glances. "What statue?" Drizhnakh said.
"Come on, boys," said Nick. "You know about the statue. The one we took
out of your temple. The one the baroness said she wanted. That statue. What do you know
about it?"
"Nuffing," muttered Garfok.
"Now, now," said Nick. "No answer, no pay. No pay, no play."
"Okay, okay," said Drizhnakh. "But we doesn't know much. A long
time ago, see, our granfaders' granfaders used to live in the Orclands. But dere was
dis big brouhaha. Da Dark Lord got pissed at dem or somethin'. So dey split, wiv dis
statue thing."
"Days what Gramma said, anyhow," said Garfok. "I din't know it was in da
temple, though."
"Fragrit din't never tell nobody nuffing," said Spug. "Days right."
Drizhnakh nodded.
"Thanks, boys," said Nick. He shoved three stacks of silver coins across the
table.
Timaeus studied the gaming table as the others argued. He was no judge of military
matters, but it appeared as if the II Cobatrix was badly outflanked. And there did seem to
be a great many orcs. He wondered how Macpherson planned to pull this battle off.
Macpherson and the dark-skinned man were pouring over an incunabulum and bickering.
"Vellantius says the dress was standardized, doesn't that imply that
previous distinctions were eliminated? And . . ."
"Yet, in the same paragraph, he refers to the elephant head emblazoned on the
shields of the Ceterinae auxilia. This indicates a degree of variation from the accepted
standard. . . ."
Timaeus puffed on his pipe and wandered about the table. Macpherson, or more probably
his graduate students, had done a fine job painting the figures. He had to squint to make
out some of the finer details in the gray light. He picked up an orc.
"Leave that be," snapped Macpherson. "Positions are important, and
you'll never set it back in precisely the same place."
"Oh, let the poor lad alone," said the dark-skinned man. "It's not that
vital." They began to argue once again.
Timaeus studied the table. The historians had built little hills of sand and had stuck
bits of painted lichen here and there to represent trees. A ribbon of blue indicated a
river, in the center of which stood an island.
Nob Island, Timaeus slowly realized. The River Jones. And that steepsided hill must
be"Miller's Seat," he said. But where was Castle Durf? And the city of Urf
Durfal?
The dark-skinned man looked over. "That's right," he said. "Topography
look familiar, eh?"
"Yes," said Timaeus. "I assume this is how it looked in Imperial
days?" "As near as we can tell," said Macpherson. "Durfalus, later Urf
Durfal, was little more than a market village."
"And this battle?" asked Timaeus.
"The Battle of Durfalus," said Macpherson. "3708. Where Stantius the
Third was captured by the orcish forces."
Timaeus pondered this for a moment. "And the V Victrix was on this ridge?
Here?" he said.
"Quite so," said Macpherson. "I've maneuvered them into approximately
the same position. And"
"What happened to V Victrix?"
"Destroyed," said the dark-skinned man, "to the last soldier. They died
defending Stantius, and the Dung-beetle Clan trolls hauled away the bodies as
provender."
"Hmm," said Timaeus. "In that case, why don't you do some digging?"
"Pardon?" said Macpherson.
"Where is this?" said Timaeus, pointing to the ridge. "Collin Hill,
somewhere, isn't it? Looks likemm, Market and Sylvan streets. If they all fell
there, you should be able to find the bones, armor, weapons. Perhaps even a button or
two."
Macpherson's eyes lit up. "An excellent notion!" he said enthusiastically.
"I've been meaning to bring out my Intro Ancients class on a field trip. Just the
thing, set the undergrads to digging ditches. That's about all their intellectual
attainments render them suitable for, in any event."
" 'Twould certainly solve the argument," said the dark-skinned man.
"Mind if I tag along?"
"Afraid I'll plant blue buttons if you don't?" said Macpherson nastily.
"I wouldn't put it past you," said the dark-skinned man.
"Good heavens, look at the time," said Macpherson. "I've got a seminar
with my graduate students in fifteen minutes . . . we'll have to continue the game another
time."
"Oh, bother," said Timaeus. "Look, I have a few questions you may be
able to answer. Do you mind if I"
"Come along," said Macpherson shortly, pulling on a pair of boots and a
canvas jacket. "Ask on the way." And he strode quickly out the door, Timaeus
nearly trotting to keep up.
"Stantius," said Timaeus. "What happened to him after he was
captured?"
"No one really knows," said Macpherson, bounding down the stairs.
"Except Arst-Kara-Morn, of course. They took him back to the Orclands."
"And then?"
Macpherson threw open the door to the hall and dashed out into the rain. "Devil
should I know?" he said. "Ask the Dark Lord."
"Why was he the last emperor?" said Timaeus, puffing to keep up. He hated the
rain. Water and fire mages don't mix too well.
"Damned good question," said Macpherson. "The mantle of imperium never
descended on another."
"How is that possible?" asked Timaeus.
Macpherson shrugged, scattering raindrops from his canvas jacket. "Perhaps
Stantius isn't dead. Perhaps Arst-Kara-Morn performed some great magic to prevent it.
Perhaps the gods got tired of humanity, and decided they'd not bother selecting our next
king." He paused briefly to let Timaeus catch up, then squelched onward, diagonally
across the Common. "We do have some sketchy evidence that a great ritual magic was to
be performed on the plain of Arst-Kara-Morn after Stantius's arrival. What happened then,
it is impossible to know. Humanity, of course, was in the throes of a dark age, and the
orcs were nearly as badly off; some great civil war broke out. Arst-Kara-Morn took
centuries to recover, and it's only now that they've launched another great war of
conquest."
"Is that what it truly is?" said Timaeus, disturbed. "You think this
thing at Ish is . . ."
Macpherson splashed through a puddle, wetting Timaeus to the knee. "Damned
right," he said. "Just the beginning."
"Do you know anything about a statue?" said Timaeus. "What statue?"
"A life-size statue of Stantius."
Macpherson ran up the steps to Cranford Hall. Gargoyles peered down from the soffit.
"All over the empire during his reign," he said.
"Cast entirely of athenor," said Timaeus.
Macpherson halted, blinked, and peered at Timaeus. "Impossible," he scoffed.
"No one would be so profligate with the metal. Why, its magical uses
alone"
"I know about that," said Timaeus. "But I've, ah, heard a rumor about
such a statue, and I was wondering whether there's any historical record."
"No," said Macpherson, shaking his head. "I've never run across any
such mention." He peered more closely at Timaeus. "If you should run across
such a thing, I should be extremely interested in examining it." Morglop was quite
relieved when the end of the tunnel came in view.
Several sections of the tunnel were already on the verge of collapse; once, a cave-in
had begun around them, and they'd had to run to avoid burial. Morglop pulled himself over
the tunnel's lip. Wentworth, recently re
stored to his accustomed weight, followed. It was drizzling. Jasper flitted around
Morglop and into the rain.
"Where are we?" said Wentworth.
"Just a mo," said Jasper. He flew straight up for a few dozen cubits and
surveyed the city. He zipped back down to the other Boars. "Near Roddy Square,"
he said.
Morglop studied the ground around the tunnel. He noticed the impressions made by a pair
of boots. He began to follow the tracks. They led to one edge of the lot, then walked
along it. They turned, and walked back. On the third iteration, Morglop realized that
whoever had worn these boots had been searching the lot, perhaps for the statue.
He came back to the others, who were examining a pile of dirt. Someone or something had
been digging at it. "Someone here before," Morglop said. "Search for
statue. Not find. I am puzzled; no wagon, no heavy prints. How they take statue from
tunnel?" He shrugged.
"Recognize that?" said Wentworth, nodding at the mound of dirt.
"I believe so," said Jasper. "It looks like what's left of an earth
elemental when the summoned force dissipates. So we're looking for an earth mage,
eh?"
"So it would seem."
"Now what?" said Morglop.
"Tracking the statute from here looks pretty futile," said Wentworth.
"Let's go back to my shop, and I'll conduct a magical scan. With luck, I should be
able to pinpoint the statue's current location."
"Okay," said Morglop. "Get cleaned up. Have tea." "That sounds
pleasant," said Jasper.
XIII.
Ross Montiel stood in the top floor of number eleven with his pet water mage. George's
body lay in the street. Ross peered at it sadly. "Golly," he said. "Micah
is sure taking his time."
The water mage was close to tears. "Duh-duh-demons," he blubbered. A winged
form flitted past the windows.
"I can see that," said Ross. "And zuh-zombies!" "Right,
right," said Ross.
There was a creaking sound from the roof. Ross looked up uneasily. There was a sharp
crack, then a rumble. Plaster fell about them. Ross and the water mage ran for the stairs.
The roof ripped off the building. Above them, peering in, was a giant demonic form,
something with compound eyes and tentacles. It emitted a peculiar high-pitched giggle. A
tentacle grabbed the water mage, who was too terrified to attempt a spell. He screamed.
The demon giggled again and inserted the mage in a massive, toothless maw. It gummed the
wizard to death.
"Oh, phooey," said Ross as he skipped down the stairs. It was hard to find
magicians who worked cheap. "Who's running these darn demons, anyhow?" he
muttered.
Someone was banging on the cellar door. "Let me out!" yelled Elma. "Shut
up!" shrieked Ross. Where was Micah, anyhow?
Ross considered running across the street to number twelve. He went to the parlor
window. A phalanx of zombies marched down the street, heading for a bunch of dockyard
toughs.
Ross recognized the dockers. It was the Death Spuds, a petty waterfront gang. He'd
fought a gang war with them once. He was happy to see them die.
Where was Micah, anyhow?
Up ahead, odd shapes flitted among the clouds. Carruthers, who was rather nearsighted,
failed to see them. There was the occasional flash and boom of a spell.
"Righto," said the general. Behind him was a century of the Ducal Guard, a
hundred middle-aged men on horses. "We'll sweep the blighters before us, what?"
"I say," said one of his men. "This'll be fun, eh? Haven't seen action
since last Carnival."
"A hundred men charging on horseback ought to give the scum whatfor, eh,
lads?" said the master sergeant. There were chuckles.
"Right, then," said the general. "On my mark, charge!"
With yells and laughter, the horsemen thundered down Thwart. Three of Micah's thugs
broke from hiding. They darted down Thwart Street into the doorway of the next building.
Micah watched them go.
A demon swooped. It had three rotating wings, an arrangement Micah had never seen
before. It grabbed one of the goons in its claws and began to lift.
"Now!" piped Micah. Crossbows twanged about him. Several bolts hit the demon.
The demon was startled enough to drop the goon. The goon fell twenty feet and broke his
neck on the cobblestones.
The other two made it to the safety of the doorway.
Micah sighed. There were too many demons and random blasts of magic out there. The only
reasonably safe way for his men to get to Montiel was by working down the street from
building to building. The buildings provided a modicum of shelter from demonic attack and
haphazard explosions. Unfortunately, Micah was losing too many men. It wasn't just the
demons, either. There seemed to be at least a dozen opposing groups out
therezombies, elves, dockyard toughs . . . Half the city was out after the statue.
"Better get the next group ready," said Micah to a hulking thug. "A lot
of the boys are deserting," said the thug.
"Of all the disloyal twerps," said Micah.
"Aw, come on," said the thug. "These guys signed up to kneecap debtors
and make an easy quid. Monsters from the nether hells ain't in the job description."
Another group of thugs dashed for the far doorway. They made it.
"Ross is in danger," shrilled Micah. "He needs us."
The thug dug a finger into his ear and drilled for earwax. He didn't want to respond to
that statement. In his opinion, a boss who got himself into this much trouble didn't much
deserve to stay boss.
But no one was asking his opinion.
The elven sailors huddled in the ruins of an apartment building. "Gosh,
Cap'n," said one. "This was supposed to be easy money."
"Yeah," said another. "Grab a statue and run."
"Sorry, guys," said the captain. "Looks like a lot of other bozos heard
about this statue thing, too."
The baroness's headquarters was in a sewer. The scent left something to be desired, but
it was well hidden, and the catacombs gave her scouts ready access to the whole parish.
The lich plodded up to her, dragging a dead elf. The baroness grabbed the body and
inspected it. She spoke a Word; she spoke several. She did not need to kill an animal to
fuel this spell. Enough people were dying up above; she tapped the energy of their deaths.
She completed the spell. A zombie elf lurched to its feet and back down the corridor to
join the rest of her forces.
"Where is the statue?" the baroness demanded.
"It's a madhouse out there," whispered the lich. "I count at least six
contending forces."
"Damn those orcs," muttered Veronee. "They said they were selling me an
exclusive."
"And," whispered the lich sarcastically, "an ore's word is his
bond." "Spare me," snarled Veronee. "When will you have it?"
"Hard to say," the lich whispered. "We're half a block from number
twelve. It shan't be long."
A fireball exploded in the rubble.
As the flames dissipated, the form of a paunchy, red-haired young man in a maroon
greatcoat appeared. He held an elaborately carved meerschaum pipe and stared about the
rubble that had once been number 12, Cobblers Lane.
"Good heavens," said Timaeus. A sudden whistle increased in volume and
intensity. He threw himself flat on the ground and rolled behind a cast-iron bedstead.
A flash of green exploded in the street. Cobblestones, thrown from the roadbed, flew in
all directions, shattering windows. In its place, the explosion left a thorntree, standing
two stories high. Its branches moved restlessly, searching for prey.
The thump and thunder of other spells could be heard. So could shouting voices and the
screams of the dying.
On his hands and knees, Timaeus scrambled about what was left of the flat. He'd
teleported because his trip to the university had taken far longer than he had expected;
too long.
He hoped Sidney wouldn't be too upset. "Sidney?" he called. "Nick?
Father Thwaite?"
Awestruck, the elves held their fire. A hundred men thundered past on horseback. A
hundred men in mail. A hundred men with lance and sword. Horseshoes struck sparks from the
cobblestones. At the van floated the flag of Athelstan.
They certainly looked impressive. Then they met the zombies.
The big advantage a man on horse has over a foe on foot is mass. When a cavalryman
charges you with lance extended, a ton is hurtling at you at twenty miles an hour. All of
that kinetic energy is concentrated at the point of the lance. That lance can penetrate
any mail.
A horseman's advantage is also his Achilles' heel. Picture cavalry charging pikes. The
pikes are longer than the lances. Guess whose point penetrates whose mail?
A massed pike formation can defeat a cavalry charge every time if-and this is an
important ifthe formation holds. For a cavalry charge is a fearsome sight. Many a
pikeman has turned and fled when faced with the reality of a ton of flesh and steel
hurtling down his throat.
Unfortunately for the Ducal Guard, zombies have no imagination. Being dead already,
they have no fear of death.
General Carruthers was supremely confident of the Ducal Guard's ability to sweep all
opposition before it. He kept his confidence right up to the instant that he ran his mount
into the zombies' pikes. The horse screamed, fell on its back (flinging Carruthers ten
feet into the curb), and broke its leg. It continued to scream as the rest of the hundred
piled into it, horses falling, men dying on pikes or trampled underfoot.
The irresistible force met the immovable object. The immovable object won.
Zombies with swords and axes moved out to dispatch the wounded. Soon, there'd be a
whole bunch of new zombies. Necromancers have something of an unfair advantage that way.
Limping in clanking armor, scared out of his wits, General Carruthers fled down the
street.
There wasn't anybody here, Timaeus realized.
In the distance, there was the clash of arms, the sounds of screams, and a tremendous
clatter. More spells rocked the air. I've got to get out of here, Timaeus thought.
Cobblers Lane was an unhealthy place to be.
He hoped that the rubble did not contain the bodies of his companions. If it did, he'd
never find them.
Where would they have gone?
No way to know. But Kraki's inn sounded like a good bet. Timaeus began to prepare
another fireball teleport.
A second fireball flashed in the ruins across the street. Montiel opened the door a
crack. Incredibly, there didn't seem to be anyone in the street right now. He darted out
and into the rubble of number twelve.
It didn't take him long to find the tunnel below the floorboards. He ventured down it a
short length but couldn't go any farther. A few cubits in, it had collapsed.
He stood in the tunnel for a long moment. Spells boomed and crashed in the distance.
"I've been taken," muttered the elf. Obviously, the statue was gone.
Corky Evanish had said no one else knew about the thing. Corky Evanish had been lying
through his teeth. Corky Evanish had some questions to answer, Ross decided. If the
customs official answered them with alacrity, Ross might even let him live. For an hour.
Or two. The elf smiled to himself in anticipation.
Ross clambered up the side of the hole and pulled himself onto the rubble. "Uh
oh," he said. A bunch of guys in rags were waiting for him. "Hi fellas!"
said the elf. "You've just become a bunch of rich . . . dead
guys." They were dead, all right. Some of them were weeks dead. They gave off
quite a pong.
"It is awfully hard," Ross reflected, "to bribe zombies."
Ross was getting a little frightened, but he hid it well. The zombies hustled him into
the sewers. Ross used the sewers to dispose of corpses. He was beginning to suspect that
he might wind up a corpse himself.
"Who are you?" said the veiled woman to Montiel in a melodious but somehow
threatening voice.
"Hiya doll," said the elf, trying to get a glimpse of her legs.
"Montiel, Ross Montiel. But you can call me sugar."
She gave a low chuckle. "The dead have no epithets," she said. She motioned
to the lich. Montiel died quickly.
"My apologies," she told the corpse. She spoke the spell that would allow her
to interrogate the spirit of Ross Montiel. "Where is the statue?" she asked.
"Beats the hell out of me," said the sepulchral but somehow still shrill
elven voice.
Veronee grimaced. Her zombies had already sifted through the ruins. The elf had been
her last hope for information. She was tired and testy. She'd been up all day for nothing.
"I await your orders," the lich whispered.
The gods only knew where the damn thing was, Veronee thought. Someone had nabbed it,
that much was clear. Judging by the mess up top, half the city was trying to find it.
"Back to the house," she told the lich. "What about the zombies?"
it whispered.
"Let them fight on," she said. The zombies were of no account. It was easier
to let them be cut to pieces than to try to find some place to keep them until needed.
It was time, reflected the baroness, to give Morty a visit. The grand duke might be a
fool, but Sir Ethelred, the foreign minister, ran a fairly effective intelligence network.
The statue might be anywhere in the city; if anyone could find it, Sir Ethelred could. All
Morty had to do was give the orders. He'd be happy to give her the statue as a present,
Veronee thought; more than happy, if she were to give him the reward he desired. The
thought was distasteful-but, Veronee thought, exitus acta probat, after all.
As long, she thought, as she managed to keep the truth of the matter from Sir Ethelred.
"Catastrophe," blubbered General Carruthers. "Foul sorcery and knavish
tricks."
"What exactly" said Sir Ethelred, peering over his pince-nez.
"Demons!" shouted the general. "Necromancy! Undead! The whole parish in
chaos! Mobilize the army! Send out word across the realm! The grand duke must flee to
his"
"Thank you," said Sir Ethelred testily. "You may go."
Carruthers looked from the foreign minister to Major Yohn and back again. The general
knew when he was being snubbed.
He gritted his teeth. He hadn't exactly returned in triumph. Blushing it shame, he
strode from the library.
Major Yohn turned to Sir Ethelred, his leather chair creaking. "It's hard to
believe that a simple magic object found by some adventurers could cause this much
chaos," he said.
Sir Ethelred shrugged. "Per rumor," he said, "it's an object of
fantastic value, as well as of magical power. Something that seems almost calculated to
arouse greed among our less virtuous citizens."
"What would you have me do?" Yohn said.
"The most important thing," said Sir Ethelred, "is simply to restore
order. It's a rather formidable undertaking, to be sure, but"
"I believe it is feasible," said Yohn matter-of-factly. "Good,"
said Sir Ethelred. "I shall leave it in your hands." "A pity Carruthers
was"
"Carruthers is a fool," said Sir Ethelred shortly. He curled a greasy lock
around one forefinger.
"The grand duke seems to trust"
"You leave Mortimer to me," said Sir Ethelred. "How long do you expect
you'll take?"
Major Yohn stood. "I shall report when I have a better notion," he said.
"Farewell."
"And godspeed," said Sir Ethelred, rising and shaking the young soldier's
hand.
Timaeus stood at the bar of the Inn of the Villein Impaled. "What's your
pleasure?" said the wench.
He eyed her plump bodice, then thought better of it. "Ahpint of
bitter," he said. "In a clean glass, mind." He didn't think much of the
inn's standards of hygiene. "And would you have any pipeweed?"
"Aye, sir," said the wench, and went to fetch him his drink and smoke. He was
beginning to get worried. His friends weren't here. He'd been up to Kraki's room, but
there was no sign of recent occupancy. Timaeus frowned, shrugged, then settled in at a
table by the window. He'd just have to wait for someone to show up.
He peered through the window into Roderick Square. Old Mad Roddy still posed atop his
charger. Timaeus drank a silent toast to Valiant, Roderick's horse, who, per legend, had
considerably more brains than his rider.
A wizened derelict came to the table. "Buy a drink for an old man?" he
wheezed.
Timaeus was about to give him the brush-off when he noticed a pigeon on the man's
shoulder. "Where'd you get the bird?" he asked.
"Heh," said Vic craftily. "Buy me a drink, and I'll tell you the
tale." So Timaeus did, and Vic began to spin him some yarn about a shipwreck
and a cursed bird. Timaeus fed the pigeon pretzels and had some more beer.
XIV.
The sign on Wentworth's door said "Closed." Sidney glanced through the
window. There didn't seem to be anyone inside the shop.
The only other pedestrian in the street, a fop with a rapier, ran through the rain in a
futile attempt to protect his silk blouse. Though no eyes were on her, Sidney didn't pause
as she passed Wentworth's storefront. She merely strolled past the shop and around the
corner.
Garni and Father Thwaite were waiting for her, huddled against the side of the
building.
"It's closed," Sidney reported. "I didn't see anyone inside."
Father Thwaite was unhappy with this development. "Are you certain it's necessary
to break in?" he said. "It seems rather rude-not to mention illegal."
"Look, Father," said Sidney. "Last thing we knew, Nick and Kraki were
headed here. Then they disappear, and some guy who's been on a strict diet for five or six
centuries shows up with a ransom note. Maybe Jorgesen has nothing to do with it. But I
wouldn't bet on it. Rude or not, I'm busting in."
Thwaite sighed.
"What if Jorgesen shows up while we're ransacking the place?" asked Garni.
They stood in silence for a moment. "We'll worry about that when it happens,"
Sidney said. "I just wish we were better armed." She had only her sword; the
others had no weapons at all.
Through the gray light and pouring wet, they walked back to Fen Street. Garni and
Thwaite stood in front of the door and argued about nothing in particular while Sidney
worked on the lock. A lone carriage came down the street, its horse morose in the rain,
its driver buried deep in his cloak.
Garni and Thwaite moved to shield Sidney from the driver's eyes as she worked.
The lock came open. They hustled inside. Sidney locked and closed the door behind them.
Father Thwaite took a sniff and immediately began to chant a prayer. He threw his arms
wide; silver light appeared, encircling Garni and Sidney as well as Thwaite.
Instantly, Sidney drew her sword.
"What is it, Father?" Garni demanded, reaching for a battle-axe that wasn't
there.
Thwaite shook his head and continued to chant.
Sidney circled warily, looking for danger. "Gods," she said. "What a
smell."
"What is it?" said Garni.
Sidney rounded the counter. "Rotten meat," she said. "That's what it
is."
Garni peered over her shoulder. The floor of the shop was covered with dismembered
bodies in an advanced state of decay. "Gah," he said. "They've been here a
long time."
Thwaite stopped chanting. The silver light dissipated. "Sorry," he said.
"I smelled zombies, so I . . ."
"No need to apologize, Father," said Sidney. "You didn't know they were
dead."
"Zombies are dead," said Thwaite. "You mean . . . dysfunctional, I
suppose."
"Whatever," said Sidney irritably. She blinked; she recognized one of the
corpses. "Mike Yarrow!" she said. "Hell." She stood over the body for
a moment. "He looks fairly fresh."
There was the sound of a key in the lock.
Sidney dived behind the counter. Garni rolled under a worktable. Father Thwaite darted
up the stairs to the roof.
". . . nice cup of tea . . . my word, what a pong," said Wentworth as he
entered the shop.
Morglop sniffed. "Undead!" he grated. He hurled Wentworth to the floor,
whipped out his sword, vaulted to stand atop the counter, and peered about alertly. Then,
he noticed the mess on the floor and relaxed.
Wentworth picked himself off the shop floor. He was irritated. "My dear
cyclops," he said. "It is not considered courteous to play skittles with the
person of your host. . . ." He caught sight of the dismembered bodies. "Oh
dear," he said. "And the cleaning woman doesn't come till Tuesday."
Garni lay against a wall. A severed hand in an advanced state of decay
rested less than a foot from his nostrils. Garni's nose twitched. He hoped the
newcomers would leave soon. Either that or find him. He could feel bile rising in his
throat.
Jasper flitted into the shop. The point of green light circled the room.
"Wentworth, old chum," he said, "I know your potions contain somewhat
exotic ingredients, but really. Eye of newt and toe of frog is all very well, but rotting
human flesh . . . Hullo. What's that?"
"What's what?" said Wentworth, gloomily searching through his pockets for his
handkerchief. The smell was really quite revolting.
"I sense . . ." said Jasper. "Ah, Miss Stollitt. What a pleasure to meet
you again. Do introduce us to your two companions."
With some relief, Garni rolled out from under the worktable. Shuddering, he pushed the
dismembered hand away with his boot. Sidney and Thwaite reluctantly joined him.
Wentworth stared at the trio, handkerchief to nose, in undisguised astonishment.
"Jasper," he said, "will you please tell me what in creation is going
on?"
The smell of zombie wasn't nearly so bad in the back room, at least with the door
firmly closed. Sidney, Thwaite, and Garni sat on stools at a scarred and battered old
oaken table.
Morglop leaned over Sidney. His single eye was golden, huge in his face; a scar slashed
his right cheek from top to bottom. In one ear, he wore a feathered earring. His mail was
polished but well-worn, a few broken links visible. His triceps bulged. He wore a sword, a
pommelled dagger, and throwing stars. He looked dangerous. "Crumpet?" he
growled, scowling and holding out a plate.
"We'll never talk," said Sidney defiantly. She clenched her fists and sat
bolt upright on the plain wooden stool.
Jasper's green point of light hung over another stool. "But my dear," he
said, "all I ask is that you explain"
"You can kill a free woman," said Sidney fiercely, "but you cannot break
her." Her jaw was set.
Wentworth, who had been bustling in the background, appeared with a steaming pot and a
platter bearing teacups. "Tea?" he said brightly.
"Do your worst," snarled Garni. He folded his arms across his chest and
jutted his beard. Thwaite, pale, nodded agreement.
"The last we saw your friend Pratchitt," said Jasper, "he and a rather
muscular fellow were pursuing us by carpet over the skies of this city-for no discernible
reason, as far as we could tell."
Sidney made a rude noise. "I don't know what you've done with Nick and Kraki, and
I don't know what you're going to do with us. But remember this, villain"
"Really," said Jasper. "This is all quite unnecessary."
Since no one had responded to Wentworth's offer, the alchemist poured cups for Jasper,
Morglop, and himself. Jasper's teacup rose from the table and tilted back in midair. There
was a slurping sound. The tea level dropped noticeably. Wentworth turned to Garni.
"One sugar or two?" he asked.
"I will not break bread with my enemies," Garni growled.
"It isn't bread," Wentworth pointed out. "It's tea. And I rather hope
you don't break the china."
"What makes you think we enemies?" asked Morglop, popping a whole crumpet
into his mouth. His mail jangled as he sat at the table and pulled over the jam.
Sidney snorted. "First, you offer to buy our statue. When we don't immediately
agree, you kidnap two of our group, threaten to kill them unless we give you the
statueand, when that fails, assault Nick's flat and try to snatch the statue by main
force. This doesn't count as friendly behavior where I come from."
"You don't have the statue?" asked Jasper urgently.
Sidney glared at him. "Bring on your tortures," she said. "We'll never
tell."
"Well," said Wentworth wearily. "Really. You break into my shop, spread
dead people all over my floor, smash up my merchandise, and refuse my tea. Breaking and
entering is one thing, but deliberate rudeness is quite"
"What?" said Garni.
"I mean to say," said Wentworth, "after all. It's only a bloody spot of
tea. I'm drinking out of the same pot, am I not? There should be no cause to suspect
poison."
"No, no," said Garni. "What was that about dead people?"
"And damned odoriferous they are, too," said Wentworth. "I haven't the
foggiest idea how I'm to get rid of them. I can't just set them out with the trash; people
will look askance."
"Wait, wait," said Father Thwaite. "You mean the zombies aren't
yours?"
"Mine?" said Wentworth. "What the devil do I want with zombies? Cuthbert
knows, finding capable salesmen is difficult enough, but I suspect that animated corpses
would rather put off my clientele. . . ."
"They aren't ours, either," said Sidney slowly. "No?" said
Wentworth. "Then whose are they?"
"Precisely," said Jasper with satisfaction.
They all stared at him. Or rather, in his general direction. "What do you know
about it?" Garni demanded.
"Less than you," said Jasper. "However, consider. There was a fight here
between a group of zombies and . . . an unknown. The statue has disappeared."
"You don't have it?" said Sidney.
"Would that I did," said Jasper. "The whole purpose of watching your
apartment was not to snatch the statue at an opportune momentI do have certain
respect for the notion of property rights, my dear, and I can raise sufficient capital to
purchase it from you should you desire to sell-rather, it was to ensure that the item did
not fall into the wrong hands." "Like whose?" said Sidney skeptically.
"Do you know what your statue is?" asked Jasper. "Do you?" said
Garni.
"Er . . . well, no, not entirely. But . . . I suspect it is important. That is,
not merely of value for its metal content, but important on a far higher plane."
"Hah?" said Sidney.
"You know about the Sceptre of Stantius?"
"It's glowing, right? And there's some silly story about a new king . . ."
"Precisely. And your statue depicts Stantius." "So?"
"So? Consider! How much magical energy does the statue contain? There must be
a connection between it and the sceptreand, possibly, with the war in Ishkabibble.
Suppose the legend of the king's return is true; would not-ah-certain parties take
considerable pains to forestall the legend's fulfillment?"
"If you were just watching the apartment," said Thwaite, "why did you
attack us?"
"We didn't," said Jasper.
"No?" said Sidney. "You didn't? Muscle boy here didn't come charging
into our flat waving his sword?" She pointed at Morglop with her thumb. "Friend
Jorgesen didn't try to blow up the building with explosive flasks?"
Wentworth cleared his throat. "No," he said. "Rather, certain members of
our party ascertained that the statue was in imminent danger of capture by the forces of
darkness."
"What?" said Sidney.
"Therefore, we acted to prevent it from falling into the hands of the lords of
evil."
"I beg your pardon?" said Thwaite.
"You were under attack when we arrived, as you may recall," Wentworth said.
He took a sip of tea.
"No, we weren't," said Sidney.
"Yes, we were," Thwaite reminded her. "We were being evicted."
"Mrs. Coopersmith?" said Sidney unbelievingly. "You thought Mrs.
Coopersmith was a servant of chaos?"
Morglop swallowed and looked at the ceiling.
"I said that a member of our party came to this conclusion," Wentworth said
scathingly. "I didn't say that this individual was even remotely justified in so
deciding."
Morglop cleared his throat but said nothing. Everyone stared at him. "Why am I
beginning to believe this?" complained Sidney.
Garni grinned.
"One of the principles of my order," said Father Thwaite, "is: never
ascribe to malice what is adequately explained by incompetence."
"A wise rule," said Jasper.
"Everyone else attack too," said Morglop defensively. "Human thugs,
demons . . ."
Wentworth snorted. Morglop hurriedly took another crumpet.
"Let me get this straight," said Sidney. "You didn't attack us to get
the statue."
"Correct," said Jasper. "Actually, I had hoped you still retained
possession."
"No." Sidney sighed.
"The statue doesn't show up on a magical scan," Wentworth said to Jasper.
"Damnation," said the green light. "What does that mean?" Wentworth
shrugged and took a sip of tea. "It's either out of the city or someone's masking
it."
"Masking it?" said Garni.
"Hiding its magical emanations," said Wentworth. "Is that
possible?" Garni asked.
"Certainly," Wentworth said. "It's not an easy thing to do. It would
take a fairly powerful mage. But it's by no means impossible. It's merely a variant on a
simple invisibility spell."
"Okay," said Sidney. "Look here. Nick and Kraki have, we think, been
kidnapped by a necromancer. At least, what delivered their ransom note was a skeleton in a
robe. If-and I'm only saying ifthose zombies aren't yours, then I buy your story.
But why are you so concerned about the statue falling into the wrong hands?"
"Yeah," said Garni. "Who are you guys?"
"Jasper de Mobray, Magister Mentis and KGF, at your service, sir,"
said Jasper. The green light dipped, giving the impression of a bow. "No, I mean you
lot," said Garni.
"Am Morglop," said Morglop. "We're Boars," said Wentworth.
Garni looked at him as if he were mad. "Of course you are," he said
soothingly. "I'm a gazelle myself."
Morglop chuckled.
"Members of the Loyal and Fraternal Sodality of the Boar," said Wentworth
with irritation. "An ancient order of chivalrous souls devoted to righting wrongs and
fighting evil."
Sidney snorted. "A club where overgrown adolescents go to suck back booze and tell
each other lies about adventures they never had."
"Now Sidney," said Thwaite reproachfully. "The Boars distribute free
capons to the poor every Mathewan's Feast, and"
"One of our many charitable endeavors," said Jasper.
There was silence for a moment. "First," said Sidney, "I get hooked up
with a aristo firebug with delusions of competence. Then, I get involved with a bunch of
overage boy scouts."
"You can always go home to mum," suggested Thwaite. "It's beginning to
look more attractive," muttered Sidney.
"Well," said Wentworth, "let's see what we can find out about those
zombies." He rubbed his hands with anticipation, pushed his chair back, rose, and
dumped several ounces of crumb on the carpet. A marmalade cat materialized and began to do
its part for household cleanliness.
They stood in the front room. One hand holding a scented handkerchief to his nose,
Wentworth carefully opened an ivory box with the other. Within, there lay a dragon's
tooth.
"This is a rather rare item," he said, his voice slightly muffled by the
handkerchief. "Avagrrine!" he shouted.
Vibrating slightly, the dragon's tooth rose into the air and hung at about chest
height. It turned black and swung to point at the door to the cellar. "Black,"
said Wentworth, "for necromancy. Not that this is any sur
prise, to be sure. And it is indicating that a source of necromantic magic either came
from or exited through the cellar door. Or possibly both." Morglop opened the door
and peered into the dark cellar. "Need light," he said.
Wentworth took a lantern from its hook by the cellar door. He put his handkerchief into
his pocket and, breathing through his mouth, withdrew a small flask from inside his coat.
He opened it and poured a single drop onto the lantern's wick. The wick flamed.
Wentworth led the way into the cellar, holding the lantern high, the dragon's tooth
floating before him. "Aha," he said. "That tunnel was not here
before." The tooth pointed directly toward a roughly dug hole in the side of the
cellar wall.
"Not tunnel again," muttered Morglop.
"Hunh," said Sidney. "Okay. Let's go take a look."
"Can you give us some weapons?" Garni asked Wentworth. "Of course,"
the alchemist said.
Cards were scattered across the wooden box. In the flickering torchlight, Garfok and
Drizhnakh looked hangdog in defeat. "And where is her headquarters?" asked Nick.
Garfok looked at Drizhnakh. Drizhnakh shrugged resignedly. "She gots a place on
Collin Hill," said Garfok. Nick skated each orc a shilling, picked up the deck, and
began to shuffle.
"Oi!" said Spug suddenly. "Wait a minute. I gots an idear."
"Oi, Drizhnakh," said Garfok. "Ya hears dat? Spug gots an idear."
They both chortled.
"No, really," insisted Spug as Nick began to slap down cards. "Look. Dis
guy's got alla da dough, right?"
"Days right," said Garfok soothingly.
"So we is lettin' him ask questions so's we gets a stake, right?" "Right
you is, Spug!" said Garfok. "Dat is real good. Ya got it right da first time,
even."
"Okay," said Spug. "Why'nt we just take da dough? We gots swords an
stuff, right? Huh, guys?"
Nick stopped dealing. He looked at the orcs nervously. Drizhnakh's jaw dropped. A dazed
look appeared in Garfok's eyes.
"Oi!" shouted Drizhnakh. He sprung to his feet. "Arrrrgh!" He
ran to the chamber's uneven, rocky wall. He banged his head against the stone. "Arrrrgh!"
he said. He banged his head again. Soon, he was building up a good rhythm: Thud thud
thud thud.
Spug whimpered. "I's sorry, guys," he said. "Gosh, I's sorry I's so
dumb. But how come"
"You is right," said Garfok. "Huh?" said Spug.
"You isn't wrong," said Garfok. "You is right." "I is?"
"Yup."
There was a moment of silence, broken only by the thud of Drizhnakh's head against
stone. Then, Spug leapt for joy. "Hah!" he shouted. "I is right! I is
right!"
There was a thunk. The wooden box jerked two feet across the floor, cards flying off it
and into the air. A quarrel protruded from the box's side. "Freeze," said a
voice.
The orcs froze. Drizhnakh stopped banging his head on the wall and peered dizzily at
the speaker.
Sidney Stollitt stood in the passageway, a crossbow in either hand. One was still
loaded.
"Oi," said Garfok. "If we rush her . . ."
Two figures appeared flanking her: a dwarf with a great axe and a cyclops with a sword.
A point of green light flew past them and into the chamber.
"I'd advise against any precipitate action," said Jasper. Garfok gnashed his
tusks.
While Sidney covered the orcs, Garni moved forward to disarm them. "Where's
Kraki?" the dwarf asked Nick.
"In there," said Nick, nodding toward the crypt.
Morglop and Garni heaved the slab aside. Sidney peered down into the crypt. Kraki,
bound and bleeding, peered up at her uncertainly. He frowned. "Don't worry,"
Sidney called. "We'll have you out of there in a jiffy."
"Ah . . ." Kraki said.
Nick handed Sidney the ladder. She lowered it into the crypt, then descended. Dagger in
hand, she approached Kraki's form.
"Stop!" bellowed the barbarian. Sidney halted. Suddenly alert, she peered
around the crypt, looking for danger. "What is it?" she hissed. "I vill not
be rescued by a voman," Kraki said.
"What?" said Sidney unbelievingly.
"Vhat you mean, vhat? I can yust hear the bards sing about this vone. `And the
damsel rescued the hero in distress, hey tiddly tiddly a-tiddly wink-oh.' No vay."
"Cut it out," said Sidney with some irritation. She knelt by Kraki. The
barbarian rolled away as fast as he could, until he hit the wall of the crypt. "You
vant to humiliate me?" he demanded. "Stay avay, or . . ."
"Or what?" said Sidney nastily.
"Mother of Tsich," he said. "I'd be laughingstock of Northland. Kraki,
son of Kronar, rescued by a girl. Vhat if my father heard about it?"
"Fine," said Sidney. "Stay here. See if I care." She turned and
climbed the ladder again.
"Hokay by me," said Kraki from the crypt. "If vord get out, I never
marry. No Northland voman be my vife. Folkmoot bar me from speaking. Companions shun me.
Some hero, me."
At the top of the ladder, Sidney rolled her eyes. "You do it, okay?" she said
to Garni. The dwarf grinned and took her dagger.
In the front room of Wentworth's shop, the three orcs cleaned up the dismembered
zombies under Morglop's monocular glare. The others were with Nick and Kraki in the back.
Still weak as kittens, Nick and Kraki sat at the oaken table and fortified themselves with
tea and brandy.
. . . so the orcs agreed," said Nick. "I asked them who our captor was."
Everyone leaned forward.
"They said it was the Baroness Veronee." There was a shocked silence.
"There must be some mistake," said Wentworth. "The baroness is a
well-respected courtier, an intimate of the grand duke himself. . . ." His voice
trailed away.
"Hmm," said Jasper. "You're saying she's a necromancer?"
"According to our green-skinned friends," said Nick.
"I say," said Jasper to Wentworth, "who do we have at court?"
"Mmm," said the alchemist. "How about Sir Ethelred?"
"He's a Boar?" said Thwaite with interest. "No," said Wentworth,
"but his secretary is." "Who's Ethelred?" asked Garni.
"The current foreign minister," said Wentworth. "His portfolio includes
espionage; and I believe, therefore, the baroness's activities fall under his
purview."
"Fine," said Sidney. "Warn the court. But we'd better do something about
her ourselves."
"I quite agree," said Jasper. "She has the statue, I expect."
"How do you figure?" said Garni.
"I reason as follows," said Jasper. "I don't have it. You don't have it.
Someone dug a tunnel to snatch it out. Veronee apparently has access to a network of
catacombs and tunnels beneath the city, as evidenced by your capture and the zombies in
Wentworth's shop. Ergo, it seems likely she is the one who stole it. Quod erat
demonstrandum."
"Sounds good," said Garni.
"Damon!" said Jasper. "A message for the Grand Boar!"
A small green light separated from Jasper. "No dice," said Damon. "What?
I need to send a message"
"It's after quitting time," said Damon nastily.
There was a hostile silence for a moment. "You have a dangerous amount of gall, my
young friend," said Jasper. "You exist at my sufferance, you know."
"You gonna snuff me?" said Damon. "Gonna be pretty hard to send a
message if you do."
Jasper was speechless for a moment. "Right," he said in an annoyed tone.
"Time and a half."
Damon considered this briefly. "Okay, Jazz," he said. "You got a
deal." Some time later, the Grand Boar surveyed the crowd. "Jasper has called
the Sodality to arms. Who will answer?" he shouted through his tusks. "I!"
shouted a voice. "And I!" "And I!"
"Forget it," said a dwarven voice.
The hunter's horn sounded. They headed for the door.
The grand duke was engaged in a tricky bit of work. He took the scissors and carefully
cut at the base of a Lactarius piperatus. The blue-gilled bolete was precisely the
right size for harvesting; but harvesting it presented dangers. In common with other
mushrooms of the genus Lactarius, it oozes a milk when cut, like the stem of the
common dandelion. Unlike that of other Lactarii, the milk of piperatus is
extraordinarily acidic. It is inadvisable to take the fungus with the bare hands. Unless
the acid is washed off immediately, it begins to eat into the skin.
Some scholars have gone so far as to classify piperatus as poisonous. The
classification has its merits: if one eats a crown of the mushroom raw, one experiences
severe gastrointestinal pain. Some might even find the experience fatal. Yet the same
would be true if one were to eat a raw chili pepper.
This, in fact, was Mortimer's discovery, one of which he was inordinately proud: piperatus,
when properly prepared, is delicious. Even with the milk pressed from the crown, the
mushroom is extremely hot; but this merely makes it an ideal spice for addition to dishes
intended to be fiery. Mortimer's kitchen used piperatus exclusively when strong
spices were called for.
Mortimer's mining lantern shone on his mushrooms as he worked. He lay atop a mound of
composted dung mixed with humus, goggles protecting his eyes from any spray of milk. A
man-at-arms entered the chamber. "Your Grace?" the soldier said.
"Yes?" said Mortimer, without looking up. He was involved in his work.
"Your Grace, the Baroness Veronee requests an audience."
It took a moment for this to penetrate Mortimer's concentration. He rolled to his side
and stared at the soldier through his goggles. "She does?" he said.
"Yes, Your Grace." "She's here?" "Aye."
Mortimer stood up. He held the scissors in one hand and a blue-gilled fungus in the
other. He was clad in dung-smeared overalls and rubber waders. Goggles made him appear
rather froglike. Why would the baroness have come on such short notice? Could he dare to
hope . . . ?
"Have the kitchen prepare us a nice big Fistulina hepatica. With fried
onions," he told the soldier. He suddenly realized that he was in no shape to receive
anyone. "And tell Reginald to draw me a bath."
As he hurried through the dungeons toward his bath, he wondered what might go well with
the Fistulina. Perhaps the Chateau d'Alfar '06. No, too light; an earthier wine was
needed, a full-bodied red. Perhaps the St. Tammanie. Or the Sang du Demon. Yes, definitely
the Demon. That would do nicely.
Veronee tapped her foot impatiently. She stared at the tapestry. Some clod in plate
mail was standing over a dead griffin, holding the beast's severed head in one hand. He
was grinningthe clod, not the griffin. "Heroes," the baroness sneered to
herself.
She'd been waiting a good half hour. She was somewhat peeved. Had her hold on Mortimer
begun to fade? There'd been a time when he would have seen her instantly.
"Please follow me, my lady," said a manservant. The baroness turned away from
the tapestry and followed him. He led the way down a corridor and into Mortimer's private
chambers.
Mortimer was waiting for her in his salon. He lounged in an over-stuffed armchair,
wearing a silk dressing gown with a gorgeously rendered red dragon on the front. He held a
briar rather awkwardly in one hand. His silk-slippered feet were up on a footrest carved
in the shape of an heraldic lion. Veronee had to smile; her fears were groundless.
Mortimer was obviously trying to look dashing. He was succeeding, unfortunately, in
looking like a nearsighted fungus fancier in a bathrobe. Which was only fair, since that's
what he was.
"My dear lady," Mortimer said, rising and waving his unlit pipe. "How
pleasant to see you." He motioned the guards to get out, and they, with a grin,
complied. "May I offer you a glass of wine? The Sang du Demon '89, quite a good
year."
"Of course, Morty," said the baroness.
"Oh, Mortimer," said Veronee throatily, placing one hand on his arm. His
wineglass shook. "I need your assistance in the most dreadful way." The grand
duke swallowed hard. "Gah," he said in surprise. She'd come
to him for help? Most unlike her. "Yes, umm, of course, yes. How can I help you,
hmm?"
Veronee pulled out a lace handkerchief, dabbed at her eyes, and twisted it between
lacquered fingernails. "Your Grace," she said and gave a sob, "I am
ruined."
"My honor!" said the grand duke, standing upright. "What has
happened?"
"The fundament of my family's fortune," she said despairingly, "has been
filched."
"Your fortress in Filbert has been pilfered?" said the duke, shocked.
"Nay, nay," sobbed the baroness. "Our fortune is not founded in our Filbert
fortress. Rather, it flows from a figure."
"A figure?" said the grand duke, puzzled.
"A statue," explained the baroness, "full-scale, depicting a man in
archaic harness. It has magical properties, bringing wealth and well-being to its owner.
And now it is gone!" She broke down and heaved sobs into her handkerchief.
"Now, now," said the grand duke. "Now, now. Fear not, dear lady."
He patted her arm somewhat cautiously.
Veronee threw herself into the grand duke's arms. His wineglass hit the floor with a
crash. He nearly tumbled over the footrest. "My lord," she sobbed, burying her
face in his dressing gown. "I know you will help me!"
Unable to believe his good fortune, the grand duke stroked her hair. "What can I
do?" he asked.
She looked up at him. "Oh, Morty," she cooed, "can your men not find my
statue?"
"Eh?" "If a reward is posted; if the guard searches diligently . .
."
"Oh, yes. I suppose. We'll have the herald make an announcement immediately. Sir
Ethelred can coordinate the search."
She covered his faces with kisses. "Oh, Morty! I shall be forever grateful."
Idiot, he thought. He'd given away the farm. Here he had her at his power, and he'd
simply granted her request. Surely he could have extracted some minor dalliance in
exchange for aid? He cursed his tutors.
Neither romantic badinage nor haggling had been part of their curriculum. Tutors, he
reflected, never taught you anything important.
Mortimer cleared his throat. It was in his mind to suggest that a little advance
gratitude would not be amiss, but he could not find the words. She tucked her head into
his reedy chest. "Mortimer?" she asked softly. "May I tell you
something?"
"Of course," he said.
"I . . . I have always found you attractive."
The grand duke's Adam's apple bobbed like a yo-yo. "Yes?" he squeaked.
"Do you think . . . I mean . . . are you expecting anyone soon?"
"No," he moaned.
Somehow, they began to move toward the bedroom door.
The Baroness Veronee doubted he'd make much of a bed partner. On the other hand, she
felt hungry. Yes, she thought, she could definitely use a . . . bite.
Sir Ethelred Ethelbert was in the library. He perched unsteadily on a ladder, a book in
one hand. He gaped down at Jameson, his secretary. "Are you sure?" said Sir
Ethelred. "Baroness Veronee? A necromancer? And a spy for Arst-Kara-Morn?"
"The information is from my Sodality connections," said Jameson. "I do
not believe they would make such an accusation baselessly."
The foreign minister replaced his book on the shelf. Slowly, he descended the ladder.
"If we act on this information and it proves false, it will mean my head," he
said.
"Yes, sir," said Jameson.
"On the other hand," said Sir Ethelred, "if I can make it stick, I can
probably get Mortimer to see reason about the Ishkabibble crisis. The baroness has been
one of the primary obstacles. . . ."
"Sir, ah . . . the grand duke is with the baroness now." "Now?
Where?"
"In his private chambers."
"In his private chambers?" Sir Ethelred looked distinctly uneasy. He shook
his greasy locks. "Delightful. I shall rush in, find him in flagrante, and
inform him that the lady with whom he is delicto is a spy. I'm sure he'll
appreciate the stern vigilance of our guardians of public order."
"Sir," said Jameson uneasily, "he could be in danger at this very
moment."
Sir Ethelred sighed. "It's taking a terrible risk," he told Jameson.
"Young men are supposed to take the risks. We old fogies are supposed to stay in our
studies and pull the strings. Ah, well; miseria fortes viros probat, eh?"
Mortimer sprawled on the big four-poster bed. The curtains to the bed were drawn. He
snored gently. Two small wounds were visible on his neck. Poor pathetic twit, thought the
baroness; he'd never even gotten his pajamas off.
Veronee wiped the blood from her chin. They were always suggestible in this state.
"When you awake," she said to the grand duke's slumbering form, "you shall
do as I say. You will remember nothing of this conversation"
There was a pounding at the door. There were shouting voices. She distinguished the
voice of that meddling minister, Sir Ethelred something. "My liege!" it shouted.
"You are in dire peril!"
She sat bolt upright. They knew she was in here, of course. She had entered Castle Durf
openly and requested an audience with Mortimer. If they were saying he was in danger . . .
her cover must be broken.
There was the sound of an axe chunking into the door.
That clinched it. Interrupting the grand duke was one thing. Breaking down his door was
quite another, especially when he was engaged in an amour with a noblewoman. Either they
knew what she was, or a coup d'etat was in progress. She doubted the latter.
How had they found out? No time to worry about it now. There was just time to finish
the poor bastard. She leaned over Mortimer and drank deeply. The life rattled from his
body.
Naked, she ran to the French windows and threw them open. There was a bolt of
lightning. She started.
For by the flashing light, she saw the ghost of Mad Roderick, atop his charger Valiant.
For an instant, she was sure her sins had caught up with her. Mortimer's ancestor was
about to wreak his revenge.
Then she realized that she was seeing no ghost. It was a statue.
A bronze statue.
A statue identical to the one in Roderick Square.
How odd, she thought. Did Morty have a replica made for his terrace? Axes chunked
repeatedly into the heavy wooden door. It wouldn't hold much longer.
She noticed that the statue had pigeon droppings on its shoulders. She examined it more
closely.
It was the one from Roddy Square.
If it wasn't in Roddy Square, then what was? The door splintered.
The Baroness Veronee transformed into a bat and launched herself into the night.
Eighteen Boars had answered the summons. Garfok counted them. In all, Garfok thought,
the three orcs were surrounded by twenty-six heavily armed people of various races, all
armed to the teeth, most with powerful magic items, many with intrinsic magical abilities.
And every single one of them disliked orcs. Garfok had resigned himself to the prospect of
a shallow grave in Wentworth's cellar.
. . . taking a party this size and this well armed through the streets of the city is
inviting trouble. Ergo, we need you to lead us through the catacombs to Veronee's
mansion," said Jasper.
"No chanst," said Drizhnakh. "Unh uh," said Garfok.
"Does ya think we is stupid or somefing?" said Spug. "You vant to live,
or vhat?" said Kraki.
"Oi, sure we wants to live," said Drizhnakh.
"Then you take us to house of baroness," said Kraki.
"Dat don't sound like da way to ensure my future survival, if ya follow me,"
said Garfok.
"Look at it this vay," said Kraki. "If you take us to baroness, maybe
she kill you. If you don't, for sure I kill you."
"It ain't dat easy," said Drizhnakh. "Da problem wit' da baroness is
dis: if she wants to rip out yer eyeballs wit' red-hot tweezers, a little thing like da
fact dat you're dead ain't gonna stop her."
"Perhaps I can suggest an alternative," said Father Thwaite. "Huh?"
"Burial in consecrated ground would prevent the use of your body or spirit. . .
."
"So yer offer is dat you'll bury us in a churchyard after ya kill us, so's da
baroness can't turn us into zombies? Dat's real generous, I gotta say." "We're
wasting time," said Jasper. "Look here, I admit that there is a
certain danger that the baroness will wreak revenge upon you should you aid us.
However, the odds are that you would survive the experience." "Sez you."
"We're offering you your freedom. . . ." "Da freedom to be a dead
guy."
"Surely a sufficient cash payment would overcome your reservations." Garfok
grinned delightedly. "Now yer talkin'," he said.
While Jasper haggled and Morglop kept his eye on the captives, the others began to
prepare.
"Two healing draughts per person," announced Wentworth. Garni nudged Sidney.
"Take them," he said.
"We'll be okay," she said. "We've got Father Thwaite."
"They cost a good pound argentum on the open market," he said.
"You never know when one might come in handy."
"Oh, all right," she said.
Wentworth handed Garni a lacquered box containing three red gems. "What's this
for?" said Garni.
"They'rerather like congealed fireballs," said Wentworth. "Throw
them and they explode."
"Ah . . . same radius as a fireball?" "Quite. Do be careful with
them." "You bet."
"Don't test that in here!" yelled a woman in black.
"Why not?" asked an elf who was pointing a rod toward a window. "If it
backfires, it could wipe us out," she said. "And you don't know how many charges
it has, anyway."
Wentworth showed Sidney his cache of small weapons. She found room for six throwing
stars and a brace of daggers under her belt.
"I beg your pardon," said Father Thwaite, tugging at Wentworth's sleeve.
"Would you have any brandy?"
Wentworth frowned. "Fortifying yourself before a battle may sound like a sensible
notion a priori, " he said, "but I've found that the effects are more
deleterious than beneficial."
Thwaite sighed. "Nonetheless . . ."
Wentworth shrugged and found the cleric a flask.
The alchemist moved around the shop, pulling down vials, flasks, and powders. He handed
them out hither and yon. A good portion of his inventory was going into the pockets and
packs of the assemblage.
This was, Sidney thought with satisfaction, perhaps the best armed group of adventurers
she'd ever seen. The baroness would never know what hit her.
"Look at dese dips," whispered Garfok to Drizhnakh. "Dey actually think
dey've got a chance."
Drizhnakh gave a hollow laugh. "When does we make a break for it?"
XVI.
This, thought the Baroness Veronee, is no fun.
She dodged crazily through the sky. It was raining fiercely. Her fur was wet through
and through. Lightning crashed from time to time; she prayed none found her.
Below her, she saw her destination: Roderick Square. Grand Duke Roddy posed as always,
sword aloft. Valiant had three feet on the ground. That meant something or other, Veronee
thought; died in battle or didn't die in battle or something of the kind. Two feet aloft
meant something else.
She fluttered around the monument. She tried to land on the sword blade; she grabbed
for it with her legs, expecting to swing to a halt and hang facedownthe usual perch
for a bat.
She almost broke her neck. There wasn't any sword.
She flew to the edge of the square and hung from the rafters of the Inn of the Villein
Impaled. It sure looked like a sword was there.
She wanted to examine that statue more closely. Specifically, she wanted to touch it,
to see if it felt like a man on horseback-or more like the lifesize statue of a human
male.
Unfortunately, bats have no hands. To feel the statue, she'd need to return to human
form.
Equally unfortunately, her clothes were now in a pile by Mortimer's bed. Veronee
suspected that a naked woman climbing up Mad Roddy's statue would elicit a certain amount
of interest. Not that there were many people in the square just at present.
She caught a whiff of smoke. Pipeweed, she thought. She peered through the inn's small
and rather dirty window. There were two men sitting at a table. One was a geezer, passed
out on the table. The other was a large, red-haired young man, smoking a pipe-Timaeus
d'Asperge, she thought in some surprise.
Hmm. Could she possibly have misjudged him? Could he have been clever enough to
disguise the statue as Mad Roddy? Or was his presence here mere coincidence?
There was, she decided, only one way to find out.
She fluttered to the statue and transformed. She climbed it and felt the figure.
There was no doubt about it. This statue was not what it appeared to be. It merely
looked like Mad Roddy. It felt like the life-size statue of a human male.
Someone must have replaced Roderick's statue and, for want of anything better to do
with it, decided to play a practical joke on Mortimer. Who might have done the deed?
"Hey, sugar," came a voice. "Don't you know 'bout Odd Rod? You wan'
sa'sfaction, you lookin' in the wrong place."
She looked down. A drunk had accosted her. She leapt to the cobblestones.
"Aroint thee," she said contemptuously. The drunk leered and grabbed for a
buttock.
She clouted him on the side of the head with her fist. Momentarily, the drunk looked
surprised; then, his eyes flickered and he keeled over, unconscious. She caught him and
lowered his body to the street.
"So when was this?" asked Timaeus, taking the pipe from his mouth-but his
drinking mate had passed out at the table.
And no wonder, Timaeus thought blearily. One of the advantages of being Igniti was
an ability to handle considerable quantities of firewater, but there was a limit to
anyone's capacity. Both he and the oldster had imbibed a truly alarming volume of liquor
in the course of the afternoon.
Timaeus was beginning to worry about Sidney and the others but could think of no better
place to look for them; of course, in his current state of inebriation, he couldn't think
much at all.
He leaned back in his chair and puffed on his pipe contemplatively. He looked out the
rain-smeared window. He felt warm and comfortable. He felt vaguely guilty that he wasn't
searching more strenuously; but where to look?
Outside, a naked and rather attractive woman walked by. Timaeus blinked twice.
The door to the inn swung open. "Innkeeper!" the woman called. "I plead
your assistance." Given her state of deshabille, thought Timaeus, she
sounded quite commanding. With a shock, he recognized her. It was the Baroness Veronee.
"Extraordinary," he muttered and rose from the table.
The innkeeper's wife was wrapping a shawl about the baroness. The innkeeper shouted
orders to his serving maids. One wench brought her a stoup of mulled wine, another a
broiled chicken. The innkeeper guided her to a seat.
Timaeus cleared his throat and approached. "My lady," he said.
The baroness looked up and leapt to her feet. The shawl slipped, displaying an alarming
amount of cleavage. "Darling Timaeus!" she cried. "How wonderful to find a
gentleman in this dark hour."
Timaeus's breast puffed a little at being so described. "Can I be of any
assistance?" he asked.
She extended a hand for him to kiss. "Chivalry is not dead," she murmured.
After he'd done the honors, she continued: "Yes, my dear. Can I possibly impose on
you to escort me home? These streets are not safe for a woman alone, as I have, to my
cost, discovered this evening."
"Of course, Baroness," said Timaeus. "I should be delighted."
Moments later, he was swaying through the streets, stumbling over the cobblestones, rain
battering at his greatcoat. He wondered what he'd gotten himself into this time-and how
he'd ever find his friends.
"You are most kind to help me," said the baroness, "but I feel I should
warn you."
"Sorry?" said Timaeus. Between the alcohol in his veins and the rainslick
cobblestones underfoot, he was having a hard time concentrating on conversation.
"My life is in danger."
"What? Surely not! A woman in your position, a member of the grand duke's court .
. . ?"
"Precisely." Veronee sighed as they hurried through the rainy dark. "I
am a victim of conspiracy."
"My lady!" said Timaeus. "I had no idea." He was somewhat
skeptical; it was hard to imagine the court of Mushroom Morty as a hotbed of intrigue.
They hurried on in silence for several minutes. At last, Veronee spoke again. "I
perceive that you have seen through my fabrication," she said in a low voice.
"Pray forgive me. It is not court intrigue that I fear. Rather, I have-enemies."
She increased her speed. Timaeus had almost to trot to keep up. He cleared his throat.
"Before I say more," said Veronee, looking at a tenement as they passed
anywhere but at TimaeusI must know your allegiance."
"Sorry?" said Timaeus, bewildered.
She halted suddenly and stopped him with a hand on his arm. She peered at his face, her
own face drawn. "Who is your liege?" she asked intensely.
"What? Why, the grand duke, I suppose-through the proctor of Durfalus University,
of course. . . ."
"You have no other?" she asked, staring intently into his eyes. Timaeus was
taken aback. "Hmm, well, technically my father . . ." She sighed, and her
shoulders slumped. "I shall have to trust you," she
said softly. She turned and walked forward again, this time more slowly.
"Athelstan may seem a dull enough place," she said, "but it has strategic
value. It dominates the valley of the River Jones, and in Durfalus University it possesses
one of the great magical colleges of the human lands. It attracts a certain amount of
attention from the espionage bureaux of the surrounding regions."
Timaeus was startled. "Are you saying you're a spy? For Alcala? Or
Hamsterburg?"
She gave a throaty laugh. "Would that it were anything so simple," she said.
"No, my friend, I work for . . . other masters. Surely you know of the war in
Ish."
Timaeus nodded.
"Petty human squabbles are mere embroidery on the fabric of the eternal war
between Arst-Kara-Morn and the free peoples."
"Yes, of course," said Timaeus. "But that struggle is fought out over
centuries, not . . ."
"Nonetheless," said Veronee, "each of the combatants has its own
collectors of information."
"And you?"
"I am a servant of the Council," she said.
A thrill passed through Timaeus. The White Council? Could it possibly be more than
legend? The wisest mages of all the world, joined to fight the eternal battle against the
eastern foe? Heroic legends and boyhood daydreams fused within him.
"It hardly need be said," said Veronee, "that our cause has its
opponents."
"My lady," said Timaeus thickly, "I shall do whatever I can to aid
you."
Romantic sap, thought the baroness. Caught up in the baroness's tale, Timaeus had
hardly noticed when they began to climb Collin Hill. And here was her town house.
"I would appreciate it if you would stay for the night," said the baroness.
"Under the circumstances, I believe it would be reassuring to have a man about the
house."
"Of course," said Timaeus.
"This is Rupert," said Veronee, waving at the butler. "He will get you
anything you need. You'll forgive me for a few moments? I have some things to attend
to." While Timaeus examined the bookshelves, she motioned to Rupert and headed to the
door from the room. "Has Cook begun supper?" she asked.
"Yes, my lady," Rupert said. "But I believe a guest can be
accommodated."
"Good," said the baroness. When they were out of the room, she closed the
door behind them. "Forget supper," she said in low tones. "Prepare to
flee."
"My lady?" said the butler, raising an eyebrow.
"I have killed the grand duke," she said. "I believe the palace has a
fair idea that I am responsible."
Rupert blanched. "Yes, my lady," he said faintly. "I shall prepare the
carriage at once."
"Good." "Shall I tell Cook?"
"Mmm? Ah . . . no." Cook, unlike Rupert, had no value except as a servant.
Moreover, she knew too much. Best that she burn with the house. "I understand, my
lady," said Rupert. "Will that be all?"
"Better see if Timaeus wants something," said Veronee. "Slip something
in his drink to make him . . . suggestible."
"Very good, my lady," said Rupert. Veronee descended into her cellars.
"Go to the crypt," she told the lich. "Tell those fool orcs to leave
their prisoners and"
"I've been," whispered the lich. "Pardon?"
"I went to check on those idiots," the lich hissed. "Capturing the thief
and the barbarian was a pain in the neck. Or the upper thoracic region, at any event. I
wanted to make sure they hadn't escaped."
"And?" "They had." "Who had what?"
"The crypt was open and the orcs were gone," the lich whispered. Veronee
blinked. "Any sign of a struggle?"
"No obvious bloodstains."
"Damn," said Veronee. "Well, no matter. I know where the statue is.
We're going to obtain it and flee."
"Flee?" "To Arst-Kara-Morn."
The lich shuddered. Well, it would make a change. "What about your mission
here?" it hissed.
"I've been compromised," said Veronee. "We have several spells to
prepare. I need fresh zombies to lift the statue into the coach. I need demonic horses to
pull us faster than pursuit can follow. And I need to burn down the house."
"Burn it?"
"Too much evidence to destroy any other way," she said, waving at the cellar
that surrounded them.
"How do you propose to do that?" asked the lich.
Veronee smiled tightly. "I have a . . . cooperative . . . fire mage
upstairs," she said.
"Ah," said the lich. That ought to do the trick. Fire mages tended to explode
at death in any event. A properly handled sacrifice ought to work wonders.
"Come," said the baroness. "Let us begin."
There were four kittens in the cage. They mewled piteously as the baroness unlocked the
door. She picked one up and held it to her cheek. "Puss, puss, puss," she said.
The tiny cat rubbed its head against her cheek and purred throbbingly.
The Fifth Frontier Warders were three hundred strong. They'd left the few horses they
had at home; cavalry is good for scouting and cowing unarmed crowds, but horses are
vulnerable to spells. In a magic-heavy urban combat zone, infantry's the thing.
Major Yohn surveyed his troops. They were in a loose tortoise, overlapping shields,
spears forward. He fretted about magic. With magic, a wizard can deliver a great deal of
energy at a single place and time, to devastating effect. Consequently, dispersal is
sensible whenever magic is expected.
But infantry is most effective en masse. Infantry delivers its energy at the point of
its spears and the edge of its swords. The more spears and swords per cubit of frontage,
the more damage it can do. Concentration of force at the point of the enemy's weakness is
the essence of its strategy.
It was a conundrum for which there was no single solution, Yohn knew. Each situation
had its optimum response, its own best combination of concentration and dispersal. His
lieutenants had been for a dispersed ap
proach, house to house fighting across the parish. That, Yohn knew, would lead to
casualties. Too, it might drag on for days. The quicker he could restore order, the higher
he would rise in the estimation of the court.
And Yohn was sick of being known as some backwoods bandit hunter. Suppress unrest in
full view of Castle Durf, and his star would rise.
A massed formation was required. So he made the best compromise he could. The wards
were out.
At each corner of the formation, and at several places in between, minor adepts raised
standards. Each standard was a regimental icon, many times bloodied; each had been raised
in many battles, in many lands. Each was rich with tradition, honor, and, more important,
mana. The traditions, the antiquity, invested them with power.
They were the poles across which the Fifth Frontier strung its spell. For the Fifth
Frontier had no great wizard, no collegiate magister, no major adept. It had only a
few minor talents, a few traditional wards; and the voices of three hundred men.
In unison, they chanted the Words, the Words of power. Other than the adepts, no man
had any inkling of the meaning of the Words. No single man contributed a tenth, a
hundredth of the energy a single trained mage could have brought to bear; for few of them
had the slightest magical comprehension.
But there were three hundred of them. Together, they forged a spell of considerable
power.
Yohn prayed it would be enough.
He was in luck. The rumor of the statue was spreading across the city still; but those
at the center of the maelstrom had already learned that the statue was gone. Yohn did not
have to contend with the Boars, Ross Montiel's disciplined goons, Veronee's zombies, or
demons; they were gone. Only a dozen or so other groups remained, each after an object of
fantastic value. An elven ship's crew, now fighting only for survival; a shadow mage,
skulking through the alleys and sending out shadows of daggers to destroy those in his
path; dockyard toughs, down to a disciplined core, holding number twelve at the moment and
sifting desperately through the rubble in search of something no longer there; twenty
disciplined Hamsterian soldiers, in civilian garb, bearing forged papers, out to collect
an item that would bolster the lord mayor's dubious claim to the rule of all humanity; a
gnomish artificer with small but deadly clockwork dragons to do his fighting, hoping to
obtain a lifetime supply of athenor to fuel his devices, . . . and others. Many others.
But none, any longer, with the magical prowess to break the wards of the Fifth
Frontier.
The Fifth Frontier marched down Thwart. The opposition melted before them. Here, quite
evidently, were the grand duke's men, out to restore order to a parish that was now
largely ruins.
Oh, they took casualties. The Hamsterian soldiers stood their ground and fought,
convinced that the Athelstani had discovered their mission and would show no mercy. They
died to the last man, taking a good dozen of Yohn's men with them. And several of Yohn's
officers died with mysterious stab wounds in their backs. But the shadow mage gave up when
he realized he could not hope to rout so large a force.
There were fools who loosed a quarrel before they realized what they faced. There were
those who panicked and fought when they might have surrendered. But within two hours, Yohn
controlled Five Corners.
XVII.
From the kitchen at the rear of Veronee's town house ran a simple wooden stair down to
an innocuous root cellar. There, Cook stored potatoes, root vegetables, and the dried
mushrooms the grand duke insisted on giving Veronee from time to time. A door from the
root cellar led to a disused wine cellar. The wine cellar held dusty wine racks and a few
bottles of wine; Veronee drank very little and kept only meagre stock to meet the needs of
her occasional guests. The previous owner of the town house had been a lover of wine; he
had died accidentally in a particularly ghastly way -coincidentally, shortly before
Veronee bought the place. Or not so coincidentally, actually.
At one corner of the root cellar, a trapdoor lay under a pile of enormous dried
mushrooms (a subspecies of Lycoperdon giganteum, a full four feet across at the
crown). Under the trapdoor was a spiral stair.
The stair ran down a circular shaft that a cooperative earth mage had dug through the
sand underlying Veronee's house. The mage, too, had expired of unnatural causes at an
early age, a fact the baroness found propitious, as she had no desire for others to learn
of her subterranean secrets.
At the foot of the stair was Veronee's workroom. It was a large chamber, lit by tapers
affixed to the earthen walls. The floor was a wooden platform suspended over the earth on
blocks of stone. About the walls were bookshelves, several inches inward from the earth
itself, avoiding direct contact with the soil. Worktables and chairs were scattered about
the room. Cages stacked against one wall held small animals for Veronee's use.
Two doors led from the workroom: one to the room where Veronee kept her records, and
the other to a smaller chamber containing prison cells.
The baroness had reason to hold people occasionally, usually prior to involving them in
her magical preparations.
The prison chamber had another door; it led to the catacombs themselves. This served a
dual purpose: as a bolthole through which Veronee might flee if the authorities should
descend unannounced, and as a means for her servants to visit the city surreptitiously.
The prison chamber also contained a small stair, leading to what Veronee called her
morgue: little more than a pit, it was used to store corpses until needed.
From the records room, a short stair ran to Veronee's bedroom. Veronee forewent the
traditional coffin in favor of a comfortable feather bed; a pillow filled with earth
sufficed to provide contact with the soil in which she had been buried, one of the unhappy
requirements of her current . . . incarnation.
Veronee stood in her workroom. A corpse, fairly fresh, lay on the table before her. In
her hand was a kitten. She raised a knife high and plunged it down. She spoke Words of
power.
She tossed the dead kitten over her shoulder and completed her spell. The corpse rose
from the worktable and stumbled over to join five other zombies in front of a bookshelf.
The lich entered the room, dry bones piled like firewood in its brownrobed arms. It
tumbled the bones onto Veronee's table. "That's the lot," it whispered.
"What?" said Veronee. "Only seven?"
"I haven't had time to fetch more bodies," whispered the lich irritably.
"We used up most of the morgue in the fight at Five Corners."
"Very well," said Veronee. "It will have to do." She went to the
cages. A large rat stared at her malevolently. She preferred more tractable animals but
had exhausted her supply of kittens and puppies. Rats were smart; they weren't trusting.
She reached into the cage. The rat struck at her hand, but she was too fast. She
grabbed it by the neck. It struggled fiercely.
She spoke a Word and went to the worktable. She picked up her knife and spoke again.
The bones rustled.
Halfway through her spell, a pounding noise came from her prison chamber. She was so
startled that she almost lost her concentration. Determinedly, she focused on the spell.
She spoke faster; gradually, control returned. The pounding noise continued as she
completed the spell.
The lich moved toward the prison chamber to take a look. When Veronee finished, she ran
to join it.
At the far end of the chamber, a heavy door barred the way to the
catacombs. An axe blade protruded through the door. The blade pulled out, readying for
another swing.
"I believe we have company," whispered the lich.
Her mind awhirl, Veronee slammed and bolted the door between the workroom and the
prison chamber. Who was out there? Sir Ethelred was, no doubt, dispatching men to arrest
her even now; but soldiers would come through the streets. Would they not?
She whirled on the zombies. "Kill anything that comes through that door," she
said, pointing to the door she'd locked. They moved to form a semicircle around it.
"Come on," she snapped to the lich. Both of them ran for the spiral stair.
If the attackers weren't men from the palace, who could they be? No one else knew about
the catacombs . . .
Except those damned orcs.
They skittered upward, the lich's foot bones clanging hollowly on the metal stairs.
"Those orcs," Veronee gasped. "They've betrayed me." "Ah,"
whispered the lich. They came to the root cellar. "But to whom?" "To
Pratchitt and the barbarian, fool," she snarled.
"Shall I close the trapdoor?"
"No," Veronee said. "I have to think." Pratchitt and the others
must be attacking below. The zombies would hold them off for a while. But how would she
get the statue into her carriage without zombies to lift it?
Timaeus, thought the baroness. An excellent idea. What a pleasure it would be to use
the fool against his friends.
"Those zombies won't hold them long," the lich whispered. "Very
well," said Veronee. "Get Cook."
"Ah," said the lich. It shrugged and climbed the wooden stairs to the
kitchen.
While she waited, Veronee cursed herself for her stupidity. The orcs were both stupid
and greedy: cleverness could outwit them and gold could buy them. She had been foolish to
leave them unattended.
Still, she thought, if I ever encounter Garfok and Drizhnakh again, they will wish they
were dead. Then, after a while, they'll wish they weren't dead.
Veronee chuckled to herself and readied her silver knife.
Bony fingers opened the door to the kitchen. A tiny, gray-haired woman looked up
tiredly. "Bitch wants you," whispered the lich.
Cook stood up and sighed. She trudged to the cellar door, muttering something. She
climbed laboriously down the stairs, clutching the wooden bannister for dear life.
Resignedly, the lich followed after.
"Thank you, dear," said the baroness when Cook reached the cellar floor. The
old woman bobbed in a perfunctory curtsey. "Amatagung!" Veronee shouted.
Cook looked up with a puzzled expression. With a flourish, the baroness sliced into her
own palm, drawing a line of blood. She stepped sideways and began a slow dance.
Cook, terrified, backed directly into the lich's arms. Its bony fingers grabbed her and
held her tightly.
The baroness's chanting came to a climax. With a single stroke of her knife, perfectly
timed with the steps of her dance, she cut Cook's throat. The baroness knelt with the
woman on the cold stone floor, sucking greedily at the throat. After a moment, she stepped
back, wiped her mouth, sighed with satiety, and finished severing the head, chanting Words
of power.
Finished with her spell, she held Cook's head before her. Blood dripped from the stump
of the neck. Cook's eyes moved, looking sluggishly about the room.
"Good," whispered Veronee. Quickly, she moved to the spiral stair and tossed
the head down the shaft.
"Come," she said to the lich.
Timaeus tottered around the parlor. The room was spinning. He was beginning to regret
having asked Rupert for a whiskey. He'd been drinking all afternoon; the whiskey was
proving to be the final straw.
He tried to focus on the title of a book. He was pulling it off the shelf when the door
flung open and the baroness Veronee hurried into the room. "Timaeus!" she cried.
"They are here!"
Timaeus looked up. "Who?" he asked thickly.
"The servants of darkness!" she cried, taking his hand. "They attack
from below. Come, we must flee." She tugged him toward the door. "But my
lady," said Rupert, entering the study. "We cannot hope to
outdistance them; they have magical steeds."
"Then all is lost," Veronee said and threw herself into an armchair, weeping.
Timaeus stared at her, aghast. Before he could comfort her, Rupert spoke.
"I will stay," said Rupert bravely. "Perhaps by sacrificing my miserable
life, I can hope to buy you some scant seconds."
Timaeus's mind was moving fuzzily, but he had a fair idea what was expected of him
under the circumstances. Noblesse oblige, and all that.
"Nay, faithful servant," he said unsteadily, "attend your mistress. I
shall stay and serve what use I may."
Veronee rose and flung herself into his arms. "Oh, bravest Tim," she said,
and kissed him soundly. "I will remember you always." She took his hand and
tugged him toward the door. "Come," she said. "They will attack through the
cellar, from the catacombs."
"What?" said Timaeus. "You must face them there."
"I shall do what I may," said Timaeus. He was beginning to wonder how he'd
gotten himself into this one.
Veronee led him through the kitchen and down into a root cellar. She pointed to the
spiral stair. "There is where they will come."
"Righto," said Timaeus, reaching for his pipe.
"Then . . . farewell, dearest Tim," she said, kissed him once more, and
scurried out the door.
Garni plunged the axe into the door again.
Morglop stood with Kraki, right behind the dwarf. Their weapons were out. They were
ready to charge through the door.
Wentworth crouched beside the door, an explosive flask in his hands. Wizards stood in a
semicircle behind Morglop and Kraki, readying spells. "They won't know what hit
'em," said one Boar to another.
Sidney was at the rear with several Boars, guarding the orcs. The last thing anyone
needed was to worry about a stab in the back from their green-skinned "allies."
"It's going," grunted Garni. On his next swing, the door splintered. Spells
poured through the opening. The prison chamber resounded with green flashes, red
explosions, a burst of yellow light. Arrows shot through the door. Fighting men poured in,
swords and axes ready. . . .
"Is empty," said Kraki with frustration, dancing about the room. He looked
distinctly upset.
Morglop prowled the room, double-checking to make sure that no danger lurked. A spell
had melted the bars of one of the prison cells into surreal shapes. Char marks could be
seen on the walls.
"Boy, we sure showed them," said one Boar to another. Morglop snorted.
"We've lost the element of surprise," said Wentworth, surveying the room
through his monocle.
"Yes," said Morglop. Bashing down doors with axes was not the way to sneak up
on someone.
Morglop went to the door on the far wall, the one that led to Veronee's work chamber.
He tested the knob. The door was locked. He waved to Garni. "Another door," he
said.
"Right," said the dwarf, hefting his axe.
"Hell vith this!" yelled Kraki. He hurtled toward the door, shoulder first,
sword in his trailing hand. Morglop stepped out of the barbarian's way. Kraki impacted the
door. It burst off its hinges and slammed onto the floor of the room beyond.
Kraki fell to hands and knees on top of the door. He looked up. Seven zombies were
about to kill him. He raised his sword and parried desperately.
The others scrambled toward the door. No one was in position; Kraki had acted too
abruptly.
Wentworth turned a dangerous color of red. "After him!" he screamed at
Morglop.
"I can't," said the cyclops. He hovered by the door, trying to wedge his way
through, but the zombies kept Kraki hemmed in against the opening. Several wizards
gathered behind Morglop, wondering whether to chance
a spell. The doorway gave them a narrow line of sight into the room beyond, but Kraki
was dodging wildly as he struggled with the zombies. A spell might as easily hit him as an
enemy.
The barbarian was already wounded in two places. He was a superb swordsman, but seven
opponents were more than he could handle.
"Do something!" shrieked Wentworth.
"Care to be more specific?" snorted Morglop.
A beam of black light shot through the door, inches from Morglop's eye. He reared back
in surprise.
The beam struck one of the waiting wizards. The man's face wrinkled and his hair turned
white. He clutched his chest, stumbled, and fell prone. Morglop stared past the zombies. A
severed human head hung behind
them, floating in midair. Blood dripped from its neck. Its eyes focussed on the
cyclops. A black beam shot. . . .
Morglop darted to the side. The black beam struck the door frame; the wood instantly
rotted and turned to dust.
"Everyone out of doorway," Morglop shouted. The order was unnecessary.
Everyone was already scrambling away from the opening and to the sides of the room.
Kraki, no fool, backed through the door, parrying wildly. "Morglop!" he
yelled. "Vhen they follow, fight from side of door." Then, he ducked out of the
head's line of sight, ready for the first zombie to come through the door.
But they didn't come.
Kraki sneaked a peek. The head stayed in the workroom. The zombies were completely
motionless. Veronee's order had been very explicit: "Kill anything that comes through
that door." Only one thing had come through the door, and Kraki had left again.
Patiently, they waited for something else to kill.
Father Thwaite was crouching over the wizard that the black beam had struck.
"What's wrong with him?" Morglop asked.
"He's dead," said Thwaite.
"Dead?" echoed Wentworth. "How did he die?" Thwaite looked at the
alchemist. "Of old age."
Wentworth raised an eyebrow, then shrugged. After all, they were dealing with
necromancy.
"We're pinned down," said Sidney.
"That," said Wentworth, polishing his monocle, "is about the size
o it." "How about a fireball?" asked a young Boar in a chain mail
byrnie. Morglop rolled his eye.
"These cellars are too small," Jasper answered testily. "A fireball
would fry us to cinders."
"Oh," said the Boar.
They sat or stood in silence for a moment. "Now what?" asked Wentworth.
"Why dontcha give up while da givin' is good?" suggested Garfok. "Before
da baroness gets here."
"Shut up," Sidney said, poking the orc with her blade.
"Gosh," said an elf maiden finally. She wore a green cap with a point that
flopped over one eye, green leggings, and curly-toed shoes. She had a bow over her back.
There were little cozies over her arrow points. "I can get that mean monster!"
Everyone stared at her. Elves, thought Jasper. He knew it was uncivilized of him to
harbor prejudice for an allied species, but he hated elves. They were so damned . . .
cute.
"You can, eh?" Wentworth said.
"Sure, mister!" she said brightly. She knelt against the wall, right by the
edge of the door, and nocked her bow. While the others watched, she pulled the bowstring
back to her ear, leaned into the door opening, and let fly. She leaned back out of the
doorway.
A black beam shot through the door and splashed harmlessly against the far wall.
The elf maid nocked another arrow, leaned into the doorway again, and let fly again.
She hesitated, then stood up, square in the middle of the doorway.
Nothing happened to her.
She stuck her tongue out at the zombies, then turned to Jasper. "See?" she
said brightly. "Told ya."
Warily, Jasper flitted into the doorway. Beyond the still-motionless zombies, the
severed head swivelled and bobbed wildly, one arrow protruding from each eye.
"Good work," Jasper said grudgingly. The elf maiden giggled. Morglop stepped
into the doorway. The zombies stood in a rough semicircle about the opening. They were as
motionless as the corpses they were. The cyclops stepped through the door.
Instantly, the corpses raised their weapons and closed on him. He stepped back over the
lintel.
The corpses halted as instantly as they had moved. "Strange," said Morglop.
"Why don't they attack?"
Father Thwaite peered through the doorway. "Zombies have no volition," he
said. "They merely follow orders. They were probably ordered to attack anything that
comes through the door. You're on the other side of the door."
"Good," said Morglop. "So why not throw rocks at them until they
die?"
"That would work," said Father Thwaite. "But this may be somewhat
quicker." He pulled out a flask of brandy, hesitated, took a hefty swig, then began
to chant. Within moments, a blue glow had imbued the flask. He took an aspergillum from
his robe, poured the brandy into it, and, standing on tiptoes, leaned through the door to
sprinkle brandy on the zombies.
With the first sprinkle of brandy, one zombie fell to its knees. With a second, it fell
lifeless to the stone floor. Soon, the zombies were nothing but sprawled corpses.
The group drifted into the workroom. The statue wasn't here. The severed head kept on
bumping into Kraki blindly. He brushed it away. "Up stairway?" he suggested.
Morglop peered up the spiral stair. He shrugged. "Wentworth," he said,
"let's get organized."
Timaeus sniffed suspiciously at a mushroom and put it aside.
He peered down the spiral stairs. It filled the shaft, meaning he had no way of knowing
what was down there. He lit his pipe (bang!), and settled back on a sack of
potatoes to wait for the foe.
Sounds of combat floated up the stairs. Timaeus frowned and listened closely. After a
while, the noise stopped.
Some minutes later, a footstep clanged on the metal stairway. Timaeus couldn't see who
his foe was, but someone was coming up the stairs. He cleared his throat and said a Word.
A ball of flames appeared in his right hand. He tossed it negligently down the
stairway.
It bounced down along the spiral. There was an explosion.
Flames gushed back up the shaft, enveloping Timaeus.
His greatcoat began to burn. "Shoddy workmanship," he muttered, batting at it
with his hands. He got the fire out. His clothing smoking, he peered down the stairway.
"That should hold them," he said, and sucked on his pipe contentedly. A small
ball of flame rolled under Morglop's feet and into the room. He wondered what it was.
Garni knew. Instantly, he dived over the stairway bannister, putting the metal of the
stair between himself and the fireball.
Sidney dived under a worktable.
Morglop noticed their reactions and dived for the floor himself. Like most of the
Boars, he was an instant too late.
The small ball of flames became a big ball of flames. There was a loud noise.
After a while, the smoke cleared enough for Garni to see the room. Several of the Boars
were down, Wentworth among them. Jasper flitted about the room, but he moved more slowly
than usual.
"Cleric!" Garni said weakly.
Father Thwaite was ministering to someone else. He paused long enough to look at Garni,
and say, "Use your healing draught." Wentworth awoke to find Sidney holding a
flask to his lips. He sput
tered, then drank deeply. "Necromancy," said Sidney bitterly. "You said
there was necromancy. You never said anything about fire magic." Wentworth sat up and
wiped his mouth with a sleeve. "Didn't sense
any," he said. He pulled out his dragon's tooth and threw it into the air. It hung
motionless for a moment, then turned black and pointed at the severed head, still floating
aimlessly around the room, arrows poking from its eyes.
"Yes, yes, I know that already," snapped Wentworth, rising gingerly to his
feet.
The tooth swivelled, hesitated, then pointed to a zombie corpse. "Right,"
said Wentworth, disgusted. "I know about that too. And the
other zombies," he said with irritation, as the tooth began to point to another.
The tooth pointed directly at him and turned yellow. "Yes, I know I'm an
alchemist, thank you very much," muttered Wentworth. "Fire magic. All right? How
about fire magic?"
The tooth swung about, as if uncertain. Then, it darted to the stairwell and pointed
straight up.
"There!" said Wentworth triumphantly. "See?"
Sidney stared at him as if he were mad. "Gosh, Mr. Wizard," she said, lapsing
into elvish tones. "I'm so impressed. There's a fire mage up there, I bet! Thanks for
warning us, Mr. Wizard, sir."
Wentworth turned crimson. He opened the ivory box in which the dragon tooth's was
normally stored, walked over, held the box open around the tooth, and snapped it shut.
"That," Morglop said to the Boar in the chain mail byrnie, "is why you
don't use fireballs."
Kraki conferred with Morglop. Jasper flew over to join them. "How ve get up
stairs?" Kraki asked.
Morglop studied the staircase. "Run?" he suggested.
This sounded like suicide, even to Kraki. He shrugged. "Hokay," he said.
"Wait a sec, will you, lads?" said Jasper. "Why don't I run a recce,
eh?" "Vhat?" said Kraki. Without waiting for an answer, Jasper began to fly
up the staircase in a tight green helix.
"He means, he'll go and take a look," explained Morglop.
As he flew up the stairs, Jasper mustered his concentration. He whispered Words,
readying a spell. He was hoping to take his foe by surprise. He shot out of the stairwell
and into another earthen chamber, this one
lit by a single torch. A man in a greatcoat sat on a sack of potatoes, his mouth open
in surprise. Smoke curled over his head.
Jasper shouted the final Word of his spell. Green light enveloped his foe. Jasper
plunged deep into his enemy's mind, seizing control of the man's body. . . .
Timaeus slumped over onto the potato sack. His eyes were glazed. His pipe hit a
mushroom. He drooled onto the burlap.
Jasper flitted around the fire mage, studying him. Why in heaven was Timaeus here? And
why had he thrown that fireball?
Gingerly, Jasper began to feel through Timaeus's mind. To his surprise,
Jasper found a compulsion, a desire to help a woman in distress. . . . The spell was
crude, short term, easy to break. A magician of some other branch of the art must have
imposed it on Timaeus. Jasper released the fire mage. "I say, d'Asperge, old
boy," he said. "What's all this about, then, eh.
Timaeus blinked and sat up groggily. "J . . . de Mobray?" he said
unbelievingly.
"Spot on."
Timaeus reached for his pipe. It wasn't in its accustomed pocket. He noticed it on the
mushroom and reached for it. "What happened?" he said. "I remember a green
light . . . then I blacked out."
"I'm the green light, of course," said Jasper. "What the devil do you
mean by fireballing me?"
Timaeus stared at the point of green light. "Fireballing you?" he said in
some confusion.
"And," said Jasper, "your friends Sidney Stollitt, Nick Pratchitt,
Garni, that Kraki fellow . . ."
Timaeus puffed fiercely on his pipe. "Forces of evil," he muttered
disgustedly. "'Farewell, dearest Tim!"' He scowled.
"Beg pardon?" said Jasper.
Timaeus's ears were an interesting pink. "Er . . . is everybody all right?"
he asked.
Jasper sighed. "No fatalities, I believe," he said. "Thank Dion,"
said Timaeus.
They had found the parlor. The injured were draped in couches and chairs. Father
Thwaite had found Veronee's modest cellar, and several were sipping sherry.
Wentworth stood in the center of the room looking harried. "No statue?" he
said unbelievingly. "None at all? Not even a bust? A lawn ornament? A toy soldier,
for Cuthbert's sake?"
"We've been all over the joint," said Sidney. "The baroness doesn't have
Stantius. Or if she does, it isn't here."
Wentworth turned to Kraki. "Nothing?" he said despairingly.
"Nothing," said Kraki.
"Unh uh," said the elf maiden. "Zilch," said Garni.
There was silence for a moment.
Wentworth gave a little hop of frustration. He hurled his monocle to the floor. It
cracked. He turned to Jasper. "This was your idea," he yelled.
"Me?" said Jasper in an injured tone. "Me? Hmm, ah, well. That is to
say. It was my idea, wasn't it?"
"No point in recriminations," said Sidney tiredly. "The question is: now
what?"
"Vhere is orcs?" said Kraki.
Sidney sat up straight. "Oh, hell," she said. "I haven't seen them since
the fireball."
Drizhnakh, Garfok, and Spug hustled down the catacomb.
"Har har," giggled Spug. "We sure showed dem dumb youmans, huh,
guys?"
"We was lucky," said Garfok petulantly. "Dey got smeared, and wasn't
payin' too much attention. Dat's all."
"Well, anyway," said Spug, "we gots free. Right guys? We is okay
now." "You maroon," sneered Drizhnakh. "We is in da sewers of a city
populated by hostile youmans, every one of dem scared shitless of orcs and as likely to
gut you as say hello. We got no money, no chanst of gettin' any, and no place to go."
Spug sucked on his tusks sadly. "Well," he said, "at least we is
free." "Free to starve," muttered Garfok.
"Unh uh," said Spug, cheering up. "Remember what da baroness said?
Dere's plenny of sewage to drink an' rats to eat down here. Remember guys?"
"Days right," said Garfok, a little happier. "It ain't so bad,
Drizhnakh."
"Oi," said Drizhnakh. Perhaps Garfok was right, he thought. Drizhnakh was
rather partial to rat.
XVIII.
A peasheful evening, Vic thought. He liked warm, summer storms. At least, he liked them
when he had shelter. He stood, dry under the eaves of the Inn of the Villein Impaled, a
bottle of wine in one hand. His pigeon nestled in the eaves, its head under one wing. Vic
took a pull on his flask.
The air smelled fresh, as it rarely did amid the flatulence of the city. The rain
washed it clean. Puddles pooled on the cobblestone street.
A lazhy evening, Vic thought. A day well done. He raised his bottle of wine to Roddy
and took another swig. A day well done becaushe . . . becaushe . . . now what did I do
today? Shomething important. I remember that. Shomething . . .
Lightning flashed. The downpour redoubled. Vic studied the chaotic intersection of
ripples in the fountain around Valiant's hooves. A carriage, two trotters in its harness,
rumbled into the square. Vic peered at it with interest.
Rupert brought the carriage to a halt. Lightning flashed, revealing the statue of
Roderick. Rupert hiked up the collar of his cloak; a trickle of water escaped down his
back.
The baroness, snug within the carriage, twitched back a curtain and peered into the
rain.
"Now what?" whispered the lich.
The baroness smiled. "Rupert," she called sweetly, "can I see you for a
moment?"
Cursing, the butler got down from his perch and stepped into a puddle. He muttered a
brief oath, opened the carriage door, and climbed inside. "Yes, my lady?" he
said, crouching in the carriage interior.
"Amatagung!" said the baroness. The lich grabbed Rupert's arms.
"Wait a minute," said Rupert.
The baroness grinned and spoke another Word.
"What about my back wages?" Rupert said desperately. "What would you do
with them in hell?" whispered the lich.
"Would it help to say I'm sorry about nabbing the silver?" said Rupert. The
baroness drew her knife. "Chin up," whispered the lich.
Rupert knew this was not intended as consolation. Doggedly, he wedged his chin into his
collar.
The lich stuck a bony finger under Rupert's chin and lifted.
Straining, Rupert tried to keep his head down. The lich was too strong. Rupert realized
he was a dead man. Defiantly, he lifted his head and stared proudly into Veronee's eyes.
She sliced his throat open. Blood flowed.
"I endeavor," mouthed Rupert's lips as the life departed his body, "to
give satisfaction." Neither Veronee nor the lich noticed.
Veronee drank deeply of Rupert's blood. Strength coursed through her limbs.
"And it's so hard to find good servants these days," the lich whispered.
Veronee ignored it. She opened the carriage door and stared at the statue. She'd have to
wade through the fountain. Her boots would be ruined.
The spell would not last long; she was burning Rupert's life energy at a considerable
rate. But while the magic lasted, she ought to be able to lift a ton or two of athenor.
She shrugged, stepped into the puddle, and waded toward the statue. The water was cold.
She climbed up Roddy's pedestal and gripped the statue's knees.
She lifted. She pulled. She strained.
The statue wouldn't budge.
She felt the force of her spell ebbing.
This was inexplicable. She could heft an elephant as if it were a three-month babe. Why
couldn't she lift the statue? Was there another magician about?
The only other person in the square was an ancient codger, standing under the eaves of
the Inn of the Villein Impaled with a bottle of wine in one hand. He held the bottle to
his mouth, sucked back a swallow, and gave Veronee a toothless grin.
The old man was clearly no danger. However, Veronee thought, he might do to power
another spell. She stalked over to him. "How would you like tuppence?" she said
soothingly. There was a pigeon in the rafters of the inn, she noted.
"Tuppenshe?" Vic said. "Sure," he said, holding out his palm.
The baroness gave him a ha'penny. "I need you in my carriage," she
said. "You'll get the rest there."
Vic didn't move. "Forget it," he said. She turned. "What?"
"I shaid, forget it," he said. "You won't get . . . won't get . .
."What was it so important that she not get?
Veronee stared at him. Her eyes narrowed. She pointed at the old man and spoke a single
Word. It resounded across the square like the crack of thunder.
A beam of brilliant black light shot toward Vic. Rain sizzled in its wake. Vic raised a
hand. The beam struck his palm. It dissipated into the rain in a spray of a thousand
colors.
Vic smiled. "Shtill got it," he congratulated himself. Veronee gasped and
backed toward her carriage. "What was that all about?" the pigeon asked Vic.
The Boars had begun to drift away. The fight was evidently over, and it was getting on
toward dinner time. "Hope you find it, Jazz," said the woman with the eye patch.
Jasper winced at the familiarity. Since he was largely invisible, she didn't notice. She
looked down the stoop of Veronee's house and into the rain. "Oh, well," she
said, and ran down the stoop and up the street.
"Maybe the baroness had the statue when she left," suggested the Boar in the
byrnie. He didn't look inclined to leave, so Jasper shut the door. "I don't think
so," said Timaeus wearily. "She left in a coach. A statue
as heavy as ours would have weighed it down. I would have noticed that." "She
never had it at all," said Wentworth with finality. "We jumped to the conclusion
that she had it on rather inadequate evidence."
Jasper cleared his throat guiltily but said nothing. "Vhat about dinner?"
said Kraki.
"Wait," said Sidney. "Okay, if she never had it, someone else does. We
don't know who."
"Very helpful," snapped Wentworth.
"We know they took it down the tunnel," said Father Thwaite.
"Correct," said Wentworth. "To the vacant lot. Where it disappeared into
thin air."
"Could be," said Sidney. "Could magic do that?" Morglop chuckled.
"Take a look at Jasper," he said.
They all did. The point of green light shifted back and forth with mild embarrassment.
"Yes, well," said Jasper. He had, he supposed, disappeared into thin air. About
twenty years previously. In a manner of speaking.
"We've been all over that lot," said Sidney, "looking for evidence. But
we didn't find anything."
"What about the dragon's tooth?" said Garni.
Wentworth stared at the dwarf for a long moment. "Ah," he said at last.
"Not a bad idea."
A carriage careened through the streets of Urf Durfal, a carriage pulled by demon
horses. Their necks were flayed open, their flanks streaked with blood; they hauled the
carriage with unearthly speed. A glow of sinister light streamed forth from around the
carriage doors.
Inside, bone gripped flesh.
The carriage hit a pothole. The lich and Veronee were thrown across the compartment.
They fetched up against the door, then tumbled to the floor. The lich dug its thumb bones
into Veronee's neck. She gasped out a Word.
The undead horses hurtled onward through the streets.
Veronee brought up her hands and wrenched the lich's fingers away. It stabbed for her
eyes and missed.
If the lich survived, it would bring the story of her failure to Arst-Kara-Morn.
Hence, she had no alternative but to destroy it.
Ergo, to preserve its own existence, it must destroy her.
They thundered out the Eastern Gate and down the Alcalan Pike. The pike was, if
anything, less well paved than the city streets. Veronee was flung against the luggage
rack, then to the back of the seat. Gasping for breath, she spoke another Word.
The lich scrambled toward her across the carpet.
The carriage hurtled into the night. Within, two creatures, neither now human, battled
on.
It was drizzling steadily. The breeze stirred rain-laden weeds. The earth of the vacant
lot was soggy beneath their boots. They were down to a dozen: Timaeus's friends, the three
Fullbrights, and three other Boars.
A frightened face peered at them from the shantytown. The vagabonds, beggars, and
dispossessed peasants who camped out here did not expect visitors, not this late, not in
the rain. Visitors meant hoodlums out to bash in a few heads and steal the shanty
dwellers' meagre possessions.
Sidney's light cotton clothing was soaked through. She glanced at
Timaeus; he looked, if it were possible, even more uncomfortable and bedraggled than
she.
"Now what?" asked Nick.
They stood in a loose circle around the remains of the collapsed tunnel. Mud-laden
water drizzled down into the opening; soon, it would disappear entirely.
Wentworth removed the dragon's tooth from its ivory box. "Avagrrine!" he
said.
The tooth rose from his palm. It hung in midair. It swivelled uncertainly, as if
searching. . . .
It steadied. It pointed away from the tunnel. Garni held his lantern higher to get a
better look. The tooth was brown.
"Earth magic," pronounced Wentworth. "Makes sense," Timaeus
grunted.
"Undoubtedly," said Wentworth. He spoke another Word. The tooth moved
forward. The party followed.
They came to a mound of dirt. Earlier in the day, it had been roughly human in shape.
Now, it was nothing more than a vague pile.
The dragon's tooth turned sky blue. "Air magic," said Wentworth. The tooth
pointed upward at an angle and began to climb into the rainy sky. "Jasper!" said
Wentworth. "Follow it, will you, old boy?"
"Of course, of course," said the point of green light. It flitted after the
tooth.
"We must be dealing with two wizards," Wentworth explained. "An earth
mage and an air mage. Once they got it out of the tunnels, the air mage took over and
summoned an air elemental to carry the statue."
The party followed on the ground below Jasper, craning to watch him. The tooth was no
longer visible, but Jasper shone brightly enough to be seen.
"I say," Jasper called back. "It's flashing blue and silver!"
"An illusionist, too?" said Wentworth. This was getting out of hand. "To
cloak it in invisibility," suggested Timaeus, "so that no one would gawp at a
huge statue sailing overhead."
"I suppose," said Wentworth.
They came to the edge of the lot and stepped into the street. Jasper sailed over a
building. Everyone ran, splashing through puddles, to get around the building before
Jasper disappeared across the next street. "Red!" called Jasper.
"Fire magic?" said Timaeus.
"Yes," said Wentworth uncertainly. They scurried on another hundred feet.
"Purple!" shouted Jasper. "What?" said Wentworth.
"Purple," Jasper repeated. "Violet, lilac, mauve. Are you deaf?"
"What's purple?" Garni asked.
"Deuced if I know," muttered Wentworth. They followed Jasper, craning.
"Orange!" said Jasper. He skirted a small temple. They followed.
"Yellow!" said Jasper.
"Alchemy?" said Wentworth in a puzzled tone. He was getting a glazed look in
his eyes.
"Gold!" said Jasper. He went over another building. This time, they had to
run around the block. He was already disappearing over the next block, and they had to run
around it, too.
"Pink!" Jasper called faintly.
"We are dealing," gasped Wentworth, "with a magical conspiracy of
mammoth proportions. There must be dozens of wizards-dozens!"
They dashed into Roderick Square and halted. Timaeus held his sides and panted. He
wasn't used to this much exertion.
The tooth was slanting downward now. It headed directly toward the statue. It flared
silver again, then sailed on past Mad Roddy (and Valiant, of course), across the square,
to the Inn of the Villein Impaled.
It came to rest a foot off the ground, pointing directly toward the recumbent form of .
. .
Vic peeled open an eye. It was dry under the eaves. Just right for a nap. He was
surrounded by a motley group of wizards, fighting men, and thieves. "Shpare a copper
for an old man?" he wheezed, sitting up. "Oh, evening, Geoffrey."
The tooth flickered from one color to another. As Wentworth watched, agape, the colors
flickered faster and faster, until there was nothing left but a white blur.
Vic focused on the dragon's tooth. "Ah," he said, and rubbed an eye.
"Damn thing must be defective," said Wentworth. He grabbed the tooth, held it by
his ear, and shook it experimentally.
Vic chortled. He stood up and held out a hand. "Give it to me," he said.
"Old man," Wentworth said, "we don't have"
"Give it to him," Timaeus said faintly.
Wentworth dropped the tooth into Vic's palm. Vic pointed it to Wentworth. It flared
yellow. "Alchemy," Vic said. He pointed the tooth at Timaeus. It turned red.
"Fire," Vic said. He pointed the tooth at the pigeon, who stood under the eaves,
watching the proceedings beadily. The tooth flared green. "Nature magic," Vic
said.
"What do you mean?" said the pigeon. They looked at it, startled.
Vic walked across the square, holding the tooth. The others trailed him. He splashed
through the puddle around the statue, and touched the tooth to Valiant. The tooth turned
silver. Vic turned back to Wentworth. "Illusion," Vic said. He spoke a Word.
Stantius stood in the rain. He was still painted brown. Rain rolled down the paint.
"Shee?" Vic said, handing the tooth back to Wentworth. "It worksh."
Wentworth choked. "You are a mage?" he asked the old man.
Vic cackled. "You bet your ash, shonny," he said. Wentworth looked pained.
"Why did you steal the statue?" Sidney demanded.
"But . . ." Wentworth said, "there had to have been a dozen magicians. .
. ."
"Or," Timaeus said, "one polymage."
"That's absurd," Jasper said. "There hasn't been a full-fledged polymage
for centur"
They were all silent for a long moment. Vic was the focus of all eyes. The only noise
was the patter of rain.
Vic shifted uneasily from one foot to another. "Sure I'm a mage," he said.
"Bet your ash." He cackled.
Jasper flitted about the statue in an erratic way. "Extraordinary," he said.
"What's that?" said Sidney.
"A spirit is bound into this object," he said. "What?" said Father
Thwaite. "A human spirit?"
"Perhaps," said Jasper. "The spirit of a sapient, surely. I've only
encountered this once before-I had a sword, once, with a spirit and mind of its own.
Unusual form of magic."
"What is it thinking?" said Timaeus.
"Sorry?" said Jasper. "Oh, nothing as far as I can tell. That is, a
mind, if present, is not active. Spirit and mind are separable, you know."
"Yes," said Timaeus, "I know."
"Ve find statue," Kraki pointed out. "Now, ve have dinner, hokay? Old
man tell us story over food."
Vic's eyes acquired a glazed look. He mumbled and began to wander off. "Vic!"
said Father Thwaite urgently. "Vic!" He took the old man's arm. Vic looked up.
His eyes cleared. "Oh, Geoffrey," he said. "Evening." "Vic,"
said Thwaite. "You have to do something about the statue." "Shtatue?
Shtatue? That'sh right. Now . . . ?"
Thwaite pointed at the statue. "You have to hide it again," he said. Vic
peered at the statue. A look of comprehension passed across his face. He spoke a Word.
Stantius became Roderick (and Valiant) once more. "Food now?" said Kraki.
Vic looked at the barbarian. "Sure," he said. "My treat."
"Sure, Vic," said Father Thwaite soothingly. "Your treat." He began
to steer the old man gently toward the inn.
"No," said Vic. "We'll go to my club."
Timaeus raised a skeptical eyebrow. Vic's shirt was multiply patched and threadbare.
His pants had holes at the knees. He wore leggings made of rags. "Your club?"
Timaeus said.
"Sure," said Vic. "The Cloud."
Timaeus almost swallowed his pipe. The Cloud Club was the most prestigious gentlemen's
society in all of Athelstan. Its members looked down on members of the Millennium,
Timaeus's own club, as Millennials looked down on peasants. "The Cloud," he said
severely, "does not admit urinestained vagabonds."
Vic cackled. He spoke a Word. He spoke several. There was a stiff breeze. It scattered
rain.
There was a questioning noise on the wind. Vic spoke again.
The air elemental bore them aloft, into the sky. There was nothing between them and a
fall, no carpet, no magical steed.
Morglop moaned and closed his eye tight.
Sidney grinned manically as they plunged through the night sky. "Don't look so
happy," Timaeus told her, whizzing past. "Consider whose magic keeps us
up."
She lost her grin.
"I only hope," muttered Father Thwaite, "that he doesn't forget where
he's taking us before we get there."
The pigeon fluttered desperately to keep up.
Sir Ethelred Ethelbert sat forlornly on the coverlet of the four-poster bed. He brushed
his hand over a tassel. Part of the coverlet was sticky with coagulated blood. Sir
Ethelred looked away from it.
They'd taken Mortimer away. Sadly, Sir Ethelred looked toward the French doors that led
to the balcony. The doors banged, swinging in the wet breeze.
Since Mortimer had never had children, the heir presumptive was Baron Harald of Meep,
Mortimer's nephew. Sir Ethelred sighed. Harald was
nineteen and a complete fool. His main pursuit was hunting, both deer and the local
peasant girls. Sir Ethelred gloomily considered the prospect of being foreign minister to
such a lout.
At least, he supposed, it should be possible to get Harald to go to Ishkabibble's aid.
It would probably be more difficult to prevent the loon from going to war with everyone
else.
Sir Ethelred looked at the pitiful pile of clothing by the bed. Damn Veronee. He hoped
his men found her, but feared they would not. She was a wily one.
Gods knew, Mortimer had been a trial at times. Still, whatever his drawbacks as a
monarch, he had been a superb mycologist, among the best in the world. He had been
passionate about his subject. And he had been sensible enough to leave the governance of
the realm in reasonably capable hands:
Most of the time, anyway.
Well. Time to get moving. Someone had to see that the Fifth Frontier got fed. And to
initiate funeral proceedings. And see that the barons and the populace were informed. And
put out an announcement on the news crystal. And send a messenger with a fast horse to
Baron Harald. . . .
Sir Ethelred got to his feet. Where the devil was Jameson when a man needed him?
"Egad," said Sir Ethelred, peering out toward the terrace. What was the
heroic statue of Roderick doing out there?
He went to the French doors and studied the bronze in amazement. "I sit here in
Castle Durf with the best espionage bureau in the human lands," he muttered to
himself, "and I still haven't the foggiest notion what goes on."
Part III.
ANOTHER QUEST
I.
Soaked and chilled, they fluttered to the landing of the Cloud Club. The club was a
cloud. It was not built on a cloud, it was built into a
cloud. The cloud was tethered by thick rope cables to one of the bridges over the River
Jones. The walls of the club were fleecy; parts white, parts gray, parts rosy with
magically captured sunset light. The architecture was fanciful and airy.
The Grand Hall of the club was built into the lowest layer of the cloud; its floor and
one entire wall were constructed of solid air, permitting the diners a glorious view of
the city of Urf Durfal and Athelstan's rolling hills at least, when it wasn't
raining cats and dogs.
Access to the aerial club was, necessarily, by air. Some members could fly to it of
their own volition. Others hired flying carpets. The club itself maintained a ferry
service, a flying carriage pulled by swans. The concierge was therefore not surprised when
thirteen persons of assorted races tumbled to the soft, white cloud deck which served as a
landing strip.
The group moved toward the reception desk.
They were uniformly soaked. Several were wounded. The only reason the concierge didn't
order them tossed over the edge was thatwell, they had flown here under their
own power. Obviously, there must be more to this group than met the eye.
Vic trudged up to the desk. Behind it, the concierge stood resplendent in a brilliant
crimson uniform with golden tassels. Behind him was a pegboard. Small metal circles hung
from the pegs. Inside each circle, the name of a club member was engraved. "How may I
help you, sir?" the concierge said.
"I'm a member," Vic said. "Theshe're my gueshtsh."
The man leaned over the desk and peered at Vic's garb. "Ah," he said
skeptically. "And your name, sir?"
"Vincianus Polymage," Vic said.
The concierge turned to the pegboard and scanned it. How was he going to get rid of
this lunatic? The fellow's friends looked frightfully well armed. The board of directors
would have his neck if he disturbed the club's members in the process of evicting this
clown. He cleared his throat. "I'm afraid there's no Vincby Dion," he
said. He reached up. From the left-most, highest peg on the board hung a rusty metal
circle. He tugged at it. It was rusted to the peg, which itself was nearly rusted through;
the peg broke off. The doorman brought the circle close to his eyes. He swallowed.
Vincianus Polymage was indeed a member. Moreover, according to the code on the rusty
circle, his dues were paid up. In fact, they were paid in advance-for the next ten
thousand years.
"Yes, sir," said the concierge faintly. "Everything appears to be in
order, sir. Will you and your companions be dining tonight?"
"Hi," said the waiter. "My name is Jeremy, and I'll be your waiter for
this evening."
The ancient geezer stared at him malevolently. "You tell your true name to
everyone who asksh, shonny?" he said. "You do that around here, you'll get
turned to a frog fashter'n you can shay `ribbit.' They shtill got frogsh' legsh on the
menu?"
The waiter was somewhat at a loss. "Ah . . . no, sir, but I can ask the chef . .
." He noticed with a start that a pigeon was standing on the linen tablecloth.
"Shoo!" said Jeremy, waving his hand at the pigeon. "Shoo!"
"Cut it out, mac," said the pigeon.
Jeremy's eyes bugged out.
"Leave him alone," said Vic, waving a liver-spotted hand. "Get ush three
bottlesh of Chateau d'Alfar."
"Very good, sir. The ought-nine?"
Vic stared at him. A confused look came into the oldster's eyes. He started counting
his fingers and mumbling.
"The ought-nine is fine," said Timaeus.
"What year ish it, anyway?" the geezer hissed in a loud stage whisper.
"Never mind," Father Thwaite said gently. "Ought-nine was a good year for
the northern elvish appellation."
"Would you like to hear about the specials?" said Jeremy. "Can I have
some bar nuts?" asked the pigeon.
Jeremy blinked. "I'll see what I can do," he said faintly.
"I vant roast boar," said Kraki.
"A portion of roast boar," said Jeremy, jotting the order on his pad.
"No," said Kraki. "Vone roast boar."
"That's what I said, sir," said Jeremy. "One roast boar."
"He wants the whole boar," said Nick.
"Sir?" said Jeremy.
"Is right," said Kraki. "Vone roast boar." "Yes, sir,"
said Jeremy. He gulped.
"I'd like to hear about the specials," said Sidney.
Jeremy cleared his throat. "Very good, madam," he said. "Our specials
tonight include filet of dragonelle pan-fried in beurre noir with asparagus; roc
egg omelet with shrimp, fresh tomatoes, and coriander; and a greep bouillabaisse."
"Isn't bouillabaisse a fish dish?" asked Garni. "Yes, sir," said
Jeremy.
"I thought greeps were nuts."
"Sir? By no means, sir. They are indeed fruits de mer . . . "
GREEP BOUILLABAISSE
"They are indeed fruits de mer, flown fresh at great expense by dragon
riders from the southern seas.
"I can claim a certain expertise in this matter, for I was born in southern
climes.
"Ah, how I yearn for the clean breeze of the south! For the salt spray, the azure
skies, the crystal sands!
"I was raised on a remote coral isle. Few other humans lived nearby, so I made my
friends among the merfolk. Oh, happy were they! And happy was I, to watch them frolic
among the waves. Though I was clumsy in the sea, lacking webbed fingers, gills, and
flukes, I learned from them to swim as best a human may. Together, we explored the reefs
and grottoes of the shore.
"And I fell in love.
"Oh, do not be shocked, good sirs, good ladies! Though I was a man and she but a
fish, our love was strong and true!
"Thalassa was her name. We hid our love from everyone, for both of us knew the
penalty for miscegenation. We knew, too, that any issue we might have would be an unhappy
hybrid, clumsy in both water and air, unable himself to breed. Yet we persisted.
"We'd meet on the rocks by the eastern shore, and I would strip and join her in
the sea. She'd tell me of the beauty of the reef and of the strange unity of life beneath
the waves; I'd tell her of the people and the creatures of the land. Once, I brought her a
bouquet of flowers; their beauty, strange to her, entranced her. She took them with her
when she left. The next day, she was crying when we met. `They cannot survive in salt
water,' she said dolorously. `Nor can you.'
"I knew it was true. I knew how hopeless was our love. But there was nothing to be
done, so I thought.
"I thought wrong. For she knew . . .
"One day, she appeared, eyes shining. She kissed me and told me she'd found a
mermage who'd taught her a spell. She could, she told me, turn me mer.
T"How we rejoiced! How happy I was! At last, we could be together. "She
recited her spell. Gills appeared along my neck. My legs merged into a single fluke. And
webbing appeared between my fingers. I plunged into the sea, and together, webbed hand in
webbed hand, we swam into her world.
"Thalassa was of simple birth, as was I; she introduced me to her parents. I
joined a gang of fishermers to make my living; and, respectably employed, gained the favor
of her folks. Soon, we were engaged.
"We lived in beauty. You who have never seen below the waves, I cannot tell you of
its glories. The fish that populate the reefs are like flowers in their prime. Strange
life waves gently in the currents. There are no storms, no drastic cold or heat, no need
for shelter. We drifted across the ocean, hearts and hands entwined.
"I loved my work. The merfolk raised seaweed, as we raise grain. But mostly, they
eat fish. Each morning, we ventured forth, with nets and spears, in search of prey. We
sent out scouts to locate schools of fish for our nets.
"Swordfish, we hunted with spears. Fluke, lobster, conch, and crab, we harvested;
but above all else, we sought the greep. For the merfolk prize the greep's flesh above all
others.
"Have you ever seen the greep run? In the spring when they school, they turn the
sea silver with their bodies. They leap into the air and plunge back in again. There are
so many, sometimes, that the splashes of their leaps sound a constant roar, like that of a
waterfall.
"Each spring, the merfolk gather and hunt the greep while they can. For once the
greep have bred, they scatter across the ocean and can be caught only by ones and twos.
But while they run, they can be captured in their thousands. For the merfolk, the greep
run marks the springtime.
"Well I remember their small silver bodies, thrashing against the net. Well do I
remember my fellow fishers, laughing bubbles in the water as we
gathered up our catch. Well do I remember dolphins, gamboling through the school,
eating their own fill of the ocean's bounty. Ah, the greep run was a time for rejoicing.
"Greeps are not large fish; no more than six inches long. But the merfolk have a
legend of a monstrous greep, a greep cubits in length. The Old Greep of the Sea, he is
called. And it is said that whosoever captures him is granted a single wish.
"I heard the legend, but thought nothing of it.
"Not all the fishers in our group were male. The merfolk think nothing of sending
merwomen to the hunt. Our gang had several; but the one I knew best was Mare.
"She was a lithe little creature, a faster swimmer than any of us. She was
positioned to my left on the net, so we saw much of each other. We became friends and used
to joke as we swam toward our prey.
"One day, during the greep run, we labored home with a monstrous catch. Everyone
was exhilarated and exhausted. We'd do well off the catch; and the next day promised a
catch just as fine.
"We went to celebrate at a grotto where merfolk purchase essences. They do not
drink as humans do; instead, they uncork small bottles, release the liquid contents into
the sea, and inhale this through the gills. The effect is both like and unlike bibulation.
"I overindulged. And Mare swam alongside me. She kissed me, and we left the grotto
for a private niche among the reefs.
"Once the deed was done, I began to choke. Mare looked at me with horror and
revulsion. My fluke, which she had thought handsome, had separated in twain. My gills were
scabbing over. She fled from me in fright.
"I barely surfaced before I could breathe the waters no more. I was miles from the
island, but I'd been a good swimmer virtually from birth. I made it to land with the last
of my strength.
"I stumbled to my parents' house. They had given me up for dead. `Where have you
been?' my father asked.
"I gasped out my tale. Horror passed across their faces. " `You slept with .
. . a fish?' my mother asked.
"'Get out of my house,' my father said.
"I slept on the beach. The next day, I went to the special place where Thalassa
and I used to meet. She never came.
"But her father did. `You have ruined my daughter,' he screamed, and threw a
trident at me. It missed. He could not pursue me on land. `Animal!' he yelled, thrashing
about the bay.
"'What happened?' I asked. He told me the tale.
"Driven by her love for me, Thalassa had sought out and captured the Old Greep of
the Sea. She had asked that I be made mer, and he had agreed. `But,' the Old Greep said,
`the enchantment is powered by the love between you. Should you ever be unfaithful to him,
or he to you, he will revert to human form.'
"Laughing, Thalassa told him that would never happen. We were too much in love.
"Too much in love. "And I betrayed her.
"'She will find no suitor now,' said her father, cursing me. `No one will
marry a lover of animals.'
"My love was lost. My parents disowned me. And so I fled my land, fled for the
cold north, away from Thalassa, away from the merfolk, away from the greeps, away from
everything I knew."
. . . sobbed Jeremy. He ran toward the kitchen, crying.
"Well," said Jasper after a pause. "I can't say I think much of the
service here."
Vic was sprawled in his chair, his head hanging back, his mouth open, revealing
toothless gums. He snored.
"Vhat about my boar?" asked Kraki.
"Waiter!" Wentworth yelled. Reluctantly, a white-coated young man approached.
"Sir?" he said.
"We want to order," said Wentworth. "This isn't my table . . ."
"Right," said Wentworth. "It's the table of your weepy young friend
Jeremy. After you take our order, you may go console him in the kitchen." The waiter
blinked. "All right, sir," he said, mystified. "Can I tell you about our
specials?"
"Absolutely not. We want one whole roast boar." "Sir?"
"A whole roast boar. Are you having any difficulty understanding me?"
"No, sir. Will you have salad with that?"
"Pah!" Kraki spat. "Is for rabbits."
"No, I think not," said Wentworth. "The boar is for him. And I'll have
fish."
"What sort of fish, sir?"
"Any sort at all, except greep."
"And you, madam?" the waiter addressed Sidney. "I'd like a chop,"
she said.
"What kind?"
"Any kind, other than greep."
Father Thwaite ordered a salad, of any type, as long as it contained no greep. Nick
ordered a stew, failing to specify type, other than a complete absence of greep. Jasper
ordered mineral water (without greeps), and the filet of dragonelle, subject to the
waiter's firm assurance that the sauce contained not the slightest smidgen of greep.
Morglop ordered the roc egg omelet. "No greep," he muttered. Timaeus, going with
the tide, ordered steak tartare.
"Without greeps, sir?" asked the waiter. "Correct," said Timaeus.
Garni had a pastrami on rye. Without greeps.
"Sidney," said Wentworth, "wake Vincianus and find out what he wants,
will you?"
Vic wanted greeps. Everyone stared at him. "Are you sure?" Jasper said.
"What'sh the matter with you guysh?" said the old man querulously.
"Never had greepsh?"
Everyone shuddered, except for Timaeus, who was rather partial to a greep now and
again.
"Now, Vic," said Sidney. "Why don't you tell us how you stole the
statue?"
"Shteal?" said the old man. "Never shtole anything in my life." He
sounded highly offended.
"Appropriated," Timaeus suggested soothingly. "Absconded with.
Borrowed."
Vic stared at him as if he were mad. "Where'sh the wine I ordered?" he said.
"Wine!" said Wentworth, slapping his forehead. "Damnation. I knew I'd
forgotten something."
"We'll order some when he gets back," said Sidney. "Tell us about the
damn statue!"
Vic looked at her with a wounded, puzzled expression.
"The statue," she said slowly. "The statue in Roderick Square."
Vic began to mumble. He took a piece of bread from the basket, and began to gum the
crust.
"Father," Sidney said, "he's drifting. What can we do?"
Thwaite looked up. "Nothing," he said. "Vies like that. He'll clear up
in a little while. To a degree."
"You know the gentleman?" Jasper asked. "For many years."
"But you didn't know he was a polymage?"
"Certainly not. He never displayed any magical powers in my presence."
"What do you know about him?"
"He's lived on the streets of Five Corners Parish for longer than anyone can
remember. He's kind to children. His mind wanders. He tells long, pointless stories."
"I can vouch for that," said Timaeus.
"You mean," said Wentworth, "that he's senile?" "That's about
the size of it, yes."
They stared at the old man.
"Copper for an old man?" Vic said to a passing waiter. The waiter stared at
him strangely.
"This," announced Wentworth, "is insane. He's got more magical power
than the entire local chapter of the Sodality combined, but he can't remember what year it
is. We're never going to get a coherent story out of him."
"Well," said Father Thwaite, after a silence, "I've found that if you
begin to tell Vic what you remember of one of his stories, he sometimes picks up the
thread"
"But we don't know what the story is!" said Wentworth with
exasperation.
Nick took a sip of his water. "Well, the orcs told me a little bit about it,"
he said.
Everyone looked at him. "Go on," said Sidney.
"They said that it came from the Orclands. The orcish colony in the Caverns of
Cytorax was established by a group of refugees, fleeing some civil war. They brought the
statue with them."
"Civil war? Among the orcs?" said Wentworth frowning. "I've never heard
of such a thing. Usually, Arst-Kara-Morn keeps a pretty tight leash on things. . . ."
"Ah," said Timaeus, "but there was such a civil war. In the late 3700s,
I believe. Shortly after Stantius III was captured in the battle of Durfalus-and then
taken to the Orclands!"
"Yes?" said Wentworth, leaning over the table and peering at Timaeus through
his cracked monocle. "And then?"
Timaeus shrugged. "Nobody knows," he said. "I talked to a professor of
history at the university. He says that there are rumors that some great ritual magic was
to be performed on the plain of Arst-Kara-Morn, but no one knows why or what it
involved."
Everyone looked at Vic. "Do you know anything about that?" said Father
Thwaite in a calm voice.
"'Bout what, Geoffrey?" asked Vic. A bit of saliva-soaked bread adhered to
his chin.
"Ritual magic in Arst-Kara-Morn?" "Sho what elshe is new?" Vic
shrugged. Thwaite sighed. "I guess not," he said.
"Hmm," Jasper mused. "Suppose you had an enemy king. What would you do
with him?"
"Hold him for ransom?" suggested Nick.
"I was always told that the health of the king is the health of the
mountains," said Garni. "At least, that's the way it is among dwarves. Could you
torture the king to weaken your enemies or something like that?"
"Of course!" said Timaeus. "Nothing quite so crude, but . . . the
fundamental principle of magic is the Law of Similarity. There is no distinction,
magically, between, say, a woman and a lock of the woman's hair; the objects are similar,
so that the lock of hair can be manipulated magically to affect the woman. A king is the
health of the land, in a literal sense. A king is his species. By capturing the
king, you may capture his people!"
Jasper bounced up and down over his chair. "By Cuthbert!" he said. "Do
you mean to say that the ritual magic in Arst-Kara-Morn was the Dark Lords attempting to
bind humanity to their will through Stantius?"
"Why not?" said Timaeus. "That would certainly tip the balance of power
in their favor, don't you think?"
"This is a great deal of speculation built upon a rather flimsy basis of
fact," said Wentworth. "Why didn't it work, if this is true? Why do we not have
a king who leads us in the services of darkness?"
At this moment, the waiter arrived with food. He unfolded a stand by Vic's seat, set
his platter on the stand, and began to remove dishes from it, placing them before the
diners. Sidney was the first served.
"Something went wrong," Sidney suggested. She was tempted to begin on her
chop, but decided to wait until the others were served. "The ritual got screwed up.
Maybe Stantius was killed, but instead of binding the new king to his service, the Dark
Lord stopped any king from being chosen."
"There is a spirit in the statue!" said Jasper excitedly. "Stantius's
spirit!" "Do you know that it's Stantius's spirit?" said Wentworth.
"Er, well, no. But if it were Stantius's spirit, that would explain why
there has been no king for two millennia. Stantius's spirit has not departed this plane of
existence; therefore he is, in some sense, living; so the gods have not chosen a new
king."
"Perhaps," said Wentworth. "But all you have is the word of a couple of
orcs (we know how reliable that is) and a great deal of supposition."
"I'm sorry," said the waiter. "Who's having the greeps?"
"Him," said Kraki, pointing to Vic.
"Vic," said Father Thwaite, "does the statue contain Stantius's
spirit?" Vic looked at Thwaite. "Shorry, Geoffrey?"
"I said, does the statue contain Stantius's spirit?"
"Doesh the shtatue contain Shtantiush'sh shpirit?" He appeared to mull this
over for a minute. The waiter leaned beside him to set the plate of greeps on the table.
"Yesh!" shouted Vic, springing to his feet. The plate went flying. The waiter
hurtled into the stand. The rest of dishes spilled to the ground. "The shtatue!"
shouted Vic, wild-eyed, rising from his chair and quivering in excitement. "For a
thousand yearsh have I shought the shtatue, the shtatue that containsh the shpirit of
Shantiush Human King. It musht be freed!"
"I am most dreadfully sorry, sir," said the waiter, trying to mop the greeps
off Vic's filthy shirt with a napkin. "Extremely clumsy of me. I do beg your
pardon."
"Freed, Vic?" said Father Thwaite. "What do you mean?"
"Get away from me, boy," shouted Vic, pushing at the waiter petulantly.
"I musht find the shtatue and take it to Arsht-Kara-Morn to unwork the Dark Lord'sh
shpell and releashe the shpirit of Shtantiush, that humanity may once again have a
king!"
All eyes in the restaurant were on the shouting, gesticulating old man. "I musht
gather companionsh to join me on my quesht," he bellowed. Suddenly, he stopped. He
looked around the Cloud Club querulously, then frowned. "Where'sh my wine?" he
said.
The waiter was on hands and knees, trying to scrape up the greeps. "Wine,
sir?" he said, looking up.
"Chateau d'Alfar," Vic said automatically, sitting back down. The waiter
stood up and headed for the kitchen.
"What quest?" said Father Thwaite.
"Quesht? Quesht?" said Vic. "I shaid wine, not quesht."
"The quest to take Stantius's statue to Arst-Kara-Morn," said Father Thwaite.
"Oh, that quesht," said Vic. "Never happen. Damn shtatue'sh been
losht for two thoushand yearsh. What happened to my wine?"
"Would you need companions for such a quest?"
"Yesh, of courshe," muttered Vic rubbing his eyes. "Alwaysh need
companionsh for a quesht. Pain in the neck, really, but it'sh traditional. If anyone found
the damn thing, they'd be the onesh to take." He yawned widely. "Time for a
nap," he said, and leaned back in his chair.
"Vic?" said Father Thwaite. There was no reply. "Vic?"
"Let me get this straight," said Sidney. "He wants us to go to
Arst-Kara-Morn with him."
"A place," said Nick, "where they'd rather gut you like a trout than say
hello."
"Lugging a statue that weighs a ton," said Garni, "across three thousand
miles of hostile terrain."
"A statue," said Timaeus, "that we're suppose to hide from the
opposition while it pumps out magical energy like a whole pantheon of gods." Vic
began to snore.
"Vith," said Kraki, "a senile geezer who can't even remember vhat year
it is as our guide."
"Your wine, sir?" said the waiter, presenting a bottle. Vic snored.
Everyone stared at him.
"Never mind the damned wine," snapped Wentworth. "What about our
food?"
THE END OR, AT ANY EVENT,
THE SHAMELESS CLIFF-HANGER
Notes
The main trade currency of the human lands is the pound argentum-which is equal
to one pound of silver, as the pound sterling was originally. Different polities mint
their own coins, but all coin is hard money, and the pound-shilling-pence system has been
universally adopted. There are twenty shillings to the pound and twelve pence to the
shilling, meaning that each penny weights one-twentieth of a (troy) ounce. Nick says that
one ounce of gold is worth one pound argentum; if he is correct, gold is somewhat
more common in his world than in our own. On earth, gold usually goes for fifteen to
sixteen times as much, per ounce, as silver; but there are only twelve troy ounces to the
troy pound, not sixteen. Perhaps Nick is confusing the troy pound with the pound avoirdupoisa
supposition suggested by the fact that he talks of Father Thwaite's weight in the same
passage.
"Essence of belladonna" is, in fact, atropine, a drug refined from the
belladonna plant. Its appearance here is, of course, not in keeping with the otherwise
Renaissance technology of the world; in our world, it was first extracted in the
mid-nineteenth century. I posit that the fascination of witches and alchemists with
medicinal plants and herbs leads to alternative, magical methods of extraction. The
symptoms and dosages described are correct; however, I believe atropine is no longer used
as an anaesthetic. It is still sometimes used in the treatment of certain poisons.
The orcish Hymn of Propitiation can be sung to the tune of Beethoven's Ode to Joy (if
anyone cares).
Several archaic units of measure are used. A cubit is traditionally the distance
between the tip of one's middle finger and the elbowabout eighteen inches. A stone
is a unit of weight, that, depending on type, can vary from eight to twenty-two pounds;
the traditional English stone is fourteen pounds.
Another Day, Another Dungeon
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Cast of Characters
The Adventurers
Timaeus d'Asperge, Magister Igniti: an aristocrat and fire
mage, financer of the expedition.
Sidney Stollitt: partner in Pratchitt & Stollitt, a firm that specializes in
theft, divorce work, and assembling expeditions into the caverns. She is far more reliable
than her partner.
Nick Pratchitt: Sidney's partner.
Father Geoffrey Thwaite: a priest of the god Dion, patron of drunkards.
Kraki Kronarsson: barbarian and illegal alien.
Garni Ben Griwi: dwarf and experienced adventurer.
The Caverns
Lenny the Lizard: tour guide.
Drizhnakh, Garfok, and Spug: assorted orcs.
Fragrit: orc priest.
Dorog: another orc.
Rog: large person with claws and an unpleasant disposition.
Corcoran Evanish: customs official.
The Boars
Wentworth Secundus Jorgensen, Magister Alchimiae: Master Alchemist and
Fullbright of the Loyal and Fraternal Sodality of the Boar.
Jasper de Mobray, KGF, Magister Mentis: a flying, largely invisible adept
of the mental arts. Member, Order of the Golden Fleece; Order of the Green Flame.
Fullbright of the Boars.
Morglop Morstern: cyclops, Fullbright of the Boars, swordsman.
Manfred: the Grand Boar.
The Court
His Grace, Mortimer, by the Grace of the Gods Grand Duke of Athelstan, Lord of
Durfalus, Defender of the Faiths, etc., etc., etc : enthusiastic mycologist.
Sir Ethelred Ethelbert: his foreign minister.
Jameson: Sir Ethelred's secretary.
General Carruthers: Commander of the Ducal Guard.
Major Yohn: Commander of the Fifth Frontier Warders, recently returned from the
suppression of the Meep Banditti.
University Faculty
Doctor Calidos: Timaeus's don, Senior Professor of the Department of Fire.
Doctor Macpherson: Adjunct Professor of Imperial History.
Bad Guys
The Right Honorable the Baroness Veronee, Magistra Necromantiae: Baroness
of the Realm, necromancer, and spy for Arst-Kara-Morn.
The Lich: powerful dead guy.
Rupert: Veronee's butler.
Cook: Veronee's cook.
Ross Montiel: elven gangster.
Micah: his lieutenant.
George, Fred, and Billy: assorted thugs.
Neighborhood Fixtures
Mrs. Coopersmith: Nick and Garni's landlady.
Elma: mistress of number 11 Cobblers Lane, the house that Montiel commandeers.
Vic: senile old geezer.
Madame Laura: successful madame, in hock to Montiel. Mother of
"Priscilla."
Part I.
ANOTHER DUNGEON
I.
Timaeus d'Asperge was comfortably ensconced in his favorite armchair at the Millennium
Club. One hand held his ancient meerschaum, stuffed with Alcalan black leaf. By his other
hand, on a small serviette, stood a decanter of Moothlayan single malt.
"Now that you have your Master's," the man with the monocle asked Timaeus,
"what will you do?"
"Hah!" said the Colonel. "Go to Ish and join the army, that's what,
eh?" He struck Timaeus on the knee with a clenched fist. "Show those damnable
orcs what for, eh, boy? Good man."
Timaeus cleared his throat with slight embarrassment. "Actually," he said,
"I was thinking about opening a practice"
"Go into trade?" said the man with the monocle with undisguised horror.
"My dear boy, that will never"
"No, no, the military life, that's the ticket," said the Colonel. "By
Dion, I envy you! Marches in blistering heat, hostiles sweeping out of the hills . . .
university makes a gentleman out of you, but the service makes you a man, what,
what?" The Colonel reached over and slapped Timaeus's slight paunch. "Lose that
in the army, that's for certain." His eyes gleamed over his gray mustache. Timaeus
puffed on his pipe to avoid having to respond. "What about adventuring?" said
the man with the monocle.
"Hmm?" said Timaeus.
"A traditional way for a young nobleman to win fame and fortune," the man
with the monocle continued. "Slaying dragons, rescuing damsels in distress, that sort
of thing." He waved a hand airily.
"Well," mused Timaeus, "I had thought about it, but I wouldn't know
where to start. I mean, what, advertise for quests?"
"Start with the Caverns of Cytorax," suggested the man with the monocle.
"They're not far. Scads of monsters down there, I'm told."
"Mmm," mused Timaeus. "But where would I find companions?"
"What about your mates at the university?" asked the Colonel. "Mostly out
of town," said Timaeus. "Back at home or joining the
army. Besides, I'd need more than wizards. Men at arms, spelunkers, clerics . . . you
know."
"You need a staff officer," said the Colonel. "Take care of these petty
problems for you."
"If you don't know how to do it yourself," said the man with the monocle,
"hire it done." He coughed delicately into a handkerchief. "I know just the
firm."
"A group that assembles expeditions into the caverns?" said Timaeus.
"Umm, rather . . . a firm that handlesmatters of delicacy. I should think they
could assemble some experienced adventurers with fair ease. Pratchitt and Stollitt,
Stollitt and Pratchitt. Something like that. I'll give you the address."
Garni was sweating into his beard. Dwarves weren't used to city summers. Their native
mountains were usually cool.
At least it would be cool in the basement apartment he and Nick Pratchitt shared. It
wasn't in the best part of town, but it did have the distinct advantage of being cheap.
Garni walked down the hall to the apartment door. The door was bolted shut. He heard
giggling on the other side.
Garni knocked. "Nick," he said. "It's Garni. Open up."
There was silence for a moment. Then, through the door Nick said, "Uh, Garni? I'm
busy. Could you come back later?"
Damn. "Look, Nick," said the dwarf, "I just want to get some
lunch." "Just a sec," said Nick. There was a shuffling sound, then a bang.
The door opened a crack. Two hands held out a salami, a loaf of bread, and a wine jug.
"Here," said Nick. He didn't have a shirt on.
Garni sighed. He took the food. Nick closed and bolted the door. Garni sat down in the
hallway by the apartment door. At least he was out of the sun down here. He munched on the
salami and listened to the giggles.
Personally, he didn't find human women attractive at all. Too gangly. No facial hair.
Garni wondered what Nick thought he was doing. Sidney would find out. It was only a matter
of time. And Nick certainly acted like he cared what she thought about things.
Oh, well. It wasn't his business. His business was to find a job. Garni
was a decent blacksmith, but the guild here in the city had that racket sewed up.
Manual labor was about all that was left. He wasn't having any luck finding work. And the
rent was three months overdue.
"Mrs. Coopersmith," said Garni. He got to his feet and brushed crumbs off his
jerkin. "How nice to see"
"Where's my money, dwarf?" said the woman. Her arms were floured to her
shoulders. Sweat spread in semicircles around her armpits. "Umm, in just a few days .
. "
The woman scowled. "Dwarves and single men," she said bitterly. "I
should have known."
"I'm terribly sorry, but"
"I want my money Tuesday."
"Of course, Mrs. Coopersmith. We'll . . ."
She turned on her heel and climbed back up the stairway. Giggles came from the
apartment.
Garni sighed and climbed after his landlady. He'd go down to the docks and see if any
ships had come in. Maybe he could earn a few pence unloading cargo.
Kraki Kronarsson leaned on the bar. His dirty blond hair hung down around a face that
hadn't been shaved in days. The bar creaked under his bulging thews. "Ale," he
told the innkeeper.
The innkeeper was walleyed. "Well, honorable," he mumbled, smearing a greasy
rag across a tankard under the misapprehension that this was improving the tankard's
looks, "there's the matter of your tab, sor."
A group of fishermen at one of the tables was singing loudly. Kraki had been listening
to the song and hadn't really heard the innkeeper. He did notice, however, that he wasn't
getting any ale. "Vhat?" he said, touching the haft of the broadsword slung over
his backa nervous gesture.
"Three weeks stay," said the innkeeper. "Sixpence a night. Meals and
drink. You owe"
"You qvibbling little snit," shouted the barbarian, standing away from the
bar.
The fisherman stopped singing.
"Hoy," said a man at the bar. He wore a workman's apron. His thews bulged
almost as much as Kraki's. "No call for such language. Dere's ladies present."
An overage and rather blowsy whore hung on the workman's arm.
Kraki reached across the bar and grabbed the innkeeper by the shirt. "I am Kraki,
son of Kronar," he shouted. "I grace your sty vith my presence. Be grateful you
may show hospitality to so great a lord!"
The workman walked over and put a hand on Kraki's arm. "We do things different
'ere, barbarian," he said. "Yer owes the man."
Kraki punched him in the jaw. The workman stumbled back.
The fishermen rose from their table. The whore dived for the exit. The workman grabbed
a bar stool and broke it over Kraki's head. Kraki didn't bat an eye. "You dare lay
hands on the son of a chief?" he bellowed. He grabbed the workman by the waist and
hurled him onto the fisherman's table. It collapsed. Tankards of ale flew. The fishermen
converged on Kraki.
The innkeeper cowered behind the bar and moaned. Why was it always thugs and
barbarians? Why couldn't he have a nice, quiet clientele consisting solely of spinsters
and maiden aunts?
Father Thwaite stopped singing when they pushed him through the door to the abbot's
office. It was cool in the office. A little chilly, evenat least if you were naked.
"Brother," said the abbot.
Dion help me, I'm in for it now, thought Thwaite. He released his penis. He swayed a
bit. He was drunk. Very drunk.
Well, it had been fun.
"I suppose," said the abbot, shuffling some papers on his desk, "that
you can explain why you were pissing on the chancellery bell?"
"Yes, Reverend Father," said Thwaite. "See, there was this li'l He
hiccupped. He continued determinedly, enunciating clearly. "Little spot of tarnish.
And urine is acidic. So I . . ."
The abbot sighed heavily. "What am I to do with you?" he said. Father Thwaite
hung his head. "I'm sorry, Reverend," he said. "But the spirit moved
me"
"Spirits, rather," said the abbot. "They say you've been into the brandy
again."
"Wine is a susss . . . a sacrament," said Thwaite.
"In vino veritas, yes, Brother," said the abbot. "One of the
precepts of our order. Yet moderation is also virtue. Why are you naked?"
"It was . . . warm in the garden," said Thwaite. "An', I thought, why do
we clothe ourselves? The Creator gave us skin. So . . ."
The abbot took off his spectacles and folded them up. "Since you refuse to abide
by the rules of our older"
"I'm sorry," said Thwaite, suddenly realizing the depth of his predicament.
"I promise I'll"
"It's a little late for that," said the abbot, rubbing his eyes with thumb
and forefinger. "Go to Brother Mortain. He will issue you a begging bowl. Depart
from here into the streets of the city."
Thwaite sat down. The flags were chill on his thin, middle-aged buttocks. "You're
expelling me from the order?" he said, suddenly sober. "Not at all," said
the abbot. "You may return when you have learned moderation."
"And until then?" said Thwaite, head bowed.
"Leave us. Beg for your living. Live only off the largesse of others. If you
obtain more than sixpence, give it to the poor. Drink when you are offered drink; but
purchase none yourself."
Father Thwaite rose, bowed, and shuffled backwards to the door, continuing to bow.
After the door closed, he stuck his tongue out.
He visited the kitchen before he left and stole a bottle of cheap wine. Dion, he told
himself somewhat defensively, permits theft to those who are in need.
The goon's name was George. He looked like a George. His shoulders were nearly as broad
as the doorway.
Sidney Stollitt leaned back in her chair. Surreptitiously, she opened the top drawer in
her desk. She fished around in the drawer for a dagger. She thought there was one there.
She hoped so.
George was picking his teeth with a stiletto. "Nice joint you got," he said,
looking around. The drawer of one of the filing cabinets hung off its rails. A roll of
flypaper hung from the ceiling, covered with dirty specks. "You wouldn't wanna lose
it, huh?" said George.
"All this?" said Sidney. "I'd be devastated." They could torch the
place for all she gave a damn. There wasn't a lot invested in the furnishings. "Ross
says you guys been bad," said George. He wandered into the
office and over to the file drawer. He studied it with apparent interest.
"Sorry," said Sidney. There didn't seem to be a dagger in the desk drawer after
all. Nick had probably done something with it. Where the hell was Nick, anyway? He should
have been here hours ago.
"Ross just wants you to know," said George, turning back to face her.
"Ross says he wants to be friends."
"I know about Ross," said Sidney.
George looked at her. "You don't know nothing," he said. With a sudden,
brutal motion, he punched out the glass in the door. The glass that said PRATCHITT &
STOLLITT. It had cost them several shillings to get it etched. Sidney winced.
"If you're going to rip up the place . . ." she said in a menacing tone.
"Friends help out friends," said George. "That's what Ross told me to
say."
"Sure," said Sidney. "And we know who our friends are." George
shrugged and disappeared.
Sidney slumped back in the chair. Damn.
Last week, she and Nick had robbed a house on Nob Island. They'd gotten away with a
nice little box of jewels. They hadn't fenced the goods through Ross Montiel, who
controlled half the fences in this part of town. He was obviously upset; he expected
Sidney and Nick to take their business to him.
But she was damned if she'd work with the little scumbag. Maybe it was time to take on
an honest proposition or two. Lay low on the burglary. Where the hell was Nick, anyway?
A face peered in through broken glass. It bore an uncertain expression, red hair, and
an unkempt beard. A lit meerschaum pipe stuck out of the middle of it. "I say,"
it said. "Is there a Mr. Pratchitt or Mr. Stollitt about?"
"No," said Sidney. "I'm Stollitt."
"There must be some mistake," said the face. "Are you Mr. Stollitt's
wife?"
"I'm Stollitt," she said. "Sidney Stollitt." The face's accent was
aristocratic. It was probably connected to a mark, Sidney thought. "Why don't you
come in?"
"Ah," said Timaeus. "Thank you. Sidney's an unusual name for a girl,
isn't it?" He turned the doorknob. It came off in his hand. He stated at it for a
moment, then pushed on the door, which opened. He came into the office, set the knob on
Sidney's desk, and looked around.
"No," said Sidney in complete defiance of the facts, "it's not."
The mark wore a red tunic with gold trim. He had sandals on his feet. HE was a little
pudgy, not too old. The tunic and the pipe screamed fire mage. Sidney hoped he didn't get
upset. The building was a firetrap.
Timaeus was dismayed. This Stollitt wench looked tough enough, certainly. She had a
long scar on one cheek. Her black hair was tied back in a silver ring; it wouldn't get in
the way in combat. She was lean and moved as if she could fight.
But the office was dismal. The glass in the door was broken. There were holes in the
plaster. There were mouse droppings on the floor.
"What can I do for you?" asked Sidney, rising and motioning Timaeus toward a
chair.
Timaeus sat on the chair gingerly. It hadn't been reupholstered within living memory.
Horsehair stuck him through his clothes. "I wish to engage
your services to assemble an expedition to venture into the depths of Cytorax
Caverns," said Timaeus.
He wanted to go into the dungeon? What did she know about dungeons? She belonged in the
city.
Still, anyone who wanted to go to Cytorax was clearly a fool. And you know what they
say about fools and their money. "I'm your woman," Sidney said.
II.
"What is all this crap?" asked Nicholas. He lay on an unmade bed, his
boots off and his hands behind his head. The morning sun slanted into the basement
apartment. Clothes were strewn across the floor. On the rug in the center of the room,
Garni had assembled a veritable mountain of equipment.
"This?" said the dwarf, waving at the pile. "Yeah, that."
"The caverns are dangerous, young Nick. One must be prepared." "Prepared
for a six-month siege?" There were weapons, flasks, pouches of stuff, hand tools,
boxes, torches, food, clothing, pieces of cloth. It looked, Nick thought, like the odd
lots from an estate sale. "It'd take a week just to catalog it all. You got anything
to eat?"
"Hardtack and pemmican." "Yuck," Nick said.
"It's all I can justify taking," said Garni. "I need the room for more
important things."
"Like what?"
Garni picked up an item. "This."
"A mirror? What do you want a mirror for?" "I don't know. To see around
corners, maybe."
"Yeah? I'd take a couple of roast chickens instead. How are you going to fit all
this stuff in, anyway?" It was a fair question. The pile stood higher than Garni.
Garni shrugged. He maneuvered objects into his pack, trying to fit everything into the
smallest possible space. He'd put something in the pack, move it around, decide it didn't
fit precisely right, and try something else. "I'll manage," he said.
Nick noticed a long pole sticking out of the pile. He pried it out; other objects slid
and tumbled.
"Be careful!" Garni said.
"Sorry. You'll never get this in, anyway." It was more than double Garni's
height.
"Yes, I will," said Garni, taking the pole. He disassembled it; it came apart
into four segments.
"What is it?" asked Nick, as Garni strapped the segments to the side of the
pack.
"An eleven-foot pole." "Why eleven feet?"
"There are some things I wouldn't touch with a ten-foot pole," said Garni.
Nick chuckled. "You really think all this stuff is necessary?"
"Some of it we may not use. But any of these things might save our lives."
"If you say so, Garni. Tell me something, though." "What?"
"How much does all this weigh?"
Garni hefted his pack. "I'd guess about a hundred pounds, all told."
"You're really going to carry a hundred pounds of kit into the caverns?"
"Yes."
"I thought the whole point was to bring stuff out of the caverns. Treasure.
Jewels. Magic items. How are you going to carry anything out?" Garni ran his fingers
through his beard and smiled. "You'll just have to
carry my share of the treasure, Nicholas."
It was morning in the city of Urf Durfal. The houseboy of the Inn of the Villein
Impaled staggered out into Roderick Square, carrying two buckets. In the center of the
square stood the equestrian statue of Grand Duke Roderick, father of the current ruler of
the city; and around the statue was a fountain, spouting water borne from the hills by the
city's aqueducts. The houseboy went to the fountain and filled his buckets. The floors of
the inn badly needed mopping, as they did every morning: the inn's clientele tended to
carouse in particularly messy fashionnor were they all capable of keeping down the
rotgut the taproom served.
Around the square, merchants put up awnings to protect perishable merchandise from the
fierce sun. The day looked to be a hot one; there was nary a cloud in the sky. Except,
perhaps, for a figurative cloud gathering over the head of Sidney Stollitt.
She stood in the shadow of Roderick's statue. With her was a mule cart and a drover.
The drover was reclining with his straw hat pulled down over his eyes. Sidney, unable to
contain herself, was pacing and scanning the faces of passersby.
Dawn, she had said. And here it was half past seven.
Garni, at least, had been prompt. She'd sent him out after Father Thwaite; Timaeus had
advanced them each a small sum to purchase equipment, and Sidney was reasonably certain
that the cleric had found a way to turn his into booze. Garni was under orders to examine
every body he found in the gutter. Odds were, one was Thwaite.
Nicholas Pratchitt approached. He was wearing black leather-enough to turn a footpad's
blade, but not heavy enough to qualify as real armor. Sidney scowled; that might do for
the city streets but was hardly appropriate for a dungeon expedition. As he neared, she
saw that he had circles under his blue eyes and his black hair was mussed. He looked as if
he hadn't slept all night. He was whistling a sprightly tune.
"Where the hell have you been?" snapped Sidney. "Am I late?" Nick
asked unrepentently.
"Garni was here on time," Sidney said. "Garni's reliable. Garni
keeps his commitments."
Nick winced. The unspoken corollary was that, since he shared a flat with Garni and had
not appeared at the same time as the dwarf, he'd spent the night elsewhere. In another
bed. Someone else's bed. A bed, to belabor the point, that was neither his own nor
Sidney's. With some relief, he saw Kraki lumbering out of the inn. The barbarian held a
large mug of ale in one hand, which he drained in three neat gulps. "Hallo," he
said. "Ve go now?"
"You're late," said Sidney.
"Late?" said Kraki. He looked around. "Vhere is everybody?"
"They're late, too," said Sidney.
Kraki shrugged. "Late," he said, "is if everybody else gets there first.
So I not late." He raised his head and sniffed. One of the vendors at the edge of the
square had fired a charcoal grill and was cooking something. "Am hungry," said
Kraki, and lumbered away.
"Keep an eye on him," Sidney said to Nick. "Keep him out of
trouble." Nick grinned at her and followed the barbarian.
There was an explosion. A brilliant flash lit the square. Sidney Stollitt hit the
ground and rolled across the cobblestones into the cover of the rim around the fountain.
The mules neighed and bucked; the drover came alive and yanked at the reins. Muffled
screams came from the merchants' stalls.
Timaeus d'Asperge, Magister Igniti, stood in the fountain. Smoke bil
lowed about him. The water hissed, quenching the flames of the explosion in which he
had appeared.
"Good morning, Stollitt," he said, peering at her prone form over the lip of
the fountain. "Sorry I'm late." He stepped out of the fountain, shaking his
legs.
Sidney sat up. "Is this how you usually get around?" she asked. "Because
if it is, I may change my mind about this deal."
Timaeus fumbled for his pipe in a mildly embarrassed way. "Mmm, well, no," he
said. "Usually not. Teleportation takes a certain amount of power. I wouldn't have
used it, but . . . well, I overslept, I'm afraid, and I was running a bit late. Where is
everybody?"
"Good question," said Sidney, brushing herself off.
"There's no one here but you and me," Timaeus said, peering about petulantly.
"Nick and Kraki are over there," she said, pointing toward a vendor's awning.
Timaeus looked nearsightedly in that direction; he didn't see them but took her word for
it.
"And what of the others? I commissioned you to assemble a group, and yet I find us
standing here, two hours after we were supposed to have departed, with nary a soul to be
seen."
"You didn't show up," sneered Sidney. "Why should they?"
Timaeus colored. "As to that," he said, "I am financing this
expedition, after all. My hirelings may expect to wait on my presence; but I, hardly, on
theirs. Now"
"Hireling, am I?" said Sidney nastily.
"In a manner of . . . I say . . . is that the dwarf?"
Garni was trundling a wheelbarrow toward the statue. Thwaite lay in the barrow, legs
flopping over the front, his tonsured pate banging against the barrow's metal surface as
the wheel bumped over stones. The cleric was obviously unconscious.
"Here we are," said Garni cheerfully. "Ready to go?"
Timaeus stared at the brown-robed cleric, apparently dumbfounded. He stuck a finger
into Thwaite's ribs experimentally. "What's wrong with the man?" he inquired.
"He's unconscious," said Sidney.
"I can see that," said Timaeus. "Is he subject to regular fainting
spells?" Garni chortled. "Yup," he said. "He regularly faints when
he's downed a hogshead or two of wine."
There was a long moment of silence. "Are you certain," Timaeus asked Sidney
unhappily, "that this potted priest is the only cleric you can find who will
accompany us?"
"Look," Sidney said with irritation, "priests sit in temples and collect
gold from suckers. Why go wander around a hole in the ground looking for more gold?
Especially when the hole is populated by nasty monsters with large, pointy teeth. Sitting
around's a lot easier. Finding a cleric willing to risk the caverns wasn't easy."
Timaeus sighed and shook his head.
"Thwaite's okay," said Garni. "When he's sober."
"Which, judging by available evidence, is never," said Timaeus. "Ah,
well, ad praisens ova cras pullis sunt meliora, as the poet says."
Charcoal smoke swirled into the air and an interesting aroma with it. Several little
pastries warmed on a grill over the brazier. The vendor turned them with his one good
hand; the other arm ended in a cloth-bound stump.
"What's your pleasure, good sirs?" said the vendor.
Kraki pointed to one of the pastries. "Vhat is that?" he asked. "Greep
tart," grunted the vendor.
"Vhat?" said Kraki. "Vhat is greep?"
"Huh," said the man, waving his spatula. "You don't know what greeps
are? Well, when the air goes chill . . ."
GREEP TART
"Well, when air goes chill and the leaves begin to turn, that's when the greep
flocks gather. They turn, turn above the painted leaves, wheeling in their thousands,
their thousand thousands. The sky is dark with them, the flocks, the many greeps. Their
tiny call is magnified so that it becomes a constant honk, the cry of a god, blanketing
the woodland with the sound.
"I remember it still, that constant honk, that bleating, that call. . . . "We
fled, my family and I, from our homestead in the hills of Cordonia. Mayhap we lived
foolishly close to the Eastern Realm, but our homestead was old, ours for generations, and
we farmed rich bottomland we would not readily abandon.
"But when the trolls began to move, we had no recourse but to flee, lest we be
butchered as our neighbors were. So we fled, fled into the Cordon Wood, with naught but
the clothes on our backs and a tool or two. We left our fields, our home, our comforts.
"The elves granted us refuge. They gave us acorn meal, and said that we might live
within the wood if we so wished. We were grateful, for we had nowhere else to go, no way
to win our livelihood. But the conditions they placed upon us, oh, the conditions were
onerous.
"We were not to slay a single animal within the elvenwood, though there
were beavers in the streams and deer among the trees. We were not to cut a single tree,
though we might burn such branches as were already dead. Certain mushrooms and plants,
also, were forbidden us; they were too precious, we were told.
"They stood there in their merry green, their damnable big eyes twinkling, peering
at us, and expecting us to kowtow to them, our protectors; our benefactors.
"We could not sow a crop, for the earth lay in the shade of the trees, and no crop
would grow on such ground. We could not cut the trees to clear a field, for the elves
forbade it. We gleaned a meager sustenance from the forest-mushrooms, berries, acorns, and
nuts. But the deer we could not touch, nor the squirrels, nor any of the abundant life
that flourished about our little hut.
"The winter was cruel. We cleared the forest round about of dead branches; each
day, I was forced to forage farther and father afield for tinder. And our tiny store of
nuts and dried berries rapidly diminished.
"We lost our youngest child that winter, my wife too starved herself to nurse him
adequately. And all of us were lean.
"The spring brought some relief. Ferns sprang up anew, and herbs. We ate the
tender shoots on the trees, anything at all that we could stomach. Gradually, we regained
some semblance of health, though always we were hungry.
"But as the weather cooled toward autumn, and as the greeps gathered for their
migration, we faced another winter, a winter we knew we could not again survive. . . .
"In Alcala, they string nets among the trees. The greep flocks come down to rest
and are caught. Then they gut the birds and roast them. . . . In Alcala, the greep
migration is a festival time, a time for celebration.
"But the elves would not countenance the death of a single bird.
"The flocks darkened the skies, and the honks rang counterpoint to the grumbles of
my stomach, the stomachs of my children. . . .
"And so I fashioned an awkward bow and strung it with my daughter's hair. I shot
seven of the birds, seven small birds, to feed us. And I made them into tarts.
"They were delicious. The gods' ambrosia cannot taste so fine. The flesh was
sweet, satisfying, the finest thing we had ever tasted.
"We slept well that night.
"But the following morning, the elf-lord came: He grinned up at me, his pointy
ears poking beside his crown of laurel, and told us we had been naughty.
"Then his soldiers took me and struck off my hand in punishment for my theft. For
that is what the elves termed it, a theft from nature, a violation of their covenant with
my family.
"They drove us from the elvenwood. Perforce, we found our way to this city. Now, I
make a meager living selling my greep tarts and gain a meager measure of revenge from
knowing that with each tart I sell, another of the birds dies.
"Come, taste the flesh. It is sweet and delectable. There is no taste to compare
with that of the greep, the greeps that sweep the skies above the elvenwood, their numbers
so great that they darken the sun."
"Is good," said Kraki. Nick shuddered. He'd nibbled on one tart, decided it
had all the consistency and none of the culinary attractions of stewed rat, and had
offered the rest to an alley cat. The cat had given him a contemptuous glare and had taken
off for parts unknown.
"Are we all quite ready?' said Timaeus impatiently.
The drover clucked and the mule cart began to move, eastward into the sun, toward the
Caverns of Cytorax.
The mouth of the caverns was blocked by a striped, red and white gate. To one side
stood a small building. The travellers entered it and followed the signs that pointed to
the customs post.
Inside a small chamber, a bureaucrat wearing an elaborate and ill-fitting blue uniform
sat on a stool. He stamped Sidney's papers and motioned her on. Kraki walked up to the
bureaucrat, who held out his hand.
"Your papers, sir?" said the bureaucrat.
Kraki yanked the official half over the counter. "LET ME PASS, PIG, OR YOU VILL
TASTE THE BITE OF MY STEEL!" he roared. His mighty thews bulged alarmingly.
"Let him down, Kraki," Sidney said.
"Guards! Guards!" screamed the bureaucrat, clawing at Kraki's hands. Kraki
threw the official across the room, whirled, and drew his sword. The side door smashed
open. Soldiers poured in. "Drop the sword, barbarian!" shouted one. They spread
out along the walls, ringing the party.
"I am a free man!" shouted Kraki. "I vill not be herded like sheep! I
spit on your papers!"
"Better do what he says, buddy," said Nick.
"No!" shouted Kraki. "I kill them all. Then ve go."
"Impractical," said Timaeus.
"Come on, Kraki," said Sidney. "What happens when we come back?"
Kraki glanced at her, then turned back to keep an eye on the soldiers. "Hah?"
"We go in the caverns. We slay lots of monsters. We come back with piles of loot.
We're tired and beaten up-and we have to fight our way out through dozens and dozens of
soldiers. Why not show him your papers, huh, pal?"
Kraki thought about this for a moment, then sheathed his sword. The soldiers looked
relieved. The bureaucrat got up slowly, checking to make sure nothing was broken.
"Don't got none," said Kraki sullenly.
There was silence for a moment.
"No papers?" said the bureaucrat. "That's impossible."
"In vild North, ve have no need for papers," insisted Kraki. "I say I am
Kraki, son of Kronar; any who say different, I kill for the lying cowards that they are.
That is how ve identify ourselves in Northland!"
The bureaucrat cleared his throat. "Quite. However, all foreigners are issued
letters of transit when they cross the border."
"Yah?" said Kraki. "I valk across border. No vone give me papers. No
vone stop me." He pulled his sword about two inches out of its scabbard and let it
fall back. "No vone try." He glared at the bureaucrat. "You vant to
try?"
"Er . . ."
"Surely, good sir," Timaeus intervened, "there are regulations to cover
this eventuality. The discovery of an undocumented alien within the Grand Duke's realm can
hardly be an unique occurrence."
"Oh, yes," said the bureaucrat happily, "there is a . . . regulation . .
." His voice trailed off. An expression of dismay passed across his face. He backed
toward the soldiers.
"What is it?" asked Timaeus.
"When an undocumented alien is found within the Grand Duchy of Athelstan . .
."
"Yes?" The soldiers tensed. "He must be jailed"
Kraki roared a challenge and drew his sword. Hastily, the soldiers prepared for combat.
"Unless!" shouted the bureaucrat. The tableau held. "Unless
vhat?" said Kraki.
The bureaucrat spoke rapidly. "Unless he is within ten miles of the border, in
which case he must be escorted across it."
Kraki considered this for a moment. "Veil, then," he said, sheathing his
weapon and smiling slowly. "I vill go qvietly."
"Yes," said the bureaucrat unhappily, "but I believe the provision is
intended to apply to raiders or people who wander across the border by mistake-not to
those who have been living illegally in the grand duchy for some time. . . ."
The captain of the guards eyed Kraki's heavily-muscled torso. "If regs give us a
choice between fighting that and escorting him ten feet into the caverns, guess
what my choice is."
There were mumbles of agreement from the other soldiers.
The cavern was a great gash in the earth, far wider than it was tall, like the mouth of
some vast creature. At one end was daylight, blinding compared to the dimness within. At
the other end, the chamber broke apart into shafts and passageways, tendrils extending off
into the depths. Within the chamber, not far from the customs post, lay the village of
Gateway.
"Why did we have to go through customs, anyway?" Nick asked Garni. "The
earth below thirty cubits belongs to usto the dwarves," Garni said.
"That's right," said Timaeus hefting the wheelbarrow containing Father
Thwaite over the rocky floor. "Although the Caverns of Cytorax lie entirely within
the boundaries of Athelstan, by ancient treaty with the Dwarven Kings, the grand duchy
extends only thirty cubits below the surface of the earth. Below that depth is dwarven
territory."
Gateway was built of rock quarried from the chamber walls, limestone loosely mortared
together. The buildings were small, the walls somewhat rickety; but then, no weather
penetrated here, and the cavern remained always at the same chill temperature.
Shops lined the street. An orc wearing an apron stood in one; behind him stood bottles
of liquor and bales of weed. "Duty free?" the orc grunted. Sidney smiled and
shook her head. She had been here before. Since Gateway lay wholly within the caverns, it
was outside Athelstani jurisdiction. It was sometimes convenient to do business beyond the
reach of the grand duke's justice.
A smallish lizardman bounded up and zeroed in on Timaeus, the most prosperous looking
of the group. He tugged on the wizard's robe. "Welcome to cavernth, honored
thir," the lizard said, hopping rapidly to keep up. "Need hotel? Know all good
rethtauranth. Act ath guide? Thee many hithtoric thights? Rent thithter? Hourly
rateth."
"Get lost," Nick said menacingly. The lizardman hopped away from him a
little.
"No, no," said Timaeus. "None of us is familiar with the depths of
Cytorax Caverns. An experienced native guide could prove invaluable." "Yeth!
Yeth!" said the lizardman, hopping closer. "Lenny knowth all
about cavernth! Lenny show you! Lenny take you to good treasure, yeth! Lenny ith good
guide! Reathonable rateth!"
"This is a mistake," Sidney said.
"What do you mean?" said Timaeus a little huffily.
"Just look at the little reptile," said Sidney. "Give him the
opportunity, and he'd sell you as quickly as his sister."
Lenny looked at her with wounded eyes. "Not true! Not true!" he whined.
"Lenny honetht lithard! Honetht!"
"Really," said Timaeus, "I hadn't expected racial slurs from you, Miss
Stollitt. Given trust and support, I'm sure this young creature "Yeth!"
said Lenny. "Trutht Lenny! Lenny find treasure! Big treasure!" "Look,"
said Nick to Timaeus, "forget it. It's a dumb idea. Okay?" Timaeus bristled.
"Nonsense. None of us is familiar with Cytorax. We
need a guide. I'm sure this fellow will do us proud." He patted the lizardman on
the head; Lenny looked back adoringly.
"Twenty thilver pennies per hour?" Lenny said.
Timaeus cleared his throat. "Sidney, please take care of the details, if you
will." He wandered across the street to look at one of the stalls. Sidney gritted her
teeth. She glared at the lizardman. "Two pennies an
hour, you little bastard," she said, fighting to keep control of her voice.
"And not a penny more."
The lizard looked disappointed that he wasn't bargaining with Timaeus.
"Three," he said. "And one perthent of any treasure."
"Two and a halfand no part of any treasure, you reptile. And if you abandon
us down there, I'll hunt you down and kill youand your sister, too. Got
me?"
Lenny looked at her with wounded eyes. "Lenny not do that," he said sadly.
"Lenny good guide. Lenny help. Need three pennieth. Thtandard rate."
Sidney sighed. "Three pennies," she said. Lenny bounced up and down in joy.
He bounded off after Timaeus.
"Thir! Thir! Not shop here. Lenny show you better thtore. Duty free itemth. Good
pritheth."
"What are we getting into?" said Nick.
Kraki grunted and picked up the handles of the wheelbarrow. "Don't vorry," he
said. "If lizard con us, I tvist head off." He strode off down the street.
"That's very reassuring," said Garni doubtfully. He hoisted his gear and
followed.
Sidney shook her head and sighed.
Nick patted her on the bottom. "Don't worry, kiddo," he said. She glared at
him. "And why the hell not?" she muttered.
III.
The passageway, Garni thought, had obviously been a mine shaft at one time. He raised
his lantern and studied the beams that held up the roof; they looked several centuries
old. He doubted they were entirely sound.
Up ahead, Lenny had stopped at a thick wooden door. Light seeped out around its edges.
"Thththth!" Lenny said, putting one finger to his crocodilian snout. The others
joined him.
"Okay," said Garni in a low voice. "Everybody ready?" The others
readied their weapons. Timaeus nodded.
Garni threw himself against the door. It slammed open. He stumbled into the room
beyond, waving his battle-axe and shouting a battle cry. Swords swiped through the air
above Garni's head. Two trolls stood
inside the room, one on either side of the door. They'd been prepared for
intrudersbut obviously expected someone taller than the dwarf. Unable to stop
himself under the weight of his pack, Garni staggered all
the way across the room to fetch up against one wall. One troll turned to charge the
dwarf, while the other kept a wary eye on the door.
Kraki stood blocking the doorway, studying Garni's axe work. "Well?" said
Sidney, prodding him from behind.
"Hah?" Kraki said. "Oh! Ve kill things now?" "Yes, you
idiot!"
"Hokay, hokay," said the barbarian huffily, drawing his sword. "You
don't have to get upset." He hurled himself into the room. "YAH HA!" he
exclaimed, plunging his sword into one troll's torso, whipping it out, and hacking off the
head of the other.
Both trolls fell.
Kraki flexed his muscles heroically, looking pleased. He posed with one
foot atop a trollish body. Garni lowered his battle-axe to the ground and stood
panting, leaning on its haft.
The troll under Kraki's foot reached up and ripped open the barbarian's calf. It rolled
for its sword. Kraki, astounded, stood with one foot in the air, bleeding from his leg
wound. "Vhat going on?" he complained.
"Shut up and fight," panted Garni. The troll stood up clutching its sword.
Snarling, Kraki ran to it and hacked off both its arms, then both its legs for good
measure.
The limbs began to inch across the floor toward the glaring, limbless torso. Garni
fumbled with an arm, trying to keep it away. The other limbs began to heal back in place.
"Vatch out!" shouted Kraki. Behind Garni's back, the other troll, blindly
fumbling across the floor, had found its head. Kraki charged across the room and kicked
the head out of the troll's hands. The head bit him on the foot.
"Ouch!" said Kraki. "I kill you now." He stabbed at the head
gingerly, trying to avoid his foot. He hopped on his free leg. The head gnawed on his
toes.
"Those things can regenerate," said Sidney worriedly from the doorway. She
tossed a dagger at one trollish arm, trying to keep it from getting back to its torso.
"Quite so," said Timaeus.
"How can we kill them?" asked Nick, peering intently at the trolls, his face
ferretlike in the torchlight.
"If I recall my natural philosophy," Timaeus said, "only fire or acid
will do."
"Great," said Nick. "I'm all out of Greek fire, I'm afraid. How . . .
?" "Leave it to me," said Timaeus, as Kraki hopped around the room stabbing
at the head on his foot. "Stand back." Timaeus cleared his throat, held his
pipe, and gestured, speaking Words of mystic power. A ball of flame appeared in his hand;
he hurled it into the room.
The ball exploded.
There was a blinding flash.
There was a tremendous, thundering boom.
Flame splashed out of the room, billowing up and down the corridor for dozens of yards.
Sidney, Nick, and Lenny were hurled down the corridor like straws in a wind.
The caverns shook with the boom. Dust and pebbles fell from the corridor roof. Beams
creaked and shuddered.
Father Thwaite fell out of the wheelbarrow. "Where am I?" he said faintly.
"Well," said Timaeus happily. "That certainly did the trick."
The magician was completely untouched by the explosion and breathed the thick smoke
without discomfort. By touch, he found Garni's lantern, which the blast had snuffed, and
relit it.
The room was devastated.
The rug on the floor was burnt to a cinder. The wooden table at the back of the room
was burning merrily. The trolls were charred and motionless. Garni was unconscious on the
floor, his clothing smoking. Kraki's skin was covered with soot. He stood with an idiot
grin on his face, one leg in the air with a charred trollish head on the raised foot. As
Timaeus watched, the barbarian's eyes turned up into his head, and he tumbled to the
floor. The floor shook.
"Oh," Timaeus said. "I say."
Nick stumbled into the room, supporting himself against one wall. His hair was singed.
"I think I've seen the spell before," he said hoarsely. "Fireball, wasn't
it?" He coughed and waved the smoke away from his face.
"Er . . . yes."
"What's the diameter of a fireball?" "Ah . . . thirty feet or so."
"Hmm." Nick eyeballed the room. "I'd say this room is about ten by
ten."
"Er . . . Yes," said Timaeus. "Given the volume of the spell, a certain
amount of splashback was to be expected."
A green snout peered around the edge of the door. Lenny looked in hesitantly.
"A certain amount?" Nick said incredulously. "You're an educated man.
You figure it out. The spell's volume of effect is ten times as big as this
room."
"Ah . . ."
"We're lucky to be alive! Have you looked at the corridor? I just hope the support
beams hold long enough for us to get out."
Timaeus was turning pink.
Sidney pulled herself into the room. She moved gingerly, as if unconvinced that she was
still alive. "Nifty spell," she said sarcastically. "Real neat."
"Look . . ." said Timaeus.
Thwaite staggered into the room. The cleric looked haggard, hung-over, and queasy. He
stopped and peered around. He noticed the charred
corpses, the unconscious bodies, and the gore that had splashed everywhere. Thwaite
looked even queasier. He staggered back out of the room. There was a retching sound from
the hall.
Timaeus sighed. "Look," he said softly, "I'll be more careful next time.
Fire doesn't much affect me, you see, and sometimes I forget what it can do to others.
I'll try to give you some warning. Is that acceptable?"
Nick and Sidney looked at each other. "It's your expedition," said Nick.
"You twit," said Sidney.
Timaeus bristled. "Madam, I've given you my apology" "Don't call
me madam," snarled Sidney.
Thwaite staggered back into the room. He fetched up against a wall. "Hello,"
he asked the wall, "do I know you?"
"As a matter of fact said Timaeus.
Sidney sighed. "It's Sidney, Father," she said. "And this is Magister
d'Asperge, the leader of the expedition I was telling you about." She glared at
Timaeus.
"Hmm?" the cleric said, studying the wall. "I vaguely recall . . ."
"The expedition into the Caverns of Cytorax," Timaeus said. Thwaite shuddered.
"Which you joined by signing the papers of enlistment in my office not forty-eight
hours ago."
"The Caverns of Cytorax?" Thwaite said in horror. "What in Dion's name
did I do that for?"
"You must have been drunk," said Timaeus dryly.
Thwaite cleared his throat. His head was pounding. "A state I much prefer to my
current one," he said. Glancing around the room, Thwaite noticed Garni's sprawled
body. Blisters were beginning to form on the dwarf's face. "Oh dear," Thwaite
said. "Hmm." He pushed off the wall, staggered over to the dwarf, and dropped to
the floor. Timaeus made an abortive gesture to catch the priest, then realized Thwaite had
merely fallen to his knees.
Thwaite studied the dwarf. He held a wrist, thumped Garni's chest, and felt the dwarf's
forehead. Thwaite closed his eyes and concentrated for a moment.
"Yes," he said faintly. From within his robes, he produced a silver
aspergillum and a stick of incense. He leaned over and lit the incense at the burning
table, then wafted the stick over the dwarf's body, murmuring a prayer. He stood the stick
on the floor and sprinkled the body with water from the aspergillum, praying as he did.
Under the cleric's ministrations, Garni's blisters began visibly to recede. Perhaps,
Timaeus thought, the cleric would be of some assistance after all. He scratched an ear and
surveyed the blasted room and his injured companions with embarrassment.
"Idiot," he muttered to himself.
The room was carved from the rock; sedimentary banding along the walls plunged at an
odd angle toward the floor. The table, no longer burning, stood at the rear of the room.
Underneath the table lay a trunk, bound with leather. Straw ticking lay in a clump against
one wall.
Garni was still too weak to rise, but that didn't stop him from directing the search.
"Righto," he said. "Nick, lad, search the bodies. Sidney, take a look at
the chest. If you would be so kind, Magister d'Asperge, do you think you could examine the
table? Father? The straw . . . ? Thank you."
Kraki propped himself up against the wall, put both hands behind his head, and grinned,
watching the others work. Thwaite had bound up the barbarian's leg, but his injuries
excused him from the labor, at least for now.
Nick went over the body of the man the trolls had killed. "A purse," he said.
He poured its contents into his hand. "Four shillings andum-eight pence
ha'penny." Lenny came over and stared at the silver avidly. Nick poured it back and
fixed the purse to his belt. "A daggera cheap one."
"Pockets?" asked Garni. "Are the clothes worth anything?"
"They're sliced up," Nick said, "and kind of bloody." "Never
mind. Slit open the belt."
"Hey, what do you know! A gold sovereign, sewn into the leather." Garni
grinned into his beard.
Timaeus yanked open the table's only drawer. A cockroach crawled out.
"Zounds," he said, and jumped back. He pointed at the cockroach and started
muttering a spell. Before he could complete it, the roach had disappeared into a crack.
Timaeus stopped muttering; smoke curled from his finger as the aborted spell dissipated.
He shook his finger painfully and cursed under his breath, then reached into the drawer.
"Empty," he reported, "save for this paper." He pulled it out.
"It appears to be a note of some kind. Written inI believe it is orcish
script."
"Lenny read! Lenny read!" said the lizardman, bounding up and down. Timaeus
handed it to him. Lenny puzzled over it. "Heat oil in heavy thkillet," he read
slowly. "Fry one pound thalted manthflesh"
"Yoiks," said Timaeus in disgust. "A recipe."
"If you would, Magister d'Asperge," said Garni, "the rest of the
table." "What rest? There's only the one draw."
Garni sighed. "Anything behind the drawer?" "Hmm?" Timaeus pulled
it out. "No."
"Does the drawer have a false bottom?" "Ah . . . no."
"Does the top of the table lift off?" "No."
"Flip it over. That's right. Now, pry out the table legs." "Is this
necessary?"
"Professionalism, Magister! We must be thorough! Does the leg sound hollow?"
"No." "Test it."
"Eh? What do you mean?"
"I've known magic wands to be disguised as table legs," Garni said. "Ye
gods . . . All right." Timaeus pointed the table leg at a wall, and said "Klaathu
. . . Proujansky . . . Moshalu!"
Nothing happened. "The other legs."
With mounting impatience, Timaeus tried the other three legs. Nothing. "Knock all
over the tabletop."
"I say, this is a bit thick."
"Wouldn't you feel like an idiot if we passed up a treasure just because we
weren't thorough?" said Garni.
"I suppose, but"
"Professionalism, my dear Magister! Professionalism! Knock, my good man!"
"Non omnia possumus omnes, " Timaeus mutteredbut he knocked on the
tabletop. It sounded like solid, slightly scorched oak.
"All right, hand me the legs." Timaeus did so. Garni took out his boot knife
and started whittling.
"What the devil are you doing?"
Garni shrugged. "There might be secret compartments . . . items glued into the
wood . . . anything. You never know."
Timaeus rolled his eyes and reached for his pipe. He started tamping it with pipeweed.
"Ah . . ." said Father Thwaite. "Yes, good cleric?" said Garni.
"Ah, this straw seems to be matted together with . . ." "Yes?"
"Well, from the stench, I would venture to guess that it's . . . troll
urine."
"Indeed. Well, persevere, Father! Persevere!" "Yes," said Thwaite
faintly.
"Nick, lad?" said Garni. He'd reduced one table leg to shavings and was
working on the second.
"Yes, Garni?" Nick said, grinning. "The troll bodies."
"What about them? They don't have any clothing . . ." "You never know
what might be in the stomachs." Nick lost his grin. "Stomachs?"
"Yes. Trolls are not very bright, you know. They've been known to swallow the most
extraordinary things."
Grimacing, Nick moved toward one of the trolls, dagger in hand. Timaeus had finished
tamping his pipe. He brought one finger toward the bowl . . .
There was an explosion. Everyone dived for cover.
Flames raged around Timaeus's head for a moment, then dissipated in smoke.
Unscathed, Timaeus puffed contentedly on his pipe. He looked around the room and
noticed that everyone was hugging the floor. "Oh, really," he said. "Can't
a man smoke in peace?" He puffed some more.
"How are you doing with the trunk, Sidney?" Garni asked.
"Just a minute," Sidney said. She pressed an ear to the steamer trunk and
tapped over it with a finger. She drew back, stood up, and took off her pack. She took an
ear trumpet out of the pack and tapped over the chest again, listening with the trumpet.
Then, she brought out a Y-shaped silver wand and, holding the forked end of the wand in
both hands, moved it over the chest and down all four sides. The wand remained stable.
She stepped back and looked at the chest, thinking for a moment. Then she took a coil
of rope from her pack. She looped it around the chest and moved as far across the room as
she could. She gave the rope a tug. The chest moved slightly. Nothing else happened. She
yanked harder. The chest moved a little farther.
She coiled the rope and looked at the chest thoughtfully. "Yust open it,"
said Kraki.
She glanced at him. "It could be trapped." "Bah," said Kraki.
"Everyone out of the room," said Sidney.
"This is silliness," said Kraki. "Ve are vasting time."
Nick stumbled out of the room, green trollish ichor dripping from his sleeves. He
looked rather greenish himself. The others followed him, Kraki last and reluctantly.
Sidney dragged the heavy oak tabletop up to the chest. She tipped it up along its long
edge and crouched behind it. She laid a metal rod, several feet in length, over the
tabletop. The rod had a claw at the end; carefully, she used it to pry open the chest lid.
The lid opened. Nothing else happened.
Sidney peered over the tabletop and into the chest. She probed the interior with the
rod.
Nothing happened.
She stood up and let the tabletop fall with a bang.
Everyone rushed into the room. "Are you all right?" Nick asked.
"Sure," she said, peering in the chest.
Lenny bounded up and down. "Lenny lead you to good treasure! Magic! Thilver!
Jewelth!"
"Two bags of pemmican," she said, "and a jar of" she sniffed,
and took a swig "rather flat ginger beer."
Lenny stopped bounding up and down.
"Well," said Timaeus scathingly. "It was certainly foresighted of us to
bring the wheelbarrow along. How could we ever get this munificent treasure out
otherwise?"
Kraki fingered the edge of his sword and eyed Lenny thoughtfully.
By the time they left the room, they'd reduced everything in it to flinders. "Now
that," said Garni happily, "is what I call a professional job."
IV.
Where water had run into the terrestrial depths, it had left a slantwise crack in the
limestone, a shaft scattered with boulders and pebbles, potholes and minor cliffs. It had
scoured the shaft smooth, burnishing the stone to a yellow luster.
Lenny bounded easily from boulder to boulder, springing down the slope to stand where
rocks gave temporary purchase. "Lenny find better treasure!" he yipped.
"Thecret treasure! Jewelth! Magic! Lenny show you!"
The others found the going more difficult. At times, the slope approached the vertical.
They descended slowly, searching for handholds among the potholes and boulders.
Garni hammered a piton into the groove between a boulder and the streambed, and ran a
rope through the piton's iron loop. Holding both ends of the rope, he backed cautiously
down the slope. The others watched him.
He reached a flatter area where he could stand unsupported and called, "All right,
who's next?"
Sidney spoke to Timaeus. "Are you sure you want to go down there?"
"Absolutely," he said, puffing on his pipe. "Adventure awaits us in the
depths of Cytorax! Forward, my friends! Fortuna favet fortibus!"
"Lenny lead! Follow Lenny!" the lizardman yipped faintly from far down the
shaft.
"Where is he taking us?" Sidney asked. "To fame and fortune!" said
Timaeus.
"More likely to an early grave," Nick muttered.
"I trust him implicitly," Timaeus huffed, and grabbed Garni's rope.
Drizhnakh, Garfok, and Spug were playing cards in front of the fire. They were on guard
duty. No one took guard duty too seriously.
Drizhnakh and Garfok were both cheating. They both knew that they were both cheating.
Spug didn't have a clue, of course.
They were playing Spatzle. For money. If they'd been playing anything else, Drizhnakh
and Garfok might have played honestly. It wasn't too likely, of course, but they might
have. Spatzle is played by orcish children. It is completely mindless-on the same level as
Go Fish or Old Maid. There's no strategy. Both Drizhnakh and Garfok were bored with it.
Which is why they had to spice the game up with some judicious cheating.
The problem was that Spazle was the only thing Spug would play. It was the only thing
Spug could play. Spug was, as his orcish companions would have so charmingly put
it, "a maroon." Not that your run-of-the-mill orc is exactly the world's leading
intellectual light, but you get the idea.
As far as Drizhnakh and Garfok were concerned, cheating was the real game, anyway. It
was a given that Spug would lose. The only question was whether Drizhnakh or Garfok would
win. Skill at cardsharping, not skill at cards, was the requirement for victory.
Drizhnakh and Garfok were tired of Spatzle. For them, it had lost its charm. It was no
longer pleasing. It had become otiose. As Garfok put it, "Dis is a dumb friggin'
game, Spug." He threw down his cards.
Spug looked injured. "I likes it, Garfok," he said. "It's fun."
"I is had enough, ya maroon," riposted Garfok.
"Pick up da hand, Garfok," Drizhnakh said menacingly.
"Piss up yer aunt's leg! I says I's had it wiv dis game," said Garfok.
"Days cause you got a lousy hand, ya dipshit. Pick it up," Drizhnakh said.
"Yeah!" said Spug. "You is just got a lousy hand! You is just upset
cause you is gonna lose!"
"Piss on you," replied Garfok.
Drizhnakh drew his sword and buried its sharp end in the table before Garfok.
"Pick up da cards!" he yelled.
Garfok picked up his cards. "Tree of fangs," he said sullenly, throwing a
card on the table.
Drizhnakh pulled a card out of his sleeve. Spug didn't notice. Garfok did.
"Trump," Drizhnakh said. "Raise two copper."
Garfok sighed. Then he saw a flash of green by the door. He dropped his cards on the
table, then tipped his chair back, keeping his balance by putting his knees under the
table. He reached outside the door, grabbed Lenny by the neck, and pulled the lizardman
into the room.
Lenny's legs windmilled as he tried to break free. "Hey!" said Garfok.
"Look at dis! It's Lenny da Lizard."
Lenny went limp. "Lenny come to thay hello," he said hesitantly. Drizhnakh
smiled; his tusks made it a rather menacing smile. "It's da lizard kid," he said
to Spug, "come to visit." He laid his cards carefully on the table.
"Yeah," said Spug, nodding wisely. "An' just in time for lunch,
too." "I haven't had lizard in months an' months," said Drizhnakh
thoughtfully.
"Say, kid," said Garfok, still holding Lenny by the neck. "Whatcha doin'
down here anyway, huh?"
"Lenny going for thtroll," the lizardman said despairingly.
Drizhnakh poked the fire. "Where's dat roastin' skewer?" he asked Spug.
Spug started pawing through a pile of gear. "It's in here somewheres," he
said.
"You got a load of tourists wiv you, kid?" Garfok asked, shaking the
lizardman.
Lenny nodded.
"Dey is comin' down da shaft?" Lenny hung motionless.
"Found dat skewer yet?" Garfok asked. Drizhnakh grunted and threw another log
on the fire; he stared at Lenny and licked his chops.
Lenny shuddered. "Yeth," he said despairingly. "Five humanth. One
dwarf."
"Youmans? Hey, Drizhnakh, sounds like mansflesh for lunch instead." Spug
nodded enthusiastically. "I like mansflesh," he confided.
"Tell ya what, buddy," Garfok said thoughtfully. "You go back to da
tourists. Take 'em to Rog."
Lenny shook his head violently. "Not Rog," he said. "Lenny not go to
Rog. Rog bad monthter. Kill Lenny."
Garfok sighed. "Listen to me, kiddo. Dese guys, da youmans an' such, dey fight
Rog. You hang back. If Rog kills 'em, dat's fine wiv us. We'll letcha go home. If dey
kills Rog, dat's good, too. Rog is a pain. And den, when dey're all wounded an' stuff from
fightin' Rog, den we attack. And kills 'em."
Lenny considered a moment. "Rog hath big treasure. Gold. Jewelth," he said
craftily.
"Days da beauty of it," Garfok said. "If dey kill Rog, we kill dem and
get da loot."
"Share for Lenny?"
"Sure, kid. Sure. Dere'll be a share for you. Right, guys?" Garfok said.
"You bet," Drizhnakh said.
"Sure, Lenny," said Spug. "We give ya a share."
"Share for Lenny," Lenny said happily. "Gold. Jewelth. Magic!"
"Days right, kid," said Garfok, releasing the lizardman.
"Lenny go back. Take humanth to Rog." "Days da ticket."
"Lenny thay good-bye," said Lenny and bounded from the room. There was
silence for a moment.
Drizhnakh collapsed against the table, shaking. "Ya got him good, Garfok," he
gasped. Garfok grinned.
"'Share for Lenny?' " Drizhnakh said. They both laughed. Spug looked puzzled.
"I don't gets it."
"'Take humanth to Rog!' " Garfok said.
"'Treasure for Lenny!' " Drizhnakh said, rolling on the floor. "C'mon,
guys," Spug said. "I don't gets it!"
Garfok grinned at him. "Does ya really think we is gonna give dat punk a share of
da treasure?"
Spug thought that over. "Days mean," he said in a bewildered tone. While
Drizhnakh chortled on the floor, Garfok took the opportunity to switch his cards with
Drizhnakh's.
Drizhnakh sat up. "We better tell da boss about dis," he said.
Sidney lost her grip on the rope, fell heavily down the slope, and slammed up against a
boulder. She gasped for air.
Father Thwaite, who was crouching on a nearby ledge, gingerly made his way crabwise
across the slope. "Are you all right?" he asked.
"My leg . . . ," she gasped.
He felt her leg. "It's not broken," he said, "but you'll have quite a
bruise."
She stood up unsteadily. "I'll be okay," she said. "I'll heal it when we
get to the bottom."
"No, Father," she said.
"Why not?" he asked, in some surprise. "I . . . I can't."
"I don't understand."
Sidney sighed. "I'm sorry, Father, she said. "I can't explain."
It was warm in Rog's cavern. He liked it that way. He liked his cavern very much. There
was a pool to wade in. There was a comfy pile of gold to sleep on. And there were
crocodiles in the pool for snacks.
Rog was having a snack right now, as matter of fact. He reached one paw into the pool
and fished around. There was one! He grabbed the croc by the middle, lifted it out, and
dropped it into his maw. The croc thrashed, and Rog chewed. It was crunchy. He swallowed.
He'd have a few more crocs, and then he'd go have a nice nap. Later on, maybe he'd go
for a little walk through the caverns. Maybe he'd find an orc or two. It was a long time
since he'd had an orc. Crocs were good, but it was always nice to vary your diet.
Rog was quite looking forward to his day.
From the base of the shaft, the rest of the party watched Kraki descend the last few
feet. His foot slipped. He fell heavily onto the slope. He clutched his sword, and
plummeted . . .
. . . into the pool at the base of the shaft. There was a splash. Garni raised his
lantern high and peered into the water.
Lenny hopped into the circle of light.
"Where the hell have you been?" asked Sidney. "Lenny thcout ahead! Lenny
find big treasure!"
Kraki surfaced with a whoop. "Hoo!" he said. "Vater cold. Feels
good." He slapped some water toward the party.
Timaeus studied the pool and shuddered. "Unhealthy," he muttered. Garni
stepped back to avoid being splashed. Kraki backstroked across the pond.
"What's that?" said Nick, pointing at something floating in the water. It was
barely visible in the lantern's dim light.
Lenny peered. "Ith crocth," he said.
It took Nick a moment to understand. "Kraki!" he yelled. "Get out
of the water! Now!"
Kraki stopped backstroking and sat up, treading water. "Vhy?" There was a
thrashing noise, and the barbarian disappeared.
Timaeus cursed and began to chant, preparing a spell. Sidney drew her sword, then
wondered what to do with it.
Kraki surfaced near them blowing. "Are you all right?" Garni shouted. The
barbarian laughed exuberantly. "Yah, yah," he said. "Look vhat I
found." He held a crocodile by the snout, one jaw in each hand. The crocodile
struggled to free itself, but Kraki was too strong. Kraki disappeared under the water
again-then shot from it, to sit on the edge of the pool, still holding the croc.
"See my little friend?" he said, holding the crocodile toward the others. He
opened and closed the jaws with his hands. "Vant a kiss?" he said,
shoving the crocodile toward Father Thwaite. The cleric backed away. The crocodile's
feet scrabbled, but it got nowhere.
"It's blind," said Garni. It was true; the crocodile's lids were sealed
together. Its coloring was light in comparison to its surface-dwelling cousins.
"Many crocth in cavernth," said Lenny. "Thwimming bad." "Throw
it back," said Timaeus.
"Vhat? Not vant for dinner?"
"I don't think so, Kraki," said Sidney.
"Hokay," said the barbarian, and dropped the crocodile back into the pool. It
swam away as fast as it could.
"About this treasure," said Nick.
"Big treasure, mathterth! Gold! Thilver! Lenny find good treasure thith time! Make
up for trollth! Trutht Lenny!" Lenny said, and bounded off. They followed him down a
brief passageway that opened into a large
cavern. Bats fluttered overhead, moving like leaves whipped in a silent storm.
"I don't like this," Sidney said. "Where was he? What was he
doing?" "You fret too much, my dear," Timaeus said, pulling out his pipe
and packing it. He brought his finger toward the bowl. Everyone else put their fingers in
their ears.
Thunder sounded across the cave. Timaeus puffed contentedly.
They came to a narrow crack, lined with geodes winking orange in the lantern light.
Beyond the crack was darkness.
"Be very, very quiet!" said Lenny, holding a finger to his snout.
"Follow Lenny." He led the way through the crack and into another cavern, as
huge as the one before. They heard a splash off in the darkness. Lenny tiptoed across the
uneven rock. The party followed, the lantern lighting their way.
Rog lifted another croc out of the water, then stopped. What was that noise? It sounded
like a faint jingling. The croc thrashed in Rog's hand. Lenny turned. "Thee?" he
whispered. "Thee? Mathter like treasure?" It was a veritable hill of gold. Well,
maybe not a hill. More like a small
mound. Actually, it was closer to a pile. Look, it was a lot of gold. Enough gold to
set you up for life. Enough gold to make even a dragon's eyes gleam. A lot.
It wasn't just gold, either. There was the occasional flash of a jewel; there were
chalices, swords, suits of armor, and all sorts of other goodies poking out of the pile.
"Whoopee!" shouted Nick, diving headfirst into the pile. He flung coins into
the air. "I'm rich! I'm rich!" he said. "I'm socially secure!"
Kraki smiled broadly. Sidney licked her lips. Garni took off his backpack and started
fumbling through it. He pulled out a bag of hardtack, three small steel balls, a box of
cocoa mix. He pulled out a rabbit's foot, a wooden stake, a mallet, and a box of iron
nails.
"What are you looking for?" asked Nick.
"I've got a bunch of burlap sacks," said Garni. "We'll need them to get
the treasure out. I know they're in here somewhere." He pulled out a compass, an
astrolabe, and a heavy bound book. . . .
"I don't know," Timaeus said.
There was a loud noise. Rog heard it distinctly. It sounded like it came from . . . his
pile of gold! His comfy pile of gold! Those darn orcs. They were always after his gold!
And it had taken him so long to get a nice comfy pile, too. He'd teach those orcs a thing
or two!
The croc still clutched in one hand, Rog ran toward his gold. "Somehow, it seems
too easy," said Timaeus.
Sidney turned white.
"What's the matter?" Timaeus said. Sidney pointed.
Timaeus turned.
Twenty cubits away, there were two feet planted on the ground. The thing about these
feet was that the body to which they were attached wasn't visible. Not that the body was
invisible, exactly; it was just so huge that you couldn't see it all in the dim light of
Garni's lantern. All you could see was a pair of huge, scaled, greenish feet, each with
four toes, each toe sporting a claw the length of a man's arm.
Also visible, hanging about fifteen cubits off the ground, was a pale green crocodile,
clutched in a huge, clawed hand.
"Run," suggested Sidney in a conversational tone.
"Vhat?" said Kraki and turned to see what Sidney was talking about.
"Run!" Sidney said more forcefully.
Nick craned around to look. Garni looked up from his backpack. "RUN!" Sidney
screamed.
"A felicitous suggestion," said Timaeus.
A giant, clawed hand felt over the pile of gold. Nick scurried out of its way just in
time. They ran.
The hand found Lenny. It lifted him high in the air by one leg. "Mathterth!
Mathterth! Thave Lenny! Pleathe thave Lenny!" he screamed.
Timaeus turned and hurled a fireball over his shoulder. It exploded somewhere near the
creature's torso. There was a thunderous shout of anger. The creature dropped Lenny.
The monster pounded after them, the cavern shaking with each tencubit stride.
"Scatter!" Timaeus gasped. "Or it'll get us all!" They scattered.
There was a boom, and something burned Rog. Ooh! That smarted. Now Rog was angry. Where
was the one he had grabbed? Rog felt around for it. Rog would get them for this. Darn
orcs.
Sidney and Nick made for the same hiding placea niche at one end of the cavern.
They squeezed in together, their backs to the cool stone. Nick put his arm around Sidney
and nuzzled her neck.
"Cut that out," she hissed.
"Aw, c'mon, Sidney." He put a hand on her leg.
"Cut it out, you jerk," she whispered. "There's a monster out
there." "Yeah," said Nick. "We could die at any moment. Danger always
adds an element of"
"Do you remember what direction the cavern entrance is?"
"Mmm. Remember the time the town watch was looking for us? And . . ." Nick
slid a hand around her back.
A dagger pricked his ribs.
"Oh, hell, Sidney," he said, drawing back.
"So where the hell were you last night, buster?" she said in a low voice.
"UhI thought we had an understanding"
"Understanding? Understanding!" Sidney's voice was getting noticeably louder.
"You shit! Our understanding was that"
"Sssh!" said Nick.
There was silence for a moment.
"This is a hell of a time to pick a fight," said Nick.
"We're partners, Pratchitt," said Sidney. "That's all we
are." "But Sidney," Nick said, "what about"
"That was then," said Sidney. "This is now. Now listen to me. We're not
going to be able to beat that monster. Right?"
"No chance," said Nick.
"So if we want a part of that treasure, we've got to snatch it."
"Sure," said Nick.
"Let's go," said Sidney.
Suddenly, the space in the niche next to Nick was empty. "Sidney?" Nick
whispered.
"Sidney?" he whispered a little louder, out into the vastness of the cavern.
He couldn't see anything out there. It was as dark as the inside of a casket.
Cursing, he moved out into the darkness. Kraki crouched against the uneven wall.
Kraki didn't care about treasure. Barbarians didn't worry about money. Glory, that was
the thing. Great deeds to be sung in the long-hall, deeds that would resound in his name
for all time to come. Killing a monster the size of a mountain, for instance. Preferably
in single combat. With one arm tied behind your back. Blindfolded. With a hat pin.
Let's not, Kraki told himself, get carried away.
It was dark, as dark as dragon's blood. He couldn't even see himself. He had his sword.
He had the strength of his right arm. The monster was out there.
He had no idea how to kill the thing. It was just too damn big. Without a good look at
the monster, he had no way of knowing where its vulnerable spots might be. External organs
are usually the best bet: eyes and genitals. The throat is good, too.
He felt the wall he crouched against. It was grainy, a little soft. There were a few
cracks, a few holes. And it was soft enough that he might be able to carve a handhold with
his knife if he needed to.
In the pitch darkness, Kraki began to climb. All of the monster's potential vulnerable
spots were well off the ground. He had to gain some height. It didn't look too good, Kraki
had to admit. How could he fight a monster he couldn't see?
He kept on climbing. It never occurred to him to do anything else. Heroes fight
monsters. Monsters fight heroes. It's just one of those things. And I, Kraki told himself,
am a hero. Yah, for sure.
Garni lay flat on his stomach. He was near a pool of water. His lamp had gone out in
the confusion, though he'd hung on to his pack. His dwarven night vision let him see a few
shadowy shapes, but he could make out very little. It was black, as black as an ogre's
heart. He heard a splash from the pool; he hoped the crocs would leave him alone. But
crocodiles were the least of his worries.
He wished he could see what was going on. He considered relighting his
lantern, but decided against it. Doing so would only reveal his position to the
creature out there.
He'd boasted to Nick about being prepared. Well, he might not be prepared to deal with
monsters the size of mountains. But maybe there was something in his pack. . . .
He fumbled through it. Wood axe. Spare socks. Bedroll. Brandy. Nothing useful there.
Oil. Salt. Wolfsbane.
Belladonna. Parchment.
Wait. Belladonna. No, not just belladonna. Essence of belladonna, thin crystalline
needles extracted by some magical process from the root and leaves of the plant. Priests
and chirurgeons used it as a local anaesthetic. The medicinal dose was one hundreth of a
grain; a truly tiny amount. Two grains would kill a man.
He hefted the packet. He must havecall it an ounce and a half. Something over six
hundred grains.
Was that enough to kill the monster? It was damned big. Its body weight must be
tremendous. Still . . . it was the only thing Garni could think of. And even if the dose
weren't lethal, it might slow the monster down.
But how to get the monster to take the poison? He could dump the belladonna into a jar
of pemmican. . . . But no. The monster wouldn't identify the jar as food.
I suppose, Garni thought, I could get it to eat me. He shuddered. For a moment, he
contemplated capturing a crocodile and forcing it to eat the belladonnabut he was
not about to wrestle blind crocs in the dark.
Could he get the poison into the monster without getting him to eat it? Wait . . . To
use belladonna as a local anaesthetic, you dissolve it in alcohol and rub it into the
skin. The alcohol penetrates. . . .
He picked up the bottle of brandy.
Rog was unhappy. He crisscrossed the cavern floor. Those darn orcs had disappeared.
Maybe they were huddling against the walls. Yeah, that's it! They must be huddling
against the walls. Rog began to feel his way around the cavern, patting the walls with his
fingertips.
Timaeus stood uncertainly in the entrance. It was dark, as dark as the seventh hell. He
could see very little. Where had everyone gotten to? Any sensible person would make for
the exit. Wouldn't they? That creature was unbeatable.
Wasn't it?
Perhaps not unbeatable, precisely. Just very tough. Very, very tough.
Wizards no more powerful than he had slain dragons, hadn't they? Admittedly, wizards
far more powerful than he had also been eaten by dragons, but he didn't come on this
expedition to shirk adventure.
Still, those claws . . . He shuddered.
Timaeus reached for his pipe, then stopped himself. Smoke would reveal his whereabouts.
No pipeweed for now.
The monster was so big. And those scales! His fireball had bounced right off-doing a
little collateral damage, perhaps, but nothing major. The monster was just so big . . .
Hmm. What would happen if the thing tripped? At university, he'd learned that the
velocity of a falling object is directly proportional to its weight. The creature was
nothing if not heavy. It would fall fast-and hard.
Perhaps an entrapment spell on one foot . . .
Father Thwaite panted heavily. He crouched with his back to a sizable stalagmite. He
could see nothing; the cavern was as dark as the sins of humanity.
What should he be doing? His companions were out there somewhere in the dark, no doubt
worried, no doubt afraid. He would comfort them if he could, but he had no idea where they
were or where he was, for that matter.
Was there anything he could do about the monster?
He prayed for spiritual guidance. He wished he had a drink.
The monster. Was it truly evil? Few creatures were. Its home had been invaded, and it
had responded accordingly. Might it not be intelligent? Might it possess a soul? Could he,
perhaps, reach it somehow, convince it that the little creatures scurrying about its feet
could become its friends? Could he lead the creature into the path of righteousness and
instruct it in the ways of the gods?
Even if it were not intelligent, perhaps he could calm it, gentle it as holy men are
said to gentle the most ferocious of beasts.
Stop, he thought.
Yes, this is what he must do. He must go forth, unarmed and unafraid, to do battle for
the spirit of the monster.
"Suicide," he groaned. The theology was ineluctable, but he didn't have to
like it.
Father Thwaite closed his eyes and intoned his mantra. He rose and slowly walked
forward across the chamber floor. He tried to gentle his thoughts, rid himself of emotion,
and reach out with his mind to contact the mind of the monster.
It was hard to concentrate. Here he was, wandering out into the middle of an unlit
cavern, trying to convert a fifty-foot monster ravening for human bloodthat he
couldn't even see. Thwaite wished he'd chosen a different god to follow. Dion had his good
pointsincluding a notable fondness for bibulationbut this predilection for
martyrdom was not among them.
Ye gods, he needed a drink. Blind faith was always easier with a few stiff ones under
the belt.
Garni sloshed the poisoned brandy. Now what?
Ideally, he wanted the monster to swallow the vial. Failing that, he'd have to splash
the stuff onto its skin. The thing to do was hurl the brandy toward the creature's mouth;
at worst, it would splash onto the face, and at best the creature would swallow.
How could he hurl the vial so high? The creature was big. . . .
He took out his eleven-foot pole and screwed it together. Maybe he could use the pole
as a kind of sling . . .
Timaeus inhaled deeply and prepared himself. This would take all his skill. First, he'd
need some kind of light spell, to see his target. Then, he'd need to get the monster to
run. Finally, he'd need an entrapment spell-and he'd better put everything into it.
If this didn't work, they were probably dead.
At last. Kraki came to a ledge and pulled himself onto it. He was tired. His leg wound
was throbbing. He needed a rest. He thought he was high enough to reach the monster's
head, although it was hard to tell.
But how would he knew when it was nearby?
Bah. He could always bellow a challenge. No doubt it would come to a hero's call.
Nick knew Sidney was nearby because he could hear her breathe. "Found
anything?" he whispered.
"No," she whispered back. "We should have come to the treasure by
now."
"Let's" Nick began, then broke off.
There was a . . . footstep. The ground shook slightly. The air moved. Dalara and Dion,
Nick thought. It must be standing right above us. That's when the lights came on.
There was a flash and a bang, as of fireworks. That's what it was; streamers of white
drifted slowly toward the cavern floor.
Aha, Timaeus thought, spotting the monster. There's the bugger. He cleared his throat.
"NYA NYA! NYA NYA!" he shouted. "YOU CAN'T CATCH ME! NYA NYA! NYA
NYA!"
Rog heard a bang. Then he heard one of the orcs yell something insulting. Or was it an
orc? He bellowed and ran toward the yell.
Nick knew he was going to die as soon as the monster saw them. All it had to do was
step on them.
It began to move away. He fainted in relief.
Sidney looked about. "Of all the . . ." she muttered, and began dragging Nick
toward the edge of the cavern. If Timaeus was about to start tossing spells around, she
didn't want to be at ground zero.
Kraki sprang to his feet. He was startled for a moment, then realized the light must be
more of the wizard's magic. The wizard yelled, and the monster began to run toward him.
What was the wizard planning? No time to wonder. Kraki was above the monster. It was
not far away, and moving closer. Kraki drew his sword, screamed and leapt.
Aha! Light! Garni was ready. He swung the flask at the end of the pole. The monster
opened its maw to bellow. Garni swept the flask back and let it fly.
It arced through space, directly toward the monster's mouth.
Timaeus shouted the Words of power. He felt the forces of magic work through him. He
reached out . . .
Crimson lines of energy crackled across space and encircled one of the monster's giant
limbs.
The foot stuck. Rog tripped. Slowly, slowly he began to fall. Timaeus held motionless,
pumping all his power into the spell. Kraki's exquisitely timed leap would have
landed him directly on the monster's head . . .
Only, the monster tripped.
Kraki made a grab for an ear as he fell past. He missed. He kept on screaming.
Garni's flask arced highmissed the stumbling monster-and fell. Standing in the
middle of the cavern, Father Thwaite peeled one eye
open. His concentration had gone to hell. Where had all this light come from? Something
hit him in the chest. It fell to his feet. He opened the other eye. It was a flask of some
kind. It looked like brandy. Ah! That should do the trick. He unstoppered it and drank.
Just what he needed. Althoughthere was a rather peculiar aftertaste.
With a splash, Kraki fell into the pool. He stopped screaming.
Rog was unhappy. He was falling over. This was turning out to be a bad day. Why did
everyone always pick on him?
He hit the cavern floor. Everything shook. Timaeus collapsed in exhaustion.
Everything was silent for a moment. Rog lay still. Garni lit his lantern. Sidney limped
up to the giant form. It was breathing, but "It's unconscious," she reported.
She stared at the monster. It had no eyes. "And there we were, creeping around in the
dark like mice," she said disgustedly.
Garni let out his breath and turned to help Kraki out of the pool. "Vater
cold," Kraki said. "Brr. Enough svimming for one day." The two walked
toward the treasure, where Sidney and Thwaite joined them.
"Where are the others?" Thwaite asked.
"Nick's unconscious," Sidney said. "I left him over"
Garni stared in horror at the open flask in Father Thwaite's hand. "Did you drink
any of that?" he said urgently.
"Why, yes," said Thwaite.
Garni dived into Thwaite, knocking him over. The flask went flying. He tried to shove a
finger down Thwaite's throat. Thwaite fought back. "The dwarf's gone mad!"
yelled Thwaite. "Help me!"
Sidney and Kraki exchanged glances. Kraki shrugged. "That's poison!" Garni
shouted.
Thwaite sat up with an alarmed expression on his face. "Oh, dear. Dear, me."
A human would have found the chapel grim. To an orc, it was pretty normal. Guttering
torches lit a garishly painted state of a multilimbed female deity with big fangs. She was
clutching the severed limbs of several victims. The altar was a stone slab with a
depression in the middle and blood runnels down the side. The walls of the chamber were
soot-stained limestone. Orcs were prostrate on the stone floor, muttering prayers into the
rock as Fragrit finished the sacrament.
Fragrit was a devout believer, yet he knew that whatever power this ceremony lent him
did not come from the goddess Szanbu alone. Beneath the altar was an object which emitted
a surprisingly strong magical field. The goddess' ceremony allowed him to tap some small
part of the object's magic and use it himself. He shuddered to think what might happen if
the spirit he was thus exploiting were ever to escape-and therefore prayed to Szanbu,
Mistress of Madness, with fervor.
The screams of the sacrificial victim died away. Fragrit turned to his congregation. He
raised the knife and beating heart over his head and said, "An' now, we is going to
sing da Hymn of Propitiation, number twenty-seven in yer hymnals."
As Fragrit cleansed the knife and burned the heart in a brazier, strong orcish voices
rang out with the time-honored words of the sacred song: "Oi, Miz Szanbu, please
don't hang us,
Or have us burned alive.
Please don't whip us or filet us, Other victims we'll provide.
"Cries of fear, an' cries of anguish Rise up to da heavens high;
Oi, Miz Szanbu, please don't eat us, We'll bring more blood bye an' bye."
The ceremony over, Fragrit stationed himself by the exit and shook the hands of his
parishioners as they filed out. "Nice ceremony, Padre," said one.
"Tanks, Dorog," said Fragrit. Others murmured their respects as they passed.
Drizhnakh, Garfok, and Spug bustled into the temple. "Oi!" said Drizhnakh.
"Boss!" The worshippers stopped drifting out and waited to see what was up.
"Yes, Drizhnakh?" responded Fragrit.
"Well, yer worshipfulness," said Drizhnakh, "we caught dat Lenny da
Lizard skulkin' around, and he says dere are a buncha youmans comin' our way. . . ."
Fragrit listened carefully to Drizhnakh's story. "Ah," he said. "Five
youmans an' a dwarf. You done good, Drizhnakh." He turned to the congregation.
"Awright, youse," he said. "Get yer weapons. Drizhnakh, Garfokget
Fifi."
Garfok looked at Fragrit, startled. "Not a chanst," he said. "Whaddaya
mean, not a chanst?" said Fragrit menacingly.
"I ain't gettin' Fifi," said Garfok. "No way. Unh uh. Get yourself some
udder sucker."
"You is gettin' Fifi," said Fragrit, "unless you maybe wanta be da next
sacrifice. Right, boys?"
Several of the other orcs- muttered agreement. They didn't want to be the one to
get Fifi, that was for sure.
Garfok looked with dismay from green orcish face to green orcish face. He swallowed.
"Awright," he said faintly.
Timaeus lay prostrate on the rocks, unconsciousand naked. The others stared at
him, more than a little puzzled. His lack of consciousness might be a side effect of the
spell or the result of backlashbut his nakedness was harder to explain.
Sidney shook Timaeus's shoulder. "Magister!" she said. "Magister! Wake
up!"
Timaeus groaned and flung one arm over his eyes. "Two lumps, Randolph," he
said. "And a kipper or two, if you'd be so kind." He sat up suddenly and looked
at his companions. "Oh," he said. "The monster . . . did I . . . ?"
"Yah," said Kraki. "Monster fall over. Knocked out. Good yob."
"Thank you," said Timaeus. He looked quite pleased with himself. Then, he
realized the state of his dress-or lack thereof. He blushed and positioned his hands
strategically. "Er . . . My clothes . . . What happened . . . ?"
Garni began looking through his pack. "Just a minute," he said. "I have
a spare blanket. Somewhere." He hauled out a small club, a piece of flint, a silver
spoon, a packet of needles.
"Lenny," said Nick to Sidney. "Eh?" said Timaeus.
"He rolled you," said Nick bluntly. Timaeus looked upset.
"Nonsense," he said.
"Yah," said Kraki. "Vhere is the little bugger, anyvay?"
"Don't you think it's kind of suspicious that he's not around?" Nick asked
Timaeus.
"Granted," said Timaeus, "but"
"If you'd been found by a bunch of orcs, say, you'd be dead. Who else would take
your clothes-and your purse, I betwithout offing you?" asked Sidney.
"My purse," said Timaeus somewhat dazed. "My . . . my pipe! Good lord,
the conniving little devil has stolen my pipe!" He looked genuinely upset for the
first time.
"Here's the blanket!" said Garni triumphantly from behind a pile of stuff.
Timaeus draped himself in it.
"Douse dem torches," Fragrit ordered. The orcs obeyed. That left his lantern,
with its closable door, as their only light. He surveyed his orcs; there were a good
forty, all males with weapons. "Guys wiv swords an' such in da front row," he
said. "Bows in da rear." They formed up.
Fifi stood in front of the orcs. All Fragrit could see, really, was her two hind legs
and her massive, scaled rear. Atop her perched Garfok.
It was an uncomfortable perch. The huge lizard's spine was, well, spiny. Garfok
shifted, trying to find a way to sit that didn't make his backside ache. He studied the
reins in his hands.
In theory, it was simple. If he yanked on the left rein, Fifi's head would pull left,
and she'd turn in that direction. If he yanked on the right rein; she'd turn right. There
was a smaller rope tied to one of her spinal knobs; if he pulled on the rope, the hood
covering Fifi's eyes would slip off. If he let the rope loose, the hood would drop back
over her eyes.
There were only a few problems with this, Garfok knew. First, Fifi was a lot stronger
than he was. If she wanted to turn left, all the yanking in the world wouldn't stop her.
Second, the hood was supposed to drop in place if he let the rope go-but it didn't look
any too secure to him. Third, he'd never ridden Fifi into battle before; training is all
very fine, but there was no predicting what she'd do when spells started zipping past her
and people started bellowing war cries. Fourth, Garfok was awfully visible to the enemy,
perched as he was on top of the lizard.
Fifth, Fifi's neck was long and flexible enough that if she wanted to look back at
Garfok-or at the orcs following hershe could do so pretty easily. The thought made
Garfok distinctly uneasy.
Fragrit walked to Fifi's hooded head and scratched behind the spikes. "My widdle
popsy," he crooned. "My widdle Fifi. Fifi wanna treat?" The massive, scaled
tail wagged sluggishly. Fragrit held out a handful of unrefined sugar; Fifi sucked it up.
Garfok was tempted to pull the hood up. "Awright!" shouted Fragrit.
"Forward!"
Thwaite was either in a coma or a meditative trance; it was hard to tell which. He lay
by the pile of gold, shivering violently.
"I vill carry priest," said Kraki patiently.
"Ye gods, man, do you realize what you're saying?" said Nick. "He must
weigh a hundred and fifty pounds if he weighs an ounce. That's a hundred and fifty pounds
of gold we won't be able to take out with us. ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY POUNDS OF GOLD! Do
you know how many pints of mead a hundred and fifty pounds of gold buys?"
"Are you saying we should dump him?" said Sidney.
"Tempting idea," said Nick. "I mean, he has sucked back enough
poison to kill a dozen men."
"But the priests of Dion are able, so it is said, to detoxify any poison . .
." said Timaeus.
"Yeah, maybe. Okay, okay. But if he dies on us, we're going to feel awfully
stupid."
Nick, Sidney, and Timaeus had loaded themselves with as much of the treasure as they
could possibly carry. Kraki could carry a fair amount, even burdened by the priest, but
that still left a heartbreakingly large pile of gold. "We've already got a king's
ransom," said Sidney.
"And suppose we had to ransom a king," muttered Nick. "Then we wouldn't
have anything left."
"Not much danger of that," said Garni. He had emptied his backpack and was
sorting his equipment into two piles: objects to be abandoned to make room for treasure,
and things he still wanted to carry. "Since there hasn't been a human king in two
millennia."
"Are you done yet?" asked Nick. "Yes," said Garni.
"You're throwing that much away?" said Nick, impressed.
"Eh? No, no. That's the necessary pile. I'm throwing away the other one."
"Gimme a break," Nick moaned. "Every ounce you can carry is worth a
pound argentum . . ."
"Nick, lad," said Garni, "we'll never get back up that shaft without my
mountaineering equipment. And any of these items"
"Could save our lives. Garni, you're killing me."
"Ve come back later," said Kraki. "Get rest of gold."
"No chance," said Nick. "There's no way we can beat that monster when
it's awake."
"Hokay," said Kraki. "I kill now."
Nick thought about that. "No," he said finally. "The odds are, you'll
wake it up. And if you do kill it, someone else will rip off the gold before we get
back."
"Yah," said Kraki. "Also, no glory in killing sleeping monster."
"Speaking of which," said Timaeus, "I'd just as soon get going before it
decides it's finished its nap." Garni nodded and began repacking his supplies.
"A little under two million," said Nick. "Vhat?" said Kraki.
"I figured it out," Nick said. "At sixpence a pint, a hundred and fifty
pounds of gold buys a little under two millions pints of mead."
Kraki patted Nick on the back. Nick stumbled under the impact. "Don't vorry,"
Kraki said. "Vith my share, I buy you all the mead you vant."
Fifi moved slowly, slowly down the corridor. Blindly, blindly, her head swung back and
forth, back and forth. Members of her species were not fast; they didn't need to be.
There was a scurrying noise down the corridor. Fragrit held the lantern higher.
Lenny came running around a corner, peering back over his shoulder. He had what looked
like a wizard's robes clutched in his arms.
Lenny turned, saw Fifi and the orcs, and stopped dead in his tracks. He was nonplussed.
"Look, guys," said Drizhnakh. "It's our pal Lenny."
"Lenny . . . Lenny come to find palth," the lizardman said nervously.
"Whatcha got dere, Lenny? C'mere," said Drizhnakh.
"Nothing," said Lenny, trying vainly to hide the robes behind his back.
"Lemme see dat," said Fragrit, snatching Lenny's burden. "Wizard's
robes," he said. "Coupla daggers. Underwear. You steal da guy's underwear,
Lenny?"
Lenny hung his head.
"A pouch wiv miscellaneous crap. Nice pipe," Fragrit said. "A
purse!" He opened it. "Looks like a coupla quid." He pocketed the purse.
"So where is dese guys at, Lenny?" said Drizhnakh. "Humanth beat up
Rog," Lenny said.
"Dey did, did dey? Dey must be pretty tough. Good thing we got Fifi along,"
said Fragrit, patting her flank.
Lenny looked at the creature and shuddered.
"Dey'll head for da shaft wiv da treasure," Garfok said from atop his mount.
"Right!" said Fragrit. "We'll nab 'em dere."
The passageway that led from the cavern ended in a sharp right turn. Beyond the turn
was a corridor that led past the pool, the shaftand, at the moment, Fifi and the
orcs.
"I'll scout ahead," Nick said, dumping his treasure. Silently, he moved into
the passageway. He turned.
"Somefing's down da corridor," Garfok hissed.
Fragrit opened the lantern door. Nick froze in the light, startled. He turned back. . .
.
Garfok pulled off Fifi's hood.
The lizard squinted in the light. Her eyes focused. She saw Nick. With a crackle of
energy, Nick Pratchitt turned to stone.
The adventurers watched Nick walk forward and turn. He was startled. He turned back to
call to them. He turned to stone.
They were stunned.
"Nick!" shouted Sidney and ran toward him.
Timaeus grabbed her. "No, you fool!" he said urgently.
Sidney stood, gulped, and eyed the statue. She looked at Timaeus and nodded shakily.
Garni set down his backpack. Cursing under his breath, he pawed through it rapidly,
tossing objects heedlessly, until he found the mirror.
"Da hood!" Fragrit said. Garfok dropped it in place.
They stood silently for a moment. Fragrit closed his lantern door. "He's right in
da entrance," Garfok said thoughtfully from atop Fifi. "I bet dey saw him when
Fifi stoned him."
"Now what?" said Drizhnakh.
"Dey're warned," said Garfok. "Da thing to do is attack while dey're
confused."
"Only, if we get ahead of Fifi we can't use her. Cause she might turn us to
stone," said Fragrit.
"So's we either lose our best weapon," said Garfok, "or we sit here
until dey figger out how to beat us."
"Right," said Drizhnakh. "Fragrit, you is a friggin' military genius, ya
know dat?"
"Shaddup, you two!" said Fragrit menacingly. "I is beginning to think I
know who is gonna be da next sacrifice."
They stood in the darkness, wondering what to do.
Garni tied the mirror to his eleven-foot pole and extended the pole down the passage.
He juggled the mirror until he could see around the turn. "Can't see a thing,"
he said. "It's dark down there."
"Here," Sidney said. She lit a torch and threw it toward the turn in the
passage. Garni studied the mirror.
A torch rolled into the corridor. There was some kind of pole. And a shiny thing . . .
"Keep da hood in place!" Fragrit shouted.
Garfok was just about to pull the rope but stopped.
Drizhnakh looked at the packed orcish formation. "If dey use a fireball on us,
we're goners," he told Fragrit. Fragrit glared.
"Awright!" Fragrit yelled, coming to a decision. "Garfok! Get Fifi
movin'. You udder guys; move forward, behind Fifi. Bowmen! Nock yer weapons."
"Boy," said Drizhnakh caustically, "dis'll be a speedy charge."
Slowly, slowly, the lizard moved forward.
"Oy," Garni said, peering into the mirror. "At least twenty orcs. All
armed. And some creature I've never seen before, some kind of lizard. One of them is
mounted on it."
Timaeus peered over Garni's shoulder at the mirror. "I believe it's a
basilisk," he said. "They're quite rare. That would explain what happened to
Nick."
"It would?" said Sidney.
Even without his pipe, Timaeus managed to give the impression of pontificating.
"Yes. Their glance turns living creatures to stone. They're herbivorous, actually;
quite an effective magical defensive sys"
"They're coming this way!" Garni said.
Timaeus sighed. "My friends," he said, "I am sorry. My powers are
exhausted, and in their absence, I fear we have little hope of victory. A basilisk is a
fearsome foe indeed."
Kraki slapped him on the back. "Is hokay," he said. "You defeat big
monster. No vonder nothing left."
"And yet," said Timaeus, "it is I who have led you to this evil hour,
and I who must bear the responsibility for our failure."
Sidney looked at Nick's statue and sighed. "We could run," she said.
"Where?" said Garni.
Kraki flexed his muscles and drew his sword. "Is hokay," he said. "Ve
kill many to serve us in undervorld. It vill be glorious."
Garni looked up. "It isn't over yet," he said. He pulled the pole in and
untied the mirror.
Garni stood by the lip of the passageway. To see around the corner without risking
himself, he held his mirror out with one hand. The others stood flat against the cavern
wall.
Slowly, slowly, the basilisk turned the corner. Fifi's eyes were unhooded; she was
going into battle. She brushed against Nick, who fell over with a clunk. She turned. The
orcs trailed her.
Fifi trundled forward. On her long neck, her head was the first thing to come through
the entrance and into the cavern. It swayed back and forth with every step. Fifi didn't
notice the humans and the dwarf crouched along the cavern walls.
Fifi's head swung toward Garni. He grabbed it, turned it toward him . . .
And held the mirror before the basilisk's eyes. Fifi regarded herself dimly. She
probably never realized what she was looking at.
Crackle. Fifi turned to stone.
Kraki roared and swung into the entranceway. He charged the orcs. Clad only in a
blanket, Timaeus stepped next to Fifi's statue and began to chant.
On her hands and knees, Sidney scrambled under Fifi's belly toward the orcs, a knife in
her teeth.
Garni charged, waving a battle-axe.
"Fire!" yelled Fragrit. A swarm of arrows shot forward.
One bounced off Garni's helm. One hit Kraki's good leg. Unconcernedly, he pulled it
out, shouted "YAH HAH!", and charged, flourishing his sword. Heads and limbs
flew. He was always happiest when killing things.
Timaeus ducked behind Fifi to avoid the arrows, then stepped back out and began
chanting again. Fragrit was chanting, too.
Sidney scrambled out between Fifi's front legs and buried her dagger in the throat of a
surprised orc. She drew her sword and engaged two others. Garni killed two orcs before the
rest withdrew around him, unwilling to
face his whirling axe. He stood with his back to the corridor wall. "Come here,
greenie," he said to one. "Think you can kill me just by being ugly?"
Timaeus conjured a ball of flame in his hand and hurled it at the orcs . . .
It fizzled. He cursed.
A ray of blackness shot from Fragrit's pointing finger and enveloped Timaeus. The
wizard fell.
Three orcs fought Sidney. She took a wound to her sword arm and dropped the weapon. One
of the orcs clubbed her in the temple with a spear. She fell to her hands and knees.
Quickly, they tackled her and bound her arms and legs.
"Sidney!" yelled Garni. He tried to go to her, but the orcs moved in, and he
was forced back to the wall.
Kraki fought all the way through the orcish horde, from one end to the other. He was
covered in green gore and grinning maniacally. "Some fun, hah?" he asked an orc
as he chopped him open from shoulder to breastbone. The orc did not reply.
Lenny was cowering in the rear.
"You!" yelled Kraki. "I kill you now, lizard pig!" The sentiment,
however zoologically absurd, was at least heartfelt.
Lenny ran. Kraki ran after him.
"Get da bowmen up here," said Drizhnakh. They stood behind the orcs facing
Garni and fired at the dwarf. An arrow hit Garni in the shoulder. His axework faltered. He
spat at Drizhnakh.
The orcs moved in. He wounded one before they bashed him unconscious.
The orcs stood panting. Slowly, they realized the battle was over. Fragrit hugged the
head of the basilisk. "Fifi," he moaned. "Dey gots ya, Fifi."
Drizhnakh snorted and turned away. "Listen, youse," he said to the orcs.
"Pick up da youmans and da dwarf. An' da treasure. We'll take it
back to da temple. An' take da youman statue, too; it'll make a nice souvenir." He
smiled and tugged on his tusks.
"Poor widdle Fifi," Fragrit said forlornly, petting the stone head.
"We better get out of here before dat guy wiv da sword comes back," said
Dorog. "He's tough."
Timaeus was wrapped tight in the bonds of a glowing black net. He struggled but could
not break Fragrit's spell. Three orcs picked him up like a sack of potatoes. "Release
me at once!" shouted the wizard. "I am an Athelstani citizen!"
The orcs chortled.
Kraki stopped and leaned against the cool wall of the corridor. He couldn't keep up
with the lizard, not with the wound in his leg. He panted. He began to realize that he'd
made a serious mistake. His friends were in
danger back there. He hit his forehead with the heel of his hand. "Stupid,
stupid," he told himself. He had to get back.
Onlywhich way was back? Where were they? Where was he, for that matter?
It was dark. He couldn't see anything. The stone was cool. The only sound was the slow
drip of water somewhere in the middle distance.
VI.
"I sez sacrifice dem now," said Drizhnakh. "Dat way, we can have
mansflesh for din-din."
"Yeah!" said Spug enthusiastically. "Mansflesh. Yum!"
"No way," said Fragrit. "Szanbu is already had a sacrifice today."
The three humans and the dwarf lay tumbled together in the odiferous cell where they'd
been tossed. Filthy straw covered the stone floor. The orcs argued outside the barred
window. Thwaite still shivered in the throes of belladonna poisoning.
"Garni?" asked Sidney.
"Yes?" the dwarf replied. His head hurt like the devil. He was seeing double.
"Are you all right
"I think I have a concussion," he said. "And you, Magister?"
Timaeus cleared his throat. "I'm fine, save for a bruised ego," he said.
"We need to get them to open the door," said Sidney.
"Why?" asked Timaeus.
"So I can escape," said Sidney.
Timaeus wiggled, trying to find a more comfortable position in the straw. "And how
are you going to manage that, my dear?" he said. "I'm out of magic. The two of
you are wounded. Thwaite is poisoned. We're all tied up. Nick is a piece of garden
statuary, and the gods only know where Kraki is."
Sidney chuckled. "Show a little faith," she said.
"Right," said Timaeus. He sighed, then yelled: "We have a recipe!"
There was silence from outside the door. "What da hell?" said Fragrit. "We
have a recipe," said Timaeus, "for mansflesh."
"What is you blabbin' about?" said Drizhnakh.
"We took it off some trolls," said Timaeus. "It really sounded quite
good. If you must cook us, I would appreciate it if you'd take some care in the
preparation."
"Shaddup in dere," said Fragrit.
"I mean, bad enough to be eaten by orcs. But if that is one's fate, one much
prefers to go as a meal fit for kings, don't you think?" "Shaddup," said
Fragrit.
"How about some nice thigh steaks au poivre?" said Timaeus. "I
have no idea whether human diaphragm will double for brisket, but my mother's cook had the
most marvelous"
The door slammed open. "Shaddup you," said Fragrit, driving a boot into
Timaeus's aforementioned diaphragm.
A small black cat slipped out the open door. It limped on two legs. Sidney, thought
Garni. I had no idea.
The orc kicked Timaeus again. "Don't play with your dinner," gasped the
wizard.
"Yah," Kraki said to himself. "This is basilisk." There was no
mistaking the stony scales and the skinny neck, even in pitch darkness. "But vhere
did they go from here?"
"Mrowr?" said Sidney inquisitively.
"What's that?" said Kraki. Sidney came up and brushed against his legs. Kraki
gave a start, then reached down and pet her. "Is kitty-cat," he said.
"Pretty pussy." He stroked the length of her and scratched behind her ears. She
purred. "How does pussy-cat get in caverns?" he asked.
"Mrow, " she responded and walked away from him. He followed a little,
then stopped.
"Now vhat?"
"Mrowr!" Sidney said insistently. She came back to rub up against his
legs again, then walked away in the same direction as previously. "Pussycat vants
Kraki to follow?" he asked.
"Mrow, " Sidney said, and walked a little farther away. "Is
crazy," Kraki said.
Sidney hissed, then meowed again. "Mrowr!"
Kraki sighed. "Hokay," he said. "Vith magic, anything is possible. And I
got no better idea vhat to do."
"Orcs an' fellow believers," Fragrit intoned, "we is here today once
again to propitiate Mistress Szanbu, Goddess of Madness, she whose curses roil da world,
she who loves to torture small, furry animals. Oi,
Szanbu, hear me now; we tanks you for our victory over da youmans." Fragrit
motioned toward a large, leather-bound chest that stood by the altar. "We tanks you
for da treasure dey was carryin', an' we promise dat a goodly portion will be spent to
purchase further victims. Accept from us dis sacrifice, in place of our own miserable
lives. Let us live, so dat we may bring you further sacrifices.
"Awright, fellas," he continued. "Let's have da cleric first."
Garfok and Dorog swung Father Thwaite's limp body up onto the altar and fixed the manacles
in place.
"I don't want to watch this," Garni said. Timaeus looked sick and made no
reply. He eyed Nick's statue, now occupying a niche to the right of the altar. He prayed
that somehow Kraki would find them.
Who is that?
Victims of belladonna poisoning do not enter a coma. Father Thwaite was unconscious
only because he was deep in a meditative trance. His mind travelled the veins and byways
of his body, helping his liver extract the poison from his bloodstream, calming his
rapidly beating heart when the belladonna's stimulus threatened to make it burst. An
untrained man would have been dead many times over. Only Thwaite's powers stood between
him and death.
Still, his body shook with the poison. It stimulated his heart, his lungs, his muscles;
he twitched, his heart beat madly, he breathed in short gasps. Were he not meditating, he
would have been conscious: indeed, he would have been preternaturally alert.
The voice in his mind broke his concentration, as being hauled around the caverns by
the barbarian had not, as the battle with the orcs had not, as the stench of the cell had
not.
No one belonged in his mind. Who? he screamed silently. What?
A human, said the voice. Beware, kinsman. You are in danger. Thwaite's eyes
flew open. Above him stood an orc with a knife; and beyond the orc, a wooden carving of
Szanbu. Thwaite's own limbs were manacled to an altar. He knew enough about the goddess to
know a human sacrifice when he was one.
"Dion," gasped Thwaite, calling on his god, "aid me now!" It was an
expression of despair; he had no hope that anyone would answer.
And then, something happened that Thwaite had problems remembering later. Something
very strange. Suddenly, he no longer felt the belladonna in his veins. Instead, he
feltgood. Happy. Wonderful, in fact.
The orc was heating a sacrificial blade in a brazier. The blade glowed red. Well, maybe
not wonderful, Thwaite thought.
But the feeling was familiar, somehow. He felt likelike he'd just had six pints
of stout, he realized. But without the need to pee.
The orcish priest backed away, a look of horror on his tusked face. Thwaite didn't know
it, but his entire body was englobed in brilliant, golden light.
Father Thwaite looked at the niche to the right of the altar. It held Nick Pratchitt,
now a hunk of stone. Thwaite knew, somehow, that he must touch the statue's toe.
With a crack of thunder, Father Thwaite sat up from the altar, pulling the manacles
right out of the rock. His muscles no longer twitched. However, his nose was red, and he
was grinning happily.
"Boo," he said to Fragrit, who gulped, backed away some more, and fell off
the stage and into the congregation.
In the distance there was thunder.
"Thunder?" said Kraki. "Vhy is there thunder in cavern?"
Sidney would have shrugged her shoulders if she'd had any. At least in this form, she
could see in the dark. "Mraow, " she complained and led Kraki toward the
orcish temple.
Thwaite touched the toe of Nick's statue.
Power thrilled through Thwaite's body. He could feel it pouring out of the altar,
through him, and into the statue. The golden glow about Thwaite gradually diminished, and
an equally golden glow spread across Nick Pratchitt. The orcs watched in awe.
Fragrit peered over the lip of the altar. In sudden fear, he realized the power he'd
tapped for so long was free.
As suddenly as it had started, the power stopped flowing. Thwaite fell back on the
altar. He felt wonderful. The room spun about him. He knew he should get up and do
something, but it felt so much nicer just to sprawl there.
The statue looked down and opened its hands, the glow suffusing its form.
Sidney transformed. "Kraki," she said.
The barbarian whirled in the darkness. "Vhat?" he cried. "Sidney?"
"Yeah," she said. "We're almost there."
"Vhere?" "The temple. Do you have an extra weapon?"
"Yah, a dagger. Here. Vhere did you come from?" "Thanks. Never
mind."
Standing still, Nick Pratchitt rose out of the niche and floated across the temple.
Nick touched Timaeus, then Garni. The bonds slipped from their bodies. Garfok and
Dorog, who'd been holding the prisoners, were forced away as if by invisible hands.
Garni's wounds closed.
"My . . ." said Timaeus wonderingly, "my magic has been restored."
The tableau held for a long moment. Then, the golden glow about Nick Pratchitt
disappeared. He fell heavily to the ground, unconscious and, to all appearances, a normal
human being.
"Dey have defiled da temple!" screamed Fragrit. "Get 'em!" With a
roar, the orcs boiled toward the altar.
Timaeus began to chant.
The temple door slammed open.
"Die, foul vights!" said Kraki. He charged in, waving his sword. Sidney,
naked, kept close to him, holding a dagger. The orcs, threatened from both the front and
rear of the temple, milled confusedly.
"Vights?" one orc said to another. "What does he mean, vights?"
"I think he means wights," said the other.
"But we isn't wights," said the first. "We is orcs." "Beats
me," said the second.
Kraki sliced both their heads off.
The orcs divided. Some charged Timaeus and Garni; others turned to face Kraki and
Sidney.
"Duck!" yelled Timaeus. Sidney and Garni dropped prone. "Vhat?"
said Kraki. Sidney pulled him down.
"Duck?" said an orc. "What does he mean, duck?" "I
dunno," said another. "We is orcs, not Timaeus's fireball exploded.
A handful of orcs survived, huddled at the side of the temple. All were scorched.
Fragrit was dead, Garfok and Drizhnakh among the survivors. "YAH HA!" yelled
Kraki and waded into the orcs, whipping his sword back and forth. He was in his element.
Orcish gore flew.
"Oi, Garfok," said Dorog. "Dat guy wiv da sword is gonna kill us
all." "Parley!" yelled Drizhnakh.
"YAH HA!" yelled Kraki again. He was happy. He was killing things.
"Parley! Parley!" the orcs yelled, scrambling to get out of Kraki's way.
Kraki paused, a little puzzled. "Come back," he yelled. "Fight like
orcs, damn you!"
"Can we please surrender?" pled Drizhnakh. "Pretty please?"
"YAH HA!" shouted the barbarian, oblivious, as he killed three more orcs.
Drizhnakh had a brainstorm. He threw his sword against the temple wall with a clang. He
walked up to Kraki, lay down, and exposed his throat. "Awright," he said.
"G'wan. Kill me."
Kraki drew back his sword, then paused. "No fun," he complained. "Too
easy. Get up and fight like orc."
"No," said Drizhnakh. "If ya wants to kill me, it's gotta be like
dis." All the remaining orcs tossed their weapons away.
"Bah," said Kraki.
"Oh, let them go, Kraki," said Timaeus. "They're no threat."
Kraki pouted. "Hokay," he said reluctantly, hooking a thumb at the door.
"Get lost."
The orcs scrambled out of the temple.
If the temple had looked grim before, it looked even grimmer now. Torches continued to
gutter along the wall. Szanbu glared from behind the altar. Bits of orc lay hither and
yon. Kraki sat down heavily on the dais. "Whew," he said and stretched out.
Nick rose groggily, Sidney supporting him. "Are you okay?" she asked.
"Yeah, I guess so." He noticed Sidney's state of undress. She was smeared with
gore. "You've looked better, doll," he said.
Sidney looked at herself. "Uh, yeah," she said. "Garni! Do you have
another blanket?"
"Aye," said the dwarf reluctantly. He was beginning to get a little tired of
unpacking and repacking and unpacking . . .
Timaeus was trying to get sense out of Thwaite. Thwaite wasn't being terribly
cooperative. He was singing bits and snatches of drinking songs. "What happened there
on the altar?" Timaeus demanded.
"Hmm? Feel wonderful! Wonderful. And a hey down to the well, me lad, and a hey
down to the well . . ."
"You glowed golden."
"Golden? Golden? Golden the ship was, oh oh oh . . ." Thwaite staggered away
from Timaeus, beaming broadly.
Timaeus wondered somewhat irritably how the cleric had managed to find booze while
poisoned, comatose, and bound to an altar.
Kraki sat up and wandered over to the altar. He grabbed the edge and pulled. It moved
slightly. "Top comes off," he reported, and made to remove it.
"Wait!" shouted Garni.
Kraki looked down at the dwarf. "Vhat?" he demanded.
"It could be trapped," said Garni. "Leave the job to
professionals." Kraki scowled. "Bah," he said.
"I'll do it," said Nick. He motioned Kraki away; the barbarian stepped off
the dais reluctantly.
Nick borrowed Sidney's ear trumpet and tapped over the altar, listening carefully. He
frowned. "Magister," he said to Timaeus, "do you detect any magic within
the altar?"
Timaeus raised his eyebrows, shrugged, and chanted briefly. There was a flash before
his eyes. The wizard jumped back, blinking furiously. "My dear Nicholas," he
said slowly, "that altar virtually exudes power. I've rarely encountered a magical
field of such intensity."
Nick's eyes went wide. "We'd better be careful then," he said. "Yust
lift the damn top off," Kraki said impatiently.
Nick studied the altar for a moment, then looked at the statue of Szanbu. He took a
coil of rope and tied it through the holes in the altar where the manacle pins had
penetrated. He looped the rope through the brackets that held Szanbu's statue in place.
He motioned everyone away from the altar, moved as far away himself as the rope would
let him, and pulled on the rope, using the brackets as a primitive pulley.
The rope strained. The altar top moved slightly. The brackets pulled free from the wall
and Szanbu's statue crashed onto the floor.
Thwaite winced. Szanbu was far from his favorite goddess, but desecration was
desecration.
Nick moved up to the altar and, crouching by its side, stuck a knife under the altar
top. Carefully, covering his eyes, he pried the top up a crack.
Nothing happened.
He moved away from the altar and picked up the rope again. Standing as far away as
possible, he pulled on the rope. The altar didn't budge. Kraki joined him and pulled too.
The altar top slid off and hit the floor with a crash. It broke into several pieces.
Nothing else happened.
"Hoo boy," said Kraki sarcastically. "Big trap in that vone, for
sure." He and Nick went forward to peer into the altar.
Nick gasped.
Lying in the altar was an exquisitely detailed, minutely rendered statue. The artistry
alone was breathtaking. It was a life-sized depiction of a human male, wildly mustachioed,
clad in pants and a leather harness, unarmed. His head was raised, as if he were looked
upward; although he held himself proudly, his expression was one of trepidation.
But it was neither the artistry nor the subject of the statue that caught the eye. It
was the material.
The statue shone richly, redly in the torchlight, shone with the unmistakable rosy tint
of athenor.
Athenor: chiefest among the magical metals. Athenor: which cannot be termed pink, nor
red, any more than gold can be called yellow. Athenor: from which the greatest, most
legendary objects of power are formed. Athenor: ounce for ounce and grain for grain, far
more valuable than gold.
Cautiously, Nick reached into the altar and rapped the statue. "Solid," he
whispered. They were looking at a fortune; several fortunes; wealth beyond imagining.
"Who is it?" Garni asked.
Timaeus fingered his beard. "I don't know," he said. "But his garb is
archaic. It must be immensely old."
Garni ran his hand along the statue and peered at it closely. "No tool
marks," he said. "I can't imagine how it was cast."
"Let's get it out," said Nick.
Kraki reached in and pulled. The statue barely budged. "Must veigh a ton," he
grunted.
They strung ropes under the statue and, pulling together, managed to haul it from the
altar.
"How in blazes are we going to get this thing up the shaft?" asked Timaeus
plaintively.
"Look," said Garni, "we'll worry about getting it out later. We still
have other things to worry about. The chest, for one. And we still have wounded."
The others fell silent.
"Okay," said Nick. He walked to the chest by the altar and began to tap it.
"Not again," muttered Kraki.
"Right," said Father Thwaite, still dangerously red-faced but less obviously
inebriated than before. "You're hurt the worst, Sidney, me lass . . ."
She shook her head, "I'm sorry, Father."
Garni took the priest by one arm. "She can't let you cure her," he said
quietly.
"Why not?"
"She has . . . the taint of chaos." "She's a sh-shapechanger?"
"It isn't widely known."
"You bet. People don't like shapechangers. Why doesn't she do something about it?
Therianthropy can be cured."
"Yes, Father. But in her occupation, it comes in handy." "Oh? What is
she?"
"A cat. Who moves silently and sees in darkness. And can get places a human
can't."
"A pussycat," said Thwaite. "That's nice. But . . . ," he furrowed
his brow, "if she dies unsanctified"
"That's her risk."
While they talked, Nick fiddled with the chest. He listened with the ear trumpet. He
pressed all over the chest for buttons or moving panels. He tied a rope around it and
tugged. He cut one of the leather straps that bound the chest, and began to work the strap
free.
Kraki watched Nick with increasing impatience. "Bah!" he said finally.
"Enough vith this silliness. Vhen you go through a door in a tavern, do you check it
for traps?"
"No," said Nick, "but"
"It's yust a chest. Vaste of time. I show you how." He muscled Nick aside and
yanked open the lid.
There was an explosion. Three steel darts shot forth and buried themselves in Kraki's
chest. There was a faint hiss as a greenish gas spurted out the side. Smoke rose from the
lid.
Kraki inhaled the gas.
"See?" he said hoarsely, bleeding from the dart wounds. "Is how varrior
opens chest." He pounded his chest, coughed vigorously, and keeled over with a crash.
Thwaite stumbled to the barbarian, pulling out his incense and aspergillum.
"Thoroughly unprofessional," Garni muttered, shaking his head.
Nick grinned bemusedly and peered inside the chest. "Looks like most of the
treasure the orcs took off us," he said.
"More stuff to get up the shaft," Timaeus grumbled, wandering over to look.
"My pipe!' he yelped happily, diving into the chest. He pulled out his pipe and wiped
it with his blanket, then started pawing through the chest, looking for pipeweed.
VII.
Just dragging the statue to the base of the shaft was exhausting. They were all
sweating, and Kraki, who'd borne the brunt of the labor, was panting heavily. The shaft
itself was daunting. Their lantern lit only the first twenty cubits, but that was quite
enough. They could see a five-foot cliff, thirty-degree slopes of smooth, water-worn
rocks, and boulders blocking what would otherwise be the obvious path. They knew full well
that the traverse became no easier at higher elevations.
"Can we set up some kind of pulley system?" Sidney asked Garni. The dwarf
considered.
"I don't see how," he replied. "I only have about fifty feet of rope. To
bear the weight of the statue, I'd have to quadruple it up-that only leaves a length of
about ten feet. If we can find someplace to rest the statue every few feet while we move
the pulley, we might be able to do itbut you remember what the shaft is like.
Slanting places, cliffs, boulders . . ."
"Yeah." She turned to Timaeus. "How about magic?"
He puffed on his pipe. "Madam, we've been over this. The statue weighs close to a
ton. The shaft is at least fifty feet high. The amount of energy I'd have to expend to
lift a ton that far against the natural tendency of earthly objects to fall is simply
prohibitive. Besides which, I am no polymage; my idiom is fire. Now, if you could find me
a supply of magical energy to tap . . ." Timaeus took out his pipe and held it,
staring into space. "Hmm."
"How about the statue itself? You said it holds a great deal of magical energy. .
. ."
"Yes, bound in some way I cannot begin to fathom. But I have another idea."
"What the hell are they doing up there?" said Sidney impatiently. Timaeus and
Kraki had disappeared up the shaft thirty minutes ago to prepare some spell the wizard had
in mind. They'd left the rest of the party with the statue. Sidney eyed the pool
suspiciously and worried about crocodiles. And about orcs. "What if those orcs come
back?" she asked.
"Calm down," said Nick. "Everything'll be fine."
They stood by the base of the shaft. There was nothing to be heard but the occasional
splash of a croc or squeak of a bat. And . . .
"Ssst! I hear something," Nick whispered. Walking on his toes, he moved out
into the darkness.
There was the sound of a brief struggle.
"Well, well, well," Nick said. "What have we here?" He came back
into the circle of light cast by the lantern, clutching Lenny by the neck. "Lenny run
away from bad orcth," Lenny said, studying possible escape routes. "Come to find
friendth!"
Nick chuckled.
"What did I tell you, lizard?" Sidney said coldly. Lenny said nothing. He
looked forlorn.
"You betrayed us," she said.
"No! No! Lenny alwayth faithful. Bad orcth capture Lenny. Torture Lenny! Thay bad
thingth. Make Lenny tell about friendth. Lenny want to help! Bad orcth make Lenny do bad
thingth!"
"I told you that if you betrayed us, I'd hunt you down and kill you, lizard,"
Sidney said.
"No! No! Don't kill Lenny! Lenny alwayth faithful! Lenny found good
treasures!" His legs windmilled desperately.
"I think he'd make a nice pair of boots," Nick said, studying the lizardman,
still holding Lenny by the neck. Lenny whimpered.
"You can't just kill him out of hand," said Father Thwaite. He was sitting on
the rocks, clutching his head. He was in the unhappy state between drunkenness and
sobriety, when one is neither entirely sober nor free of the pains of hangover.
"Why not?" said Nick.
"He does have a soul," said Thwaite, "and he is no immediate danger to
us."
"If we let him go, he'll just screw someone else," said Sidney.
"No! No! Lenny reform! Lenny thee light! Lenny join monathtery! Lenny thpend retht
of life repenting thins!" He began keening hymns, slightly off key.
"Shut up, you," Nick said.
Garni cleared his throat. "I have a practical consideration to offer," he
said.
"What's that?" asked Sidney.
"We need to get an awful lot of stuff up the shaft," said Garni. "He's
an extra pair of arms and legs."
"True," said Nick, grinning. "Oh, all right. You live, Lenny, old
pal." "Lenny very, very grateful. Lenny love human friendth. Lenny do anything
for humanth!"
"Stop grovelling!" snarled Sidney.
Timaeus was puffing. Kraki's torso was covered with a sheen of sweat. The pile of rocks
was turning into a sizable hill.
They had scavenged the tabletop from the room where the trolls had been killed.
Currently, it was standing between two outcroppings, a little way down the slope, holding
the pile of rocks in place. "I hope this is enough," Kraki said. "Board is
bulging." He was right. The inch-thick oak was visibly bending under the weight.
"I believe this will do," said Timaeus. He paused to think, filled his pipe,
andBang!lit it. Flames enveloped his head, then gradually dissipated.
"How does this vork, anyvay?" Kraki asked.
"It's quite an elegant spell, really," Timaeus said enthusiastically.
"All we do is establish a magical similarity between these rocks and the statue. But
we reverse the sign on the position vector. That way, the potential energy of the rocks
lifts the statue! We don't have to invest much power ourselves, except to establish the
identity."
"Hah?" "Er . . . in layman's terms, eh? Ah, we make the boulders and the
statue like two sides of a pulley, all right? Then, we release the boulders."
"They fall."
"That's right. And the statue rises."
"If you say so. Sounds like silliness to me."
"Don't worry, it'll work," Timaeus said. He turned to call down the shaft:
"Fore!" he shouted.
A voice echoed back up. "What?"
Timaeus began to chant in a language Kraki didn't know. Timaeus waved his arms, chalked
runes on the ground, and moved in a kind of dance. The smoke from his pipe formed patterns
about his head.
"Now!" he shouted. Kraki yanked on the tabletop. With a roar, the boulders
hurtled down the shaft.
"What is keeping those bozos?" said Sidney.
Suddenly, the statue leapt upwards, as if yanked by a string.
The spell may have been elegant, but its effects were not. The statue flew up the
shaft, bounding off obstructions, clanging off walls, and spinning violently. The racket
was tremendous.
"Good thing it's made of athenor," muttered Garni. "Anything else would
be mashed shapeless."
The noise of its passage died away. Then, there was another noise, like the roar of the
sea.
"What's that?" asked Nick. It got louder.
"I don't know," said Garni.
A rock nearly hit Thwaite. He dived for cover as it bounced down the corridor.
"Run!" yelled Sidney. They all ran for the cavern. A veritable avalanche
thundered about them.
The statue narrowly missed Kraki as it flew up the shaft, spun past him, bounced off
the ceiling, and ricocheted violently down the corridor. It clanged to a stop. The
barbarian swore.
Timaeus smiled around his pipe and went to examine the statue. It was unharmed.
Although the statue's expression had not changed, Timaeus got the distinct impression it
was glaring at him. "Sorry, old bean," he muttered. He rather hoped they had no
further adventures. His powers were just about exhausted once again.
Sidney panted as she pulled herself up the rope to the top of the shaft. "You
could have killed us!" she yelled.
"I called a warning down the shaft," Timaeus said huffily. "
'Fore?"' said Sidney. "You call that a warning?"
"Er . . . well, it did seem appropriate. Besides, I told you what I was going to
do before Kraki and I climbed the shaft."
"You babbled something about rocks and kinetic energy! You didn't say you were
going to start a landslide!"
"Sidney," Nick said, joining them, "cut it out, okay?" "We
could have been"
"Look, it worked, all right? And nobody was hurt. You asked him to do the
impossible, and he did it."
Sidney sighed. "Okay," she said. "I'm sorry. But, dammit, explain what
you're going to do next time, all right?"
Timaeus puffed on his pipe with mild embarrassment.
Crouching in hiding, Garfok elbowed Drizhnakh in the ribs. "Did ya see dat?"
he asked wonderingly.
"Yeah," said Drizhnakh. "Dat statue's gotta be worth a friggin'
fortune."
"Yeah. Too bad we isn't strong enough to ambush dem again."
"Uh huh," said Drizhnakh thoughtfully. "But I knows someone dat might be
innerested. . . ."
"Pay Lenny now?" said Lenny.
"You're lucky we don't kill you, you little jerk," Garni said. "Get
lost." "Three pennieth an hour! You thaid tho!"
"If you're still here by the time I count ten, you're a dead lizard."
It was an exhausted troupe of adventurers that staggered into Gateway, pulling the
massive statue of a man by its shoulders. The low stone buildings and dingy shops looked a
lot like paradise. Or at least one of paradise's lesser suburbs.
"Hello, gents," said an orcish shopkeeper. "Had a good haul, huh?"
"What's it to you?" said Garni.
The shopkeeper wiped his hands on his apron. "Nuffing much," he said,
"'cept dat I gots da finest duty-free merchandise in dis whole burg." "My
good fellow," said Timaeus. "We are, as you see, overladen with
recent acquisitions. Why should we wish to burden ourselves further?" "Well,
buddy, dere's a simple answer to dat. Ya see, da grand duke takes ten percent of anything
you take trough customs."
"Ten percent? Gadzooks!"
Sidney nodded. "That's right," she said. "Standard tariff for
treasure." "An'," the orc continued, "each individual can take up to a
gallon of booze, two ounces of pipeweed, and tree quid of miscellaneous goods into da
grand duchy duty free."
"I see," said Father Thwaite, eyeing the orc's floor-to-ceiling racks of
bottled goods. Remembering his oath, he turned to Nick. "Perhaps you would be so good
as to purchase me a bottle, lad," he said.
While the others loaded up on duty-free goodies, Timaeus conferred with Nick. "How
are they going to take ten percent of the statue?" he worried. "It's worth the
rest of our treasure several times over."
Nick smiled. "Leave it to me," he said. "It'll be a snap. I wonder if
they've got a hardware store around here?" He wandered down the street. Timaeus
stared after him, then shrugged and went to look at the pipeweed. The variety was
astonishing. "Quite a little racket," he mused, looking the store over.
Somewhere, Nick had found two mules and a cart, which certainly made hauling the statue
easier. He sat in the cart, twitching the reins. Father Thwaite, already well lubricated,
lay in the back on top of the tarp that covered the statue. Kraki sat with him. The three
passed an open bottle of brandy back and forth; it was already a good third empty.
Timaeus puffed on his pipe and fretted. "I do wish Nick weren't drinking," he
told Sidney.
"Why?" she said, somewhat surprised.
"I haven't the slightest idea how we're going to get the statue through customs.
Nick says he has a planbut if he's drunk . . ."
"Don't worry," Sidney said, smiling slightly. "He'll manage."
"Why do you suppose he painted it brown?"
"It was kind of obvious unpainted, wasn't it?"
"I tell you I got no papers, pig!" Kraki roared, shaking the official by
his tunic.
"Kraki," said Nick, "you really ought to learn how to deal with
bureaucrats. This is getting us nowhere."
"Hokay," said Kraki disgustedly, dropping the customs official and turning on
his heel. "You talk to him."
"Sir," Nick said, "what is the procedure used when an individual from an
ungoverned area enters the realm?"
The bureaucrat rubbed the back of his neck and swung his head back and forth, checking
to make sure nothing was broken. "He's issued papers of transit, unless there's
reason to believe he's an undesirable, in which case he's turned away at the border."
"So shouldn't you issue him letters of transit?"
The bureaucrat sighed. "It's highly irregular," he said. "Anyone who
goes into the Caverns of Cytorax is supposed to have papers already." Nick flipped a
large gold coin in the air and caught it. The bureaucrat's
eyes followed the sovereign hungrily; it was as much as he was paid in a week.
"I'll bet you're saying it'd be illegal for you to issue Kraki papers."
"Well, no, actually I do have that authority. . . ."
"Huh," said Nick, flipping the coin again. "I guess it's not my lucky
day. You win that bet." He flipped the coin to the bureaucrat, who neatly caught and
pocketed it, looking around to make sure no one else was watching.
Customs was a long, low room with a half-dozen tables. They brought the cart and their
equipment up to one table and began dumping the treasure onto it. A customs official stood
by; his eyes bugged as he saw the quantity of gold they unloaded. Other officials were
busy checking travellers at other tables; Gateway had apparently been doing a brisk
business in duty-free items this morning.
The official made a quick division of the treasure, expertly appraising some of the
jeweled weapons and chalices and taking a rough ten percent for the crown. Then, he
pointed to the cart.
"What's in there?" he asked. The tarp covered the statue.
"A, ah, religious reliquary," said Timaeus nervously. "Of little
intrinsic worth. Artistic value only."
"Let me see," said the official, twitching back the tarp. The brownpainted
statue did not look particularly impressive. He took out a pocketknife and scraped a small
area free of paint.
His jaw dropped. "Guh," he said expressively.
Smoothly, Nick took one of his arms. "Keep your cool, my friend," he said.
"What's your name?"
"Corcoran Evanish," the official said. "Why?"
"Well, Mr. Evanish," said Nick, "you've just become a rich man."
"What?" said the official.
"That statue, as you must realize, is worth considerably more than the rest of our
treasure put together."
"I wouldn't doubt it," Evanish said fervently.
"I believe you'd normally confiscate the item, auction it to the highest bidder,
and forward ninety percent of the auction price to us."
"Yes," said the bureaucrat. "That would be the indicated
procedure." "But you know how things are. The highest bidder would be some crony
of the grand duke's. We'd be lucky to realize a few percent of the statue's actual
value."
Evanish harrumphed. "That's no concern of mine," he said, "and I
certainly have no doubts about the integrity"
Nick interrupted him. "So," he said, "you see, we have a mutuality of
interest."
"I beg your pardon?"
"We desire to get this statue through customs in order to realize the full value
of our discovery. You can help us do so. We are prepared to be extremely generous in token
of our gratitude for your assistance."
"Are you proposing a bribe?"
"No, no, certainly not. Nothing of the kind. Think of it as a gratuity, an
expediter's fee, a little . . . lagniappe."
Evanish licked his lips and looked cautiously around the room. The brown-painted statue
had attracted no particular attention. "Ahthere is my job to consider," he
said.
"Ah, but a man of sufficient means need hardly labor at this dreary occupation.
May I offer you-a full pound of gold? In archaic coin, no doubt of even greater value to
antiquarians."
Evanish pursed his lips. "Not here," he murmured. "We're searched at the
end of the shift. I will require one hundred pounds argentum, to be deposited in
the Royal Bank of Dwarfheim. I will supply you with an account number."
Nick choked. "One hundred . . ."
"Ninety. And don't think about backing out. I have your names, and I'll turn you
in if the money isn't deposited within three days."
Nick did a rapid calculation. "Seventy-five quid," he said.
"Eighty."
"Done." This time, all six rode in the mule cart. The brandy flowed like
water. The cart was more than a little cramped. The two mules were clearly unhappy, but no
one much cared.
Nick was reading Kraki's papers. "Hey, Kraki," he said. "Says here
you're a dwarf."
"VHAT?" said the eighteen-stone, six-foot eight-inch barbarian.
Garni chuckled. "Sure," he said. "You entered the grand duchy from the
Caverns of Cytorax, which, by international law, are dwarven. You must be a dwarf."
Kraki shook his head. "I vill never understand civilization," he said.
"Who's got the brandy?"
Part II.
ANOTHER DAY
I.
The sky was azure overhead. The fields were tan with stubble. Birds wheeled, gleaning
discarded bits from the recently completed harvest. It was quiet, or nearly so. There was
bird song,- the susurrus of the wind; the clink of harness; the low, muttered conversation
of ten thousand men. It was a good day to die.
There's no such thing as a good day to die. Why do all these heroic cretins sound the
same?
There was something on the hill, a point of darkness. Then, there were a thousand.
Suddenly, I was alert; it was the advance guard of the enemy army. I could see the
standard now, a crimson rag and a green, grimacing, tusked orcish face.
Great. In fifteen minutes, it's going to be like a meat grinder here. Why don't we run
like the dickens?
Drums sounded and a hundred voices bawled orders. And there was another standard, and
another, and another-
The crest line was dark with the enemy.
Gah. I bet if we work fast, we can find a horse and . . . "My liege, "
said a voice from my right. "You must not go. "
"Aye, I must. The Royal Horseguard is our only reserve. Should their charge
falter, our cause is lost. I must lead them."
No, no, bad idea. Bad idea. Listen . . .
The general said, "My lord, if we lose this battle, something may yet be salvaged.
The wizards of the White Council hold out yet. But you are the land; your health is our
health. We cannot afford your loss . . ."
Good advice. Listen to this guy.
"None may call me coward, " I said. "Where my soldiers go, so go I.
" Oh shit.
He sighed and held a horn out to me. "If you must go, at least fortify yourself
beforehand."
"What is that?" I asked. "Strong spirits, " he said.
Good idea. If we're going to get ourselves killed, at least . . . "No, " I
told him. "I will need all my wits about me. "
Who is this jackass?
"Then I will send for tea, " he said.
The smell of my mother's kitchen as she baked. I sat on a stool and drank the tea,
waiting for the cookies to be done. . . .
No! No! I called my batman to me, and called for my horse . . .
She pulled out the baking sheet, and there they lay, bubbling a little yet in the heat,
roughly circular blobs of doughthey smelled wonderful. Dion take it! Listen to
me, you fool . . .
I bit into one. It burned my tongue a little, but the taste of the raisins and
Men dying . . . Cinnamon . . .
Nick sat up. The blanket was on the floor. Someone was pounding on the door. Something
about cookies . . .
"I say!" said the door. "Is anyone about?"
"Just a goddamn minute," shouted Nick. He pulled on his pants and stumbled
over to open the door to his flat.
The man in the hallway was slight of build. He wore a waistcoat, hose, and a ruffled
shirt; his pale blond hair was drawn back in a ponytail. He raised a monocle to his right
eye and studied Nick's bare chest and sleepfogged face without approval. "How do you
do," he said. "I am Wentworth Secundus Jorgesen, Magister Alchimiae."
"Already got one," said Nick, and tried to shut the door.
Wentworth stuck one elegantly shod foot in the jamb. "Ahem," he said.
"Perhaps I should explain my presence."
"Perhaps you should get lost," said Nick.
"I conducted a simple magical scan of the city this morning," Wentworth said,
leaning on the door. "I do it frequently, to recalibrate my equipment. I use the
powerful magical loci of the city to orient things, you see."
Nick stopped pushing. Garni wandered up, wearing nothing but underwear. His beard was
mashed flat against his face on one side, and his hair was a mess.
"What did you find?" asked Nick.
"An extremely strong magical field is emanating from your flat," said
Wentworth.
Nick and Garni exchanged glances. They both began to push on the door.
"Damn it!" shouted Wentworth, as his foot was squeezed against the jamb.
"I just want to know what'sOW!"
"Go away," said Garni.
There was silence for a moment.
"Look," said Wentworth. "Let my foot out. Please?"
"Okay," said Nick. He let up the pressure. Wentworth snatched his foot away.
Nick slammed the door shut and put his back to it. Garni worked the lock.
"I'm willing to pay for the information," said the door plaintively.
"Sorry," said Garni. "Go away."
"You're a mess," said Nick. "What?" said the door.
"Not you," said Nick. "The dwarf. Get lost."
Nick and Garni waited. After a while they heard footsteps. Garni went to the window and
looked out, squinting in the bright morning light. "What do you see?" asked
Nick.
"He's leaving," said Garni. "But he looks kind of . . ."
"What?"
"Determined." "Hell."
"It occurs to me, young Pratchitt, that we have a problem. If our friend can
detect the statue"
"So can every other third-rate wizzo in the city of Urf Durfal." Nick went to
the thundermug and pissed into it.
"Right you are," said the dwarf. "What are we going to do about
it?" "Beats me," said Nick, buttoning his fly. "We'd better tell the
others, though."
Garni crouched in the middle of the room and pried up a floorboard. Beneath the
floorboards of their basement flat were timbers, supported at the edge of the building by
the foundation; and below them, about three feet of crawl space. Lying on the dirt was the
brown-painted statue. It still looked like it was waiting for something unpleasant to
happen.
Garni let the board fall back. "Still there," he grunted. "I think one
of us should stay while the other goes to the inn. To make sure nobody nabs it while we're
gone."
Nick went to the basin, poured out a little water stored in a jug, and splashed his
face. He began to develop lather from a bar of soap with a brush. "Good idea,"
he said. "I'll go."
"You just want breakfast," Garni grumbled, moving back to make his bed.
Nick stropped the straight razor. "Yup," he said cheerfully.
It felt nice in the gutter. Thwaite had no desire to move. The sun was warm on his
skin. His mind hung somewhere about three cubits up and a bit to the right of his head.
The world whirled about in a familiar manner.
"We'd been on campaign for monthsh," said Vic. He lay in the gutter, too, a
few feet from Father Thwaite. Vic was old, toothless, white haired, his face and hands
weatherbeaten and worn. "Sho when we found that the villa's pantry wash shtocked with
pickled quailsh eggs, crottled greepsh, and caviar, we were pretty excited, as you might
imagine."
Thwaite had trouble believing that Vic had ever been a soldier. The oldster had lived
on the streets of Urf Durfal for as long as Thwaite had known him. He had, as far as
anyone knew, always been white haired, shrunken, and more than a little senile.
"When was this, Vic?" Thwaite asked.
Vic raised his head a little and seemed to regret the motion. The two of them had
imbibed a truly impressive quantity of alcohol in the last twenty-four hours. "During
the reign of Shtantiush," he said. "Haven't you been lishtening?"
"Yes, yes, Vic. Stantius the Third?"
"That'sh right, heh heh," Vic cackled. "How old do you think I am,
anyway?"
Thwaite contemplated this while Vic continued with his interminable story. Stantius III
had ruled close to two millennia ago. No one was that old. Thwaite smiled woozily and took
another slug of his Chateau d'Alfar '08. It was good wine, one of the finest white
Linfalians on the market, a premier cru of the elvish appellation-not the usual
beverage of your gutter-dwelling wino.
The wine was all that was left of his fortune. He'd been rich, twenty-four hours ago.
That was how long it had taken him to blow his share of the treasure. A fair portion had
gone on the booze he, Vic, and half the neighborhood had downed over the night; but the
bulk had gone to better cause. Many a poor family would wake up this morning with a coin
or two that had none the night before. Many a starveling cat napped contentedly, the
remnants of a fish head in its stomach. Two urchins now had apprenticeships with
respectable artisans. And the temple had funds enough to sponsor at least four feasts.
All, of course, in humble obedience to Thwaite's ecclesiastical instructions. He had
precisely sixpence left.
A boot shoved him in the ribs. "I might have known I'd find you here," said a
voice. "Drunk in the gutter."
Thwaite dimly made out a face. "Good morning, Sidney," he said. "Come
on," she said. "We've got to get to Kraki's inn."
"All right," said Thwaite. He rose, stumbled a few paces, and fell to his
knees.
"Going, Geoffrey?" said Vic.
"I'm afraid so, Vic," mumbled Thwaite, trying to get on his feet again.
"There wash shomething you shaid lasht night," said Vic, sitting up on one
elbow. "Shomething about . . ."
Sidney helped Thwaite up and steadied him on his feet. "What? "Shomething
about . . ."
They began to walk off, Thwaite quite unsteadily, Sidney half holding him up.
"About a shtatue!" said Vic, triumphant at remembering.
"What?" demanded Sidney, turning. "Father! You know you're not supposed
to"
"A shtatue. What wash it you shaid?" said Vic.
"I'm sorry, Sidney," said Thwaite, not particularly repentently. "I must
have been"
"Drunk," she said. "That's not much of an excuse, Father, given that
you're drunk almost all the time."
"You have to tell me about the shtatue!" said Vic, clawing at Thwaite's robes
from his position in the gutter.
"Forget it," said Sidney, shoving him away with her boot. "It'sh
important," Vic said.
"What could be important to a bum in the gutter?" she said. She flipped him a
ha'penny coin. "Shut up and forget about it." She frog-marched Thwaite away,
giving him what for.
"Shtatue," Vic muttered to himself, sitting on the slate curb. He shook his
head, trying to clear it. My memory ishn't what it ushed to be, that'sh the problem, he
thought. Why, I remember when . . . Remember when . . . Well, anyway, my memory ishn't
what is ushed to be.
There was a shtatue once, a shtatue. And I was . . . Wait! Vic looked up and blinked.
There, in the center of the fountain, was a statue. No, that'sh not it, he thought. It was
only Roderick II, the father of the current grand duke, caught in heroic bronze (as well
as, it should be said, Roderick's charger, Valiant, a horse every bit as notable as the
grand duke). The statue had been there for decades, gradually turning green and gaining a
thick coat of bird droppings.
A pigeon stood on the cobblestones in front of Vic. It turned its head aside and
studied Vic out of one eye. Vic pulled a crust out of his pocket and extended it to the
bird. The pigeon hesitated, then made a grab for it. "Unh uh," said Vic.
"Shay pleashe."
The pigeon studied him. Vic waggled his fingers and said a Word. "Shay
pleashe," he repeated.
"Please?" said the pigeon. Vic gave it the crust.
"Thanks, mac," said the pigeon, pecking at the bread.
Corcoran Evanish blinked. The maitre d' was a cyclops. Evanish hadn't expected a
nonhuman, but the creature looked suitably impressive in formal attire. Corcoran felt
quite out of place. The foyer was elaborately decorated, the walls covered with murals,
the ceiling adorned with plaster friezes.
The cyclops studied the man's drab velveteen cloak and worn shoon. "May I help
you, sir," he said, his tone clearly intimating that the only help likely to be
forthcoming was a foot to the seat of the pants to assist Evanish out the door.
"Yes," said Evanish hesitantly. "I'm here to see Ross Montiel."
The cyclops raised one eyebrow. This was only natural, as he had but one. "Yes,
sir," he said dubiously. "Follow me, if you will, sir." He led the way into
the restaurant beyond.
It was of unusual construction, built of large sheets of glass held together with
black-painted cast-iron frames. The impact was light, airy, perhaps dangerously
insubstantial. The novel architecture was permitted by a recently discovered alchemical
process for the manufacture of flawless sheets of glass.
The morning sun shone brightly through the glass roof; from the floor rose plants,
gaudy flowers, whole trees shading tables. Lizardmen bounded about the floor, clad in
black coats, bearing platters of food and dirty dishes.
"Hi, Corky," said Montiel in a high-pitched, piping voice as he looked up
from his menu. He sprang to his feetall three-foot six of himand said,
"Sit down, sit down." The elf smiled in the usual goofy elfin fashion; despite
himself, Evanish smiled back.
Montiel had always been a cipher to Evanish; his mannerisms were typically
elvensweet, merry, a little twee. Yet he had become one of the biggest crime lords
in Urf Durfal, intimately involved in prostitution,
smash-and-grab operations, fencing, and the numbers. Evanish found it difficult to
reconcile the image of sweetness that the elvenkind seemed determined to maintain with
Montiel's vicious reputation. How the creature himself managed to live with the conflict
was beyond Evanish's comprehension.
They sat. Corcoran studied the menu. "How are ya?" piped Montiel. "Fine,
fine," said Corcoran, buried in the folder. "Customs duty isn't the most
challenging job in the world."
"Oh, but you're good at it," said Montiel enthusiastically, waving over a
lizardman. "And how's the missus?"
Corcoran peered over the menu in some surprise. "I'm not married," he said.
"Oh, sorry," said Montiel vaguely. "Why don't you stop by Madame Laura's
sometime? Tell them I sent you."
Corcoran colored. "Er, I'll keep it in mind," he said. "Yeth,
thir?" said the waiter.
"I'll have the oat bran with assorted fruits," piped Montiel. "And some
of your yummy herbal tea."
"Yeth, thir," said the waiter, scribbling on a pad. "And you,
thir?" "Ah, two eggs. Over easy. And a rasher of bacon, please," said
Corcoran.
"Tea?" asked the lizard.
"Please." The lizard bounded away.
Montiel peered at Evanish with wounded eyes. "Oh, Corky," he said sadly.
"Your diet is going to be the death of you."
"What?" said Corcoran with some embarrassment.
Montiel shook his head. He stood on the table, and leaned over to poke Corcoran's
stomach. "You need to get some fiber in there," he said. "You're eating
nothing but fat. Fat fat fat."
Corcoran rubbed his stomach. "I'm not fat," he said.
"No, but you will be," said Montiel, retaking his seat. "Look at the
typical middle-aged human. Overweight, gouty, ruddy jowls. Years of poor diet."
"Well . . ." said Corcoran, but Montiel was not to be interrupted.
"Animal flesh is poison!" he squeaked. "Do you know how they raise pigs in
this country?"
Corcoran had a fair idea, but preferred not to think about it.
"There's a practice knows as `pigs following cows,' " piped the elf,
"Cows aren't very efficient about turning feed into flesh. There's still a lot of
nutritional value in their dung."
Corcoran began to turn green. "Please," he said.
"So they feed it to the pigs, which are much more efficient. Pigs can not only
survive on the stuff, but thrive."
Corcoran swallowed and rubbed his eyes. The food arrived. The bacon was still sizzling.
Montiel stabbed in the direction of the bacon with his spoon. "Bullshit," he
squeaked. "That's what you're eating." He began to spoon up his oat bran.
Corcoran pushed his bacon around with his fork. "I have some information that may
be of value to you," he said.
Montiel swallowed a mouthful of peaches and said, "Uh huh?"
"A . . . highly magical object of considerable value was taken out of the caverns
yesterday."
"Oh, yeah?" said Montiel, his attention firmly on Corcoran. "How much
value?"
Corcoran cleared his throat and took a swallow of tea. "Immense value," he
said. "I couldn't begin to estimate."
"What do you want for the information?"
Corcoran considered. "Five pounds argentum, " he said. "Does
anyone else have this information?"
"Other than the party which found the item? I don't believe so."
"Okeydokey." They settled on four pounds ten.
Kraki stumbled into the taproom. He went to the bar, leaned over, grabbed a glass, and
filled it with porter. He drained the glass, filled it again, and sat heavily down at a
table. He leaned back in the chair. It creaked under his weight.
The innkeeper approached. He was walleyed. Both eyes seemed to do their best not to
focus on Kraki. The man crouched a little and wiped his hands repeatedly on his apron.
"Excuse me, honorable," he said in a quaver, ready to run if necessary.
"Yah," said Kraki and took a gulp of the beer.
"Please, sor," said the innkeeper miserably. "I hate to bring it up,
really I do, but it's been weeks and weeks, and this inn were not too profitable, you
know, my wife and I"
"Stop vhining," said Kraki, looking at the innkeeper for the first time. The
man cringed. "Sorry, sorry, forget I said a thing," he said and began to scuttle
away. He still bore bruises from the last time he'd mentioned Kraki's tab.
Kraki nabbed the innkeeper by one arm. "Vhat is it?" Kraki said, shaking the
man.
"It . : ." said the innkeeper. Then, he drew a deep breath. "It were
your bill, sor."
Kraki hurled the innkeeper to the floor.
"Bah!" he shouted in disgust. "This is vhat civilization is all about.
Money money money!" He hurled a purse at the innkeeper. It hit the man in the head
and raised a lump. "Here," he said. "Have your damn money."
The innkeeper grabbed the purse and, blubbering, crawled for the kitchen. He noticed
that the purse was rather heavy. He stopped, opened it, and peered within.
It was filled with gold coins. He gaped. Slowly, he poured the contents on the floor
and began to count.
It was a bloody fortune. It would buy the tavern several times over. He gulped and
looked at Kraki, who was getting more beer from the bar. The innkeeper swallowed and put
the gold back in the purse.
He went to Kraki and patted the barbarian on the back. "Thank you, sor," he
said. "Thank you." He leaned closer and said, "You can stay as long as you
bloody like." Then, he scuttled away.
Kraki shrugged, watching the man go. He would never figure out why these people did
what they did. He drained his glass.
II.
The foreign minister and the ambassador from the County Palatine of Ishkabibble were
gabbling about something, but Grand Duke Mortimer paid them no attention. He frowned at
his plate and peeled the egg away with his silver fork. He peered at the mushroom thus
revealed through the magnifying glass he kept on his watch fob. It was a simple mushroom
omelet, prepared with the dreadfully plebeian Agaricus campestrisbut the
crown of the mushroom, he could see, had receded noticeably from the stem. He pursed his
lips. How vulgar, he thought. This was a sign of age. The mushroom must have been picked
several days previously. As such, it was perfectly suitable for use in a sauce or soup,
but no longer quite delicate enough for direct consumption, as in an omelet. There was no
excuse for this, Mortimer thought; before the chef sliced the mushroom, he must have been
able to see the dark gills of the campestris, themselves a clear signal of age. I
will have to have a chat with the chef de cuisine, he thought.
He turned to the Baroness Veronee, who seemed uninterested in her own omelet. "I
do wish you'd join me this morning," he said. The baroness was ravishing in a
high-collared red velvet dress, which set off her pale skin most wonderfully, as did the
black lace veil that covered but did not hide her aquiline features. "I have a most
unusual Amanita, " he said. "Grown from spores imported from Far
Moothlay. I had difficulty establishing it at first, but it seems to do very well on horse
dung." To the joy of Urf Durfal's criminal class, the Grand Duke of Athelstan's only
abiding interest was mycology, the study of mushrooms and other fungi. The dungeons
beneath Castle Durf were now largely given over to his studies, packed full with dung,
humus, and pale fungal growth. Whenever the grand duke needed room for a new variety,
another dozen criminals were pardoned.
"It does sound wonderful, Morty," said the baroness, resting one
crimson-nailed hand on his arm and hiding a yawn with the other, "but I've been up
all night at the most ennuyeux ball. I really must retire shortly."
Sir Ethelred Ethelbert, the current foreign minister, sighed heavily and pinched the
bridge of his nose. "If you please, my liege," he said, "the
situation in Ishkabibble is most grave."
"Sorry, sorry," said the grand duke, a little guilty that he hadn't been
paying attention. "What exactly is the problem?" he said.
The ambassador threw up his hands and began to eat his omelet, which had grown cold
while he waited.
Sir Ethelred smiled grimly and spoke through his teeth. "The Great Evil
Empire," he said, enunciating carefully, "is on the move. After centuries of
quiescence, it has once again invaded human lands."
"Yes, yes," said Mortimer, taking off his glasses and polishing them with his
handkerchief, "but what has that got to do with us?"
"The County Ishkabibble is fighting valiantly against a combined force of orcs and
trolls," said Sir Ethelred. "The capital city of Ish is under siege."
"We will fall," said the ambassador through his omelet. "And soon."
"Unless," said Sir Ethelred, "help is forthcoming from other human
realms."
"You frighten me," said Baroness Veronee, placing her right hand above her
left breast. The grand duke watched both hand and breast avidly. "Surely we are in no
danger here."
The foreign minister shook his greasy locks. "No immediate danger, I assure you,
my lady. Nonetheless, should the forces of darkness go unchecked . . ."
"What have our military men to say?" said Mortimer.
Major Yohn looked up, a stricken expression on his face. He commanded the Fifth
Frontier Warders, recently returned from the suppression of the Meep banditti. He was
thoroughly enjoying his time at court: he'd spent close to two years in the field,
sleeping in mud and picking fleas out of his hair, and Urf Durfal was heaven by
comparison. There was superb food, wine, women . . . his only real problem was keeping his
battle-hardened men from getting out of hand. Carousing was one thing, but they'd nearly
destroyed a tavern three days ago.
Yohn was no courtier. He was a potter's son. He'd joined the army because he'd been
taken in by all that guff about visiting exotic places and rising rapidly through the
ranks. The idea of talking directly to the grand duke filled him with dismay.
He was thankful, therefore, when General Carruthers spoke up. Carruthers commanded the
Ducal Guard. The Guard was permanently stationed at Castle Durf; the only action it had
seen any time in the last three decades was against the citizens of the city, who rioted
from time to time, usually around Carnival.
"Hah!" said Carruthers, and snorted through his mustache. "Orcs and
scum. Send us to Ish, my liege! We'll put the blighters down in no time." Yohn rolled
his eyes. The force besieging Ish was the largest army any
one had seen in centuries. The average age of the Ducal Guard was thirty-five. Most of
them had a hard time squeezing into their breastplates. Membership in the Guard was a
sinecure for successful bourgeoisie and petty nobles. Faced with anything but unarmed
rabble, they'd probably turn tail and flee.
"Good, good," said Mortimer. "What about the others?"
Sir Ethelred closed his eyes briefly. "What others, Your Grace?"
"Hamsterburg, Alcala, Stralhelm-you know."
"Ishkabibble is appealing for aid to all of the human lands, Your Grace. And to
the elves and white orcs as well."
The ambassador sighed heavily but did not speak.
"War." The Baroness shuddered and took a sip of red wine.
Mortimer watched her red lips part and licked his own. He shook his head. "Let the
closer lands bear the burden," he said.
"Your Grace," said Sir Ethelred, somewhat distressed. "I must
advise"
"No," said Mortimer petulantly. "Enough of this. If there's a grand
alliance or something . . . But for now . . ."
Yohn mulled this over and took a sip of the grand duke's superb Alcalan red. Mortimer
kept a good cellar. Gods knew, Yohn had no desire to see action again any time soon. But
any idiot could see that Sir Ethelred was right. Yohn toyed with the idea of resigning his
commission and heading for Ish himself.
A page boy charged into the room. Two guards intercepted him. He ran headlong into the
breastplate of one. "Sorry," he gasped, rubbing his head. "Message for the
minister." The guards let him through, and he went to Sir Ethelred. Ethelred took a
piece of paper from the boy, put on pincenez, and peered at the message.
"Most extraordinary," muttered Sir Ethelred. "What is it?" said the
grand duke testily.
Sir Ethelred peered at him over the glasses. "My liege, the Sceptre of Stantius is
glowing."
"What?" asked Baroness Veronee in a low voice.
Sir Ethelred looked at her. "Just came over the news crystal," he said.
He cleared his voice and read. " `Oyez, oyez, oyez. Chief Herald, Free City
Hamsterburg. Let it be known throughout the human lands that the Sceptre of Stantius,
symbol of the True King of Mankind, glows once again, foretelling the imminent accession
of a new king. More to follow. Thirty.' "
"Thirty?" asked Mortimer. "What's that?"
"It means, `the end,"' explained a minor counsellor.
"If they mean `the end,"' complained Mortimer, "why don't they
just say . . . My dear! But we've just finished breakfast."
"I am sorry, Morty," said Baroness Veronee, rising to leave, "but I must
go.
While they argued, Sir Ethelred and the Ishkabibblian ambassador conferred. Yohn
eavesdropped. "What does this mean?" asked the ambassador.
"Gods only know," muttered Ethelred, rereading the message. "There
hasn't been a king in two thousand years. Since Stantius the Third. Deuce of a time for
this."
"No," said the Ishkabibblian ambassador with dawning hope. "The timing
may be excellent."
Thwaite's head and forearms were splayed on the rudely hewn wood table. He was snoring.
Nick had one arm around the serving wench, a grin on his ferretlike face. "Got any
hotcakes?" he asked.
She giggled and bobbed her head. Sidney rolled her eyes.
The innkeeper wiped his hands on his apron. "And you, honorable?" he asked
Timaeus.
"I say," said Timaeus. "Didn't I note a kettle of greeps on the
fire?" "Yes, sor," said the innkeeper. "Freshly crottled."
"Excellent. Three fried eggs and a side of greeps, if you will."
"Yuck," said Nick.
"Some kind of fish, aren't they?" said Sidney.
"Oh, no, ma'am," said the innkeeper. "That's not true. When I were a lad
. . ."
GREEP STEW
"When I were a lad, I lived in the mountains of Far Moothlay. Me ma had died in
childbirth, and we livedme da, and me seven brothers-in a little croft down by the
river. I were the eldest, and so I bore the brunt of things. It were I me da made go and
fetch the water on the coldest days, and it were I he made keep t'others in line.
Wintertime was cruel, most cruel.
The wind whipped off the mountaintops and fair froze our croft through and through, the
moss in the chinks between the building stones not enow to hold back the draft. Me da
spent half the day cutting logs to keep the fire burning, and were it not for the wee
greepies we ne'er would have made it through to spring.
"For lying in our rude straw bed, the greepies crowded round, their poor
white-haired bodies chill in the cold. And between the eight of us and the many, many
greeps, we stayed warm through the bitter night.
"And when the last of the yams were gone and the pottage running low, we'd take a
little one round the back, and butcher it. It were not my favorite task, but it were
needed, and so I took care to strike straight and firm to spare the greepie from pain.
"And then, it were haggis time. Aye, well I remember the cold winter nights and
the haggis o' greep a-roasting on the flame. Oh, we ate the flesh as well, aye we did, but
we were not rich folk, and did not discard the entrails. I know it be not high cuisine,
but the liver and lights we chopped and mixed wi' the last of our oats, and boiled it to a
pudding. And we stuffed it with the rude seasonings, plants that grew about our croft,
into the stomach of the poor little creature, and let it turn over our wood fire.
"And then at last the spring would come, and the little stream by our croft would
run strong. Then would I go up in the mountains with all our greeps, up to the gray stone
peaks and the brilliant meadows. The heather would come a-blooming, and the ewe greeps
would drop their greeplets. Aye, gladsome was it to watch the young greepies, a-bounding
with the joy of spring through the flowers of the moor.
"And though I have made my home in the city nigh these twenty years, and though me
da lie long in his shallow grave, still I remember the wee white greeps frolicking in the
cool mountain air; and still I remember the peppery taste of haggis o' greep, that king
among all puddings."
"I'll skip it," said Sidney. The innkeeper turned to Kraki.
Kraki's eyes were glazed, and he was harrying one massive black tooth with an equally
black and massive thumbnail. He took his hand out of his mouth and said, "I have
fried liver."
Timaeus began to tamp his pipe. "Now," he said, "to business. I asked
around at my club"
"Wait a minute," said Sidney. "I thought we agreed not to mention the
statue."
Timaeus paused, pipe in the air. "I merely inquired as to the name of a discreet
dealer in antiquities and rare objets, " he said. "Besides which, the
members of the Millennium are gentlemen all. I have no fear of indiscretion."
"Yeah, yeah," said Sidney. "Fine. Unfortunately, our comatose friend
hasn't been so good." Thwaite gave a snore.
"What's he been up to?" asked Nick.
"The usual," said Sidney. "He got drunk last night, gave away his
treasure, andwell, I don't know what he said, but I found him in the gutter with
some geezer called Vic, who wanted to know more about a statue."
"Typical Father Thwaite," said Nick. "Hey, sugar, is that all you're
bringing me? Ham and eggs? No perfumed notes? A lock of your hair?" The serving wench
giggled so hard that the myriad dishes she'd managed to pile onto her arms, hands, and
chest threatened to fall.
"You owrtn'ta make me laugh, sir," she said, piling dishes on the table.
Timaeus, bored with this byplay, brought his forefinger to his pipe.
"I only do it to see your glorious smile," said Nick.
There was a thunderous explosion. A flash lit the room. The wench shrieked and dived
under a nearby table. Kraki's liver went flying across the room.
Timaeus puffed happily. Sidney sighed.
"Is . . . is it all right, gentles?" came a tremulous voice from beneath the
table.
"Yes, yes," said Timaeus testily. Nick clearly wanted to say something but
was having trouble containing his laughter.
The wench crawled out from under the table. Woebegone, she fetched Kraki's liver and
dusted the sawdust off. "I'm awfully sorry, sir," she said, and plopped it
before him, then fled toward the kitchen.
"I say," yelled Timaeus after her, aghast. "You can't expect him to
eat"
Kraki picked the liver up in his hands and gave it a hefty bite. "Ha?" he
said through a mouthful.
"Never mind, never mind," said Timaeus. He puffed for a moment while everyone
else ate. "Who is this Vic fellow, anyway?" he asked Nick. "Hmm? Oh, don't
worry about him. He's an old guy, lives on the street
around Five Corners parish. Been there for years. Mumbles a lot, tells stories to the
kids. Senile as hell. Everyone'll just figure he's telling another of his stories."
"It's not Vic I'm worried about," said Sidney. "It'sif he told
Vic, who knows who else he told?"
"Well," said Nick, "if you want something to worry about, worry about
this: an alchemist showed up at our apartment this morning. Got us out of bed. He said
he'd detected strong magic coming from our place and wanted to know what was up. I got rid
of him, but Garni stayed to hold down the fort."
Timaeus dabbed at his beard with a napkin. "I expected the magical community to
start noticing eventually," he said. "However, I had hoped it wouldn't be quite
so soon. This reinforces my belief that we must find a buyer as soon as we can. Which
brings me back to Jasper." He harrumphed, and picked up a forkful of greeps.
There was a silence for a moment, save for the clinking of cutlery. "Who?"
said Nick.
"Eh? Jasper, Jasper de something something. Dealer in antiquities and rare objets.
He has a shop on Jambon Street, so I'm told," said Timaeus. "We don't
exactly have papers proving we own the statue," said Sidney. "You sure this
guy'll deal with us?"
"We can but try. I was assured as to the gentleman's discretion." "I'd
feel happier talking to a fence."
"We've been over this ground, madam. The item is so precious that a dealer in
stolen goods would be hard-pressed to obtain even a fraction of its true value."
Timaeus pushed aside his plate, which was polished, and took up his pipe again.
"Relax," he said.
"All right," said Sidney. "But I'm coming with you. And everyone else
had better go visit Garni. We don't want someone nabbing the statue while we're out."
"Don't vorry," said Kraki. "Anybody take, I kill." He burped
loudly. The coach of Baroness Veronee pulled directly into the coach house adjoining the
main part of her mansion, obviating the need to exit into the painfully bright daylight.
The mansion was modest as baronial residences go, a small sandstone town house, decorated
in the dark style that had been popular during the reign of the current grand duke's
father. Veronee's official residence was off in Barony Filbert, a decaying old pile of
stones that had been in the family for centuries. She hadn't been back to Filbert in
years; she much preferred the social whirl of life in the capital. Moreover, there was
little scope for espionage in the dank hills and gloomy orchards of her barony.
Rupert, the butler, met her in the parlor. The drapes were, as always, tightly drawn.
"An exhausting night," she said. "Is my bed prepared?" "Yes, my
lady," said the butler. "However, we have . . . visitors." He spoke as if
their presence pained him.
"Visitors?" "Yes, my lady. Orcish visitors." "Where are they,
Rupert?"
"In the pantry, my lady. I thought it best to restrict them to the servants'
quarters." He led the way.
Baroness Veronee surveyed the wreckage with dismay. Orcs in my pantry, she thought.
They were worse than roaches, ants, mice, and raccoons combined.
There was flour and sugar all over the floor. Unable to read any of the labels, the
orcs had opened everything in the pantry to make sure they weren't passing up some rare
delicacy. One was chewing on a huge smoked ham he'd cut loose from the rack overhead, his
tusks ripping away massive chunks, which he masticated messily. Another was peering into
an empty bottle of cooking wine, apparently hoping to find a last drop or two within. The
third had a jar of honey between his legs. His right hand was stuck in the jar.
"Good morning," said the baroness.
They jumped. "Oi, miss!" said one. "Nice grub ya got here!"
"Where's Cook?" said the baroness to Rupert.
"I don't know, my lady." "Better go console her."
"My lady," he said hesitantly, "do you think it advisable that I leave
you alone with these . . ."
She gave a low, throaty chuckle.
"Yes, yes, of course," said Rupert and left hurriedly.
"Now, then, my green-skinned friends," said the baroness. "Why are you
here?"
They looked at each other. "Well, miss, word is dat you is innerested in things
dat goes on in da caverns."
"Important events, yes."
"Well . . . do ya mind if we siddown?"
She inclined her head and led them into the kitchen. The one with the jar of honey was
still trying to get his hand out. She stayed on her feet. "Thanks, ma'am. An . . .
dere's also da li'ul matter of payment." "Indeed? And will you pay me for the
mess you've made of my pantry?" The orc with the jar of honey tried to hide it behind
his chair.
The first orc was not abashed. "We isn't gonna tell ya nuffing if we don't get
paid."
"How do I know that what you've got to tell me is worth money?" The orc's
face fell. He conferred briefly with the others.
"Awright. It's about a statue." "Yes?"
"A statue made out of dat red metal." "Copper?"
"No, no, dat magic stuff."
She raised an eyebrow. "Athenor?" "Yup. Solid, an' dat's a fact."
"Two pounds," she said.
"Ten quid," said Garfok.
There were seven cellars beneath the town house of Veronee. There had been two when she
bought ita wine cellar and one for roots. Only the baroness and her servants knew
about the others, for the simple reason that the earth mage who had built them was dead.
The baroness had seen to that.
The house above was for show. She held dinner parties there; from time to time, she put
up a guest. But she never slept there. Her workrooms, her living quarters, and her
livestock were kept below.
She stripped off her veil and her red velvet dress and donned a simple cotton shift. By
the light of a single candle, she surveyed her study. Wood and metal held back the sandy
walls. The bookcases stood a good foot from the soil, lest they be destroyed by contact
with wet earth and insects. One whole wall was given to her menagerie: small animals in
cages. There were cats, dogs, rats, pigeons; she paid small boys to trap them for her. The
cost was negligible.
In the country, she used farm animals, but in the city, she made do with available
resources. From time to time, she needed greater power; then, she had one of her servants
buy a horse and lead it here through the tunnels that connected her domain with the outer
world.
For the most powerful spells, only sapient beings would do. It was usually possible to
lure a derelict with promises of food and money.
Her masters would want to know about the Sceptre of Stantius immediately. And there was
also the peculiar matter of this athenor statue to report.
She went to a cage. The droopy-eared dog within sprang to its feet upon her approach..
Its tail began to wag. The wagging rose to a frenzy. The dog gave tiny leaps as she opened
the lock. She picked it up and removed it from the cage. "Nice doggie woggie,"
she said.
As she carried it to the table, it licked her face and tried to get down. "Arfy
warfums," she said.
She put it on the table and rolled it onto its back. It yipped playfully and tried to
get to its feet, but she held it in place. She spoke a Word, and another.
She spoke softly, but her Words resounded in the chamber.
The dog looked at her with trusting brown eyes as she raised the knife.
She struck. And she raised the pumping neck to her mouth. Blood spurted over her face
and her shift. She swallowed hungrily.
The life force gave her power. She shaped it with her spell. And when the Right
Honorable the Baroness Veronee, Magistra Necromantiae, spoke again, her words were
heard far across the world, on the plain of Arst-Kara-Morn.
Corcoran Evanish stood in the street outside an imposing structure whose pillars were
demons carved in stone. His meeting had gone well. Evanish was now another five pounds
richer; and a powerful demonologist now knew about the statue.
Corcoran Evanish studied his list. He crossed the demonologist's name off. There were
twenty-three names to go. He pursed his lips, put the list away, and strode off down the
street.
III.
The plate-glass window was lettered in gold leaf: JASPER DE MOBRAY, KGF, it said, and
below that, "DEALER IN ANTIQUITIES * RARE OBJETS * DIVERS ENCHANTMENTS. " To the
bottom right was a carefully painted sigila boar's head and the motto `Adiuvo Te.
"
"What's KGF?" asked Sidney.
"Knight of the Golden Fleece," said Timaeus. "One of Athelstan's more
modest honors." His tone was mildly disapproving.
"Where does the name come from?" she said.
Timaeus cleared his throat. "The primary qualification is the contribution of
large quantities of gold to the ducal fiscus."
"In other words," Sidney said, "the grand duke fleeces you of your gold
. . ."
Timaeus grinned around his pipe. "And then he knights you," he said.
"Precisely."
Sidney chuckled, and they entered. One expected shops on Jambon Street to be orderly
and elegant; commercial rents in the district were far from low. Nonetheless, the place
was a positive jumble, more reminiscent of a junk-yard than an art gallery.
An entire wall was given over to shelves bearing potions and dusty alembics. Stuffed
creatures of various sorts hung from the ceiling: there were alligators, giant crayfish,
several boars, a basilisk's head, and the eight-legged body of a truly gigantic spider. In
one corner were piled at least a hundred swords, several of which glowed. A sign above
them said, UNTESTED MAGICAL SWORDSЈlO EACH, Ј100 THE DOZEN. One wall bore the
stuffed head of a unicorn. There was a locked glass case filled with rings and assorted
jewelry. There were carved ivory statues. There were carefully painted metal figurines.
Considerable floor space was given over
to furniture: bookstands, armoires, secretaries, and cases. Another whole section
contained weaponry of every conceivable type: knives, swords, axes, mauls, morningstars,
war hammers, pole arms with blades of a plenitude of shapes and styles, and more exotic
weapons Timaeus failed to recognize. There were innumerable religious relicsstatues,
icons, aspergers, prayer mats, and sacrificial stones. And the booksthe books could
fill a library.
It was to the bookshelves that Timaeus went. He studied spines and pulled down a
volume, one bound in some black, shiny substance he could not identify. It caught his eye
because it bore no title.
He opened it at random. A mist rose from the page and began to form into a purplish
tentacle, complete with suckers. Timaeus stared at the volume, unaware.
The book closed with a snap. "No, no, sir, you don't want that one," said a
voice. "I should say not, heh." The voice emanated from a point of green light
that hung right above Timaeus's shoulder. "Very dangerous volume," said the
light, "full of unusual and heterodox concepts." The light zipped over to
another volume, which came down from the shelves, apparently on its own, and thrust itself
into Timaeus's hands. "Now here's something better suited to the man of adventure,
which I perceive you to be."
"Thank you," said Timaeus, somewhat bemused. He studied the cover, which
proclaimed the contents Shrood's Bestiary, Being an Universal and Compleat Cyclopoedia
of the Fauna, Monsters, and Mythological Creatures of the Known World, Both Factual and
Legendary, Newly Revised in Light of Recent Discoveries.
"And you, miss," said the green light, zipping across the room to Sidney.
"I perceive that you, too, are an adventurer. Perhaps you would be interested in one
of our many magical swords? We are having an especial offering this week, ten pounds for
untested weapons. All are guaranteed to be magical, but we have not tested further; you
may be purchasing a weapon of truly legendary power or, conversely, one with a simple
bladesharpening enchantment. I'll thank you to return the brooch in your frontleft
trousers pocket to the display on table three."
Blushing, Sidney did so.
The light paused in midair and rose slowly toward the ceiling. "But I sense . . .
I sense that these goods do not meet with your approval. I sense . . . I sense marital
discord in the flat above. Damnation." There was a thump from overhead and the muted
sound of shouting voices.
The light abruptly dropped about two feet. "Let's try that again," it said.
"Hmmph. Perhaps you're in the market for somewhat more sophisticated goods." It
zipped across the room.
"Sir Jasper," said Sidney.
"No, no, don't tell me," the light said. "Adventurers both, eh? How
about seven-league boots? Almost new, only used by an amateur giant killer on alternate
Tuesdays. No?" It zipped to another table. "How about this;" it said, and a
bundle of yarrow sticks rose aloft. "Damsel-in-distress locator. Very useful for the
questing knight. No?" The sticks tumbled back to the table.
The light zipped to a display case, which opened. A ring rose from it. "How about
this? Just got it in. Reputedly, it turns color when in the presence of a god or
goddessvery useful, what with all these damned deities wandering around incognito
and exacting horrible punishments on those who treat them discourteously."
Timaeus snorted and looked the bookshelf over further. He pulled down a heavy tome,
entitled An History of the Hamsterian Empire.
"Damn," said the light, and zipped back to Sidney, hanging about two feet in
front of her forehead. "Let me see . . ."
"Actually, we're not here Sidney began.
"No, no," interrupted the light petulantly. "I need the practice. Let me
see. You're upset with your partner . . . Oh, really? Hmm. Oh, my dear! I am so
sorry."
"Look," said Sidney loudly. "Stop it. Stop fumbling around in my
mind."
The light backed off. "Oh, dear, oh, dear," it said. "This is most rude
of me. I hadn't intended to go quite so deep."
Timaeus looked up briefly, then returned to his book. Its prose style was quite
archaic. He flipped through it, studying the color plates, chewing on his pipe stem.
"It'd be a lot faster for me just to explain," said Sidney.
"Yes, yes, of course," said the light, somewhat abashed. "Please go
ahead."
"Okay," said Sidney. "We have this statue. It's of a full-size human
male. It's made of athenor."
The light made a fast circle around the room and stopped before her again.
"Athenor?" it said. "Yes," she replied. "Solid?"
"Yes." "How much does it weigh?"
"We haven't weighed it," Sidney said, "but it's damned heavy."
"It would be."
There was a sudden choking sound from Timaeus. His pipe hit the floor. The light zipped
over to the wizard. "What's this?" it said, hovering over Timaeus's shoulder.
Timaeus looked up and slammed the volume shut. "Nothing, nothing," he
muttered. "How much do you want for this?"
"Three pounds ten," said the light. As Timaeus fumbled for change, it went
back to Sidney.
"Who's the artist?" it said. "Don't know."
"Hmm. Do you know who is depicted?" "No."
"Is it enchanted?"
Timaeus cleared his throat. "It puts out quite a magical field," he said,
"but it doesn't respond to any of the standard tests. If it has a function, we
haven't been able to divine it."
"Mmm," said the light, "that may be a problem. I suspect the statue is
worth more for its metal value than for either its artistry or magical function. But if it
was created for some magical purpose, dissipating the mana so that it may be melted down
may be difficult. Can you supply a provenance?"
Timaeus and Sidney exchanged glances. "I'm afraid not," said Timaeus. "I
don't deal in stolen goods . . ." said the light. "Ah, so that's it, eh? Evaded
customs, what?"
Sidney swallowed. Timaeus moved toward her. "Nonsense," he blustered.
The light cackled. "Don't worry, old man," it said. "Not the first
adventurer to cheat old Mort of his due. Nor the last, I should think." It cackled
again. "And I could tell you a story or two of my own adventuring days . . . but they
are long behind me." The light whizzed around the room again.
"Now then," it said. "We do have a few problems selling this object. Imprimis,
artist, subject, and provenance are unknown. Secundus, it's highly magical, and
no one knows why. Tertius, it's a damned lot of athenor to put on the market at
onceif we melt it down and sell the metal in ingot form, the local market for the
metal will certainly crash.
"And quartus, I could buy the thing myself, but it would take more of my
fortune than I care to commit. So I must either find a buyer and simply take a cut as a
go-between, or find investors to share part of the risk.
"So here's my offer. Sight unseen, I'm willing to pay ten thousand pounds argentum,
subject only to the proviso that the object must prove to be as you have described
itthe life-size statue of a human male, cast of pure athenor. If you are willing to
provide additional information, to let me test the object, and to give me a few weeks to
line up investors, I may be able to offer a considerably greater sum."
Timaeus's yearly income was two hundred pounds. He considered the amount exiguous, but
many a petty nobleman or haut bourgeois survived on considerably less. He choked
again and grabbed for his pipe as it fell.
Smoothly, Sidney said, "Well, it is a little less than we'd hoped to get. But it's
a reasonable offer."
"Ten th-thousand . . ." stuttered Timaeus. Sidney glared at him. "We'll
have to confer with the other members of our group," Sidney said hurriedly. "And
we'll think about your other offer, too." She hustled Timaeus outside as fast as she
could.
"You idiot," she said as soon as they were beyond the door. "You nearly
blew that." She walked him briskly down the street.
With shaking hands, Timaeus packed his pipe. "Ye gods," he said. "That's
enough to buy my father's demesne several times over."
"How do you think I feel?" she said. "Until the caverns, I'd never seen
more than ten pounds in a single place. But only an idiot accepts a first offer."
Timaeus bristled. "These mercantile considerations," he said airily, waving
one hand, "are beneath one of noble blood."
Sidney snorted. "Okay, okay," she said. "Let me do the bargaining, all
right?" She leaned away from Timaeus as he lit his pipe.
Thunder filled the street. Passersby dived for cover. A horse reared and whinnied,
overturning a cart. Sidney and Timaeus marched on innocently. Timaeus puffed deeply.
"Perhaps I'd better, madam," he said softly.
"And you'd better look at this." He opened his newly purchased book to a
color plate.
They stopped, and Sidney studied the painting. It depicted a man in his thirties
wearing archaic military dress and a prominent mustache. He had a rather silly grin on his
face. The legend underneath the portrait said, "Stantius III of the White Council,
last human king, captured by the forces of darkness at the Battle of Durfalus, 3708 of the
Modern Era."
It was the man depicted by the statue. There was no mistaking the mustache.
Sir Jasper de Mobray, KGF, whizzed about his shop, polishing things invisibly and
absentmindedly. He judged that he'd hooked them. A minor
nobleman and a thief; ten thousand quid was so far beyond their experience as to be
staggering. Oh, they'd bargain a bit, but they'd bite.
On the other handthere was many a slip 'twixt cup and lip. It was hard to hide an
object as valuable as the one they described. They might elicit an offer from someone
else. Or someone else might steal it.
That could not be allowed. Under no circumstances could he permit the statue to fall
into the wrong hands.
It depicted Stantius III. He was certain. Timaeus's reaction upon viewing the color
plate had been unmistakable.
And the Sceptre of Stantius was glowing, in far-off Hamsterburg.
Sir Jasper was unsure of the import but certain there was a connection. Once, he had
been an adventurer himself. He had stories to tell, that he did; one didn't become a
nearly invisible, flying wizard of the mental arts, an adept of the Cult of the Green
Flame, and a Fullbright of the Loyal and Fraternal Sodality of the Boar by accident.
He had a sixth sense about these things. And he knew that the forces of darkness were
on the march. He had a vague feeling that the statue of Stantius was considerably more
valuable than its metal content implied. He had the feeling that it could move nations.
A small spark split off from the green light that was Sir Jasper. "Damon!"
said Sir Jasper.
"Yeah?" said the spark.
"Go to the Grand Boar. Tell himthe hunt is on." "Yeah, yeah.
Whatever."
"Get going, you!"
"All right, all right, you don't have to get testy." The spark zipped through
the plate-glass window.
Kraki stood in the doorway of Nick and Garni's flat, the body of Father Thwaite slung
over one shoulder, his free hand poised to knock. Nick had asked the barbarian to go to
the flat with Thwaite to make sure Garni was all right. "I'll meet you later,"
Nick had said.
There wasn't, Kraki noted, much point in knocking. There wasn't any door to knock on.
Whoever had broken in had not been a skilled locksmith. He'd simply smashed the door
open. Kraki approved.
"Hallo?" he said. "Garni Dwarf?" He walked into the room and
deposited Father Thwaite on a pile of rubble.
The apartment was a shambles. Whoever had searched it had broken the furniture up by
slamming it into the walls. Huge clumps of plaster lay on the floor; sections of wall were
down to the lath. Clothing and bedding were strewn about. Straw from the ripped-up
mattresses was everywhere.
The thundermug had been smashed; its smelly contents puddled in one corner.
Garni's equipment was hither and yon, most of it broken. Garni was nowhere to be seen.
"Fine thing," muttered Kraki to himself. He wandered over to the center of
the floor and pushed aside some rubble. Nick and Garni had said they had a secret
compartment in the floor. Kraki didn't really know where, but . . . Yes, the cracks around
those floorboards looked a little prominent. He pried them up with his fingernails.
The statue was still there, peering up uncertainly. Kraki put the floorboards back.
"Bad guys come," he said to himself. "Take dwarf as hostage. Search for
statue. Don't find."
He surveyed the room.
"Not very good searchers," he muttered. "Vhy not look under
floorboards?" He shrugged.
He looked around the room. There were only two ways inthe exterior door and a
window. He pulled the remnants of a bedstead to one end of the room, a position that gave
him a clear view of both apertures. He drew his sword, sat down, and laid the sword across
his knees. And waited.
Father Thwaite rustled. A moment later, he sat up, rubbing his eyes. He surveyed the
room. "Good lord," he said. "What happened here?" Kraki sighed.
IV.
"Hey," wheezed Vic. "Give an old man a peach?"
The fruit vendor glared at him and continued to pile apples onto the table.
Vic stood in the shade of the fruit stand awning and contemplated the statue of
Roderick II. Old Mad Roddy looksh good on horsheback, he thought. It was a brilliant
summer morning, already hot, the square redolent of dried horse dung and the smells of
fresh food. The women of the neighborhood went from stall to stall, stocking up on
produce, fresh-killed chickens, the occasional piece of meat.
A matron wearing a loose-fitting dress and sensible shoes flounced up. "Good
morning, Jeremy," she said. She had a serving boy in tow, with a small wooden wagon.
"Morning, ma'am," the vendor replied. "What'll it be today?" She
looked over the display. "Are those peaches fresh?"
"Aye, yes, ma'am," he said. "Just in today. Heard about the Sceptre of
Stantius?"
"I'll take three dozen," she said. The serving boy began to load them onto
his wagon. "In Hamsterburg? What about it?"
Vic coughed directly into the apple display. Neither seemed to notice. "It's
glowing," said the vendor. "News is all over town. They say there's going to be
a king again."
Vic placed both hands on the apple table and put his back into the cough. He gave a
tremendous, racking wheeze.
The matron laughed scornfully. "Some people will believe any . . . What is that
man doing?"
Vic noticed their attention. He redoubled his efforts. He wheezed, hacked, and choked.
He wheezed some more. Spittle flew into the apples. The matron was appalled.
"Shorry," gasped Vic. "Just my conshumption acting up." He coughed
again.
"Martin," said the matron in a faint voice. "Put those peaches
back." She walked rapidly away, giving Vic an uneasy glance. Somewhat embarrassed,
the servant boy began to take the peaches out of the wagon and put them back on the table.
The vendor cursed, thrust three peaches at Vic, and said, "Get the hell out of
here."
Vic cackled and grabbed them. He wandered out into the square, the sun warm on his
back. He gummed the overripe fruit toothlessly. He tore off bits of skin and tossed them
to the pigeon. "How do you like that?" he asked the bird.
The pigeon pecked at the peach skin. "It's okay," it said.
Glowing, eh? Vic thought. He stared up at Roderick again. I remember a shtatue. Long
ago, sho long ago. There was a shtatue that disappeared. And then . . .
He scowled. I ushed to be able to remember these things, he lamented. Lived beyond my
time, that'sh the problem. Hanging on too long. He wandered in a circle around the statue,
gumming his peaches, juice running down his chin, trying to remember . . .
And then it came to him. He almost swallowed a peach stone and doubled over, coughing.
Shtantiush! he thought in triumph, hawking spittle into the street. It'sh Shtantiush!
Someone kicked Garni in the ribs. There was a high-pitched giggle. His eyes still
closed, he shook his head. It felt fragile. This was the second time he'd been knocked
unconscious in a single week. Much more of this, and I'm in for irreparable brain damage,
he thought.
"I know you're awake, dork," said a high-pitched voice. Someone kicked Garni
in the ribs again.
He peeled open one eye. The foot that had kicked him was small. It was shod in a green
cloth boot with a curly toe. The foot belonged to an elf. Garni had never seen the elf
before. "Goodness gwacious," said Garni nastily. "It's a fearsome
elfy-welfy." He sat up.
The room was smalllittle more than a cubicle. It was bare of furniture. Garni sat
on the pine-plank flooring. There was a single, tiny window at the back of the room.
The elf sneered. "Gosh, Garni, old boy," he piped. "Guess you're in for
a rough time."
In addition to the elf, the room contained two mountains. At least, that's what they
looked like: they were human, but they were narrow at the top and wider farther down. They
had the false-fat look of goons everywhere: their stomachs and torsos were huge-with solid
muscle, not with fat. Garni didn't recognize the elf, but these guys had snatched him from
the apartment. They were grinning.
Outside the room, there was hubbub. It sounded like a marketpeople talking,
something clanging, the clop of horses. Garni could smell water and old, undisturbed dust.
"Where's the statue, dork?" said the elf.
Garni perked up. That meant they hadn't found it. "What statue?" he said.
That was a mistake. One goon picked him up, twisted an arm painfully, and threw him to
the other goon. Goon number two slugged Garni in the stomach several times. Hard.
Garni fell to the floor and retched. He wished he had a war axe. The elf giggled.
"Permit me to introduce myself," said Garni to the pine boards. "We
already know who you are, dork," chirped the elf.
"And who the hell are you?"
"I think maybe I'll ask the questions. Where's the statue, dork?"
"Gawrsh," said Garni. "The widdle elfy-welfy is twying to act tough. Ain't
he cute?"
Goon number one picked him up again. Garni's abdomen was starting to become rather
tender. "Cute," he gasped into the goon's face.
"Duh, boss?" said goon number one. "Yeah?"
"I don't think he's gonna talk, boss."
"Probly not," sang Montiel. "But I like watching dorks crawl."
"Okay," said the goon. Both thugs played kick the can with Garni's ribs for a
while.
"That's enough," said the elf after several minutes. Garni lay on the floor,
blood running into his beard. The elf sounded disappointed. "All for nothing,
dork," he said to Garni. "You're a hostage, anyway. Your friends will give up
the statue, I betafter we start sending 'em pieces of dork."
Garni tried to think of something witty, but his brain wasn't working too well just
then.
"You guard the room, Fred," said the elf as he minced out the door. All of a
sudden, the room was empty. "I hate pointy ears," said Garni to the air.
The Grand Boar was in full dress. His face was completely masked by a boar's head,
tusks curving skyward, glass eyes staring glassily, bristles bristling impressively. His
eyes peered out through the boar's mouth. He wore the robes of office and dark green
cummerbund that befitted his rank. He was sweating heavily.
Jasper, old man, delighted to see you," he said, despite the fact that all he saw
was a greenish glow. He offered the forefinger and pinky of his right hand in the ritual
Boar handshake. He felt something grab them and perform the shake.
"Manfred, it's been a while, hasn't it? And how is your darling Amelia?"
"Growing up too quickly for my taste," said the Grand Boar, shaking his
tusks. "Things have changed since I was a boy, I must say."
"The way of the world, old thing. The way of the world. Have some sherry?"
"Don't mind if I do." They wandered over to the side-board. A carafe of pale
brown liquid rose and poured two drinks. Both glasses rose into the air; one pressed
itself into the Grand Boar's hand.
The room was filling up with others, many wearing boar masks, though most far less
elaborate than Manfred's. They greeted one another with glad cries, gave the ritual
handshake, and talked of the latest news and the jokes in current circulation.
The room itself was luxuriously appointed, with overstuffed armchairs, footrests, and
heavy oaken tables piled high with books. At the back of the room was an elevated stage,
and behind it, the coat of arms of the order: a boar's head, and the motto of the Loyal
and Fraternal Sodality of the Boar, Adiuvo Te"I Aid Thee."
The Grand Boar laboriously climbed the short stairway to the stage and walked to the
lectern. The three Fullbrights of the Urf Durfal chapter sat on the couch behind him. They
were Jasper de Mobray, KGF and Magister Mentis; Wentworth Secundus Jorgensen, Magister
Alchimiae; and Morglop Morstern, cyclops, and a landsknecht of renown.
The Grand Boar cleared his throat. Silence grew as the members of the order noted his
presence at the lectern and seated themselves. The herald put a horn to his lips and blew.
The last vestiges of conversation died away at the sound.
"The hunter's horn sounds," said the Grand Boar. "And we prepare,"
responded several dozen voices.
"Ahem," said the Grand Boar. "I called this meeting in response to an
urgent summons from Brother Jasper. I thank you for responding so promptly. Actually, I
don't have the slightest idea what's up. Jasper?"
"Wait a minute," said an argumentative voice from the audience. It belonged
to a dour-looking dwarf in the back. "What about the reading of the minutes?"
"Oh, bother," said the Grand Boar. "I'll entertain a motion to dispense
with the reading of the minutes."
"So moved," said a bored-looking woman in black leather garb, wearing an
eyepatch.
"Second," said several voices. "Is there any dissent?"
The dwarf said, "Yes!" in a firm voice.
The Grand Boar sighed. "All right, all right," he said. "All in favor,
say aye."
There were scattered ayes.
"What are we voting on?" asked a puzzled voice.
Testily, the Grand Boar said, "All right, we'll do that again. All in favor of
dispensing with the reading of the minutes, say aye."
There was a chorus of firm ayes. "All opposed?"
The dwarf was the only one who said "Nay." "That's that, then,"
said the Grand Boar. "Jasper?"
The green glow moved from the couch to the front of the stage. "Wait a
minute," said the dwarf.
"Yes, Brother Horst?" said the Grand Boar irritably. "Whatever the
Fullbright has to say is new business." "So?"
"Old business comes first," said the dwarf in a satisfied tone. There were
groans from the audience.
"Really, Horst," said the Grand Boar. "Things would go so much faster
if"
The dwarf shook his head determinedly. "Rules is rules," he said.
"Bloody hell," the Grand Boar muttered under his breath.
"Knew we should have blackballed the blighter," said a voice in the audience.
"Move to dispense with the old business and move straight to the new
business!" said the woman in black.
"Second!" "Right!" said the Grand Boar. "All in favor?"
Lots of ayes.
"Opposed." "Nay," said the dwarf. Everyone glared at him.
"Finished, are we?" demanded the Grand Boar. The dwarf folded his arms and
jutted his beard.
"Well, then. Jasper, if you please"
"You're supposed to open the floor," said the dwarf. "Someone sit on
him, please," said the Grand Boar.
There was a scuffle at the back of the room. The dwarf shouted something
incomprehensible as several members sat on him.
"Sure you don't want to be Grand Boar?" Manfred whispered to Wentworth.
"I'd resign in an instant."
"Not a chance," Wentworth whispered back.
"Thank you, Brother Manfred," Jasper said loudly. The Grand Boar seated
himself. "As you may have heard," said the point of green light, "the
Sceptre of Stantius, a relic of the long-lost human empire kept in the safekeeping of the
Lord Mayor of Hamsterburg, is reported to be glowing."
"Aye," said a white-beard from the rear of the room. "And legend has it
that this foretells the accession of a new true king of the human realms." There was
a skeptical buzz.
"Be that as it may," said Jasper. "This morning, I was visited by two
adventurers, one Timaeus d'Asperge, a fire mage, and his associate, Sidney Stollitt.
Neither is a member of our society.
"They reported to me that they had acquired a life-size statue of a human male,
cast in solid athenor."
My words and Good lords rose from the assemblage.
"They did not tell me, but through my magical powers I divined, that the statue
depicts Stantius the Third, the last human king, the last to hold the Sceptre of Empire,
now known as the Sceptre of Stantius. They also reported that the statue emanates strong
magical power, the source and purpose of which they do not know . . ."
There was a stir from the couch.
"Yes, Brother Wentworth?" said Jasper. That worthy rose and came to the
lectern.
"There may be a connection," he said. "This morning, I did a magical
scan of the city, a simple alchemical process I use to calibrate my equipment. I noted a
strong source of magical energy that I had never previously detected. Extraordinarily
strong, Brother Jasper; only the magical protections about the grand duke's castle
register more strongly at the present time."
"Hmm." "I traced the emanations to a flat in the Five Corners parish-an
unlikely area to find such powerful magic, you'll agree." There were
murmurs of assent; Five Corners might not be the worst slum in Urf Durfal, but it was
not far from it. "The inhabitants of the flat, a human male and a dwarf, refused to
permit me entry or to provide any explanation. Their landlady told me that their names
were Garni ben Grimi and Nick Pratchitt."
"Yes?" "Further inquiries revealed that Pratchitt is a partner in
Stollitt and Pratchitt, a firm that does guard work, assembles expeditions into the
caverns, and, per rumor, dabbles in theft and the sale of smuggled goods."
"The selfsame Stollitt who visited me this morn?" "I do believe
so."
"Then the powerful object you detected may also be this statue." "It
would seem so."
"If the object is as powerful as you indicate "It must be of
world-shaking import."
There was silence in the room.
"I venture to suggest," said Jasper, "that there is some connection
between the appearance of this statue and the reports from Hamsterburg. Precisely what
this connection may be, and what this may mean for the free peoples of the globe, I cannot
say. I believe it important that we obtain this statue for further study."
The cyclops spoke from the couch in a deep, grating voice. "Ish is at war with
Easterlings," he said. "Is connection? Do trolls move to prevent human
king?"
There was silence as the Boars considered this.
"What do you ask of us?" the Grand Boar said to Jasper.
"I have opened negotiations with d'Asperge and Stollitt toward the purchase of the
statue," said the green light. "They're well aware of the mere monetary value of
that much athenor. . . . I may need to call upon the Sodality's financial resources to
close the deal."
"Would you care to phrase that as a motion?" said the Grand Boar. "Er .
. . I'm not up on the niceties of the rules of order," Jasper said sheepishly.
A man clad in forest green spoke: "I move that Brother Jasper de Mobray, a
Fullbright of our assemblage, be permitted access to all the treasure and wealth of the
Urf Durfal chapter of this order for the purpose of purchasing the athenor statue of
Stantius the Third, subject to an accounting of all expenditures." There were several
seconds.
"Any opposed?" said the Grand Boar.
There were sounds of struggle from the back of the room. Horst the dwarf rose to his
feet and managed to shout, "Nay," before several others dragged him back down.
"Carried by acclamation," said the Grand Boar. "Also," said
Morglop.
"What's that?" asked Jasper.
"This statue, it must not go to ones who would misuse it. We must protect
it."
"Good idea," said Jasper. "Will you take on that task?"
"If you wish," said the cyclops, resting one hand on the hilt of his
broadsword.
"I'll go too," said Wentworth.
"Good fella," said the cyclops and slapped Wentworth, not the beefiest of
men, on the back. The impact propelled him off the stage and into the first row.
"Many sorrows," said the cyclops, peering over the edge of the stage.
V.
Timaeus and Sidney stood in the shattered doorway. "Boy," said Sidney,
"Nick is messy, but this is ridiculous."
"Dwarf is gone," said Kraki, rising, his sword in his hands.
"Beg pardon?" said Timaeus. He and Sidney came into the room and looked at
the chunks of plaster and smashed furniture with bemusement. Father Thwaite stood up a
little unsteadily. "The place was like this
when we got here," he said. "Kraki believes that someone came, searched for
the statue, failed to find it, and snatched Garni as a sort of consolation prize."
"The statue's still here?" said Timaeus.
"Yah," said Kraki, stamping on the floorboard. "Is here."
"This is most upsetting," said Timaeus. "Sidney, perhaps we ought to
sell the statue before"
Timaeus broke off. There were footsteps and giggles from down the corridor. "Hold
that thought, doll," said Nick Pratchitt's voice, "just let me get my keys. . .
."
Nick stood in the doorway, the servant girl from the inn under one arm, keys in the
other hand. Openmouthed, he surveyed the wreckage. "Holy maloney," he said.
"Good morning, Mr. Pratchitt," said Sidney icily. "Perhaps you would
introduce us to your companion."
"Ohmigawrsh," said the wench, looking at the rubble.
Nick cleared his throat. "Iah, hadn't expected you all back so soon,"
he said.
"Clearly," said Timaeus, enjoying himself. "Garni's gone, you
know." "Huh?" said Nick.
"Bad guys snatch," said Kraki. "But statue still here."
"Nickie?" said the wench. "Are we stayin' here? Cause I gotta be back at
the inn by"
" `Nickie'?" said Sidney in a dangerous tone, advancing toward Nick
Pratchitt.
At that instant, the window shattered with a shocking clash. A multilimbed, ochre body
tumbled into the room. It righted itself on batlike wings and thrust a sword toward Kraki,
the closest figure in the room.
The barbarian ducked, raised his own sword, and faced off against the demon.
There was a clap of thunder, the noise of a teleporting body displacing the air. In the
center of the room, another demon floated, this one a sharktoothed furry little creature.
It darted toward Sidney, snarling.
She drew her own blade and backed toward the door.
The wench screamed and scrabbled back down the hall, tripping over debris. Yet a third
demon, yellow eyes glaring from within a cloud of dark smoke, appeared, right behind Nick.
"Watch out, Nick," yelled Timaeus. Nick spun and backed into the room drawing
his own blade, a simple dagger.
Father Thwaite searched desperately through the rubble. He needed brandy . . . brandy .
. . He knew Nick had some, and it must be somewhere in all this stuff.
Caught between two demons, Nick and Sidney fought back-to-back. The toothy creature
darted for Sidney's leg, but she struck it a glancing blow, and it backed off, bleeding a
yellow fluid. The smoky demon gave a disconcerting, hollow laugh, and spat a line of flame
toward Nick. He dodged. "I told you to go back to the apartment!" screamed
Sidney. "To protect Garni and the statue . . . And look what you"
Nick spat at his opponent, hoping that the demon's use of flame meant it was
fire-aligned and that water would harm it.
His spittle did no apparent damage. "I sent Kraki and Father Thwaite," he
said defensively. "Anyway, I"
Timaeus released his spell. A dart of flame shot across the room and through the body
of the smoky demon. The dart passed through the smoke, leaving a hole-but smoke expanded
to fill the hole again. Flames shot through the doorway to start a fire in the stairwell.
The demon repeated its strange, bass laugh.
"You jerk!" yelled Sidney, dodging her demon again. It bit her in the
shoulder. She stabbed at it gingerly with her sword, trying not to injure herself.
"The point is, what the hell were you doing?"
Father Thwaite was chanting now, shouting some prayer across the room.
Nick's demon was closing, moving slowly across the space between them; Nick swiped at
it with his dagger, but the weapon had no effect on the discorporate creature.
"What's it to you?" shouted Nick angrily. "You've made it clear
that"
"We're sitting on trouble," said Sidney, "and you're crawling into some
tart's skirts. OW!"
Father Thwaite sprinkled brandy over the toothy demon, brandy that glowed with blue
light. The demon screamed and dissolved into nothingness. Some of the brandy entered
Sidney's wound, stinging terribly.
Thwaite flung the rest of the brandy toward the smoky demon. It disappeared with a
snap.
The last of the demons climbed out the window into daylight, Kraki thrusting after it
with his sword, a long, ragged tear in its wing.
For a moment, there was peace in the room.
"I'm tired of your constant carping," shouted Nick, turning to face
Sidney,'his dagger in his hand. "All I get from you is"
"Carping! Is that what you" Sidney yelled.
"Someone had better do something about that fire," said Timaeus. The
stairwell was still burning. Sidney and Nick continued to yell at each other.
"Hokay," said Kraki, walked into the hall, unbuttoned his fly, and urinated
onto the flames.
"Yes!" shouted Nick. "Carping! `I don't like this, I don't like that.' I
remember when you used to think that we"
"Ahem," said Timaeus.
"You're the one that screwed it up, Nicholas Pratchitt!" yelled Sidney.
"I was quite content to be your partner and not your"
"Good day, goodwife," said Timaeus loudly.
Nick looked at the wizard. Timaeus pointed toward the doorway.
A plump, middle-aged woman stood there. "Mrs. Coopersmith," Nick groaned. It
was his landlady.
She entered the room and looked around. She grew grim. "I knew I should never have
rented to a dwarf and a single man," she said. "More of your wild parties, I
suppose."
"What? Mrs. Coopersmith! This isn't our fault. We"
She turned to him and shook her finger. "I don't care whether it's your fault or
not, young man! I want you out! Now!" she shrieked.
"But Mrs. Coopersmith, the lease says"
"The lease doesn't say anything about smashing the walls! And fires in the hall!
And huge men urinating in the stairwell!"
Kraki came into the room and gave her a sheepish grin.
"Disgusting is what it is," she said. "There's an outhouse out back, you
know."
"We're paid up through the end of the month," Nick said defensively. It was
true. He and Garni had paid her from their share of the treasure.
"I want you out!"
Nick sighed heavily. "We can't," he said. "Not now."
"Out!" she yelled.
"Mrs. Coopersmith," said Sidney, "Nick has a legal lease. You want him
out, you've got to buy him out."
Mrs. Coopersmith wiped her hands on her apron and scowled. "We'll see about
that," she said with determination and flounced away. Thwaite bound up Sidney's
wound. "Where did those things come
from?" Timaeus wondered, fumbling through his pouch for some pipeweed.
Nick frowned. "First someone snatches Garni, then demons show up," he said.
"I get the feeling that too many people know about this statue. Maybe we should move
it. . . ."
"Where?" said Sidney. "How are we going to get it out of the
neighborhood without attracting attention?"
"Don't worry," said Kraki. "I am here. I protect statue."
"Of course, of course, thank you, Kraki," said Timaeus, packing his pipe.
"Perhaps we should simply accept de Mobray's offer. It does seem as if the statue is
becoming too hot a potato for us to handle, and . . . Hello? Can we help you?"
Someone stood in the doorway. He (she? it?) wore a brown monk's robe that fell to the
floor. The robe's cowl was deep, so deep no hint of a face could be seen. The cowl turned,
scanning the room. Silently, the figure held out an envelope.
"What do you want?" said Sidney.
The figure wafted the envelope back and forth. "Say something," Sidney said.
Thee was a faint, dry whisper, like a distant wind. "Something," it sighed.
"Everyone's a comedian," Sidney snarled and grabbed the note. She sniffed.
The envelope was perfumed and tied with a ribbon. It was addressed to Magister Timaeus
d'Asperge, No. 12, Cobblers Lane, Apt. 1.
"For you," she said, handing the letter to Timaeus. The wizard raised an
eyebrow and opened it.
It was written in a delicate hand on expensive rag paper. The ink was
the color of dried blood. Timaeus scanned a few lines, then read the whole letter
aloud:
To Magister Timaeus d'Asperge:
My dear boy! I cannot tell you how thrilled I was to hear of your daring escapade in
the Caverns of Cytorax. When first we met, I thought you rather unprepossessing, I am
ashamed to admit. I should have known that there was more to you than met the eye. After
all, a scion of the House d'Asperge must of necessity be destined for greatness! Athelstan
needs more young men of your fortitude and enterprise.
Timaeus preened. Sidney snorted.
Per report, you acquired a certain remarkable piece of statuary in the course of your
expedition. An individual whom I have the honor of representing is interested in acquiring
this item. In fact, he was quite forceful in expressing his eagerness to me. He has
authorized me to make an offer of Ј20,000 argentum for its delivery.
Timaeus stuttered over "twenty th-thousand."
The offer strikes me as more than generous, and I trust that it will meet with your
approval. In the spirit of friendship, however, let me say that my principal is not a
gentleman who brooks refusal. When frustrated, he has a tendency to become quite petulant.
To speak of such things is painful, yet I believe it is my duty to say that, should this
offer be refused, we may be compelled to take more forceful steps toward the object's
acquisition.
Under the circumstances, I believe it best to preserve a certain air of mystery. Hence,
I will say only that
I remain, your faithful and loving friend,
. . . And there it broke off. There was no signature, only a drop of dried blood at
bottom right.
"Twenty thousand pounds is a lot of money," said Nick.
"I don't like the tone," said Thwaite. "And I don't like that." He
pointed to the robed apparition. The cowl turned to face the priest, but the figure had no
other reaction.
"The note is obviously not from Garni's kidnappers," said Sidney. "Or
they'd mention him."
"Yah," said Kraki. "If ve sell statue, kidnappers be upset."
"I would dearly like to be rid of the damned thing," said Timaeus. "I
say we accept."
Thwaite moved faster than Sidney would have believed possible for a middle-aged wino
with a hangover. He darted to the doorway and threw back the creature's cowl.
Where the figure's head should have been, a bleached skull grinned. It turned atop a
bony spine and studied each of the room's occupants in turn. Skeletal fingers reached up
and flipped the cowl back in place.
"Do you want to deal with that?" Thwaite hissed. There was silence for a
moment.
"I'll deal with anyone whose silver clinks," said Nick.
Timaeus eyed Nick skeptically. "Under the circumstances," Timaeus said,
addressing the cowled figure, "I believe we must refuse the offer." The cowl
faced him and nodded once. The figure glided away.
The cowled lich glided down Cobblers Lane. It was annoyed. It was terribly annoyed.
This idiot idea of wandering about the city had been the damnable baroness's notion.
"The entire population will flee in terror," it had told her. "Skeletons
just don't walk the streets of this city, not in broad daylight."
"You'll wear a robe," she had said, "with a cowl."
"Oh, fine," the lich had whispered. "A robe with a cowl. Dandy. And
suppose some religious nut wants to confess to me, eh?"
"You'll handle it," she had said impatiently.
"I'll handle it," it had said. "No doubt I shall. I don't see you volunteering
to gad about in the daytime."
"I've had a bad night," she had said, "and I don't want any back
talk." "I'll stick out like a sore thumb."
"You'll do as you're damned well told."
It gave a soundless sigh and hesitated in front of an alley opening. It looked up the
street to make sure it wasn't observed.
But it was observed. A peasant in an oxcart was gawping at it. The oxcart was
filled with dead fish and was moving slowly down the street. Damnation, thought the lich.
It put its back to the nearest building and
tried to act nonchalant. It didn't feel in the least nonchalant. No one goes around in
full robes on a hot summer day, it thought to itself bitterly. Not even the devoutest of
monks. Damn the bitch.
The oxcart moved down the street, slowly, slowly. The damned peasant's head swivelled,
his eyes tracking the lich as his oxcart moved, his
mouth agape. It's a wonder flies don't crawl down the damned man's throat, the lich
thought.
Finally, the peasant turned the corner. With relief, the lich glided into the shadows
of the alley. From here, hidden by shadows, it had a good view of the door to number
twelve. It waited to see what the humans would do.
Really, it told itself, I wish they had accepted the offer. It's going to be so much
more work this way.
It sighed again. The baroness was a harsh mistress, it told itself. She made her
servants work their fingers to the bone.
Literally. It chuckled dryly.
VI.
Kraki had a broom. He was sweeping energetically. Plaster dust flew about the room.
"Cut it out," said Nick.
"Ve clean up, yes?" said Kraki.
"Why bother?" said Nick. "I have a suspicion I'm going to be moving
soon, no matter what we do." Kraki shrugged and dropped the broom. Timaeus lit his
pipe. The explosion knocked more plaster loose from the
walls. After the flames died down, he said, "And now what shall we do?"
"You said you wanted to sell," said Sidney.
"On reflection," said Timaeus, "I deem that inadvisable. We can expect a
ransom note for Garni to show up sooner or later. I suspect it will demand the statue.
Would you rather have the money or the dwarf?"
"Now you mention it" said Nick.
Father Thwaite stared at him. "Garni ben Grimi is your friend," he
said pointedly.
"All right, all right," said Nick. "But look . . . tracking people down
is something Sid and I do all the time. We ought to be able to find Garni and spring
him."
"Oh yeah?" said Sidney. "We don't have much in the way of clues."
"I want to start with Jorgesen," said Nick.
"Who?" "Wentworth something Jorgesen, the alchemist who showed up at the
apartment this morning," said Nick. "It's the only name we've got to work with.
If he isn't involvedand I bet he is, somehowthen maybe he'll help us. And it
looks like we'll need help, if demons and stuff keep on showing up and trying to grab the
statue."
"A reasonable supposition," said Timaeus. "I, for one, want to find out
more about this statue."
"What do you mean?" asked Sidney.
"My dear, are you aware of the magical properties of athenor?" "Huh? I
know they make rings and stuff out of it."
"Athenor is one of the few metals that can hold mana, the essence of magic.
Consequently, it is used in the creation of magic rings, amphorae for the imprisonment of
djinn, magical arms and armor, pentacles for demonologists . . . the list is endless. A
ton of the stuff is an inconceivable quality. There must be some record of
the statue's creation, some hint of its purpose. At the university, I can"
"Okay, sure," said Sidney impatiently. "But here we sit on top of the
damn thing, and you want to run off and do research? I say we get Garni back, sell the
statue, and"
"Jasper said it himself," said Timaeus, puffing deeply. "If we can
supply a provenance and some idea of the object's intended function, we can command a
considerably greater price."
"Look," said Sidney, "we're going to have to send people off looking for
Garni, right? And some are going to have to stay here to protect the statue. Judging by
the fact that Garni's been snatched and we've been attacked by demons, all in the space of
a couple of hours, whoever stays here is going to have plenty of things to worry about. I
don't like the idea of splitting our strength further. And you're our only wizard . .
."
"Thwaite can stay," said Timaeus with irritation. "He handled the demons
quite well, I thought."
"Thank you," said Father Thwaite in surprise.
Timaeus waved a hand in acknowledgment. "And who other than I could do the
research? Shall we sent Kraki?"
"Yah, I go," said Kraki.
"He'd probably burn down the library," muttered Sidney. "I don't like
it, butgo. Get back here as quickly as you can."
"You going to come with me?" asked Nick.
"N-no," said Sidney, "I don't think so. You've got about the same skills
and contacts as Iwhy don't you take Kraki for muscle?"
"Good," said Kraki, flexing his pectorals. "Ve kill people until they
tell us vhere dwarf is, yah?"
"Something like that," said Nick with a grimace. "Come on." The
lich was doing its best not to think.
It was bored. Mortally bored. Bored beyond human comprehension. Bored as only the
millennia-dead can be bored.
It must be hot, it thought, then suppressed the thought. Empty the mind, that was the
trick. Empty the mind, let time pass without notice. Bored.
It thought the day was hot. But it had no way of knowing for sure. The sun was
bright. The sidewalk shimmered. But the lich had no body to feel warm or cold.
Bored. A fly landed on its robes. A flicker of interest passed through the lich, then
died. The fly walked into the cowl and around on the lich's skull. The lich felt no
disgust, no squeamishness. It had no stomach with which to feel disquiet.
Noon was approaching. The lich felt no hunger. Bored.
An attractive woman walked by. The lich felt no attraction. Bored.
Nick and Kraki left the building across the street. At last, thought the lich. It
waited until they turned the corner. Then, it began to follow. The cowled robe glided down
the street. Small children gaped. The
religious bowed their heads in respect. Some of the more magically sensitive felt a
chill and made a gesture of warding.
I do stick out like a sore thumb, thought the lich in mortification. Damn damn damn
the bitch.
It worried that Nick and Kraki would spot it. It hung back. It could feel the life
force burbling through their bodies, the fragile taste of life in the distance. It allowed
itself, briefly, to feel a desire to crush that life, to drain it to fuel its own
half-living existence-then followed, followed its life sense, followed with no need to
keep its prey in line of sight.
It glided on.
Garni was getting hot. The room was stifling.
He studied the room's only window. It was pretty small. On the other hand, he was
pretty small, too. He just might be able to squeeze through it. He leapt up, grabbed with
both hands, and pulled himself onto the sill. He peered through the window.
There was a river down there. It passed underneath the building . . . Aha! He must be
on the Calabriot Bridge. It was one of four over the River Jones, six if you counted the
two bridges to Nob Island. Of the four, it was the only one with buildings along both
edges. There were shops all up and down the bridge, mostly goldsmiths and jewellers.
The door opened suddenly. One of the goons stood there-Fred, the elf
had called him. "Hey!" said Fred. "Get away from there!" He ran
into the room and pulled Garni away from the window.
"I'm not going to jump," Garni said. Fred put him down heavily. "Sure
you ain't," said Fred. "I ain't gonna let ya. Chow time." He went back to
the door and fetched a bowl of stew.
It looked unappetizing, but Garni ate anyway. Gods only knew when he would get another
meal. Fred, Garni reflected, was obviously not too bright. Dwarves are heavier than water.
Jumping from the window would have been suicide.
"Dja year about the scepter?" said Fred, watching the dwarf eat. "The
what?" said Garni.
"The scepter thing. In Hamsterburg. They say it's glowing or something."
"So?" said Garni.
"Means there's gonna be a new king. Or something."
Garni stared at the goon suspiciously. "So what's that to me?" he said. Fred
colored. "I dunno," he said defensively. "Just tryna make conversation.
Sheez."
"Okay, okay," said Garni. "I'm done."
Fred took the bowl and left the room, muttering to himself. He locked the door behind
him.
Garni went back to the window and stared down at the river. A new king. Garni scowled
into his beard. His grandfather had been the dwarven king. But upon his death, the gods
had chosen another, not of Garni's line. That's the way it happened, the mantle of
kingship descended on someone's shoulders, someone chosen by the gods. It could be anyone.
But Garni's family had been forced to leave Dwarfheim. There was nothing personal in
the deportation order; it was just good political practice. You didn't want to leave
potential malcontents lying around.
A barge passed under the bridge. Garni wondered if he could leap into the
bargebut it was to his right, not directly beneath the window. Too bad.
The elves had a king, too. So did the cyclopes. So did all the free peoples, except for
the humans. Garni had always wondered about that. They'd had one, long ago. And if the
goon was to be trusted, they'd have one again soon.
Garni wondered what that might mean.
The sign overhead said YARROW'S ALCHEMICAL EMPORIUMMORE POTIONS FOR THE PENCE!
Nick pushed the door open. A bell tinkled. "Be with you in a minute, Nick," said
Mike Yarrow. He turned to an old woman with a head scarf. "These leeches will suck
those bad humors right out, Mrs. Anver," he said. "Just put the little bastards
right on the boil and let them leech away."
"Oh, thankee, Master Yarrow," she said bobbing her head. "Thankee
kindly." Clutching her package tightly, she hobbled out the door.
Kraki wandered the shop and stared at shelves full of vials, bottles, alembics, paper
packages, and tubes. He picked up a small bottle and stared into it. A gnarled homunculus
hung in a brownish liquid. Kraki wondered what it was but was unable to read the label. He
shook the bottle, but the homunculus remained motionless.
"Sold any elixirs of youth lately, Mike?" asked Nick Pratchitt. Yarrow
laughed. "Nothing like that," he said. "Business is pretty slow."
"Too bad," said Nick. Mike Yarrow was a self-taught alchemist; he had
neither the money nor the connections to gain a place at the university, nor the
brilliance to win a scholarship. Without a degree, his clientele was restricted to the
poor and the miserly. Business was always pretty slow. "I'm trying to find an
alchemist," Nick said.
Yarrow raised an eyebrow. "You've come to the right place." "No, a
different alchemist."
Kraki leaned on the counter. It creaked dangerously. "Ve looking for this guy,
Ventvorth something."
"Wentworth Jorgesen. Master alchemist," said Nick.
"Oh, sure," said Yarrow. "He's got a shop on Fen Street. Good
reputation, pretty swank clientele. Comes from County Meep originally. I'm told he used to
be an adventurer."
"Do you know where he lives?" asked Nick.
"Afraid not," said Yarrow. "He probably has a villa someplace."
Nick gave a whistle. "He's rich, huh??"
"I guess so," shrugged Yarrow. "He's one of the better-known wizards in
the city."
"Well, I guess the shop is a place to start. You have the address?"
"Sure, got it right here." Yarrow pulled out an address book.
The bell on the door tinkled again.
"Yes, sir?" said Mike Yarrow. "How can I help you?"
The lich picked up a straight razor from the counter. It leaned over and opened
Yarrow's throat.
The alchemist fell back against a shelf. Bottles crashed to the floor. His hands
scrabbled. Blood pumped out onto the counter.
The lich spoke a Word. It tapped Yarrow's ebbing life force and used it to fuel the
spell. A shame, really, the lich thought. It bore the man no
animus. And killing innocents was a messy business. Dangerous. The authorities tended
to get upset. Unfortunately, it knew no spell to compel the living to tell the truth. The
dead, nowthat was a different matter.
It spoke another Word. The corpse behind the counter rustled. "Do you hear
me?" whispered the lich.
A sepulchral voice responded. "Yes."
"What did your last customer want?" whispered the lich. "Leeches,"
said the corpse tonelessly.
What? "What did they want leeches for?" "For her husband's boils,"
said the corpse.
The lich gave a silent sigh. Truth spells have their drawbacks, it thought. "You
were visited a few minutes ago by two men," it whispered. "Were you not?"
"Yes." "What were their names?"
"Nick Pratchitt andI don't know the other." Good. "They wanted
leeches?"
"No." "What did they want?"
"The address of an alchemist." "Were you not an alchemist?"
"Yes."
The lich was beginning to get irritated. "Whose address did they want?"
"Wentworth Jorgesen."
"And the address?" "Seventy-six Fen Street." Excellent.
With the last of Mike Yarrow's life force, the lich shaped another spell and reported
to its mistress.
VII.
Wentworth Secundus Jorgesen locked the door to his shop and put up a `Closed' sign.
"Ready?" asked Jasper.
"Righto," said Wentworth. He opened a door and led Jasper and the cyclops up
a flight of stairs.
"Really," said Jasper, shedding a dim green light on the wallpaper, "I'm
looking forward to this. I haven't done anything adventurous in, oh, ages." They came
to the roof. Most of it was sloping orange tile, but there was a small landing area.
"Taxi!" shouted Wentworth.
"We not walk?" asked Morglop, a little uneasily.
Off in the distance, a black spot moved among the clouds. There was no response to
Wentworth's shout.
"Why waste the time? Hoy!" yelled Wentworth. "I say! Taxi!" He
waved his arms wildly. The black spot moved on, oblivious. "Damn," muttered the
alchemist.
There was another moving spot, this one a little larger and lower, barely clearing the
minaret of a nearby temple. Morglop sighed, then put two fingers in his mouth and gave a
loud whistle.
The flying carpet swooped down and landed on the roof.
"Hah-doh," said the driver. It was a small, monkeylike being with wings. It
wore a turban. "Where be going, sahib?"
The Boars got onto the carpet and sat down. Morglop looked distinctly unhappy.
"Cobblers Lane, between Jameson and Thwart. Chop-chop." "Two
shillingi," said the creature, holding out a paw.
"One shilling sixpence," said Wentworth briskly.
The creature bowed its head meekly. "Honest afreet mek honest bargain," it
whined. "Small one at home ver' hungry. Two shillingi."
"What cheek," said Wentworth. "You creatures don't have children, and
Cobblers Lane is a zone six destination. The fare is one shilling sixpence, and you'll be
paid when we get there. Cobblers Lane, and yarely now, or I'll have you up before the
licensing board."
The creature chattered in rage as the carpet swooped away. Morglop closed his eye.
The lich stood in the basement of Wentworth's Fen Street shop. It was dark, gloomy, the
only illumination a thin line of brilliant sunshine, shining through a crack in the metal
doors that lay flat in the sidewalk above. A stair led to those doors; they were opened
only during the morning, when deliveries were made to Wentworth's shop.
About the lich lay bundles and bales, shelves stocked with bottles and packages. And
with it stood twenty-four zombies, in varying states of decay. One was Mike Yarrow's
corpse. No point in wasting a perfectly good deader, the lich thought to itself.
It was irritated. It was beginning to develop a headache. Why are humans always so
unreasonable? it thought. Ј20,000 was a substantial sum of money. And the baroness was
not a woman to cross lightly.
It sighed a soundless sigh. It's going to be so much more work this way, it thought.
For a moment, it longed to be in its grave. For just a decade or two. A little rest,
that's what it needed. A little rest.
Aha, it thought. It sensed Nick and Kraki's life force approaching. They were drawing
nearer.
It gestured. The zombies readied their weapons.
"Damn," said Nick. The door to the shop was locked and the sign said
`Closed'.
"Look," said Kraki, pointing up as a shadow passed over them. It was a flying
carpet. There were a number of figures on it. Nick recognized Wentworth by his monocle and
long, blond hair.
"Hey!" he shouted. "Wentworth! Hey!" There was no response.
"Now vhat?" said Kraki.
"Taxi!" shouted Nick.
A carpet swept to the street and came to a halt a dozen cubits away. Nick and Kraki ran
for it. "Follow that carpet!" yelled Nick to the afreet. He and Kraki tumbled to
the weave as the carpet yanked into the sky.
"Ah, now, sahib," said the afreet. "This be costing you."
"Ten shillings if we catch them," Nick promised the creature. "Two if we
fail."
"Ver' good, sahib, ver' good! We catch for sure," said the afreet
delightedly, bobbing its turban.
The carpet sailed through the azure sky, bright sun warm on their necks, a stiff breeze
blowing past. Slowly, they closed on the carpet ahead. "Ahoy!" shouted Nick.
"Ahoy the carpet!" He waved.
The lich swept the steel door back and sprang to the sidewalk. Its prey swooped into
the sky on a flying carpet.
The zombies halted, still in the cellar dimness.
For a long, long moment, the lich stared skyward. Finally, it got a grip on itself.
Frustration, it thought savagely; after five thousand years, you'd think you'd learn to
deal with frustration.
"I say," said a voice from behind. "What's all this?"
The lich turned. The speaker was a stout man in formal dress, carrying a walking stick.
"What's it to you, meat puppet?" the lich whispered harshly.
The man turned red. "Now see here," it said. "Merely because you're a
man of the cloth, you can't expect"
The lich threw back its cowl. Its skull grinned in the daylight.
The stout man's eyes bugged, then turned up in his head. He tumbled to the sidewalk,
his walking stick rolling into the gutter.
The lich reentered the basement and pulled the steel door closed. It felt faintly
better.
Definitely a headache, it thought. The pain was worse than ever. It wondered why these
ailments of the flesh still plagued it.
"My word," said Jasper. "Look behind us."
Wentworth turned and peered at the carpet following them. "Gadzooks!" he
said. "I believe that's Pratchitt. Who's the muscle boy?" "Don't
know," said Jasper.
Morglop emitted a faint moan. He was lying flat on the carpet, his hands clutching
desperately at the fringe.
"How'd they know we planned to spy on them?" asked Jasper. "Bloody
mysterious," said Wentworth, "but we've got to lose them. Afreet! We must lose
that carpet."
"No, sahib, is not possible." "Don't give me that, you monkey!"
It shook its turban sadly. "Reckless flying bad. License be yank. Against
regulation."
"One pound argentum if we lose them, you pirate."
"Now sahib be talking!" said the afreet. Suddenly, the carpet yanked into a
sharp turn. Morglop moaned a little louder.
Wentworth's carpet turned suddenly and increased speed. "Follow them!"
ordered Nick.
"Aye, sahib, aye," said the afreet, and their carpet turned, too. Nick and
Kraki leaned into the turn and clutched at the carpet edge.
"Vhat is problem?" grumbled Kraki. "Ve yust vant to talk to them."
Nick was tight-Tipped. "Evil flees where no man pursueth," he said.
"Vhat?"
"I wasn't sure Wentworth was involved, but he is. Otherwise, why would he run from
us?"
"Yah," said Kraki. "Maybe is demon summoner?" "Maybe,"
said Nick grimly.
The carpet swooped and turned sharply, dogging its prey. "They're still
following," said Jasper.
"This calls for strong measures," said Wentworth, pulling a flask from inside
his tunic. "Driver, loop back over them."
The afreet looked at him. "One shillingi."
With a curse, Wentworth tossed the creature a coin.
The carpet went into an immediate inside loop. For a long moment, the city was below
their heads. Morglop moaned again. "Bravo," said Jasper. Wentworth dropped the
flask. It tumbled toward their foe. . . .
Nick and Kraki looked up as the Boars' carpet flew overhead. A flask tumbled toward
them. "Evade!" shouted Nick.
Their carpet darted right. The flask exploded with a whump!
Kraki stood up. "Bastards!" he shouted, waving his fist. "Cowards!"
The carpet turned sharply, and he almost fell over the side. Nick grabbed him and pulled
him back.
"Be careful," Nick said.
Kraki drew his sword with a snick. "Fly under them," he told the afreet. The
afreet glanced at the sword worriedly. "I try, sahib," it said. They swerved
after the Boars' carpet. The Boars tried to lose their
pursuers. Their carpet swivelled around the minaret of a temple and climbed sharply
toward a cloud.
Suddenly, thick white fog hung around them. It was cool in the cloud. They broke out of
the mist. The other carpet was above and to the left. "Hah!" said the afreet.
"In blind spot."
"Where are they?" said Wentworth. He and Jasper scanned the sky. "We
lose," said the afreet confidently.
A sword came stabbing up through the carpet. It missed Morglop's thigh by inches. It
disappeared and stabbed up again, in a different place. "My carpet!" wailed the
afreet. Chattering in rage, it zoomed into a climb.
Everyone clutched the fibers desperately. Morglop's green skin couldn't turn white, but
it was definitely turning pastel.
The carpet zigged and zagged, almost tossing them off with each swerve. It dived
directly toward a temple dome and veered aside at the last instant. Doggedly, Nick and
Kraki followed. "Bad thing," said the afreet. "You pay if this carpet be
damage." Nick nodded.
The enemy carpet dived straight at a dome. Their own afreet anticipated the enemy's
last-minute swerve, turning before the other carpet did. Unfortunately, they turned left,
while the enemy carpet turned right.
When they rounded the dome, they saw the Boars flying off toward the east. The enemy
had gained distance in the trip around the dome. Nick and Kraki followed grimly. The enemy
carpet began to climb. The speeds of both carpets dropped as they gained altitude.
"Uh oh," said the afreet. "What's the matter?" said Nick.
"Heading for Morning Temple." "What's that?" asked Kraki.
Wentworth turned white. "No," he said. "Not there." The afreet
glared at him. "You want I lose?"
"Yes, but"
"Get flat on carpet. Minimize wind resistance."
"Ahem," said Jasper. "Sorry, brothers, but I believe it best that I meet
you at Cobblers Lane. . . ."
The point of green light flitted away from the carpet and headed north.
"Coward," muttered Morglop.
"You'd do the same, if you could fly," said Wentworth.
The cyclops peeled his eye open to see where they were heading. He shut it again with a
shudder.
The Boars' carpet broke into a sudden dive. It gained speed rapidly as it headed toward
a vast temple complex. White-domed buildings stretched
for nearly a mile by the River Jones, with manicured gardens among them. A wall kept
out the rest of the city.
"I follow?" said the afreet hesitantly.
"No," said Nick after a long pause. "Too risky." Their carpet broke
away.
"Vhat is problem?" asked Kraki. "Watch," said Nick.
The Boars' carpet was a mile up when it passed over the wall of Morning Temple. It
started to plummet.
"The whole temple's a null-magic zone," said Nick. "The Sons of the
Morning think magic is wrong. Unnatural. They won't use it."
Kraki watched, speechless. Only the momentum of the Boars' carpet kept it sailing over
the temple. It flapped in the breeze as it fell in a parabola.
"If they don't clear the far wall, they're dead," said Nick. They fell.
Wentworth pulled a flask from one of his many pockets and took a sip. They fell.
Morglop opened his eye and, mesmerized, could not shut it again. He stared grimly at
oncoming death.
They fell.
The wall approached. The afreet keened a prayer. They fell.
The wall was growing larger. Morglop made a choking noise. They fell.
They were going to hit. Wentworth began to turn transparent at the edges.
They cleared the wall. The magic came back.
The carpet snapped rigid. They slammed into its surface as it pulled upward. At the
bottom of its arc, it scraped the ground, but then they were aloft again.
"Grab me!" yelled Wentworth. Morglop took his arm.
The alchemist fluttered in the breeze like a flag. Only Morglop's grip kept Wentworth
from flying into the sky.
"What is it?" said the cyclops, surprised.
"I took a potion of weightlessness," said Wentworth, somewhat shamefaced.
"I didn't think we were going to make it."
"Nice of you to offer me sip," said Morglop, more than a little nastily.
"I only had the one dose," said Wentworth defensively. "There wasn't
time."
"Yah, sure." Morglop suddenly noticed that the buildings below looked awfully
tiny. He gripped Wentworth tight enough to make the alchemist squeak and closed his own
eye equally tight.
"They make it?" said Kraki.
"Think so," said Nick after a moment. "Where take sahib?" said the
afreet.
"Tell you what," said Nick slowly. "What say we ransack Wentworth's
shop? Since he's gone and all."
The barbarian grinned. "Sounds like fun," he said. "Back to Fen
Street," said Nicholas Pratchitt.
The lich stood in the basement, staring motionless at the ray of light that shone
between the steel doors. I need a drink, it thought. Or a smoke. Or a hallucinogenic drug.
Or anything. It really didn't matter.
Of course, it thought, I couldn't do anything with a drink. Except wet my robe.
If it didn't capture the humans, the baroness would use its skull for an ashtray.
Perhaps I ought to make a break for the city limits, it thought. No, that was a stupid
idea. The baroness would track it down. And outside the city, it was so much harder to
find victims.
The zombies stood around, motionless. They're no help, thought the lich, they're
brainless. Well, actually, not brainless. Their brains were rotting into mush, but they
did have brains of a sort. What I mean is, thought the lich, they don't have any
intelligence. They make me sick.
Well, not sick, exactly. It didn't have anything to feel sick with. They made it
feel as if it wished it could feel sick.
Or something like that.
All I have left to look forward to, thought the lich, is a bleak future of unremitting
labor in the cause of villainy.
Work, work, work.
It makes me sick, it thought. Well, not sick, it thought.
It wished it had thought these things through before it rose from the dead.
It wondered where Pratchitt was. It wondered what the hell it was supposed to do.
s x
The carpet deposited Nick and Kraki on the roof of Wentworth's shop. "I said two
shillings if we didn't catch them," said Nick. "But here's five."
"Thank you, sahib," said the afreet, kissing Nick's hand. "Thank you,
oh, thank you." It kissed his hand some more.
"Yeah, yeah, sure," Nick said; withdrawing his hand and wiping it on his
pants. The carpet zoomed away.
"Door is locked," reported Kraki.
"I'll open it," said Nick. He pulled a leather case from his coat pocket.
Inside were his lock-picking tools.
Kraki looked at them, grunted, and tore the door off its hinges. "Come on,"
he said, bounding down the stairs.
Footsteps sounded in the shop above. The lich looked up at the floorboards
speculatively.
It went to the interior stairway and floated up the steps. It opened the overhead
hatch.
"Hmm," said Nick, looking about the shop. "Quite a supply of healing
draught." He pocketed several small bottles.
"Bah," said Kraki. "Vhat are ve looking for?"
"Anything suspicious," said Nick. He sniffed. Was that the smell of rotten
meat?
"I think ve find it then," said Kraki. "What?" said Nick. He
turned.
A hatch in the wooden floor was open. The lich was rising up the stairs, its cowl
thrown back. Behind it, zombies followed.
"Mike!" said Nick, recognizing Yarrow's reanimated corpse. Kraki drew his
sword with a scritch of steel.
Nick backed toward the stairs to the roof, but the lich sped past him to block escape.
Kraki advanced on the zombies. "Yah hah!" he shouted. He whapped off Yarrow's
head. It tumbled to the floor.
"You killed Mike," Nick accused the lich, drawing his own blade. "Do
surrender, won't you?" whispered the lich. "I have the most splitting
headache."
Kraki chopped another zombie through the waist. It fell into two halves. Yarrow,
headless, put his pig-sticker through Kraki's shoulder. Kraki twirled, and chopped Yarrow
in half, too.
"Bah," he spat in disgust as he watched both halves squirm. "How can you
kill the dead?" He retreated, keeping his sword moving to ward off attack while he
considered the problem.
"No dice," said Nick to the lich. "Don't suppose you'd consider
surrendering to us?"
The lich made no reply, but gestured ritually and spoke a Word.
Nick thrust his epee into the brown robe. The blade bent into a curve as it grated
against bone.
Kraki waded forward, slicing the arms off the zombie facing him. He'd decided to chop
them up into bite-size pieces. They couldn't do much harm that way.
Nick's blade was useless, a thrusting weapon against a creature with no flesh to thrust
into. He threw the epee away and grabbed for the lich's arm, intending to break it. When
he touched the lich, he realized he'd made a mistake. Suddenly, he was weaktoo weak
to stand. He fell awkwardly to the floor.
Nick could feel weakness spreading from his limbs toward his vital organs, feel life
slipping away as the lich drained life force from his frame . . .
But apparently the lich wanted him debilitated, not dead. The creature moved away from
Nick, and strode toward Kraki's back.
"Watch out!" yelled Nick.
Kraki whirled and sliced into the brown robe. The lich's ribs shattered. Its skull went
flying.
A zombie arm grabbed Kraki's ankles and tripped the barbarian. He fell and hit his head
on the counter. While he was more or less defenseless, three zombies jumped him. Kraki
rolled around on the floor, ripping at rotting flesh, but more zombies joined in.
One zombie went and picked up the lich's skull. It carried the skull to Kraki and
touched it to the barbarian. Kraki went limp.
"Idiots," whispered the lich harshly. "Look at me! I've fallen all to
pieces." The zombies combed the room, searching for fragments of lich. Nick and Kraki
watched, weak as kittens, as zombies tied them up.
"Can I give my friend a healing draught for his shoulder wound?" asked Nick.
"No," whispered the skull petulantly. "Don't you fools know when to give
up?"
The zombies shouldered the two humans. They filed down the stairs and into the
basement.
As his eyes adjusted to the darkness and his nose to the stench, Nick marvelled. He had
never known these tunnels existed beneath the city.
"Foul unearthly vights," muttered Kraki sleepily. "I vill destroy you
all." He wrestled weakly with his bonds.
The living, reflected the skull, are a royal pain in the neck. Well, not in the neck,
perhaps, since it didn't seem to have one right now. A pain in the coronal suture or maybe
in the lower part of the parietal bone. Its headache was worse than ever-which was quite
distressing, considering that all it had left to ache was its head.
"There," said Wentworth. "Land there."
The carpet swept down to the flat slate roof of number eleven, Cobblers Lane. Morglop
staggered off and collapsed.
A point of green light was already hovering over the chimney pot. "There you
are," said Jasper. "Glad to see you made it."
"No thanks to you," muttered Morglop.
The upper stories of the building, like those of many in Urf Durfal, protruded out over
the street. Property taxes were based on a building's lot size; this was a way of gaining
extra room without paying higher taxes. The slate flags that covered the roof sloped
gently toward the edge of the building, but the shape of the building itself hid the Boars
from viewers in the street. Conversely, by peering over the gutter, they could watch
people going in and out of the building across Cobblers Lane-number twelve, Nick and
Garni's building.
"One pound, sahib," said the afreet, holding out a paw.
Wentworth, still weightless, was hanging by one arm from the chimney. "Oh,
bother," he said. "I don't have that much cash on me."
The afreet chattered its anger. "Sahib promise! Say one pound if lose pursuit!
This one lose bad persons! One pound!"
"I'll have to write you a check. Morglop, give me a hand, will you?"
"What?"
"Just hold on to me, will you? I need both hands."
While Morglop kept Wentworth from blowing away, the alchemist found a bottle of ink, a
slip of paper, and a quill. He trimmed the quill with a penknife. He put the bottle of ink
on the chimneyand it blew away. "Oh, bloody hell," said Wentworth.
"The ink's weightless too."
Not to be denied its payment, the afreet pursued the tumbling bottle and retrieved it.
"How can this be?" asked Morglop. "You drank potion. Ink bottle not drink
potion."
"It's magic, you twit," said Wentworth irritably. "That's part of the
enchantment. Covers ancillary items. Otherwise, to be truly weightless you'd have to strip
buck naked. Not the sort of sorcery a gentleman would practice, eh?"
He dipped his quill in the ink and began to write the check. After a few strokes, his
pen went dry.
He examined the tip of the quill and tried again. It went dry again. "I'll be
damned," he said. "The ink won't draw because it's weightless nothing to
push it down the quill. I'm sorry, my good, er, entity," he told the afreet,
"but I'll have to ask you to come to my office to pick up your money."
The afreet bared its teeth. "Is cheat! Is fraud! Carpet badly damage! Sahib be bad
man!"
Wentworth rolled his eyes. "Oh, really," he said. "Here's my card. Just
come to the office any time tomorrow, there's a good creature, and I'll pay you the
pound."
The afreet stared uncomprehendingly at the piece of pasteboard. It hopped up and down
on the carpet with its bandy and rather hairy little legs. "Pay now! Pay now!"
it screamed.
"Better pay," advised Jasper, hanging out over the edge of the roof.
"People in the street are beginning to stare."
Wentworth had a total of nine weightless shillings and four pence. Jasper had three
shillings eightpence. Morglop had four shillings sixpence ha'penny.
They dumped all this loose change into the afreet's outstretched paws. The creature's
lip's moved as it counted the money, snatching after one or another of Wentworth's coins
as the wind threatened to blow them away.
"I'm afraid that will have to do," said Wentworth in an injured tone. The
afreet glared at them, then took off, muttering to itself.
There was a sausage vendor in the street, Jasper noticed. The sausages smelt wonderful.
"I say," he said. "What are we going to do for lunch? We're flat broke,
now."
Morglop, who was feeling rather peckish, scowled.
VIII.
Being carried by zombies was not, Nick thought, particularly comfortable. One of his
bearers had no remaining flesh to speak of; its shoulder bone stuck painfully into Nick's
back. And the smell of rotting flesh was something awful.
The tunnel led to a chamber where torches flickered. Nick craned to see where they were
going.
A woman waited for them. She wore a flared, black dressan expensive one, Nick
judgedand a veil that obscured her features. The orcs that stood next to her wore
rusty armor and had large, ugly tusks. Given a choice, Nick thought, he'd rather look at
the woman.
They stood together next to an unlighted pit. Nick had a feeling he was going into the
pit. He hoped there wasn't anything nasty down there. Snakes, say.
"Hello, gorgeous," said Nick. "Hell of a way to pick up men."
The orcs chortled and elbowed each other. "Oi, Garfok," said one. "It's
da big guy."
"You," said Kraki weakly. "I should have killed you in caverns."
Nick glanced at Kraki. "Friends of yours?" he asked.
"Hah? Ve have met, yes. These are orcs who turned you to stone." "What
happened to you?" the Baroness Veronee asked the skull. "Don't ask," it
whispered.
"Take it to the house," she ordered one of the zombies, meaning the lich.
"And its bones, too. I'll fix you up later."
"As you wish," the lich whispered despondently. Some of the zombies departed.
"What am I going to do with you fellows?" she asked Nick and Kraki.
"Several possibilities spring to mind," said Nick.
The veil hid her smile. "You'd enjoy it less than you think," she said in a
throaty voice.
"We can have din-din," suggested Drizhnakh.
She glanced at the orcs. "Oh, no," she said. "They're far more valuable
as hostages."
"We doesn't have to kill them," said Garfok. "We can just whack off a
coupla arms. Da big one looks like he's got a lotta meat on him."
The stench of the zombies was strong in Nick's nostrils. "How can you guys think
of food with all this rotting flesh around?" he said.
"Don't bother me," said Drizhnakh. "How 'bout you, Spug?"
"I likes it," said Spug. "Makes me think of my mum's home cookin'."
Even the baroness looked faintly disturbed at that. "Throw them in the crypt,"
she said briskly.
Nick groaned inwardly. He'd been right. The orcs swung him up-then he plummeted down .
. . and smashed into damp stone. Experimentally, he struggled with his bonds. Nothing
seemed to be broken. Kraki landed with a thud nearby.
"Kraki," Nick gasped. "You okay?"
"No," said the barbarian. "Am very depressed."
By the dim light of the torches they saw a veiled face peer into the hole. "By the
way," said the woman, "in the unlikely event that you should escape, please tell
your companions that I shall not rest until the statue is restored to its rightful
owner."
"Who's that?" gasped Nick, still starved of air.
She gave a low chuckle. "Well may you ask," she said. "In the meantime,
please rest assured that you will again see the light of day-at least, if your friends act
reasonably."
"I vill kill you," said Kraki.
"That would be difficult," she said. "You won't die of thirst or
starvation. You'll find plenty of sewage and a more than adequate supply of live
prey." Somewhere, a rat squeaked. "See?" she said. "Ta, now."
Rats, thought Nick with relief. It's only rats.
The orcs gave a disturbing, rattling laugh as they pulled the massive stone slab over
the opening. It grated as it shut out the last vestiges of torchlight.
Nick and Kraki lay in darkness.
"Why do I get talked into these things?" said Nick. "Instead of spending
the afternoon in bed, I'm lying in a sewer with orcs standing guard." "Don't
vorry," said Kraki. "Soon, a maiden escaping from an evil
prince to whom her father has promised her in marriage vill flee through
the sewers and stumble upon us. Smitten vith my charms, she vill free us both."
"What?" said Nick.
"Or else," Kraki said, "a vizard, seeking to hire me to kill another
vizard who has been his enemy for a thousand years, vill summon us to his vizard's tower
by magic and free us from these bonds."
"I see," said Nick, struggling with the rope around his wrists. "What
makes you so confident?" A rat scampered over his body.
"Is inevitable," said Kraki philosophically. "Happens in all the best
sagas. First, you get thrown in pit. Then, you become king. Or something. You take the bad
vith the good. Don't vorry, Nickie. I am hero. Heroes don't die in sewers."
"Thanks, Kraki," Nick said. "I feel much better now."
Timaeus strode purposefully across the Common, puffing on his pipe. It was a pleasure
to be back in familiar surroundings, amid the Imperial architecture and carefully tended
greenery of the university. It hadn't been long since he'd left, but somehow the place
already seemed a little foreign.
Halfway across the green, he noticed that the sky ahead was filled not only with
gathering clouds, but with a pillar of smoke. He frowned and redoubled his pace toward
Scalency Hall, where the Department of Fire had its offices.
The pillar of smoke was rising from a window on the side of the building. Doctor
Renfrew, in the blue-tinted ermine and preshrunk silks of the Department of Water, stood
outside, amid a crowd of gawking undergrads. He was directing three water elementals,
dousing the surrounding grounds and nearby buildings to prevent sparks from carrying the
fire. Scalency Hall itself, built wholly of granite without supporting timbers, was
virtually indestructible, at least to firea necessary condition, given the number of
literally hot-tempered academic disputes that arose among the faculty whose offices it
contained.
"Good afternoon, sir," Timaeus addressed Renfrew. "What is
happening?"
Renfrew eyed, then ignored Timaeus. He shouted Words of power at his elementals;
clearly, keeping the playful undines about their tasks was occupying his full attention.
"Old Calidos has combusted at last," said an undergraduate gleefully.
"No test of the convolutions today!"
"Good heavens," said Timaeus, and broke into a run through the line of spray
about the hall.
"Wait!" yelled the undergraduate. "Come back. You could be
killed"
Timaeus muttered Words of power as he ran, puffing between syllables. He was damnably
out of shape. He could be killed; but it was not likely. Fire was his element,
after all.
The door to the halla slab of slate on brass hinges, wood being far too ephemeral
for the tastes of fire mageswas noticeably hot to his touch. As he entered the
foyer, Timaeus could feel his heat-resistance spell kick
in; the air in the foyer felt almost cool. As he sprinted up the steps, he could feel
the heat beginning to rise again.
Timaeus paused at the door to Magister Ardentine's office. The adjunct professor of
thermal philosophy was busy stuffing books and papers into a heavy leather bag.
"How is he?" Timaeus panted.
Ardentine looked up nearsightedly. "Terminal burnout," he said. "Shame,
really."
"We knew it was coming," said Timaeus.
"Certainly," said Ardentine irritably. "What's the temperature?"
Timaeus peered at the thermometer at the back of Ardentine's office. The professor was too
nearsighted to see it. "Halfway between water and paper," he said. It was marked
off with the boiling, melting, or burning temperatures of various materials.
"Bother," said Ardentine, redoubling his efforts to save his books before the
temperature in the office rose too high. "I'm going to lose some of these. Lend a
hand, won't you . . . ?"
But Timaeus was gone.
Calidos's office was like a blacksmith's forge. The air shimmered, the metal chair in
which the elderly mage sat glowed red. Calidos himself was a dancing flame, human form
still discernible. He looked white, shrunken, even older than Timaeus remembered.
"Doctor Calidos," Timaeus sputtered. "You mustn't . . ." "Ah,
d'Asperge," said Calidos in some surprise.
"Sir," said Timaeus in distress, "you must be aware that"
"I'm in terminal burnout, yes indeed," said Calidos almost happily. "And
it does these old bones good to feel warm at last."
Timaeus gulped unhappily. This was the fate of all too many a fire mage. Repeated
manipulation of the element increased one's own similarity to fire. When Timaeus had taken
courses with Calidos, the old man had left scorch marks on exam papers. He'd heated his
own chambers nearly to the boiling point of water, but even so complained about the cold.
Undergrads, lacking strong heat-resistance spells, dreaded meetings with Calidos; few were
willing to accept him as their don. Timaeus had done so, partly from bravado and partly
from a genuine desire to learn as much of his discipline
as he might; Calidos's mind might no longer be as sharp as it had been in his youth,
but he was still highly respected, widely acknowledged as one of the giants of his field.
"Why is no one here to control this?" demanded Timaeus.
"This is the fourth time this semester," Calidos said. "The signs have
been gathering for weeks. My time has simply come, my boy. I choose to go as gracefully as
I may. Come, 'tis not so bad; I go to immortality, of a sort."
"As a salamander," grunted Timaeus, "not in the Lady's bosom"
"Pshaw," said Calidos. "Infantile religious maunderings. Far better to rise
to the sphere of flame, to burn incandescently for all time"
"But without a mind," said Timaeus sadly. "Elementals have no
"And do the gods promise immortality in the same mind? The philosophers believe in a
duality of mind and body, while the religions add spirit, creating a trinity of self. The
spirit may survive death, but the body clearly does not. Spirit and body are separable;
hence, one may conclude, spirit and mind are separable also."
The heat was rising further, and Calidos's voice was becoming fainter. It was hard to
make out his form now, he was glowing so brightly. "Doctor," said Timaeus.
"Do not go. I need"
"You're a fine mage," said Calidos faintly. "You do not need my aid. A
bit hasty and hot-tempered, perhaps, but this is characteristic of our discipline, those
aspects being similar to fire. I"
"Doctor Calidos!" shouted Timaeus. "I am not speaking generally, but in
specifics. Please hang on; I need help researching"
"Farewell, lad," whispered Calidos, now so bright that Timaeus was forced to
avert his eyes. "Good of you to come and say good-bye to an old man."
And suddenly, the glow began to fade, like fireworks in a dark sky, quickly diminishing
from white to red to orange, a collapsing ball of flame. "My true name," came a
faint whisper, "is . . ."
But it will not be repeated here, lest it be misused by the unscrupulous. Timaeus was
astonished. Knowledge of Calidos's name would allow him to summon the elemental Calidos
had become from its place in the Sphere of Flame. And the elemental formed from the spirit
of a master mage would be powerful indeed.
He would have to use this power sparingly. So powerful a salamander would be difficult
to control; it would be foolish to risk its wrath.
The sphere was gone now. The chair had melted down to slag, and the granite walls still
emitted a somber glow. Timaeus realized he was expending power to maintain his
heat-resistance spell; no point in that now. He withdrew from the room and sadly descended
the stairs.
No time for mourning, he chided himself. What to do now? "I done good, huh, Ross?
Huh?" said Fred the goon.
Fred stood six foot six and weighed more than twenty stone. He filled a substantial
portion of the tiny maid's bedroom. Unfortunately, Fred wasn't alone in the room. There
were three other goons, all of approximately equal stature. There were also two
elvesMontiel and a subordinate-and a rather weedy human water mage. Judging by the
wizard's odor, his enthusiasm for the substance he manipulated magically seemed not to
encompass actually immersing himself in it, at least, not on any regular basis.
The seven of them stood cheek by jowl. They'd had problems getting the door closed. The
day was hot, and the room was stifling. The water mage's bathing habits did nothing to
improve the atmosphere.
"Gee, Fred," chirped Montiel. "I just don't know what to say."
"That good, huh, boss?" Fred beamed.
Montiel scrambled over one of the goons and made his way to the room's single window.
He peered out. Below was a courtyard, bordered by the block's other buildings. Montiel
shook his head sadly. "It's my fault, Fred," he piped.
A look of uncertainty passed across Fred's face. "Huh?" he said.
"I should have known better than to trust an important job like this to a complete
imbecile!" Montiel shrieked. The elf hopped up and down on the tiny bed.
"But, boss," said Fred unhappily. "You said I should rent a room."
"A room, not a closet! And I told you I wanted a room across the street!"
"Well, gosh, boss. We're in number eleven, right across the street from Sidney
Stollitt . . . just like you said!"
The elf threw up his hands. "Explain it to him, Billy," he said to one of the
other goons.
Billy threw a hand across Fred's shoulder. "Duh, look, here, Freddie," he
said. "The window don't look out on the street. It looks out the back. How we gonna
keep an eye on the building across the street if we can't see it? Huh?"
Fred's face scrunched up, as if he were about to cry. "Gosh, I'm sorry,
guys," he said. "I'm awful sorry."
"And it's in somebody's house, too," said Montiel. "How're we gonna keep
it a secret if the people in the house see us come and go all the time?"
Fred buried his head on Billy's shoulder in shame.
There was a knock on the door. Billy and the third goon drew swords, nearly
decapitating each other. Ross pointed at Fred.
"Yeah?" said Fred hesitantly.
"Uh . . . will your friends be staying to dinner?" said a timorous female
voice. "I mean, my husband doesn't even know we have a boarder, and"
"Hell with this," piped Ross. "Billy, take 'er."
Billy opened the door. As soon as he turned the knob, he staggered into the hallway,
propelled by the pressure of the others in the room. He tripped over a blond woman,
smashed through the railing which ran the length of the hall, and fell down the stairs.
The woman shrank back and put both hands to her mouth. Montiel sighed. "Your turn,
Georgie," he said.
The third goon walked out the door, casually tossed the woman to the floor, and stood
over her, his sword at her throat.
Montiel smiled and walked out the door himself. "Oh, Georgie," he said in a
sorrowful chirp, "you know how I hate brutality." The goon grinned and stared
directly into the woman's frightened eyes.
"Hiya!" said Ross Montiel. "My name is Ross. What's yours?"
"El . . . Elma," whispered the woman, eyes wide.
"Elma! That's a nice name," said the elf. He motioned to George, who sheathed
his sword. "Gosh, I just know we're going to be friends." Montiel held out a
tiny elfin hand.
She swallowed and looked at George uncertainly. "C'mon," said Montiel.
"Shake!"
She grabbed his hand and gave it a tentative shake. She sat up and shuffled on her
bottom until her back was against the hallway wall. She stared at Montiel.
"That's better," said Montiel. "I'm glad we're going to be pals, 'cause
we're going to be staying over. Just for a little while."
"How . . . how long?"
"Is that any question to ask friends who've come to stay? C'mon, Elma, you'll make
me think you're unfriendly. If you're unfriendly, I'll have to give you to George to play
with."
The goon stared at Elma and licked his lips.
"So let's keep this on an elevated plane, okay? Do what you're told and, who
knows, you might even live. How 'bout that?" Montiel said brightly.
"Please," she whimpered. "Please, Mr. Elf. We're simply folk, we don't mean
anybody any harm"
"Oh, Ross, Ross, Elma, call me Ross," said Montiel. "Mr. Elf sounds so,
I don't know, formal. Now, don't worry about a thing. We promise to treat your house just
like it was our own. Right, boys?"
"Right, boss," said a chorus.
"And we absolutely promise not to steal anything we can't physically carry.
Georgie, toss her in the cellar."
"Do I get to play with her first?"
"No, no," said Ross. "Only if she's a bad girl." The goon pouted.
"Now, Fred," said Ross, putting a tiny hand on the huge man's shoulder. He
had to go onto tiptoes to reach. "I'm going to give you a second chance. I need a
note delivered . . ."
The lich glided through the catacombs. It waggled its neckbones; they felt reasonably
secure. The baroness seemed to have done a good job sticking it back together again.
Once, it told itself, I was the terror of the Cordonian Plain. Strong men blanched at
my name. The skulls of children decorated my parapet.
It mulled over the past for a moment. And now, it thought scathingly, I'm to be the
baroness's messenger boy. Again.
Any urchin in the city would be more than happy to deliver her missives in exchange for
a copper or two. But no. It had to be it.
It sighed.
Bitch, it thought. It wondered whether this headache was permanent. Just what I need,
it thought, a migraine for the next millennium.
IX.
Sidney stared out the window. Her shoulder wound was smarting. It looked like it might
rain.
Thwaite sat by the hearth, munching on a sausage he'd bought from a vendor down the
street.
"Do you ever get the feeling that we don't know what's going on?" said
Sidney.
"Mmphm?" said Thwaite through a mouthful of meat.
"It's been too long," she said. "Nick and Kraki should have reported
back by now."
"Mmrphl. "
Sidney watched as a goon left the house across the street, and grew alert as he came
directly to their own building. She drew her sword and walked quickly but quietly across
the room to the door. She stood next to the door, flat against the wall.
Thwaite watched her, became alarmed, and dived behind what was left of Nick's bed, the
remnants of his sausage flying.
The goon appeared in the broken doorway. His lips moved. ("Ross said to
knock.") He tried to knock on the door, but it wasn't there. He looked puzzled.
Sidney sprang into the doorway and put her sword to the man's Adam's apple.
"Who are you?" she hissed.
His eyes were saucers. Ross hadn't said anything about girls with swords. "I . . .
I'm Fred," he said. "Pleased to meetcha." He held out a hand, which Sidney
made no move to take.
Thwaite peered up from behind the bed. He eyed his sausage, now on the floor, rather
sadly.
"What do you want?" said Sidney.
"I got a message for you," said the goon. "From R-from somebody."
He reached into his pocket.
Sidney's sword scraped his chin. It drew blood. The goon froze. "Move
slowly," she said.
Moving glacially, he took a folded piece of parchment from his pocket. "Out of the
way, mortal," hissed a voice from behind the goon. Sidney peered around Fred. A
brown-robed figure with a deep cowl stood there.
Fred scanned his eyes as far to the right as they could possibly go without turning his
head.
"Begone, fiend!" shouted Thwaite, springing from behind the bed. He made the
sign of the god and his hands began to glow with white light. "Oh, do save your
energy," whispered the lich wearily. "I'm only the
postman today." Two skeletal fingers extended past Fred, holding an envelope.
Fred saw the bones. He gulped loudly. Sidney's sword bobbed with his Adam's apple.
"Fine," snarled Sidney, stepping back but keeping her sword aloft. "Just
leave your ransom notes on the floor. They are ransom notes, aren't they?" The lich
merely let its envelope go. It drifted lazily into the room and
toward the floor. Fred dropped his note and stepped back. He whirled, stared at the
cowled figure, and fled, whimpering to himself. The lich stood in the doorway, impassive.
"That it?" said Sidney.
"I'm to take a response," whispered the lich. "Tell them," said
Thwaite, "the answer is no."
"Don't you think we ought to read these first?" said Sidney. "No,"
said Thwaite. "I will not traffic with undead."
"Is that your response?" whispered the lich. "For now," said
Sidney. "Get out of here."
Wordlessly, the lich glided away. Sidney went to pick up the letters. "I'm going
to check on the statue," Father Thwaite said, and began to pry up the floorboards.
Fred's letter was a folded piece of parchment. Sidney unfolded it and began to read.
Priss: Golly, Priss. It's real tough having to do this kind of stuff: I mean, I
remember when you used to be smaller than me. You were so cute. You thought I was pretty
neat, too. I still remember that time you nearly pulled my ear off . . .
Anyway, it's funny how things work out. But, look, we need to make a deal. I got
something you want, and you got something I'd really like to have. So hey! Why don't we
trade? One dork for one statue. The dork's slightly used, but I guess he has kind of a
sentimental value for you guys. And you know I think blood is really icky, but, golly, we
might have to whack off a few bits to close the deal. Know what I mean?
Listen, drop me a line by sundown. Or, well, you know. If you want to talk, just wave
from the window and someone'll come. Sorry about this. No hard feelings, huh, sugar?
There wasn't any signature. "Montiel," Sidney said. "Ross Montiel's got
Garni." She didn't know whether to be relieved or upset. God knew, the dippy elf was
capable of anything. But at least he was a known quantity.
That skeleton guy, now, that was another thing. Its letter was much like the one it had
delivered before. The letter was written, apparently in blood, on expensive paper; the
envelope was perfumed. Sidney opened it.
To Master Timaeus d'Asperge:
My dear Timaeus, I write you again, but this time in trepidation rather than
admiration. I wish for you the greatest of worldly successes; yet I fear that your
stubborn resistance may instead bring you low. Please heed my warnings, dear boy! You do
not know what forces you deny.
Rejecting my monetary offer was unwise. I have been reluctantly compelled to take
stronger steps to acquire the statue. Specifically, I have taken two of your companions
captive-a thief known as Nicholas and a large and terrifyingly well-endowed barbarian.
Dear child, please be advised of the seriousness of this matter! The principal I
represent will acquire the object in question; preferably in peaceful wise, but, if
necessary, over the prostrate bodies of you and your companions. To speak of such things
is distasteful, but the facts must be faced; please accept my assurances that all
concerned would far prefer a less sanguinary resolution.
Should this offer, too, be spurned, the next step in our negotiation is clear. As much
as it would distress me to do so, I would be compelled by your refusal to treat your
friends harshly. Please be assured that there will be no tasteless brutality; I am quite
skilled in these matters, and should I be called upon to exercise my skills, your comrades
will endure memorable and exquisite agonies.
You have until day's end to accept.
I remain, sir, your loving and devoted friend,
And again, there was no signature; only a drop of blood at lower right. "Where the
hell is Timaeus?" she muttered. "Just my luck, someone snatches him too."
She turned to survey the room. "Father?" she said. No one was there.
The floorboards hiding the statue had been pried from the floor and laid aside.
Quickly, Sidney went to the hole in the floor and peered inside. The statue was gone.
Thwaite was gone.
Where there had once been only dirt and timbers, a tunnel led off into the earth.
"Father?" she called forlornly down the tunnel.
"I don't like the look of their visitors," said Wentworth. He held onto the
gutter. Every once in a while, the breeze threatened to blow him out over the street. He
had to clutch the gutter to remain hidden on the roof.
"Odd group," agreed Jasper. "That thug returned to the house below us,
you know."
"Did he?" said Wentworth. "Hmm. I wonder who's down there."
A large drop of rain hit Morglop on the head. The cyclops looked up. "Damn,"
he said. "Should have oiled sword."
"What should we do?" asked Jasper.
"Wait," said Wentworth. "We've seen no immediate threat to the
statue."
"Going to get wet," complained Morglop, looking upward.
It was a gray noon in the city of Urf Durfal, capital of the realm of Athelstan.
Atop the great volcanic pipe called Miller's Seat perched the many towers of Castle Durf.
Within, His Grace the Grand Duke Mortimer was sitting down to lunch: a magnificent
specimen of Lycoperdon giganteum, stuffed with bitoks de pore in a delicate
paprika cream sauce. The grand duke eyed the stuffed puffball mushroom with anticipation.
In the courtyard of the castle, Major Yohn drilled the Fifth Frontier. He drilled them
dailybut not, any longer, at dawn. The last time he'd roused his men that early, two
thirds had been staggeringly drunk.
General Carruthers, watching from the battlements, made snide comments about the
low-born soldiers below.
Across the city, workmen downed their tools and called for buckets of ale to chase
their bread and cheese. Housewives took a break from scrubbing kitchen floorboards or
boiling the wash or plucking chickens or darning clothes, and heated up a bit of tea. The
shops on Jambon Street continued a brisk trade, tradesmen sneaking a sausage or an apple
from under the counter.
Barges passed up and down the river. Farmers who had brought produce to market this
morning eyed their stock, hoping they'd be rid of it by nightfall. Wizards, by and large a
late-rising group, yawned, stretched, and called for their servants. Cats prowled the
alleys looking for mice, and urchins lifted purses. Remarkably, no one was actually
murdering anyone else at the stroke of noon, although three burglaries and an assault were
in progress.
Thunder sounded. It began to rain.
In the markets, vendors put up awnings to protect their wares. Shoppers scuttled for
cover. The town watch decided this was a good time to forget about patrolling and visit
the pub. Thieves cursed and headed for doorways. Cats crouched miserably in whatever
shelter they could find.
The grand duke took a bite of his repast. His look of delight turned instantly to pain.
The chef had not taken kindly to criticism of this morning's omelet and, in revenge, had
over-peppered the bitoks.
In an alley off Cobblers Lane, the lich examined its robe. The soaking cloth draped
itself revealingly over the lich's naked bones. It didn't mind the wet, but worried about
the uselessness of its disguise.
In number twelve, a woman wearing black peered into a subterranean tunnel, wishing
these things happened to someone else.
And down in the catacombs, two men lay bound in darkness, oblivious of the weather.
Kraki was chanting sagas to himself. He'd gotten to a long genealogical
sectionsome hero was reciting his lineage for the edification of a foe: ". . .
Sired he Gostorn, gap-toothed one;
Gostorn the mighty eater of mince, Apples ate also apricots too, Mighty pie eater eater
of pies . . ."
It passed the time, Nick supposed. He spent his own time trying to work his way out of
his bonds. The knots were not particularly well tied. It was hard, Nick thought, to tie
good knots when your fingers were half rotted away.
The stone slab grated aside. Dim torchlight glinted into the crypt. Even this faint
glow was enough to make Nick squint.
"Oi," said an orcish voice. "Either of you bums play Spatzle?"
"Vhat?" said Kraki.
"Spatzle?" said Nick, grinning. "I think I've heard of it. Isn't that
the one you play with a stripped deck?"
"You hasn't never played?"
"Sorry," said Nick. "I'm not much of a card player. But I wouldn't mind
learning."
"Bah," muttered Kraki. "Such games are for children and vomen."
"He says he's willin' to learn," said Garfok over his shoulder. "Come on,
guys," said Spug. "Let me owe ya."
"No chanst," said Drizhnakh. "You is broke. You is lost all yer
dough." "Oi!" said Garfok to Nick. "Gotny money?"
Nick thought quickly. He had about ten shillings on him. "Kraki!" he
whispered. "How much money have you got?"
"Don't know," said the barbarian. "Most of treasure."
"You're carrying most of your share?" asked Nick incredulously. "Yah. I
leave in inn, it get stolen."
He was probably right, Nick reflected. "Yes," he called up to the orcs.
"I've got a few pounds."
"I says we let 'im in," said Garfok.
"Not much point in playin' wiv ourselves," said Drizhnakh. Cheating Spug was
profitable; with him out of the game, it was more than a little pointless.
"Not da big guy, though," said Spug. "He's mean."
"Right," nodded Drizhnakh. "Don't wanna let him loose."
"Jake by me," said Garfok, then turned to call down to Nick. "You is
in."
After a momentary scuffle, the orcs extended a short ladder into the crypt. Garfok
climbed down to collect Nick. Kraki struggled wildly with his bonds. He cursed. "If I
can yust get loose," he muttered.
"Never mind that," whispered Nick urgently. "Give me your purse!"
He rolled over so he was back-to-back with Kraki.
The barbarian pressed his purse into Nick's bound hands. "Vhat you going to
do?" he said.
Nick grinned in the darkness. "We'll see."
Garfok grabbed Nick, flung him over one shoulder, and started back up the ladder. As he
reached the top, Drizhnakh took Nick, stood him up, and cut the ropes tying his hands.
"What about my legs?" said Nick.
"You isn't going anywheres," said Drizhnakh.
"Here," said Garfok. "Siddown." He pointed at a spot by a wooden
crate the orcs were using as a card table.
Nick sat down. He smiled at the orcs. "Okay," he said. "Why don't you
tell me how this game is played?"
"Right," said Drizhnakh, sitting down and picking up the deck. "Dere is
four suits-fangs, ears, axes, and greeps." He dealt four cards in illustration.
"Greeps?" "Greeps." "What are greeps?"
"Don't get him started!" warned Garfok.
Mrs. Coopersmith strode determinedly down Cobblers Lane, flanked by six tough-looking
men. One carried a sock full of sand. Another carried a rough-cut stick of lumber.
Wentworth peered at the men from the roof of number eleven, hanging on to the chimney
by one hand and screwing his monocle into an eye with the other. "I say," he
said. "What do you suppose they're after?" Morglop only grunted.
"I sense . . . ," began Jasper. "I sense . . . a discontented sausage
merchant with a surplus of product. Damnation, Jorgesen, why did you have to give that
afreet all our silver? I'm half starved. And half drowned."
"Never mind that," snapped Wentworth. "What is that woman doing with
those thugs?"
Mrs. Coopersmith barged through the doorless doorway. Several meanlooking men barged in
after her. "This is it," she said. "I want them out today."
Sidney backed toward one wall and drew a sword. The man with the stick of lumber faced
her. "Let's 'ave none of that, missy," he said. "Let's make this a peaceful
eviction, eh?" Two of the other goons flanked him. The rest of the men started
grabbing objects, carrying them down the hall, and dumping them in the street.
"Stop it!" yelled Sidney. "You bitch. We got rights!"
"You don't got no right to tear the place up!" the landlady shouted back.
"You're out! If you don't like it, you can bitch to the grand bloody duke!"
"Good lord," said a familiar voice from the hole in the floorboards.
"What's going on here, Sidney?"
She glanced toward it, then did a double take. "Father!" she said.
"Where the hell have you been?"
Thwaite clambered out of the hole. "The statue's gone," he said. "I can
see that. Where were you?"
"Eh? I scouted down the tunnel a bit . . ." "Find anything?"
"No. It goes on for quite a distance."
Satisfied that Sidney wasn't going to turn violent, the goons continued carrying
objects from the room and dumping them in the street. One of them grabbed a bundle of
Garni's miscellaneous stuff-eleven-foot pole, several steel cylinders, a heavy book.
"Hey!" yelled Sidney. "Put that back!" She grabbed the book and
wrestled with the goon.
"My son," said Thwaite to another thug. "Do you feel comfortable with
what you're doing? Do you feel justified in the eyes of the gods in tossing a fellow
mortal into the street?"
"Sorry, padre," said the thug, bowing his head in respect. "There's ther
sacred rights of property ter consider. And besides, I gots ter earn a living."
Bedding, bits of straw, and an amazing variety of possessions began flying into the
street.
Morglop was instantly alert. "They after statue!" he shouted. He leapt over
the edge of the roof, fell three stories, and absorbed the impact with a crouch.
"Have you noticed," said Wentworth conversationally, "that brainlessness
seems to be a uniform characteristic of swordsmen?" He picked up a piece of slate to
give himself some weight, dragged himself to the edge of the building, and drifted toward
the street, pulled by the slate. As soon as he had a direct line of sight, he hurled a
flask through the basement window of number twelve. The force of the throw pushed him back
into the parlor window of number eleven as he drifted past. Montiel, who was peering
through the window, drew back as the floating wizard's body pressed against the glass.
The flask exploded in the basement flat. Flames splashed about the apartment. Several
of Mrs. Coopersmith's crew hit the floor. None was more than slightly injured. A fire
began to grow in one corner of the room.
"Now look what you've done!" Mrs. Coopersmith screamed at Sidney. She beat at
the fire with a blanket.
Morglop lumbered down the hall. The goon with the stick of wood blocked his way.
"What the bloody hell do you" shouted the goon. Morglop bellowed,
"Surrender or die!" He swept his sword back.
The goon dropped the stick and ran.
A point of green light flew through the broken window and into the apartment. A green
ray shot from Jasper and struck a goon. The thug's eyes rolled up in his head. He tumbled
to the floor.
Morglop strode through the doorway, waving his sword. The goon with the sock of sand
stood by the wall and tried to kibosh the cyclops. Morglop stepped aside; the sock
whistled past; Morglop sliced the goon through the pancreas.
"Jasper!" Sidney said, recognizing the green glow and jumping to the
conclusion that the dealer in antiquities was attempting to steal the statue himself.
"Bastard!" She backed toward Thwaite and the hole. "Let's get out of here,
Father," she said.
"I concur," said the cleric. They dived into the hole.
"Hey, boss," said George. "A buncha wizzos is attacking the
apartment."
"Oh, phooey," said Montiel. "I can see that, George. Micah," he
said to his elven subordinate. "Get back to headquarters as fast as you can and get
reinforcements."
Micah took off out the back door and ran, zigzagging past the outhouses.
Ross turned back to his goons. "Okay, guys!" he said. "Time to earn your
pay." George, Fred, and Billy ran out the front door and down the stoop, swords in
hand. "You too, pal," said Montiel to the water mage. He shoved the odiferous
fellow outside and locked the door after him.
The water mage stood uncertainly in the rain, then followed the goons unhappily.
Montiel watched from the parlor window.
Morglop killed two of Mrs. Coopersmith's men. The rest fell to their knees. "We
surrender!" yelled one.
"I got a wife an' three kids," yelled another.
The landlady picked up Garni's umbrella and used it to beat the cyclops about the head
and shoulders. "Now, miss," said the cyclops, fending blows off with his sword
and forearm.
"Ruffian!" she shrieked. "Brigand! Murderer! I'll have the watch on you!
Get out of my building!"
She chased him around the apartment. The thugs, still on their knees, watched bemused.
Wentworth pulled himself in through the door and, hanging in midair, screwed his
monocle into an eye. "Gadzooks," he muttered. A fire burned merrily in one
corner. Trash and bits of plaster were all over the place. There was a large hole in the
floor.
Jasper zipped up to the alchemist. "They were apparently evicting Pratchitt,"
he said. "Don't seem to know anything about the statue." "Fine," spat
Wentworth. "Dandy. I hate swordsmen, truly I do." George, Bill, and Fred charged
into the room. George stabbed Went
worth in passing. He yanked his sword back to remove it from the floating alchemist.
Wentworth stayed on the sword. Weightless, he wafted back and forth as George shook the
sword, trying to get Wentworth off. His eyes glazing, Wentworth grabbed the blade and
pushed himself off the point.
Astounded, George studied his sword for several moments before returning to the fray.
Morglop engaged Bill and Fred. Either one he could probably have killed instantly, but
together they were reasonably well matched against him. Swords rang and sparks flew.
Since no one was paying them any attention, Mrs. Coopersmith's eviction crew took the
opportunity to escape out the broken window.
Wentworth's weightless blood drifted in globules about the room. On the verge of
unconsciousness, he pulled out a healing draught and gulped it greedily. He floated,
semiconscious, as the potion began to do its work.
Jasper shouted a Word. A ray of green light struck George. George froze.
The water mage peered in through the basement window. He, too, spoke a Word. Blue
energy began to glow about his hands.
At the back of the room, the fire raged merrily.
Mrs. Coopersmith battered Morglop from behind with her umbrella. "You try my
patience, woman!" yelled Morglop. He reached behind and yanked the umbrella from her
grasp. While he was off balance, Billy struck him a glancing blow.
Jasper spoke another Word. Under Jasper's mental control, George attacked Billy from
behind.
The water mage released the blue glow about his hands. A sphere of water smashed across
the room, tumbling Morglop and the three goons to the floor.
The fire hissed out. The room filled with the smell of wet charcoal. "Trouble at
the flat," gasped Micah. Montiel's lieutenants crowded round.
Soon, messengers spread out across the city, carrying Montiel's summons to the
underworld.
Sounds like a battle zone, thought the lich. Explosions, bolts of energy, and the clash
of weapons sounded from down the street. It peered around the corner to see a brilliant
green flash shine from the window of number twelve.
It pulled back into the alley. A bedraggled cat peered out from under a heap of trash.
"Puss, puss, puss, puss," the lich whispered. "Here pretty pussy." It
held out its sleeve, taking care to hide its bones, trying to give the impression that it
was holding a treat.
Hesitantly, the scrawny cat came forward. The lich grabbed it and broke its neck. The
lich felt the life force flow through its frame. It spoke a Word. The spell seized the
cat's expiring spirit and placed a compulsion on it. The spirit flew out of the alley and
across the city, toward the town house of Baroness Veronee, carrying the lich's message.
She would come, it reflected, daytime or no. And she'd come with all her resources.
Corcoran Evanish stood in the shelter of a doorway, out of the pouring rain. He studied
his list. He crossed off the fifteenth name. Eight more to go. He patted his burgeoning
purse with satisfaction.
His work was well done:
In a lonesome garret, a wizard clad in red spoke to her familiar. "Come, my
pet," she said. "Solid athenor; think of it."
In a filthy inn, a huge, bearded man drained his tankard and spat out the lees.
"Awright, gents," he said. "There's a job we can do that'll make us all
rich."
Down by the harbor, the captain of an elvish ship spoke to his crew. "And after we
have it, it's away and downriver for us," he said.
In a study in Old Town, the ambassador from Hamsterburg spoke to his spymaster.
"There may be a connection with the sceptre," he said, "which, as you know,
is the embodiment of our claim to rightful rule of the human lands."
A dozen groups plotted, and the battle raged.
Major Yohn prowled the battlements of Castle Durf. He was restless. It was too early to
start carousing, his men were fine, nothing much was going on at the castle.
The view from Castle Durf was spectacular. It was an eminently defensible spot, a
volcanic pipe that loomed over the city. Cliffs fell away on three sides to the city
below; the only approach was a long, low ridge leading to the castle. From the
battlements, it was possible to see the entire city and a good portion of the region. The
rain reduced visibility, but the gray skies and wet streets lent a certain somber grandeur
to the town.
Yohn passed a member of the Ducal Guard. The man's mail was rusted in spots. Yohn
scowled.
"What's that?" said Yohn. Out over the city there were flashes of light. A
brief explosion revealed people flitting around on a carpet.
The guardsman yawned, scratched himself, and looked. "Beats me," he said.
"Give me your spyglass," said Yohn. The guard shrugged and handed it to him.
Yohn peered through it.
Ye gods. Looked like a battle over there. "Five Corners Parish, isn't it?"
Yohn said.
"Huh?" said the guardsman. "Yeah, sure. Guess so."
It was obviously no riot. Rioters wouldn't have access to that much magic. Yohn handed
back the spyglass and hurried away. If he knew his men, most of them were sleeping,
preparing for the night's revels. He'd
better get them organized, send out some scouts, find out what was going on. They might
be sent into action at a moment's notice.
Nick raked in the coins. He grinned from ear to ear. Spug stared, roundeyed and
gape-tusked.
"You is sure you hasn't played dis game before?" said Garfok.
"Oi, Garfok," said Drizhnakh disgusted. "He's a bloody cardsharper,
ain't it as plain as da boil on yer face?"
"Another round, boys?" said Nick. He squeezed the deck with his right hand.
The cards shot across a cubit of space to be caught in the left hand. He performed three
quick poker cuts with his left hand alone.
"I is down to da last copper," said Garfok, fumbling the coin.
"Tell you what," said Nick. "I'll advance you a shilling for every
question you answer."
"What?" said Garfok suspiciously.
"It's not like I'm asking you to let me go or anything," Nick explained.
"I know you're too sharp for that. No, I realize I can't win my way to freedom.
"
"Days for sure," said Drizhnakh. "Da baroness would moider us if we let
ya loose."
"She's a baroness, huh?" said Nick. "That's interesting. For
instance," he said to Garfok, "I'd give you a shilling of silver if you'd tell
me her name. Now, what could be the harm in that? I'm not going anywhere, after all."
The orcs glanced at each other, then moved away. They conversed in low voices.
"It's a shilling each," said Garfok. "Sorry?" said Nick.
"We'll go fer it," said Garfok, "but we decides how many questions you
gets to ask, and we gets one shilling, each of da tree of us, fer every question."
Nick raised an eyebrow. "You're a hard . . . er . . . orc, Garfok, but it's a
deal."
He shoved three piles of silver across the floor. "Veronee," said Drizhnakh.
"Da Baroness Veronee."
XI.
A toothpick nearly embedded itself in Timaeus's eye. He ducked behind the door. When he
peered back into the room, a wild-haired face stuck up from behind the gaming table. It
was wearing an archaic Imperial helmet. "Damnation!" it shouted. "Arbalests
are bloody worthless."
A dark-skinned man stood up on the right. "They're siege machines," he said.
"What do you expect at a field battle?"
"No," muttered the man in the helmet. "It's the damned rubber bands.
Musn't wind them so tight."
The two leaned over the table. Rank upon serried rank of metal soldiers stood on little
hills of sand. There were infantry, cavalry, a dragon or two elevated above the fray on
sticks. Stands of orcs stood slavering, their officer's whips measuring out command radii.
The arbalests were on a ridge to the rear. The man in the helmet turned a tiny crank on
one of the siege machines and laid a toothpick against the rubber bow string.
"Professor Macpherson?" said Timaeus.
The man in the helmet stared briefly at the intruder. "Yes? My office hours are
ten to . . . d'Asperge, isn't it?"
"Yes, sir," said Timaeus.
"A year may not seem long in the geologic scale of things," said Macpherson
scathingly, "but it's too long to wait for a term paper. Your failure stands."
Timaeus blushed. Damn, but the man had a memory. "I haven't come about that,"
he said. "I need your help."
The dark-skinned man studied the table. "I do believe the II Cobatrix can see my
hill trolls," he said. He produced another stand of minatures, and placed them on the
table.
"Gadzooks!" said Macpherson. "Well placed. I shall have to commit the
reserve." He pushed several stands of soldiers about the table with a sort of
miniature rake.
"It's about Stantius," said Timaeus.
Macpherson snapped to attention. "Ave!" he shouted. `Ave Stantius!"
The dark-skinned man bellowed, "Ash nazg thrakataluk!"
"None of your damnable orcish gibberish!" yelled Macpherson. "The
Imperium shall prevail. The vexillation from the V Victrix attacks the Severed
Hand-Standard orcs, over here. I make it a seventeen to twenty-four assault."
The dark-skinned man studied the table. "Looks right," he said. There was the
clatter of dice. Macpherson frowned and removed several figures from the tabletwo
Imperials and six orcs. He laid them to the side. The dark-skinned man picked up one of
the figures and studied it idly.
"I'm sorry to intrude," said Timaeus, "but it is rather important. You
see, I've acquired this statue"
"I say, Macpherson, old man," said the dark-skinned man. "You've got the
uniform of the V Victrix wrong."
"What?" said Macpherson. "Devil I do!"
"Look here," said the dark-skinned man. "The coat buttons are
blue." "Yes, that's right," said Macpherson.
"Yet the Edict of 2837 specifies buttons `dyed in the color of the
Cataphringians'-a sort of muddy ochre," said the dark-skinned man.
"A statue of Stantius the Third" said Timaeus.
"Nonsense!" said Macpherson. "Nobody knows quite what color is
`the Cataphringian,' and I have a monograph somewhere about that maintains it was, in
fact, identical with the Imperial purple. But that's all irrelevant, as the V Victrix was,
by order of the Emperor Sculpine, entitled to adorn its buttons with the crest of the
Blessed Bodepredominantly cobalt blue in color."
"Entirely cast in athenor," said Timaeus.
"But Sculpine antedates the Edict of 2837," said the dark-skinned man.
"Surely the V Victrix would have adopted the new standard uniform." "Surely
not!" said Macpherson. "Does one abandon a mark of distinc
tion, merely because some general order-?"
"Absurd! Would one dare to defy an Imperial edict . . . ?" said the
dark-skinned man.
"I was wondering what you could tell me about Stantius's capture, and if you might
know anything about" said Timaeus.
"Fool!" shouted Macpherson. "What do you know, anyway? The Early
Successor States is your period! I'm the authority here, and if I say the buttons were
blue, then they're damned well blue!"
"Are not!" "Are so!" "Are not!" Timaeus sighed.
A steady stream of mud-brown water flowed into the tunnel opening. Beyond was a
weed-covered lot, perhaps two acres in extent. Not far away, tenements rose. On the far
side of the lot stood a shanty townlean-tos and shacks made of scrap wood and pieces
of trash.
"Where are we?" Sidney said.
Father Thwaite pulled himself out of the tunnel, depositing a layer of mud on his robes
in the process. He looked around.
"We're about three blocks from Roderick Square," he said.
Sidney clambered up beside him, likewise smearing herself with mud. The heavy rain
began to wash it off, simultaneously drenching her.
"I don't suppose the statue is hidden in the underbrush," she said. "Not
a bad hiding place," said Thwaite. "People wouldn't expect to find a valuable
object in a place like this."
Sidney knelt and examined the soil around the tunnel. "I'm no tracker," she
said, "but the statue is awfully heavy. I don't see any wagon tracks or the kind of
path you'd expect if several people carried it. It's like it was spirited through the air
when it got here."
Thwaite shrugged. "Not impossible," he said. "Demons could do it."
Sidney nodded slowly. "Yes. But could demons have dug that tunnel?" "Maybe,
Sidney; demons come in a fantastic variety of shapes. Look, if we're going to chat, can we
get under cover?"
"I'm going to look around," said Sidney.
Thwaite headed for the cluster of shacks. He bent over and scuttled under a lean-to.
There was a snore; Vic was lying on a pile of straw. "Vic," said Thwaite
softly.
The old man woke up with a snort. "Geoffrey," he said. "What are you
doing here?"
"I might ask the same of you." "I shleep here a lot," said Vic.
"Oh." There was silence. The rain drummed on the canvas overhead. The lean-to
was in a spot with good drainage, but a rivulet of water ran down Thwaite's back. He
realized he was pressed up against the canvas, and water was leaking through. He leaned
away.
The old man rested on one elbow and eyed Thwaite keenly. "Sho what're you up to
today?" he inquired.
"Nothing much," said Thwaite vaguely, looking at the rain. "Sho where'd
you find thish shtatue, anyway?"
Thwaite sneaked a guilty glance at Vic. "Sorry, Vic," he said. "I'm not
supposed to talk about that."
Vic's mouth tightened. "Play it your way, then," he said, rolled over, and
made as if to go back to sleep.
With some startlement, Thwaite noticed that a pigeon was standing in the shelter of the
lean-to, close to one end. It eyed him beadily.
Thwaite stared out into the rain.
Sidney was glad it was warm. She was drenched; if it had been cold, she'd have been
miserable.
She searched the lot carefully. She walked clear across it, moved to the right a few
cubits, and traversed the lot again. She was determined to search every square foot. The
statue could be hidden anywhere, buried in underbrush.
But it wasn't.
She did discover a mound of dirt about six cubits from the tunnel. It was vaguely
humanoid in shape, as if someone had made a snowman from dirt. The rain was gradually
pounding it into mud.
Sidney stared at it, sighed, and then attacked it with her hands. It was just possible
that the statue was hidden inside. She got dirt under her fingernails. She got mud all
over her clothing, her face, and her hair. It took her a few minutes to convince herself
that the statue wasn't there. It wasn't.
She went to look for Thwaite among the shacks and lean-tos. "Father?" she
called.
"Here, Sidney," he replied. She found him by the sound of his voice. He was
with some old guy-the same geezer he'd been with in the gutter this morning.
Vic gave up pretence of sleep and sat up. "You," she said to him.
He stared at her with the bright-eyed gaze of senility. "Hello?" he quavered.
"We met this morning," Sidney said, bending over and moving into the lean-to.
She hunkered down by the cleric.
"Thish morning?" the old man's brow furrowed. "Let'sh shee . . ."
His voice trailed off, and he muttered inaudibly to himself.
"He's gone," said Thwaite. "It comes and goes. What happened to you?
You're a mess."
"Never mind," said Sidney with some embarrassment. She swiped futilely at her
face, dirtying it further. "It's not here."
"Did you expect it to be?"
"Not really. You know, I'm getting tired of being pushed around."
"Hmm?"
"No statue; everyone a hostage; Nick and Garni's flat trashed by jerk wizards. And
I've just been sitting around waiting for things to happen." "Well, Nick and
Kraki tried to do something"
"And just wound up in a closet somewhere. The hell with it." She stood up in
the rain determinedly. "Let's go get Garni."
"How the devil do you propose we do that?" "Come on."
Vic continued to mutter to himself.
The guard at the gate looked Sidney up and down. She was dripping wet, her hair was
plastered to her head, her pants were covered with burrs, and there were smears of mud
across face and shirt. "If you're here for a job interview," he said, "the
answer's no."
"Very funny, jocko," she snarled. "I want to see Madame Laura." The
guard laughed in her face. "But she doesn't want to see you," he said.
Sidney slugged him, hard, in the stomach. He bent over. She knocked him on the back of
the head with the pommel of her dagger. He fell to the brick paving.
She walked briskly through the gate and toward the door.
Thwaite went briefly to the guardhouse door. "Sorry," he said, and blessed
the guard, who was sitting up, groaning.
Sidney took a key from her pocket, unlocked the heavy wooden door, and flung it open.
She strode into the foyer.
All motion in the room stopped. Everyone stared at her.
A nobleman of middle years, clad only in a leather harness, was on his hands and knees
on the rug. A bit was in his mouth. A flame-haired, softskinned lovely rode on his back,
holding the reins. A look of horror passed across the nobleman's face.
One of the chief officers of the town watch lay on a couch, his coat off and his shirt
unbuttoned to the navel, a glass of whiskey on the table beside him. A dark-haired girl
who could hardly have been older than sixteen sat next to him, legs drawn beneath her, one
hand inside his shirt.
On the long staircase with its patterned rug stood a dark-skinned woman wearing the
helm of a Ducal Guard and not much else. Sidney headed for the stairway.
Thwaite trailed her, goggling at the girls and the sumptuous furnishings. The room was
lit with small fire elementals, trapped in globes affixed to the walls. That was expensive
and, should a globe be broken, quite dangerous.
"Hey!" said the woman wearing the helm, standing with hands on hips halfway
up the staircase. "Where the hell do you think you're going? And you're getting mud
on the carpet."
"Out of my way," said Sidney. The woman moved to block her. Sidney faked
right, then left, and the woman scrambled to keep in front.
"You can't come in here," she said.
"Actually," said Sidney, "that's why people visit this place."
"What?"
"N-never mind. Get out of my way, bitch, or I'll get more than mud on you."
Thwaite peered over Sidney's shoulder from down the stairs. "Try not to actually
kill anyone," he pleaded.
Sidney pulled her sword. The woman's eyes went wide, and she backed up the stairs.
Sidney pursued. The woman halted, took a breath, and screamed loudly.
Sidney grabbed her and pushed her over the bannister. The woman caught the edge of the
stairs and dropped, unharmed, to the floor below. She glared at Sidney. "Have you
considered a career on the stage?" Sidney asked, trotting up the stairs to the
landing, Thwaite close behind her.
Several hall doors opened. A dwarf wearing nothing but trousers and carrying an axe
came into the hall. His chest was amazingly hairy. Two human women peered over his
shoulders.
A thin man, naked as a jaybird, rushed out. He stared at Sidney and her sword, and
transformed into a hawk. He fluttered past her, toward the main door.
At the end of the hall, a door smashed open. Madame Laura strode forth. "What is
the meaning of this!" she shouted.
Madame Laura was a stout woman whose age, beneath copious makeup, was difficult to
discern. Her nails were close to six inches long, each painted a slightly different shade
of red. Her dress had more frills and ruffles than you can shake a stick at. She eyed
Sidney's mud-smeared form severely and reached back through the door for a loaded
crossbow.
"'Lo, Mom," said Sidney:
Thwaite stared from Madame Laura to Sidney and back, agape.
They sat in comfortable armchairs in Madame Laura's office. Laura sat behind the desk
and wafted a lady's fan. The windows were open a crack, to let in the air but not the
rain; but the room was still rather warm.
Thwaite and Sidney wore robes. Servants had taken their clothes away to be cleaned. The
silk evening gown Thwaite wore, decorated with needlepoint dragons and fish, was worth a
small fortuneand heavily perfumed.
"My dear," Laura remonstrated, "I do wish you'd chosen a less dramatic
entrance. The Baron of Montrance was beside himself. And Magister Prescott, fearing
discovery, apparently transformed into a bird and flew the coop-without, I might add,
paying for services rendered." "Sorry," said Sidney shortly. "I . . .
I need your help."
Laura sighed and eyed the ceiling medallion. "Of course you do, my dear," she
said. "We could start with a manicure. And your hairstyle is too, too outrй. Now, I
have in mind the most eligible young man" "Mother! Stop it."
Laura looked her daughter over and sighed. "Of course," she said gently.
"Of course you need my help. I don't hear from you for two and a half years, except
when Ross complains that you refuse to use him to fence your goods. Really, Prissy, you do
go out of your way to alienate people who'd be happy to help. . . ."
Sidney stood up abruptly. "This was a mistake," she said. "Where's my
sword?"
"Priscilla," said Laura. "Sit down. I've got your clothes and you're not
going anywhere until I find out what's wrong."
Sidney sat down and glared at her mother. "What is it, dear?" said Laura.
Sidney sighed. "Ross has kidnapped a friend of mine," she said. "I'm
going to rescue him. I need to know where he's being kept."
Laura pushed herself back from the desk. "Darling!" she said, appalled.
"Ross owns half this place, dear, you know thatI . . ."
"The elf says he'll start chopping pieces off by nightfall."
Laura shook her head repeatedly. "What in the world have you done to drive him to
such extremes?" she asked.
Sidney looked out the window. "It's a long story," she said. "Basically,
he wants a statue we took out of the caverns. Everyone and his brother wants it,
too."
"I'll call Ross in," said Laura with decision. "We'll talk this out. I'm
sure"
"Mom! You don't understand. I don't have the statue."
"Oh, my," Laura said. "Oh, my. That does put a different complexion on
things. Who does?"
"How the hell should I know?" Sidney snarled.
"Don't get all high and mighty with me, young lady!" shouted Laura,
waving her fingernails. "You disappear for close to three years, show up asking
for help, and you're just as impossible as"
"Oh, come on."
Laura gave an irritated sigh, opened the desk drawer, took out a flask, and downed a
slug of something. Thwaite eyed the flask and licked his lips. Laura noticed. "Oh, my
good sir," she said. "I am most dreadfully sorry. I have been shirking my hostly
duties." She rang a bell. "Can I get you something? And you, Priscilla."
"I wish you'd stop calling me that." "It's your name, isn't it?"
"My friends call me Sid," Sidney said defensively.
Laura shuddered delicately. A boy of about eight flung the door open and charged in.
"Hi, Laura!" he said.
"Monty, we need something from the bar. What would you like, Father?"
"Er . . . your house whiskey will do fine," he said.
Madame Laura hid a smile. "Nonsense," she said. "Monty, fetch a snifter
for Father Thwaite, and tell Frederico to give us four fingers of that single malt the
baron brought last week, he'll know the one. Scilla?" "Tea," Sidney said.
"And a pot of tea," Laura said with distaste.
"Okay, Laur'," said the boy. "Can I keep a frog in my room? Mom
says"
"What your mother says goes," said Laura. "But tell Cook to give you a
mason jar, and you may keep it in the wine cellar, if you promise to feed it every
day."
"Gee! Thanks, Laura." The boy disappeared. The door slammed shut behind him.
"Now, then," said Laura. She waited expectantly.
Sidney knew what was next. She gritted her teeth and resigned herself to the
inevitable. "I'm sorry, Mother," she said, as gracefully as she could.
"Look, I know it's probably half my fault, but every time I see you . . ."
Laura waved a crimson-nailed hand carelessly. "Never mind, my dear, never mind.
Ross will have my derriere in a sling if he learns I've helped you pry your friend loose,
you know."
"I'm not planning on telling him." "You did barge in here in a
rather"
"Look, I doubt anyone down there recognized me."
"In your state? Quite possibly." Laura sighed. "All right then. You are
my daughter, and it is my devoir to aid you. Can you supply particulars?"
"Thanks," said Sidney. "Okay. The guy is a dwarf. Garni ben Grimi. He was
taken from a flat in Five Corners. Number twelve, Cobblers Lane. At about eight o'clock
this morning, some goons nabbed him. They searched the flat for the statue, which was
there, actually-but were too stupid to find it, even though they smashed the place up
pretty badly."
"I have spoken to Ross about his tendency to employ the less than capable."
"Yeah. Anyway, that's about it." "No other leads?"
"Not right now."
"This is not much to go on. However, I will provide you with a list of those of
Ross's safe houses I know about: Obviously, he may have ones I don't know about. However .
. . hmm." Laura leaned back, and tapped one ruby fingernail against her chin. "I
recall that he has a shop on the Calabriot Bridge. A goldsmith's, used as a front and also
to launder funds. He has several rooms in the back. Knowing Ross's sense of humor, I would
venture to guess that he's got the dwarf there."
"What? Why?"
"Makes disposal easy. Just drop the creature off . . . dwarves are heavier than
water, you know. And it's a good way to torture the poor lamb, too. Just hold him over the
river . . ."
"I get the picture. Do you have the address?"
"Yes, of course. I will ask you to memorize the list before you depart, as I do
not want it widely circulated."
"Thanks, Mom," said Sidney. "There is one other thing."
"What?"
"Why do you never write or come to call? We've had our differences, but, really,
Priscilla, two whole years . . ."
"Okay, okay."
"It's not that I ask much from you. You've gone your own way, and although I
shudder to think of the life you must lead"
"Mom!" "Still, it doesn't seem like a great imposition to ask you to
stop by occasionallymore than once a decade would be nice"
"All right, already! Mother, you're driving me nuts."
The door smashed open. Monty staggered in, carrying a tray. "Here we are,"
said Laura.
They rode Madame Laura's carriage through the streets with the blinds tightly drawn.
"Priscilla?" said Thwaite.
"Don't you start in," said Sidney. "I was just wondering . . ."
"That's my real . . . I mean, that's the name she lumbered me with."
"Ah," said Thwaite. "May I inquire . . . ?"
"What is it?" Sidney said irritably, holding the blind aside and peering into
the rain.
"Does your mother also bear the taint?" "What? Oh, you mean, is she
therianthropic?" "Yes," said Thwaite.
"Yes," said Sidney. "It's inheritable."
"As are most diseases of the blood," said Thwaite. "I do wish you'd
consent to let me"
"No," said Sidney.
For a moment, there was only the clop of the horses' hooves and the patter of
raindrops. Then, Thwaite chuckled. "I assume her alternate form is the same as
yours," he said.
"Yes," said Sidney, puzzled. "Appropriate," said Thwaite.
"What do you mean?"
"That she should run a cathouse," said Thwaite. "We're pinned
down," said Wentworth.
Morglop stood up, brought his crossbow to his shoulder, aimed through the basement
window, and fired. The bolt went through the stomach of one of Montiel's men. Morglop
ducked back down. A dart of flame shot through the window and splashed against the far
wall. Plaster fell from the ceiling at the impact.
While Morglop cranked the crossbow to ready another shot, Jasper looked out the window
himself, trusting to his partial invisibility for protection. Through pouring rain, he saw
demonic forms flitting overhead; occasionally, they'd make a foray to the street below or
drop rocks on unwary combatants.
"Where did all these blasted fools come from?" muttered Wentworth. He was
drooping noticeably toward the floor as his potion of weightlessness wore off.
"Oh dear," said Jasper.
"What?" said Morglop, risking a peek himself. Down the street, a massed
formation of zombies, perhaps forty in all, marched toward the: flat. They were still half
a block away.
"Zombies," said Wentworth. "Demons. Thugs. Where did they all come from?"
"I would guess," Jasper said, "that they're after the statue."
"Haven't seen action like this since Ishkabibble Front," said Morglop. He
snapped another bolt through the window. A demon flew past with the arrow in its forelimb,
chittering in rage.
"You'd think even those idiots in Castle Durf would notice something was up,"
said Jasper. "If this gets any worse, the whole parish will be in ruins."
"I believe that it's time to initiate a strategic withdrawal," said
Wentworth.
"You mean, run?" said Morglop. "Er, well, yes."
"Good idea," said Morglop.
"What do you propose?" asked Jasper. There was an orange flash through the
window. When they looked out, a tentacular demon was eating zombies and screeching
merrily.
"That tunnel," said Wentworth. "The statue must have been taken down the
tunnel. With luck, it's a safe way out."
"Tunnel?" said Morglop uneasily.
"Don't tell me you're claustrophobic, too," said Jasper.
"No, of course not," said Morglop defensively. "I like midwinter
holidays."
Wentworth eyed the cyclops suspiciously.
XII.
Feeling exposed and wet, Sidney crouched on the rooftop. The rain-laden breeze blew
past her. The bridge hung out over the river; there was no shelter up here to cut the
wind.
To the left and below her was the street that ran the length of the bridge. She
crouched atop one of the buildings that lined it. Even in the rain, there was some
traffic-a nobleman's carriage travelling to the suburbs on the far side of the River
Jones, a scurrying jeweller returning to work, jacket held overhead to provide some meager
shelter.
She peered into the street and tried to read the sign over the shop immediately below
her. Montiel's front was Samuel Berber, Goldsmithy. She wasn't having much luck; letters
frequently looked distorted through a cat's eyes, and she was reading the sign from an odd
angle. She thought she had the right building.
She padded up the sloping roof to the peak and down the other side, to look at the
river. Below her was a window, and another below it. Both were shut. She could leap to the
sill of the upper window-but she doubted she could leap back, at least as long as the
window was shut. The sill was quite narrow.
While she contemplated it, a head stuck out from the window below, the one on the
bottom floor. It peered down at the river. The head looked as if it might be dwarven.
"Meow?" said Sidney.
Garni looked up. "Sidney?" he said in a low voice. "Is that you?" "Mrowr!"
Sidney transformed and clutched at the roofing tiles. In human form, she suddenly
realized just how far down it was to the river. And she had no faith in her clumsy body's
ability to retain its purchase on the rain-slick tiles.
"Garni?" she called softly.
"Yes!" said the dwarf, craning for a glimpse of her. "Are you
okay?" asked Sidney.
"All things considered," said Garni. "I'm still in one piece, at any
event. I've been hoping a boat would go under the bridge below my window, so I could
jump."
"Forget that," said Sidney. "That's suicide."
"I wasn't thrilled by the idea," said Garni. "Can you bring a
rope?" Sidney considered. As a cat, she couldn't carry much-but if she got Thwaite to
tie a rope to her, perhaps she could manage. "I'll try," she said. "Back in
a while."
Thwaite glanced up and down River Road. The cobbled street curved along the River
Jones, one side lined with expensive houses, the other with the rocky wall that had been
built to contain the river. At intervals, small piers extended into the water; this was
not a dock area, but people came here to fish, and the wealthy inhabitants of the houses
along the road kept pleasure boats. No one was watching.
To Thwaite's left, the Calabriot Bridge extended out over the river. Thwaite hiked up
his robe and, cradling Sidney and the rope in one arm, climbed up onto the railing that
ran along the river. He teetered atop the railing, then stood upright and stabilized
himself by leaning against the side of the first building on the bridge.
He couldn't quite reach the building's rain gutter.
Sidney stood on his hands and stared at the roof. A loop of the rope was around her
neck; the rest, tied in a coil. She was to drag it along the rooftops behind her. But she
didn't trust her ability to leap from Father Thwaite's hands to the rain gutter, not with
the rope to load her down.
Thwaite almost toppled from the railing, then leaned against the building again. He
pulled Sidney back down to his chest. "Too far?" he said. "Mrow, " she
said, looked at him, and pawed at the loop around her
neck. She grabbed the rope with a claw and shook her head, trying to drag it off.
Thwaite got the idea and removed the loop. "Mowr!" Sidney said
urgently.
He tucked the rope between his legs and lifted her up again. She leapt lightly to the
roof.
She peered back down at him. He took the rope and tossed it up to the roof with her. "Rowr,
" she said, thanking him.
Gingerly, Thwaite stepped back into the street. An urchin was watching him with wide
eyes.
"And who might you be, my child?" said Father Thwaite.
The grimy girl eyed him suspiciously, then ran off down the street. The cleric sighed
and went back to the shelter of a doorway.
Sidney nuzzled the loop and tried to get it over her head. Not having hands had its
drawbacks. If she transformed, she could easily manipulate the rope; but the loop was too
small to fit around a human neck.
She hooked a claw into the rope and dragged the loop onto her head. Then, she couldn't
get her claw out of the fibers. Her paw dragged the loop to the side. It fell back onto
the roof. She gave a small meow of frustration.
She tried again. This time, she got it. The loop slipped down around her neck.
She trotted off, pulling the rope. It was heavy sailor's cable; Thwaite had gotten it
at a pier a few blocks downriver. It was a good half-inch thick and twelve cubits long; it
must weight close to a stone, probably more than she herself did in cat form.
It was hard work, dragging the rope.
She was two-thirds of the way down the bridge to Garni's building when something odd
happened. Suddenly, the rope didn't seem so heavy. She stopped and turned around.
The coil had come undone. The main part of the rope was three cubits behind her, in a
loose clump; she was unravelling it as she moved. Thwaite had purposefully tied the coil
with a loose knot. The idea had
been that she could undo it with teeth and claws when she got to Garni. But this way,
she'd be forced to drag the rope in a long line. It might get hung up on some obstruction
along the way.
She decided to transform and retie the coil. Then, she realized that she couldn't get
the loop off her head. It had tightened under the strain. This was bad news. But it left
her no alternative. She started forward
again. The coil gradually unwound as she pulled the rope along.
She wished it weren't quite so wet. She walked forward ten feet, twenty . . .
Suddenly, Sidney was yanked off her paws. She tumbled down the rainslick roofing tiles,
toward the edge of the roof and the river below. It was a long fall to the water, down
there . . . and she couldn't swim. And she was weighted down by rope
Her claws skittered over the tiles. The rope around her neck was pulling her down, down
. . . she felt her speed gathering-
A claw hooked under a tile. The claw was almost yanked out of her paw -but it held. She
came to a halt.
She lay on the tile in sodden fur for a long moment, panting. She peered down the
slope.
The rope ran directly down the slope from her, over the edge of the building. She
puzzled over that; before she had been yanked off her paws, the rope had run behind her,
along the roof. Gradually, she realized what had happened. The rope behind her had slipped
down the slope of the roof. The loose end had plunged over the edge, pulling the rest of
the rope with it. The rope had continued to slideuntil it yanked her off her paws.
If she hadn't caught that tile, the rope would have pulled her into the river.
How was she going to get the rope to Garni now?
She scrabbled her way back up the sloping roof. Then, leaning away from the edge, she
paced carefully forward.
For a while, the rope followed smoothly, running along the edge of the building. Then
it got hung up on the edge of a tile. She moved forward, and the rope began to pull up
over the obstruction and onto the roof-until something suddenly gave. The section of rope
she'd dragged onto the roof plummeted back over the edge, and she was nearly yanked off
her paws again.
At least she was prepared this time-and she wasn't yanked as hard. She kept her
footing.
Sidney hoped no one in the building below would look out his window and see the rope
dangling. He might be tempted to lean out and pull on it. . . .
She came to Garni's building at last.
Now what? She had planned to transform and, in human form, tie the rope around a nearby
chimney. But with the loop over her head, there was no way to transform without killing
herselfand it was now too tight to be removed.
If she could get down to Garni, he could remove the loop. But once down there, she
couldn't get back up; there was no way she could jump two stories, even as a cat.
It was a conundrum. Up here, she couldn't get the rope off; down there, she couldn't
tie the rope to the chimney. What was she going to do? She meowed.
A moment later, Garni stuck his head from the window. "What took you so
long?" he said in a low voice.
She flicked an ear. "Mrowr. "
"This is the rope?" he said, and grabbed it.
She hissed violently and backed away. If Garni tried to climb now"Not ready
yet?" Garni asked.
"Mrow!" she said.
"Okay," he said. "Meow when ready."
She sat back on soggy haunches. Her fur was wet through and through and wasn't getting
any dryer. She'd gotten this far, and she wasn't going to give up now. But how was she to
tie the rope?
She studied the chimney. Perhaps if she just wrapped the rope around it three or four
times, that would do . . . yes, that sounded plausible.
She ran around the chimney four times, pulling the rope after her. She tried to keep it
tight against the bricks. Then, she studied her work. It looked reasonably sturdy. Faint
heart never won fair lady, she thought to herself, then realized how ridiculous that
sounded. "Mrowrorw!" she said, as loudly as she could.
Garni grabbed the rope and, using it to steady himself, stood on the windowsill. He
began to climb. Sidney could see the rope go taut.
The chimney was not in direct line with the window. The rope held against a tile for a
moment-and then the tile broke off. Garni swung at the end of the rope along the side of
the building. Sidney heard him grunt. She envisioned the dwarf scraping along the stucco,
losing his grasp and falling. . . .
But the rope continued to swing gently back and forth, like a pendulum. "Mrow?"
said Sidney.
"I'm okay," the dwarf gasped. He climbed gingerly.
Sidney was suddenly yanked forward by the loop around her neck. The rope had slipped
around the chimney an inch or two. Garni gave a yelp as he dropped an equal distance.
Sidney felt a momentary panic. The loop was tighter than ever.
Uncomfortably tight. "Sidney?" said Garni.
"Mrow!" she said, hoping he'd hear urgency in the sound. He began to
climb again.
The rope slipped again. It slipped a third time. Desperate, she hooked claws under the
tiles and held on, hoping that the little resistance she could add would stop the rope
from giving.
It helped, but she could feel the loop tightening . . . tightening. . . . Breath rasped
in her throat.
Garni pulled himself over the gutter and onto the roof. Sidney was choking.
He came to her. She clawed desperately at the loop. She could barely breathe. He sized
up the situation quickly. While Sidney choked, he worried at the loop and the knot that
held it. . . .
The loop loosened. Sidney panted for air. She stood up wearily, and rubbed up against
the dwarf.
"Thanks, Sid," Garni said, and stroked her wet fur.
On hands and knees, he followed her across the sloping, rain-slick tile. The grand duke
stood on the battlements of Castle Durf. "I see what you mean," he said,
lowering the looking glass.
Flying creatures whirled in the skies over Five Corners parish. Several buildings had
collapsed. At least one building was in flames. There was a flash of green and then a red
line that hung in the sky for a second or two.
"Still," said Mortimer petulantly. "I hardly see why you needed to drag
me away from my studies. If there's unrest in the city, put it down. Eh?" "My
men stand ready, Your Grace," said Major Yohn.
"What? You puppy," said General Carruthers contemptuously. "Your Grace,
I hardly think a passel of backwoods bandit fighters are what we need here. My men will
make short work of whatever's out there."
"Fine, fine," muttered the Grand Duke. He itched to get back to his
mushrooms. "See to it."
Carruthers smiled nastily at Yohn, then turned and strode off. Carruthers would
probably make a botch of things, Yohn reflected. He'd better restrict his men to the
castle. He expected a summons to arms before the night was out.
Nick's legs were stiff. It was uncomfortable, sitting on the floor with ankles bound.
He scooted forward and pulled in the coins.
Garfok's ears were drooping. Drizhnakh looked upset. Spug was grinning tusk to tusk.
"Dis is a dumb friggin' game," said Garfok.
"You is just pissed cause you is losin'," said Spug. "So is you, ya
maroon!" said Garfok.
"Ya got anything better to do?" said Drizhnakh. There was no response, save
the crackling of the torch.
"Another round?" said Nick.
"Yeah, sure," said Garfok resignedly.
"Good," said Nick. "What can you tell me about the statue?"
Garfok and Drizhnakh exchanged glances. "What statue?" Drizhnakh said.
"Come on, boys," said Nick. "You know about the statue. The one we took
out of your temple. The one the baroness said she wanted. That statue. What do you know
about it?"
"Nuffing," muttered Garfok.
"Now, now," said Nick. "No answer, no pay. No pay, no play."
"Okay, okay," said Drizhnakh. "But we doesn't know much. A long
time ago, see, our granfaders' granfaders used to live in the Orclands. But dere was
dis big brouhaha. Da Dark Lord got pissed at dem or somethin'. So dey split, wiv dis
statue thing."
"Days what Gramma said, anyhow," said Garfok. "I din't know it was in da
temple, though."
"Fragrit din't never tell nobody nuffing," said Spug. "Days right."
Drizhnakh nodded.
"Thanks, boys," said Nick. He shoved three stacks of silver coins across the
table.
Timaeus studied the gaming table as the others argued. He was no judge of military
matters, but it appeared as if the II Cobatrix was badly outflanked. And there did seem to
be a great many orcs. He wondered how Macpherson planned to pull this battle off.
Macpherson and the dark-skinned man were pouring over an incunabulum and bickering.
"Vellantius says the dress was standardized, doesn't that imply that
previous distinctions were eliminated? And . . ."
"Yet, in the same paragraph, he refers to the elephant head emblazoned on the
shields of the Ceterinae auxilia. This indicates a degree of variation from the accepted
standard. . . ."
Timaeus puffed on his pipe and wandered about the table. Macpherson, or more probably
his graduate students, had done a fine job painting the figures. He had to squint to make
out some of the finer details in the gray light. He picked up an orc.
"Leave that be," snapped Macpherson. "Positions are important, and
you'll never set it back in precisely the same place."
"Oh, let the poor lad alone," said the dark-skinned man. "It's not that
vital." They began to argue once again.
Timaeus studied the table. The historians had built little hills of sand and had stuck
bits of painted lichen here and there to represent trees. A ribbon of blue indicated a
river, in the center of which stood an island.
Nob Island, Timaeus slowly realized. The River Jones. And that steepsided hill must
be"Miller's Seat," he said. But where was Castle Durf? And the city of Urf
Durfal?
The dark-skinned man looked over. "That's right," he said. "Topography
look familiar, eh?"
"Yes," said Timaeus. "I assume this is how it looked in Imperial
days?" "As near as we can tell," said Macpherson. "Durfalus, later Urf
Durfal, was little more than a market village."
"And this battle?" asked Timaeus.
"The Battle of Durfalus," said Macpherson. "3708. Where Stantius the
Third was captured by the orcish forces."
Timaeus pondered this for a moment. "And the V Victrix was on this ridge?
Here?" he said.
"Quite so," said Macpherson. "I've maneuvered them into approximately
the same position. And"
"What happened to V Victrix?"
"Destroyed," said the dark-skinned man, "to the last soldier. They died
defending Stantius, and the Dung-beetle Clan trolls hauled away the bodies as
provender."
"Hmm," said Timaeus. "In that case, why don't you do some digging?"
"Pardon?" said Macpherson.
"Where is this?" said Timaeus, pointing to the ridge. "Collin Hill,
somewhere, isn't it? Looks likemm, Market and Sylvan streets. If they all fell
there, you should be able to find the bones, armor, weapons. Perhaps even a button or
two."
Macpherson's eyes lit up. "An excellent notion!" he said enthusiastically.
"I've been meaning to bring out my Intro Ancients class on a field trip. Just the
thing, set the undergrads to digging ditches. That's about all their intellectual
attainments render them suitable for, in any event."
" 'Twould certainly solve the argument," said the dark-skinned man.
"Mind if I tag along?"
"Afraid I'll plant blue buttons if you don't?" said Macpherson nastily.
"I wouldn't put it past you," said the dark-skinned man.
"Good heavens, look at the time," said Macpherson. "I've got a seminar
with my graduate students in fifteen minutes . . . we'll have to continue the game another
time."
"Oh, bother," said Timaeus. "Look, I have a few questions you may be
able to answer. Do you mind if I"
"Come along," said Macpherson shortly, pulling on a pair of boots and a
canvas jacket. "Ask on the way." And he strode quickly out the door, Timaeus
nearly trotting to keep up.
"Stantius," said Timaeus. "What happened to him after he was
captured?"
"No one really knows," said Macpherson, bounding down the stairs.
"Except Arst-Kara-Morn, of course. They took him back to the Orclands."
"And then?"
Macpherson threw open the door to the hall and dashed out into the rain. "Devil
should I know?" he said. "Ask the Dark Lord."
"Why was he the last emperor?" said Timaeus, puffing to keep up. He hated the
rain. Water and fire mages don't mix too well.
"Damned good question," said Macpherson. "The mantle of imperium never
descended on another."
"How is that possible?" asked Timaeus.
Macpherson shrugged, scattering raindrops from his canvas jacket. "Perhaps
Stantius isn't dead. Perhaps Arst-Kara-Morn performed some great magic to prevent it.
Perhaps the gods got tired of humanity, and decided they'd not bother selecting our next
king." He paused briefly to let Timaeus catch up, then squelched onward, diagonally
across the Common. "We do have some sketchy evidence that a great ritual magic was to
be performed on the plain of Arst-Kara-Morn after Stantius's arrival. What happened then,
it is impossible to know. Humanity, of course, was in the throes of a dark age, and the
orcs were nearly as badly off; some great civil war broke out. Arst-Kara-Morn took
centuries to recover, and it's only now that they've launched another great war of
conquest."
"Is that what it truly is?" said Timaeus, disturbed. "You think this
thing at Ish is . . ."
Macpherson splashed through a puddle, wetting Timaeus to the knee. "Damned
right," he said. "Just the beginning."
"Do you know anything about a statue?" said Timaeus. "What statue?"
"A life-size statue of Stantius."
Macpherson ran up the steps to Cranford Hall. Gargoyles peered down from the soffit.
"All over the empire during his reign," he said.
"Cast entirely of athenor," said Timaeus.
Macpherson halted, blinked, and peered at Timaeus. "Impossible," he scoffed.
"No one would be so profligate with the metal. Why, its magical uses
alone"
"I know about that," said Timaeus. "But I've, ah, heard a rumor about
such a statue, and I was wondering whether there's any historical record."
"No," said Macpherson, shaking his head. "I've never run across any
such mention." He peered more closely at Timaeus. "If you should run across
such a thing, I should be extremely interested in examining it." Morglop was quite
relieved when the end of the tunnel came in view.
Several sections of the tunnel were already on the verge of collapse; once, a cave-in
had begun around them, and they'd had to run to avoid burial. Morglop pulled himself over
the tunnel's lip. Wentworth, recently re
stored to his accustomed weight, followed. It was drizzling. Jasper flitted around
Morglop and into the rain.
"Where are we?" said Wentworth.
"Just a mo," said Jasper. He flew straight up for a few dozen cubits and
surveyed the city. He zipped back down to the other Boars. "Near Roddy Square,"
he said.
Morglop studied the ground around the tunnel. He noticed the impressions made by a pair
of boots. He began to follow the tracks. They led to one edge of the lot, then walked
along it. They turned, and walked back. On the third iteration, Morglop realized that
whoever had worn these boots had been searching the lot, perhaps for the statue.
He came back to the others, who were examining a pile of dirt. Someone or something had
been digging at it. "Someone here before," Morglop said. "Search for
statue. Not find. I am puzzled; no wagon, no heavy prints. How they take statue from
tunnel?" He shrugged.
"Recognize that?" said Wentworth, nodding at the mound of dirt.
"I believe so," said Jasper. "It looks like what's left of an earth
elemental when the summoned force dissipates. So we're looking for an earth mage,
eh?"
"So it would seem."
"Now what?" said Morglop.
"Tracking the statute from here looks pretty futile," said Wentworth.
"Let's go back to my shop, and I'll conduct a magical scan. With luck, I should be
able to pinpoint the statue's current location."
"Okay," said Morglop. "Get cleaned up. Have tea." "That sounds
pleasant," said Jasper.
XIII.
Ross Montiel stood in the top floor of number eleven with his pet water mage. George's
body lay in the street. Ross peered at it sadly. "Golly," he said. "Micah
is sure taking his time."
The water mage was close to tears. "Duh-duh-demons," he blubbered. A winged
form flitted past the windows.
"I can see that," said Ross. "And zuh-zombies!" "Right,
right," said Ross.
There was a creaking sound from the roof. Ross looked up uneasily. There was a sharp
crack, then a rumble. Plaster fell about them. Ross and the water mage ran for the stairs.
The roof ripped off the building. Above them, peering in, was a giant demonic form,
something with compound eyes and tentacles. It emitted a peculiar high-pitched giggle. A
tentacle grabbed the water mage, who was too terrified to attempt a spell. He screamed.
The demon giggled again and inserted the mage in a massive, toothless maw. It gummed the
wizard to death.
"Oh, phooey," said Ross as he skipped down the stairs. It was hard to find
magicians who worked cheap. "Who's running these darn demons, anyhow?" he
muttered.
Someone was banging on the cellar door. "Let me out!" yelled Elma. "Shut
up!" shrieked Ross. Where was Micah, anyhow?
Ross considered running across the street to number twelve. He went to the parlor
window. A phalanx of zombies marched down the street, heading for a bunch of dockyard
toughs.
Ross recognized the dockers. It was the Death Spuds, a petty waterfront gang. He'd
fought a gang war with them once. He was happy to see them die.
Where was Micah, anyhow?
Up ahead, odd shapes flitted among the clouds. Carruthers, who was rather nearsighted,
failed to see them. There was the occasional flash and boom of a spell.
"Righto," said the general. Behind him was a century of the Ducal Guard, a
hundred middle-aged men on horses. "We'll sweep the blighters before us, what?"
"I say," said one of his men. "This'll be fun, eh? Haven't seen action
since last Carnival."
"A hundred men charging on horseback ought to give the scum whatfor, eh,
lads?" said the master sergeant. There were chuckles.
"Right, then," said the general. "On my mark, charge!"
With yells and laughter, the horsemen thundered down Thwart. Three of Micah's thugs
broke from hiding. They darted down Thwart Street into the doorway of the next building.
Micah watched them go.
A demon swooped. It had three rotating wings, an arrangement Micah had never seen
before. It grabbed one of the goons in its claws and began to lift.
"Now!" piped Micah. Crossbows twanged about him. Several bolts hit the demon.
The demon was startled enough to drop the goon. The goon fell twenty feet and broke his
neck on the cobblestones.
The other two made it to the safety of the doorway.
Micah sighed. There were too many demons and random blasts of magic out there. The only
reasonably safe way for his men to get to Montiel was by working down the street from
building to building. The buildings provided a modicum of shelter from demonic attack and
haphazard explosions. Unfortunately, Micah was losing too many men. It wasn't just the
demons, either. There seemed to be at least a dozen opposing groups out
therezombies, elves, dockyard toughs . . . Half the city was out after the statue.
"Better get the next group ready," said Micah to a hulking thug. "A lot
of the boys are deserting," said the thug.
"Of all the disloyal twerps," said Micah.
"Aw, come on," said the thug. "These guys signed up to kneecap debtors
and make an easy quid. Monsters from the nether hells ain't in the job description."
Another group of thugs dashed for the far doorway. They made it.
"Ross is in danger," shrilled Micah. "He needs us."
The thug dug a finger into his ear and drilled for earwax. He didn't want to respond to
that statement. In his opinion, a boss who got himself into this much trouble didn't much
deserve to stay boss.
But no one was asking his opinion.
The elven sailors huddled in the ruins of an apartment building. "Gosh,
Cap'n," said one. "This was supposed to be easy money."
"Yeah," said another. "Grab a statue and run."
"Sorry, guys," said the captain. "Looks like a lot of other bozos heard
about this statue thing, too."
The baroness's headquarters was in a sewer. The scent left something to be desired, but
it was well hidden, and the catacombs gave her scouts ready access to the whole parish.
The lich plodded up to her, dragging a dead elf. The baroness grabbed the body and
inspected it. She spoke a Word; she spoke several. She did not need to kill an animal to
fuel this spell. Enough people were dying up above; she tapped the energy of their deaths.
She completed the spell. A zombie elf lurched to its feet and back down the corridor to
join the rest of her forces.
"Where is the statue?" the baroness demanded.
"It's a madhouse out there," whispered the lich. "I count at least six
contending forces."
"Damn those orcs," muttered Veronee. "They said they were selling me an
exclusive."
"And," whispered the lich sarcastically, "an ore's word is his
bond." "Spare me," snarled Veronee. "When will you have it?"
"Hard to say," the lich whispered. "We're half a block from number
twelve. It shan't be long."
A fireball exploded in the rubble.
As the flames dissipated, the form of a paunchy, red-haired young man in a maroon
greatcoat appeared. He held an elaborately carved meerschaum pipe and stared about the
rubble that had once been number 12, Cobblers Lane.
"Good heavens," said Timaeus. A sudden whistle increased in volume and
intensity. He threw himself flat on the ground and rolled behind a cast-iron bedstead.
A flash of green exploded in the street. Cobblestones, thrown from the roadbed, flew in
all directions, shattering windows. In its place, the explosion left a thorntree, standing
two stories high. Its branches moved restlessly, searching for prey.
The thump and thunder of other spells could be heard. So could shouting voices and the
screams of the dying.
On his hands and knees, Timaeus scrambled about what was left of the flat. He'd
teleported because his trip to the university had taken far longer than he had expected;
too long.
He hoped Sidney wouldn't be too upset. "Sidney?" he called. "Nick?
Father Thwaite?"
Awestruck, the elves held their fire. A hundred men thundered past on horseback. A
hundred men in mail. A hundred men with lance and sword. Horseshoes struck sparks from the
cobblestones. At the van floated the flag of Athelstan.
They certainly looked impressive. Then they met the zombies.
The big advantage a man on horse has over a foe on foot is mass. When a cavalryman
charges you with lance extended, a ton is hurtling at you at twenty miles an hour. All of
that kinetic energy is concentrated at the point of the lance. That lance can penetrate
any mail.
A horseman's advantage is also his Achilles' heel. Picture cavalry charging pikes. The
pikes are longer than the lances. Guess whose point penetrates whose mail?
A massed pike formation can defeat a cavalry charge every time if-and this is an
important ifthe formation holds. For a cavalry charge is a fearsome sight. Many a
pikeman has turned and fled when faced with the reality of a ton of flesh and steel
hurtling down his throat.
Unfortunately for the Ducal Guard, zombies have no imagination. Being dead already,
they have no fear of death.
General Carruthers was supremely confident of the Ducal Guard's ability to sweep all
opposition before it. He kept his confidence right up to the instant that he ran his mount
into the zombies' pikes. The horse screamed, fell on its back (flinging Carruthers ten
feet into the curb), and broke its leg. It continued to scream as the rest of the hundred
piled into it, horses falling, men dying on pikes or trampled underfoot.
The irresistible force met the immovable object. The immovable object won.
Zombies with swords and axes moved out to dispatch the wounded. Soon, there'd be a
whole bunch of new zombies. Necromancers have something of an unfair advantage that way.
Limping in clanking armor, scared out of his wits, General Carruthers fled down the
street.
There wasn't anybody here, Timaeus realized.
In the distance, there was the clash of arms, the sounds of screams, and a tremendous
clatter. More spells rocked the air. I've got to get out of here, Timaeus thought.
Cobblers Lane was an unhealthy place to be.
He hoped that the rubble did not contain the bodies of his companions. If it did, he'd
never find them.
Where would they have gone?
No way to know. But Kraki's inn sounded like a good bet. Timaeus began to prepare
another fireball teleport.
A second fireball flashed in the ruins across the street. Montiel opened the door a
crack. Incredibly, there didn't seem to be anyone in the street right now. He darted out
and into the rubble of number twelve.
It didn't take him long to find the tunnel below the floorboards. He ventured down it a
short length but couldn't go any farther. A few cubits in, it had collapsed.
He stood in the tunnel for a long moment. Spells boomed and crashed in the distance.
"I've been taken," muttered the elf. Obviously, the statue was gone.
Corky Evanish had said no one else knew about the thing. Corky Evanish had been lying
through his teeth. Corky Evanish had some questions to answer, Ross decided. If the
customs official answered them with alacrity, Ross might even let him live. For an hour.
Or two. The elf smiled to himself in anticipation.
Ross clambered up the side of the hole and pulled himself onto the rubble. "Uh
oh," he said. A bunch of guys in rags were waiting for him. "Hi fellas!"
said the elf. "You've just become a bunch of rich . . . dead
guys." They were dead, all right. Some of them were weeks dead. They gave off
quite a pong.
"It is awfully hard," Ross reflected, "to bribe zombies."
Ross was getting a little frightened, but he hid it well. The zombies hustled him into
the sewers. Ross used the sewers to dispose of corpses. He was beginning to suspect that
he might wind up a corpse himself.
"Who are you?" said the veiled woman to Montiel in a melodious but somehow
threatening voice.
"Hiya doll," said the elf, trying to get a glimpse of her legs.
"Montiel, Ross Montiel. But you can call me sugar."
She gave a low chuckle. "The dead have no epithets," she said. She motioned
to the lich. Montiel died quickly.
"My apologies," she told the corpse. She spoke the spell that would allow her
to interrogate the spirit of Ross Montiel. "Where is the statue?" she asked.
"Beats the hell out of me," said the sepulchral but somehow still shrill
elven voice.
Veronee grimaced. Her zombies had already sifted through the ruins. The elf had been
her last hope for information. She was tired and testy. She'd been up all day for nothing.
"I await your orders," the lich whispered.
The gods only knew where the damn thing was, Veronee thought. Someone had nabbed it,
that much was clear. Judging by the mess up top, half the city was trying to find it.
"Back to the house," she told the lich. "What about the zombies?"
it whispered.
"Let them fight on," she said. The zombies were of no account. It was easier
to let them be cut to pieces than to try to find some place to keep them until needed.
It was time, reflected the baroness, to give Morty a visit. The grand duke might be a
fool, but Sir Ethelred, the foreign minister, ran a fairly effective intelligence network.
The statue might be anywhere in the city; if anyone could find it, Sir Ethelred could. All
Morty had to do was give the orders. He'd be happy to give her the statue as a present,
Veronee thought; more than happy, if she were to give him the reward he desired. The
thought was distasteful-but, Veronee thought, exitus acta probat, after all.
As long, she thought, as she managed to keep the truth of the matter from Sir Ethelred.
"Catastrophe," blubbered General Carruthers. "Foul sorcery and knavish
tricks."
"What exactly" said Sir Ethelred, peering over his pince-nez.
"Demons!" shouted the general. "Necromancy! Undead! The whole parish in
chaos! Mobilize the army! Send out word across the realm! The grand duke must flee to
his"
"Thank you," said Sir Ethelred testily. "You may go."
Carruthers looked from the foreign minister to Major Yohn and back again. The general
knew when he was being snubbed.
He gritted his teeth. He hadn't exactly returned in triumph. Blushing it shame, he
strode from the library.
Major Yohn turned to Sir Ethelred, his leather chair creaking. "It's hard to
believe that a simple magic object found by some adventurers could cause this much
chaos," he said.
Sir Ethelred shrugged. "Per rumor," he said, "it's an object of
fantastic value, as well as of magical power. Something that seems almost calculated to
arouse greed among our less virtuous citizens."
"What would you have me do?" Yohn said.
"The most important thing," said Sir Ethelred, "is simply to restore
order. It's a rather formidable undertaking, to be sure, but"
"I believe it is feasible," said Yohn matter-of-factly. "Good,"
said Sir Ethelred. "I shall leave it in your hands." "A pity Carruthers
was"
"Carruthers is a fool," said Sir Ethelred shortly. He curled a greasy lock
around one forefinger.
"The grand duke seems to trust"
"You leave Mortimer to me," said Sir Ethelred. "How long do you expect
you'll take?"
Major Yohn stood. "I shall report when I have a better notion," he said.
"Farewell."
"And godspeed," said Sir Ethelred, rising and shaking the young soldier's
hand.
Timaeus stood at the bar of the Inn of the Villein Impaled. "What's your
pleasure?" said the wench.
He eyed her plump bodice, then thought better of it. "Ahpint of
bitter," he said. "In a clean glass, mind." He didn't think much of the
inn's standards of hygiene. "And would you have any pipeweed?"
"Aye, sir," said the wench, and went to fetch him his drink and smoke. He was
beginning to get worried. His friends weren't here. He'd been up to Kraki's room, but
there was no sign of recent occupancy. Timaeus frowned, shrugged, then settled in at a
table by the window. He'd just have to wait for someone to show up.
He peered through the window into Roderick Square. Old Mad Roddy still posed atop his
charger. Timaeus drank a silent toast to Valiant, Roderick's horse, who, per legend, had
considerably more brains than his rider.
A wizened derelict came to the table. "Buy a drink for an old man?" he
wheezed.
Timaeus was about to give him the brush-off when he noticed a pigeon on the man's
shoulder. "Where'd you get the bird?" he asked.
"Heh," said Vic craftily. "Buy me a drink, and I'll tell you the
tale." So Timaeus did, and Vic began to spin him some yarn about a shipwreck
and a cursed bird. Timaeus fed the pigeon pretzels and had some more beer.
XIV.
The sign on Wentworth's door said "Closed." Sidney glanced through the
window. There didn't seem to be anyone inside the shop.
The only other pedestrian in the street, a fop with a rapier, ran through the rain in a
futile attempt to protect his silk blouse. Though no eyes were on her, Sidney didn't pause
as she passed Wentworth's storefront. She merely strolled past the shop and around the
corner.
Garni and Father Thwaite were waiting for her, huddled against the side of the
building.
"It's closed," Sidney reported. "I didn't see anyone inside."
Father Thwaite was unhappy with this development. "Are you certain it's necessary
to break in?" he said. "It seems rather rude-not to mention illegal."
"Look, Father," said Sidney. "Last thing we knew, Nick and Kraki were
headed here. Then they disappear, and some guy who's been on a strict diet for five or six
centuries shows up with a ransom note. Maybe Jorgesen has nothing to do with it. But I
wouldn't bet on it. Rude or not, I'm busting in."
Thwaite sighed.
"What if Jorgesen shows up while we're ransacking the place?" asked Garni.
They stood in silence for a moment. "We'll worry about that when it happens,"
Sidney said. "I just wish we were better armed." She had only her sword; the
others had no weapons at all.
Through the gray light and pouring wet, they walked back to Fen Street. Garni and
Thwaite stood in front of the door and argued about nothing in particular while Sidney
worked on the lock. A lone carriage came down the street, its horse morose in the rain,
its driver buried deep in his cloak.
Garni and Thwaite moved to shield Sidney from the driver's eyes as she worked.
The lock came open. They hustled inside. Sidney locked and closed the door behind them.
Father Thwaite took a sniff and immediately began to chant a prayer. He threw his arms
wide; silver light appeared, encircling Garni and Sidney as well as Thwaite.
Instantly, Sidney drew her sword.
"What is it, Father?" Garni demanded, reaching for a battle-axe that wasn't
there.
Thwaite shook his head and continued to chant.
Sidney circled warily, looking for danger. "Gods," she said. "What a
smell."
"What is it?" said Garni.
Sidney rounded the counter. "Rotten meat," she said. "That's what it
is."
Garni peered over her shoulder. The floor of the shop was covered with dismembered
bodies in an advanced state of decay. "Gah," he said. "They've been here a
long time."
Thwaite stopped chanting. The silver light dissipated. "Sorry," he said.
"I smelled zombies, so I . . ."
"No need to apologize, Father," said Sidney. "You didn't know they were
dead."
"Zombies are dead," said Thwaite. "You mean . . . dysfunctional, I
suppose."
"Whatever," said Sidney irritably. She blinked; she recognized one of the
corpses. "Mike Yarrow!" she said. "Hell." She stood over the body for
a moment. "He looks fairly fresh."
There was the sound of a key in the lock.
Sidney dived behind the counter. Garni rolled under a worktable. Father Thwaite darted
up the stairs to the roof.
". . . nice cup of tea . . . my word, what a pong," said Wentworth as he
entered the shop.
Morglop sniffed. "Undead!" he grated. He hurled Wentworth to the floor,
whipped out his sword, vaulted to stand atop the counter, and peered about alertly. Then,
he noticed the mess on the floor and relaxed.
Wentworth picked himself off the shop floor. He was irritated. "My dear
cyclops," he said. "It is not considered courteous to play skittles with the
person of your host. . . ." He caught sight of the dismembered bodies. "Oh
dear," he said. "And the cleaning woman doesn't come till Tuesday."
Garni lay against a wall. A severed hand in an advanced state of decay
rested less than a foot from his nostrils. Garni's nose twitched. He hoped the
newcomers would leave soon. Either that or find him. He could feel bile rising in his
throat.
Jasper flitted into the shop. The point of green light circled the room.
"Wentworth, old chum," he said, "I know your potions contain somewhat
exotic ingredients, but really. Eye of newt and toe of frog is all very well, but rotting
human flesh . . . Hullo. What's that?"
"What's what?" said Wentworth, gloomily searching through his pockets for his
handkerchief. The smell was really quite revolting.
"I sense . . ." said Jasper. "Ah, Miss Stollitt. What a pleasure to meet
you again. Do introduce us to your two companions."
With some relief, Garni rolled out from under the worktable. Shuddering, he pushed the
dismembered hand away with his boot. Sidney and Thwaite reluctantly joined him.
Wentworth stared at the trio, handkerchief to nose, in undisguised astonishment.
"Jasper," he said, "will you please tell me what in creation is going
on?"
The smell of zombie wasn't nearly so bad in the back room, at least with the door
firmly closed. Sidney, Thwaite, and Garni sat on stools at a scarred and battered old
oaken table.
Morglop leaned over Sidney. His single eye was golden, huge in his face; a scar slashed
his right cheek from top to bottom. In one ear, he wore a feathered earring. His mail was
polished but well-worn, a few broken links visible. His triceps bulged. He wore a sword, a
pommelled dagger, and throwing stars. He looked dangerous. "Crumpet?" he
growled, scowling and holding out a plate.
"We'll never talk," said Sidney defiantly. She clenched her fists and sat
bolt upright on the plain wooden stool.
Jasper's green point of light hung over another stool. "But my dear," he
said, "all I ask is that you explain"
"You can kill a free woman," said Sidney fiercely, "but you cannot break
her." Her jaw was set.
Wentworth, who had been bustling in the background, appeared with a steaming pot and a
platter bearing teacups. "Tea?" he said brightly.
"Do your worst," snarled Garni. He folded his arms across his chest and
jutted his beard. Thwaite, pale, nodded agreement.
"The last we saw your friend Pratchitt," said Jasper, "he and a rather
muscular fellow were pursuing us by carpet over the skies of this city-for no discernible
reason, as far as we could tell."
Sidney made a rude noise. "I don't know what you've done with Nick and Kraki, and
I don't know what you're going to do with us. But remember this, villain"
"Really," said Jasper. "This is all quite unnecessary."
Since no one had responded to Wentworth's offer, the alchemist poured cups for Jasper,
Morglop, and himself. Jasper's teacup rose from the table and tilted back in midair. There
was a slurping sound. The tea level dropped noticeably. Wentworth turned to Garni.
"One sugar or two?" he asked.
"I will not break bread with my enemies," Garni growled.
"It isn't bread," Wentworth pointed out. "It's tea. And I rather hope
you don't break the china."
"What makes you think we enemies?" asked Morglop, popping a whole crumpet
into his mouth. His mail jangled as he sat at the table and pulled over the jam.
Sidney snorted. "First, you offer to buy our statue. When we don't immediately
agree, you kidnap two of our group, threaten to kill them unless we give you the
statueand, when that fails, assault Nick's flat and try to snatch the statue by main
force. This doesn't count as friendly behavior where I come from."
"You don't have the statue?" asked Jasper urgently.
Sidney glared at him. "Bring on your tortures," she said. "We'll never
tell."
"Well," said Wentworth wearily. "Really. You break into my shop, spread
dead people all over my floor, smash up my merchandise, and refuse my tea. Breaking and
entering is one thing, but deliberate rudeness is quite"
"What?" said Garni.
"I mean to say," said Wentworth, "after all. It's only a bloody spot of
tea. I'm drinking out of the same pot, am I not? There should be no cause to suspect
poison."
"No, no," said Garni. "What was that about dead people?"
"And damned odoriferous they are, too," said Wentworth. "I haven't the
foggiest idea how I'm to get rid of them. I can't just set them out with the trash; people
will look askance."
"Wait, wait," said Father Thwaite. "You mean the zombies aren't
yours?"
"Mine?" said Wentworth. "What the devil do I want with zombies? Cuthbert
knows, finding capable salesmen is difficult enough, but I suspect that animated corpses
would rather put off my clientele. . . ."
"They aren't ours, either," said Sidney slowly. "No?" said
Wentworth. "Then whose are they?"
"Precisely," said Jasper with satisfaction.
They all stared at him. Or rather, in his general direction. "What do you know
about it?" Garni demanded.
"Less than you," said Jasper. "However, consider. There was a fight here
between a group of zombies and . . . an unknown. The statue has disappeared."
"You don't have it?" said Sidney.
"Would that I did," said Jasper. "The whole purpose of watching your
apartment was not to snatch the statue at an opportune momentI do have certain
respect for the notion of property rights, my dear, and I can raise sufficient capital to
purchase it from you should you desire to sell-rather, it was to ensure that the item did
not fall into the wrong hands." "Like whose?" said Sidney skeptically.
"Do you know what your statue is?" asked Jasper. "Do you?" said
Garni.
"Er . . . well, no, not entirely. But . . . I suspect it is important. That is,
not merely of value for its metal content, but important on a far higher plane."
"Hah?" said Sidney.
"You know about the Sceptre of Stantius?"
"It's glowing, right? And there's some silly story about a new king . . ."
"Precisely. And your statue depicts Stantius." "So?"
"So? Consider! How much magical energy does the statue contain? There must be
a connection between it and the sceptreand, possibly, with the war in Ishkabibble.
Suppose the legend of the king's return is true; would not-ah-certain parties take
considerable pains to forestall the legend's fulfillment?"
"If you were just watching the apartment," said Thwaite, "why did you
attack us?"
"We didn't," said Jasper.
"No?" said Sidney. "You didn't? Muscle boy here didn't come charging
into our flat waving his sword?" She pointed at Morglop with her thumb. "Friend
Jorgesen didn't try to blow up the building with explosive flasks?"
Wentworth cleared his throat. "No," he said. "Rather, certain members of
our party ascertained that the statue was in imminent danger of capture by the forces of
darkness."
"What?" said Sidney.
"Therefore, we acted to prevent it from falling into the hands of the lords of
evil."
"I beg your pardon?" said Thwaite.
"You were under attack when we arrived, as you may recall," Wentworth said.
He took a sip of tea.
"No, we weren't," said Sidney.
"Yes, we were," Thwaite reminded her. "We were being evicted."
"Mrs. Coopersmith?" said Sidney unbelievingly. "You thought Mrs.
Coopersmith was a servant of chaos?"
Morglop swallowed and looked at the ceiling.
"I said that a member of our party came to this conclusion," Wentworth said
scathingly. "I didn't say that this individual was even remotely justified in so
deciding."
Morglop cleared his throat but said nothing. Everyone stared at him. "Why am I
beginning to believe this?" complained Sidney.
Garni grinned.
"One of the principles of my order," said Father Thwaite, "is: never
ascribe to malice what is adequately explained by incompetence."
"A wise rule," said Jasper.
"Everyone else attack too," said Morglop defensively. "Human thugs,
demons . . ."
Wentworth snorted. Morglop hurriedly took another crumpet.
"Let me get this straight," said Sidney. "You didn't attack us to get
the statue."
"Correct," said Jasper. "Actually, I had hoped you still retained
possession."
"No." Sidney sighed.
"The statue doesn't show up on a magical scan," Wentworth said to Jasper.
"Damnation," said the green light. "What does that mean?" Wentworth
shrugged and took a sip of tea. "It's either out of the city or someone's masking
it."
"Masking it?" said Garni.
"Hiding its magical emanations," said Wentworth. "Is that
possible?" Garni asked.
"Certainly," Wentworth said. "It's not an easy thing to do. It would
take a fairly powerful mage. But it's by no means impossible. It's merely a variant on a
simple invisibility spell."
"Okay," said Sidney. "Look here. Nick and Kraki have, we think, been
kidnapped by a necromancer. At least, what delivered their ransom note was a skeleton in a
robe. If-and I'm only saying ifthose zombies aren't yours, then I buy your story.
But why are you so concerned about the statue falling into the wrong hands?"
"Yeah," said Garni. "Who are you guys?"
"Jasper de Mobray, Magister Mentis and KGF, at your service, sir,"
said Jasper. The green light dipped, giving the impression of a bow. "No, I mean you
lot," said Garni.
"Am Morglop," said Morglop. "We're Boars," said Wentworth.
Garni looked at him as if he were mad. "Of course you are," he said
soothingly. "I'm a gazelle myself."
Morglop chuckled.
"Members of the Loyal and Fraternal Sodality of the Boar," said Wentworth
with irritation. "An ancient order of chivalrous souls devoted to righting wrongs and
fighting evil."
Sidney snorted. "A club where overgrown adolescents go to suck back booze and tell
each other lies about adventures they never had."
"Now Sidney," said Thwaite reproachfully. "The Boars distribute free
capons to the poor every Mathewan's Feast, and"
"One of our many charitable endeavors," said Jasper.
There was silence for a moment. "First," said Sidney, "I get hooked up
with a aristo firebug with delusions of competence. Then, I get involved with a bunch of
overage boy scouts."
"You can always go home to mum," suggested Thwaite. "It's beginning to
look more attractive," muttered Sidney.
"Well," said Wentworth, "let's see what we can find out about those
zombies." He rubbed his hands with anticipation, pushed his chair back, rose, and
dumped several ounces of crumb on the carpet. A marmalade cat materialized and began to do
its part for household cleanliness.
They stood in the front room. One hand holding a scented handkerchief to his nose,
Wentworth carefully opened an ivory box with the other. Within, there lay a dragon's
tooth.
"This is a rather rare item," he said, his voice slightly muffled by the
handkerchief. "Avagrrine!" he shouted.
Vibrating slightly, the dragon's tooth rose into the air and hung at about chest
height. It turned black and swung to point at the door to the cellar. "Black,"
said Wentworth, "for necromancy. Not that this is any sur
prise, to be sure. And it is indicating that a source of necromantic magic either came
from or exited through the cellar door. Or possibly both." Morglop opened the door
and peered into the dark cellar. "Need light," he said.
Wentworth took a lantern from its hook by the cellar door. He put his handkerchief into
his pocket and, breathing through his mouth, withdrew a small flask from inside his coat.
He opened it and poured a single drop onto the lantern's wick. The wick flamed.
Wentworth led the way into the cellar, holding the lantern high, the dragon's tooth
floating before him. "Aha," he said. "That tunnel was not here
before." The tooth pointed directly toward a roughly dug hole in the side of the
cellar wall.
"Not tunnel again," muttered Morglop.
"Hunh," said Sidney. "Okay. Let's go take a look."
"Can you give us some weapons?" Garni asked Wentworth. "Of course,"
the alchemist said.
Cards were scattered across the wooden box. In the flickering torchlight, Garfok and
Drizhnakh looked hangdog in defeat. "And where is her headquarters?" asked Nick.
Garfok looked at Drizhnakh. Drizhnakh shrugged resignedly. "She gots a place on
Collin Hill," said Garfok. Nick skated each orc a shilling, picked up the deck, and
began to shuffle.
"Oi!" said Spug suddenly. "Wait a minute. I gots an idear."
"Oi, Drizhnakh," said Garfok. "Ya hears dat? Spug gots an idear."
They both chortled.
"No, really," insisted Spug as Nick began to slap down cards. "Look. Dis
guy's got alla da dough, right?"
"Days right," said Garfok soothingly.
"So we is lettin' him ask questions so's we gets a stake, right?" "Right
you is, Spug!" said Garfok. "Dat is real good. Ya got it right da first time,
even."
"Okay," said Spug. "Why'nt we just take da dough? We gots swords an
stuff, right? Huh, guys?"
Nick stopped dealing. He looked at the orcs nervously. Drizhnakh's jaw dropped. A dazed
look appeared in Garfok's eyes.
"Oi!" shouted Drizhnakh. He sprung to his feet. "Arrrrgh!" He
ran to the chamber's uneven, rocky wall. He banged his head against the stone. "Arrrrgh!"
he said. He banged his head again. Soon, he was building up a good rhythm: Thud thud
thud thud.
Spug whimpered. "I's sorry, guys," he said. "Gosh, I's sorry I's so
dumb. But how come"
"You is right," said Garfok. "Huh?" said Spug.
"You isn't wrong," said Garfok. "You is right." "I is?"
"Yup."
There was a moment of silence, broken only by the thud of Drizhnakh's head against
stone. Then, Spug leapt for joy. "Hah!" he shouted. "I is right! I is
right!"
There was a thunk. The wooden box jerked two feet across the floor, cards flying off it
and into the air. A quarrel protruded from the box's side. "Freeze," said a
voice.
The orcs froze. Drizhnakh stopped banging his head on the wall and peered dizzily at
the speaker.
Sidney Stollitt stood in the passageway, a crossbow in either hand. One was still
loaded.
"Oi," said Garfok. "If we rush her . . ."
Two figures appeared flanking her: a dwarf with a great axe and a cyclops with a sword.
A point of green light flew past them and into the chamber.
"I'd advise against any precipitate action," said Jasper. Garfok gnashed his
tusks.
While Sidney covered the orcs, Garni moved forward to disarm them. "Where's
Kraki?" the dwarf asked Nick.
"In there," said Nick, nodding toward the crypt.
Morglop and Garni heaved the slab aside. Sidney peered down into the crypt. Kraki,
bound and bleeding, peered up at her uncertainly. He frowned. "Don't worry,"
Sidney called. "We'll have you out of there in a jiffy."
"Ah . . ." Kraki said.
Nick handed Sidney the ladder. She lowered it into the crypt, then descended. Dagger in
hand, she approached Kraki's form.
"Stop!" bellowed the barbarian. Sidney halted. Suddenly alert, she peered
around the crypt, looking for danger. "What is it?" she hissed. "I vill not
be rescued by a voman," Kraki said.
"What?" said Sidney unbelievingly.
"Vhat you mean, vhat? I can yust hear the bards sing about this vone. `And the
damsel rescued the hero in distress, hey tiddly tiddly a-tiddly wink-oh.' No vay."
"Cut it out," said Sidney with some irritation. She knelt by Kraki. The
barbarian rolled away as fast as he could, until he hit the wall of the crypt. "You
vant to humiliate me?" he demanded. "Stay avay, or . . ."
"Or what?" said Sidney nastily.
"Mother of Tsich," he said. "I'd be laughingstock of Northland. Kraki,
son of Kronar, rescued by a girl. Vhat if my father heard about it?"
"Fine," said Sidney. "Stay here. See if I care." She turned and
climbed the ladder again.
"Hokay by me," said Kraki from the crypt. "If vord get out, I never
marry. No Northland voman be my vife. Folkmoot bar me from speaking. Companions shun me.
Some hero, me."
At the top of the ladder, Sidney rolled her eyes. "You do it, okay?" she said
to Garni. The dwarf grinned and took her dagger.
In the front room of Wentworth's shop, the three orcs cleaned up the dismembered
zombies under Morglop's monocular glare. The others were with Nick and Kraki in the back.
Still weak as kittens, Nick and Kraki sat at the oaken table and fortified themselves with
tea and brandy.
. . . so the orcs agreed," said Nick. "I asked them who our captor was."
Everyone leaned forward.
"They said it was the Baroness Veronee." There was a shocked silence.
"There must be some mistake," said Wentworth. "The baroness is a
well-respected courtier, an intimate of the grand duke himself. . . ." His voice
trailed away.
"Hmm," said Jasper. "You're saying she's a necromancer?"
"According to our green-skinned friends," said Nick.
"I say," said Jasper to Wentworth, "who do we have at court?"
"Mmm," said the alchemist. "How about Sir Ethelred?"
"He's a Boar?" said Thwaite with interest. "No," said Wentworth,
"but his secretary is." "Who's Ethelred?" asked Garni.
"The current foreign minister," said Wentworth. "His portfolio includes
espionage; and I believe, therefore, the baroness's activities fall under his
purview."
"Fine," said Sidney. "Warn the court. But we'd better do something about
her ourselves."
"I quite agree," said Jasper. "She has the statue, I expect."
"How do you figure?" said Garni.
"I reason as follows," said Jasper. "I don't have it. You don't have it.
Someone dug a tunnel to snatch it out. Veronee apparently has access to a network of
catacombs and tunnels beneath the city, as evidenced by your capture and the zombies in
Wentworth's shop. Ergo, it seems likely she is the one who stole it. Quod erat
demonstrandum."
"Sounds good," said Garni.
"Damon!" said Jasper. "A message for the Grand Boar!"
A small green light separated from Jasper. "No dice," said Damon. "What?
I need to send a message"
"It's after quitting time," said Damon nastily.
There was a hostile silence for a moment. "You have a dangerous amount of gall, my
young friend," said Jasper. "You exist at my sufferance, you know."
"You gonna snuff me?" said Damon. "Gonna be pretty hard to send a
message if you do."
Jasper was speechless for a moment. "Right," he said in an annoyed tone.
"Time and a half."
Damon considered this briefly. "Okay, Jazz," he said. "You got a
deal." Some time later, the Grand Boar surveyed the crowd. "Jasper has called
the Sodality to arms. Who will answer?" he shouted through his tusks. "I!"
shouted a voice. "And I!" "And I!"
"Forget it," said a dwarven voice.
The hunter's horn sounded. They headed for the door.
The grand duke was engaged in a tricky bit of work. He took the scissors and carefully
cut at the base of a Lactarius piperatus. The blue-gilled bolete was precisely the
right size for harvesting; but harvesting it presented dangers. In common with other
mushrooms of the genus Lactarius, it oozes a milk when cut, like the stem of the
common dandelion. Unlike that of other Lactarii, the milk of piperatus is
extraordinarily acidic. It is inadvisable to take the fungus with the bare hands. Unless
the acid is washed off immediately, it begins to eat into the skin.
Some scholars have gone so far as to classify piperatus as poisonous. The
classification has its merits: if one eats a crown of the mushroom raw, one experiences
severe gastrointestinal pain. Some might even find the experience fatal. Yet the same
would be true if one were to eat a raw chili pepper.
This, in fact, was Mortimer's discovery, one of which he was inordinately proud: piperatus,
when properly prepared, is delicious. Even with the milk pressed from the crown, the
mushroom is extremely hot; but this merely makes it an ideal spice for addition to dishes
intended to be fiery. Mortimer's kitchen used piperatus exclusively when strong
spices were called for.
Mortimer's mining lantern shone on his mushrooms as he worked. He lay atop a mound of
composted dung mixed with humus, goggles protecting his eyes from any spray of milk. A
man-at-arms entered the chamber. "Your Grace?" the soldier said.
"Yes?" said Mortimer, without looking up. He was involved in his work.
"Your Grace, the Baroness Veronee requests an audience."
It took a moment for this to penetrate Mortimer's concentration. He rolled to his side
and stared at the soldier through his goggles. "She does?" he said.
"Yes, Your Grace." "She's here?" "Aye."
Mortimer stood up. He held the scissors in one hand and a blue-gilled fungus in the
other. He was clad in dung-smeared overalls and rubber waders. Goggles made him appear
rather froglike. Why would the baroness have come on such short notice? Could he dare to
hope . . . ?
"Have the kitchen prepare us a nice big Fistulina hepatica. With fried
onions," he told the soldier. He suddenly realized that he was in no shape to receive
anyone. "And tell Reginald to draw me a bath."
As he hurried through the dungeons toward his bath, he wondered what might go well with
the Fistulina. Perhaps the Chateau d'Alfar '06. No, too light; an earthier wine was
needed, a full-bodied red. Perhaps the St. Tammanie. Or the Sang du Demon. Yes, definitely
the Demon. That would do nicely.
Veronee tapped her foot impatiently. She stared at the tapestry. Some clod in plate
mail was standing over a dead griffin, holding the beast's severed head in one hand. He
was grinningthe clod, not the griffin. "Heroes," the baroness sneered to
herself.
She'd been waiting a good half hour. She was somewhat peeved. Had her hold on Mortimer
begun to fade? There'd been a time when he would have seen her instantly.
"Please follow me, my lady," said a manservant. The baroness turned away from
the tapestry and followed him. He led the way down a corridor and into Mortimer's private
chambers.
Mortimer was waiting for her in his salon. He lounged in an over-stuffed armchair,
wearing a silk dressing gown with a gorgeously rendered red dragon on the front. He held a
briar rather awkwardly in one hand. His silk-slippered feet were up on a footrest carved
in the shape of an heraldic lion. Veronee had to smile; her fears were groundless.
Mortimer was obviously trying to look dashing. He was succeeding, unfortunately, in
looking like a nearsighted fungus fancier in a bathrobe. Which was only fair, since that's
what he was.
"My dear lady," Mortimer said, rising and waving his unlit pipe. "How
pleasant to see you." He motioned the guards to get out, and they, with a grin,
complied. "May I offer you a glass of wine? The Sang du Demon '89, quite a good
year."
"Of course, Morty," said the baroness.
"Oh, Mortimer," said Veronee throatily, placing one hand on his arm. His
wineglass shook. "I need your assistance in the most dreadful way." The grand
duke swallowed hard. "Gah," he said in surprise. She'd come
to him for help? Most unlike her. "Yes, umm, of course, yes. How can I help you,
hmm?"
Veronee pulled out a lace handkerchief, dabbed at her eyes, and twisted it between
lacquered fingernails. "Your Grace," she said and gave a sob, "I am
ruined."
"My honor!" said the grand duke, standing upright. "What has
happened?"
"The fundament of my family's fortune," she said despairingly, "has been
filched."
"Your fortress in Filbert has been pilfered?" said the duke, shocked.
"Nay, nay," sobbed the baroness. "Our fortune is not founded in our Filbert
fortress. Rather, it flows from a figure."
"A figure?" said the grand duke, puzzled.
"A statue," explained the baroness, "full-scale, depicting a man in
archaic harness. It has magical properties, bringing wealth and well-being to its owner.
And now it is gone!" She broke down and heaved sobs into her handkerchief.
"Now, now," said the grand duke. "Now, now. Fear not, dear lady."
He patted her arm somewhat cautiously.
Veronee threw herself into the grand duke's arms. His wineglass hit the floor with a
crash. He nearly tumbled over the footrest. "My lord," she sobbed, burying her
face in his dressing gown. "I know you will help me!"
Unable to believe his good fortune, the grand duke stroked her hair. "What can I
do?" he asked.
She looked up at him. "Oh, Morty," she cooed, "can your men not find my
statue?"
"Eh?" "If a reward is posted; if the guard searches diligently . .
."
"Oh, yes. I suppose. We'll have the herald make an announcement immediately. Sir
Ethelred can coordinate the search."
She covered his faces with kisses. "Oh, Morty! I shall be forever grateful."
Idiot, he thought. He'd given away the farm. Here he had her at his power, and he'd
simply granted her request. Surely he could have extracted some minor dalliance in
exchange for aid? He cursed his tutors.
Neither romantic badinage nor haggling had been part of their curriculum. Tutors, he
reflected, never taught you anything important.
Mortimer cleared his throat. It was in his mind to suggest that a little advance
gratitude would not be amiss, but he could not find the words. She tucked her head into
his reedy chest. "Mortimer?" she asked softly. "May I tell you
something?"
"Of course," he said.
"I . . . I have always found you attractive."
The grand duke's Adam's apple bobbed like a yo-yo. "Yes?" he squeaked.
"Do you think . . . I mean . . . are you expecting anyone soon?"
"No," he moaned.
Somehow, they began to move toward the bedroom door.
The Baroness Veronee doubted he'd make much of a bed partner. On the other hand, she
felt hungry. Yes, she thought, she could definitely use a . . . bite.
Sir Ethelred Ethelbert was in the library. He perched unsteadily on a ladder, a book in
one hand. He gaped down at Jameson, his secretary. "Are you sure?" said Sir
Ethelred. "Baroness Veronee? A necromancer? And a spy for Arst-Kara-Morn?"
"The information is from my Sodality connections," said Jameson. "I do
not believe they would make such an accusation baselessly."
The foreign minister replaced his book on the shelf. Slowly, he descended the ladder.
"If we act on this information and it proves false, it will mean my head," he
said.
"Yes, sir," said Jameson.
"On the other hand," said Sir Ethelred, "if I can make it stick, I can
probably get Mortimer to see reason about the Ishkabibble crisis. The baroness has been
one of the primary obstacles. . . ."
"Sir, ah . . . the grand duke is with the baroness now." "Now?
Where?"
"In his private chambers."
"In his private chambers?" Sir Ethelred looked distinctly uneasy. He shook
his greasy locks. "Delightful. I shall rush in, find him in flagrante, and
inform him that the lady with whom he is delicto is a spy. I'm sure he'll
appreciate the stern vigilance of our guardians of public order."
"Sir," said Jameson uneasily, "he could be in danger at this very
moment."
Sir Ethelred sighed. "It's taking a terrible risk," he told Jameson.
"Young men are supposed to take the risks. We old fogies are supposed to stay in our
studies and pull the strings. Ah, well; miseria fortes viros probat, eh?"
Mortimer sprawled on the big four-poster bed. The curtains to the bed were drawn. He
snored gently. Two small wounds were visible on his neck. Poor pathetic twit, thought the
baroness; he'd never even gotten his pajamas off.
Veronee wiped the blood from her chin. They were always suggestible in this state.
"When you awake," she said to the grand duke's slumbering form, "you shall
do as I say. You will remember nothing of this conversation"
There was a pounding at the door. There were shouting voices. She distinguished the
voice of that meddling minister, Sir Ethelred something. "My liege!" it shouted.
"You are in dire peril!"
She sat bolt upright. They knew she was in here, of course. She had entered Castle Durf
openly and requested an audience with Mortimer. If they were saying he was in danger . . .
her cover must be broken.
There was the sound of an axe chunking into the door.
That clinched it. Interrupting the grand duke was one thing. Breaking down his door was
quite another, especially when he was engaged in an amour with a noblewoman. Either they
knew what she was, or a coup d'etat was in progress. She doubted the latter.
How had they found out? No time to worry about it now. There was just time to finish
the poor bastard. She leaned over Mortimer and drank deeply. The life rattled from his
body.
Naked, she ran to the French windows and threw them open. There was a bolt of
lightning. She started.
For by the flashing light, she saw the ghost of Mad Roderick, atop his charger Valiant.
For an instant, she was sure her sins had caught up with her. Mortimer's ancestor was
about to wreak his revenge.
Then she realized that she was seeing no ghost. It was a statue.
A bronze statue.
A statue identical to the one in Roderick Square.
How odd, she thought. Did Morty have a replica made for his terrace? Axes chunked
repeatedly into the heavy wooden door. It wouldn't hold much longer.
She noticed that the statue had pigeon droppings on its shoulders. She examined it more
closely.
It was the one from Roddy Square.
If it wasn't in Roddy Square, then what was? The door splintered.
The Baroness Veronee transformed into a bat and launched herself into the night.
Eighteen Boars had answered the summons. Garfok counted them. In all, Garfok thought,
the three orcs were surrounded by twenty-six heavily armed people of various races, all
armed to the teeth, most with powerful magic items, many with intrinsic magical abilities.
And every single one of them disliked orcs. Garfok had resigned himself to the prospect of
a shallow grave in Wentworth's cellar.
. . . taking a party this size and this well armed through the streets of the city is
inviting trouble. Ergo, we need you to lead us through the catacombs to Veronee's
mansion," said Jasper.
"No chanst," said Drizhnakh. "Unh uh," said Garfok.
"Does ya think we is stupid or somefing?" said Spug. "You vant to live,
or vhat?" said Kraki.
"Oi, sure we wants to live," said Drizhnakh.
"Then you take us to house of baroness," said Kraki.
"Dat don't sound like da way to ensure my future survival, if ya follow me,"
said Garfok.
"Look at it this vay," said Kraki. "If you take us to baroness, maybe
she kill you. If you don't, for sure I kill you."
"It ain't dat easy," said Drizhnakh. "Da problem wit' da baroness is
dis: if she wants to rip out yer eyeballs wit' red-hot tweezers, a little thing like da
fact dat you're dead ain't gonna stop her."
"Perhaps I can suggest an alternative," said Father Thwaite. "Huh?"
"Burial in consecrated ground would prevent the use of your body or spirit. . .
."
"So yer offer is dat you'll bury us in a churchyard after ya kill us, so's da
baroness can't turn us into zombies? Dat's real generous, I gotta say." "We're
wasting time," said Jasper. "Look here, I admit that there is a
certain danger that the baroness will wreak revenge upon you should you aid us.
However, the odds are that you would survive the experience." "Sez you."
"We're offering you your freedom. . . ." "Da freedom to be a dead
guy."
"Surely a sufficient cash payment would overcome your reservations." Garfok
grinned delightedly. "Now yer talkin'," he said.
While Jasper haggled and Morglop kept his eye on the captives, the others began to
prepare.
"Two healing draughts per person," announced Wentworth. Garni nudged Sidney.
"Take them," he said.
"We'll be okay," she said. "We've got Father Thwaite."
"They cost a good pound argentum on the open market," he said.
"You never know when one might come in handy."
"Oh, all right," she said.
Wentworth handed Garni a lacquered box containing three red gems. "What's this
for?" said Garni.
"They'rerather like congealed fireballs," said Wentworth. "Throw
them and they explode."
"Ah . . . same radius as a fireball?" "Quite. Do be careful with
them." "You bet."
"Don't test that in here!" yelled a woman in black.
"Why not?" asked an elf who was pointing a rod toward a window. "If it
backfires, it could wipe us out," she said. "And you don't know how many charges
it has, anyway."
Wentworth showed Sidney his cache of small weapons. She found room for six throwing
stars and a brace of daggers under her belt.
"I beg your pardon," said Father Thwaite, tugging at Wentworth's sleeve.
"Would you have any brandy?"
Wentworth frowned. "Fortifying yourself before a battle may sound like a sensible
notion a priori, " he said, "but I've found that the effects are more
deleterious than beneficial."
Thwaite sighed. "Nonetheless . . ."
Wentworth shrugged and found the cleric a flask.
The alchemist moved around the shop, pulling down vials, flasks, and powders. He handed
them out hither and yon. A good portion of his inventory was going into the pockets and
packs of the assemblage.
This was, Sidney thought with satisfaction, perhaps the best armed group of adventurers
she'd ever seen. The baroness would never know what hit her.
"Look at dese dips," whispered Garfok to Drizhnakh. "Dey actually think
dey've got a chance."
Drizhnakh gave a hollow laugh. "When does we make a break for it?"
XVI.
This, thought the Baroness Veronee, is no fun.
She dodged crazily through the sky. It was raining fiercely. Her fur was wet through
and through. Lightning crashed from time to time; she prayed none found her.
Below her, she saw her destination: Roderick Square. Grand Duke Roddy posed as always,
sword aloft. Valiant had three feet on the ground. That meant something or other, Veronee
thought; died in battle or didn't die in battle or something of the kind. Two feet aloft
meant something else.
She fluttered around the monument. She tried to land on the sword blade; she grabbed
for it with her legs, expecting to swing to a halt and hang facedownthe usual perch
for a bat.
She almost broke her neck. There wasn't any sword.
She flew to the edge of the square and hung from the rafters of the Inn of the Villein
Impaled. It sure looked like a sword was there.
She wanted to examine that statue more closely. Specifically, she wanted to touch it,
to see if it felt like a man on horseback-or more like the lifesize statue of a human
male.
Unfortunately, bats have no hands. To feel the statue, she'd need to return to human
form.
Equally unfortunately, her clothes were now in a pile by Mortimer's bed. Veronee
suspected that a naked woman climbing up Mad Roddy's statue would elicit a certain amount
of interest. Not that there were many people in the square just at present.
She caught a whiff of smoke. Pipeweed, she thought. She peered through the inn's small
and rather dirty window. There were two men sitting at a table. One was a geezer, passed
out on the table. The other was a large, red-haired young man, smoking a pipe-Timaeus
d'Asperge, she thought in some surprise.
Hmm. Could she possibly have misjudged him? Could he have been clever enough to
disguise the statue as Mad Roddy? Or was his presence here mere coincidence?
There was, she decided, only one way to find out.
She fluttered to the statue and transformed. She climbed it and felt the figure.
There was no doubt about it. This statue was not what it appeared to be. It merely
looked like Mad Roddy. It felt like the life-size statue of a human male.
Someone must have replaced Roderick's statue and, for want of anything better to do
with it, decided to play a practical joke on Mortimer. Who might have done the deed?
"Hey, sugar," came a voice. "Don't you know 'bout Odd Rod? You wan'
sa'sfaction, you lookin' in the wrong place."
She looked down. A drunk had accosted her. She leapt to the cobblestones.
"Aroint thee," she said contemptuously. The drunk leered and grabbed for a
buttock.
She clouted him on the side of the head with her fist. Momentarily, the drunk looked
surprised; then, his eyes flickered and he keeled over, unconscious. She caught him and
lowered his body to the street.
"So when was this?" asked Timaeus, taking the pipe from his mouth-but his
drinking mate had passed out at the table.
And no wonder, Timaeus thought blearily. One of the advantages of being Igniti was
an ability to handle considerable quantities of firewater, but there was a limit to
anyone's capacity. Both he and the oldster had imbibed a truly alarming volume of liquor
in the course of the afternoon.
Timaeus was beginning to worry about Sidney and the others but could think of no better
place to look for them; of course, in his current state of inebriation, he couldn't think
much at all.
He leaned back in his chair and puffed on his pipe contemplatively. He looked out the
rain-smeared window. He felt warm and comfortable. He felt vaguely guilty that he wasn't
searching more strenuously; but where to look?
Outside, a naked and rather attractive woman walked by. Timaeus blinked twice.
The door to the inn swung open. "Innkeeper!" the woman called. "I plead
your assistance." Given her state of deshabille, thought Timaeus, she
sounded quite commanding. With a shock, he recognized her. It was the Baroness Veronee.
"Extraordinary," he muttered and rose from the table.
The innkeeper's wife was wrapping a shawl about the baroness. The innkeeper shouted
orders to his serving maids. One wench brought her a stoup of mulled wine, another a
broiled chicken. The innkeeper guided her to a seat.
Timaeus cleared his throat and approached. "My lady," he said.
The baroness looked up and leapt to her feet. The shawl slipped, displaying an alarming
amount of cleavage. "Darling Timaeus!" she cried. "How wonderful to find a
gentleman in this dark hour."
Timaeus's breast puffed a little at being so described. "Can I be of any
assistance?" he asked.
She extended a hand for him to kiss. "Chivalry is not dead," she murmured.
After he'd done the honors, she continued: "Yes, my dear. Can I possibly impose on
you to escort me home? These streets are not safe for a woman alone, as I have, to my
cost, discovered this evening."
"Of course, Baroness," said Timaeus. "I should be delighted."
Moments later, he was swaying through the streets, stumbling over the cobblestones, rain
battering at his greatcoat. He wondered what he'd gotten himself into this time-and how
he'd ever find his friends.
"You are most kind to help me," said the baroness, "but I feel I should
warn you."
"Sorry?" said Timaeus. Between the alcohol in his veins and the rainslick
cobblestones underfoot, he was having a hard time concentrating on conversation.
"My life is in danger."
"What? Surely not! A woman in your position, a member of the grand duke's court .
. . ?"
"Precisely." Veronee sighed as they hurried through the rainy dark. "I
am a victim of conspiracy."
"My lady!" said Timaeus. "I had no idea." He was somewhat
skeptical; it was hard to imagine the court of Mushroom Morty as a hotbed of intrigue.
They hurried on in silence for several minutes. At last, Veronee spoke again. "I
perceive that you have seen through my fabrication," she said in a low voice.
"Pray forgive me. It is not court intrigue that I fear. Rather, I have-enemies."
She increased her speed. Timaeus had almost to trot to keep up. He cleared his throat.
"Before I say more," said Veronee, looking at a tenement as they passed
anywhere but at TimaeusI must know your allegiance."
"Sorry?" said Timaeus, bewildered.
She halted suddenly and stopped him with a hand on his arm. She peered at his face, her
own face drawn. "Who is your liege?" she asked intensely.
"What? Why, the grand duke, I suppose-through the proctor of Durfalus University,
of course. . . ."
"You have no other?" she asked, staring intently into his eyes. Timaeus was
taken aback. "Hmm, well, technically my father . . ." She sighed, and her
shoulders slumped. "I shall have to trust you," she
said softly. She turned and walked forward again, this time more slowly.
"Athelstan may seem a dull enough place," she said, "but it has strategic
value. It dominates the valley of the River Jones, and in Durfalus University it possesses
one of the great magical colleges of the human lands. It attracts a certain amount of
attention from the espionage bureaux of the surrounding regions."
Timaeus was startled. "Are you saying you're a spy? For Alcala? Or
Hamsterburg?"
She gave a throaty laugh. "Would that it were anything so simple," she said.
"No, my friend, I work for . . . other masters. Surely you know of the war in
Ish."
Timaeus nodded.
"Petty human squabbles are mere embroidery on the fabric of the eternal war
between Arst-Kara-Morn and the free peoples."
"Yes, of course," said Timaeus. "But that struggle is fought out over
centuries, not . . ."
"Nonetheless," said Veronee, "each of the combatants has its own
collectors of information."
"And you?"
"I am a servant of the Council," she said.
A thrill passed through Timaeus. The White Council? Could it possibly be more than
legend? The wisest mages of all the world, joined to fight the eternal battle against the
eastern foe? Heroic legends and boyhood daydreams fused within him.
"It hardly need be said," said Veronee, "that our cause has its
opponents."
"My lady," said Timaeus thickly, "I shall do whatever I can to aid
you."
Romantic sap, thought the baroness. Caught up in the baroness's tale, Timaeus had
hardly noticed when they began to climb Collin Hill. And here was her town house.
"I would appreciate it if you would stay for the night," said the baroness.
"Under the circumstances, I believe it would be reassuring to have a man about the
house."
"Of course," said Timaeus.
"This is Rupert," said Veronee, waving at the butler. "He will get you
anything you need. You'll forgive me for a few moments? I have some things to attend
to." While Timaeus examined the bookshelves, she motioned to Rupert and headed to the
door from the room. "Has Cook begun supper?" she asked.
"Yes, my lady," Rupert said. "But I believe a guest can be
accommodated."
"Good," said the baroness. When they were out of the room, she closed the
door behind them. "Forget supper," she said in low tones. "Prepare to
flee."
"My lady?" said the butler, raising an eyebrow.
"I have killed the grand duke," she said. "I believe the palace has a
fair idea that I am responsible."
Rupert blanched. "Yes, my lady," he said faintly. "I shall prepare the
carriage at once."
"Good." "Shall I tell Cook?"
"Mmm? Ah . . . no." Cook, unlike Rupert, had no value except as a servant.
Moreover, she knew too much. Best that she burn with the house. "I understand, my
lady," said Rupert. "Will that be all?"
"Better see if Timaeus wants something," said Veronee. "Slip something
in his drink to make him . . . suggestible."
"Very good, my lady," said Rupert. Veronee descended into her cellars.
"Go to the crypt," she told the lich. "Tell those fool orcs to leave
their prisoners and"
"I've been," whispered the lich. "Pardon?"
"I went to check on those idiots," the lich hissed. "Capturing the thief
and the barbarian was a pain in the neck. Or the upper thoracic region, at any event. I
wanted to make sure they hadn't escaped."
"And?" "They had." "Who had what?"
"The crypt was open and the orcs were gone," the lich whispered. Veronee
blinked. "Any sign of a struggle?"
"No obvious bloodstains."
"Damn," said Veronee. "Well, no matter. I know where the statue is.
We're going to obtain it and flee."
"Flee?" "To Arst-Kara-Morn."
The lich shuddered. Well, it would make a change. "What about your mission
here?" it hissed.
"I've been compromised," said Veronee. "We have several spells to
prepare. I need fresh zombies to lift the statue into the coach. I need demonic horses to
pull us faster than pursuit can follow. And I need to burn down the house."
"Burn it?"
"Too much evidence to destroy any other way," she said, waving at the cellar
that surrounded them.
"How do you propose to do that?" asked the lich.
Veronee smiled tightly. "I have a . . . cooperative . . . fire mage
upstairs," she said.
"Ah," said the lich. That ought to do the trick. Fire mages tended to explode
at death in any event. A properly handled sacrifice ought to work wonders.
"Come," said the baroness. "Let us begin."
There were four kittens in the cage. They mewled piteously as the baroness unlocked the
door. She picked one up and held it to her cheek. "Puss, puss, puss," she said.
The tiny cat rubbed its head against her cheek and purred throbbingly.
The Fifth Frontier Warders were three hundred strong. They'd left the few horses they
had at home; cavalry is good for scouting and cowing unarmed crowds, but horses are
vulnerable to spells. In a magic-heavy urban combat zone, infantry's the thing.
Major Yohn surveyed his troops. They were in a loose tortoise, overlapping shields,
spears forward. He fretted about magic. With magic, a wizard can deliver a great deal of
energy at a single place and time, to devastating effect. Consequently, dispersal is
sensible whenever magic is expected.
But infantry is most effective en masse. Infantry delivers its energy at the point of
its spears and the edge of its swords. The more spears and swords per cubit of frontage,
the more damage it can do. Concentration of force at the point of the enemy's weakness is
the essence of its strategy.
It was a conundrum for which there was no single solution, Yohn knew. Each situation
had its optimum response, its own best combination of concentration and dispersal. His
lieutenants had been for a dispersed ap
proach, house to house fighting across the parish. That, Yohn knew, would lead to
casualties. Too, it might drag on for days. The quicker he could restore order, the higher
he would rise in the estimation of the court.
And Yohn was sick of being known as some backwoods bandit hunter. Suppress unrest in
full view of Castle Durf, and his star would rise.
A massed formation was required. So he made the best compromise he could. The wards
were out.
At each corner of the formation, and at several places in between, minor adepts raised
standards. Each standard was a regimental icon, many times bloodied; each had been raised
in many battles, in many lands. Each was rich with tradition, honor, and, more important,
mana. The traditions, the antiquity, invested them with power.
They were the poles across which the Fifth Frontier strung its spell. For the Fifth
Frontier had no great wizard, no collegiate magister, no major adept. It had only a
few minor talents, a few traditional wards; and the voices of three hundred men.
In unison, they chanted the Words, the Words of power. Other than the adepts, no man
had any inkling of the meaning of the Words. No single man contributed a tenth, a
hundredth of the energy a single trained mage could have brought to bear; for few of them
had the slightest magical comprehension.
But there were three hundred of them. Together, they forged a spell of considerable
power.
Yohn prayed it would be enough.
He was in luck. The rumor of the statue was spreading across the city still; but those
at the center of the maelstrom had already learned that the statue was gone. Yohn did not
have to contend with the Boars, Ross Montiel's disciplined goons, Veronee's zombies, or
demons; they were gone. Only a dozen or so other groups remained, each after an object of
fantastic value. An elven ship's crew, now fighting only for survival; a shadow mage,
skulking through the alleys and sending out shadows of daggers to destroy those in his
path; dockyard toughs, down to a disciplined core, holding number twelve at the moment and
sifting desperately through the rubble in search of something no longer there; twenty
disciplined Hamsterian soldiers, in civilian garb, bearing forged papers, out to collect
an item that would bolster the lord mayor's dubious claim to the rule of all humanity; a
gnomish artificer with small but deadly clockwork dragons to do his fighting, hoping to
obtain a lifetime supply of athenor to fuel his devices, . . . and others. Many others.
But none, any longer, with the magical prowess to break the wards of the Fifth
Frontier.
The Fifth Frontier marched down Thwart. The opposition melted before them. Here, quite
evidently, were the grand duke's men, out to restore order to a parish that was now
largely ruins.
Oh, they took casualties. The Hamsterian soldiers stood their ground and fought,
convinced that the Athelstani had discovered their mission and would show no mercy. They
died to the last man, taking a good dozen of Yohn's men with them. And several of Yohn's
officers died with mysterious stab wounds in their backs. But the shadow mage gave up when
he realized he could not hope to rout so large a force.
There were fools who loosed a quarrel before they realized what they faced. There were
those who panicked and fought when they might have surrendered. But within two hours, Yohn
controlled Five Corners.
XVII.
From the kitchen at the rear of Veronee's town house ran a simple wooden stair down to
an innocuous root cellar. There, Cook stored potatoes, root vegetables, and the dried
mushrooms the grand duke insisted on giving Veronee from time to time. A door from the
root cellar led to a disused wine cellar. The wine cellar held dusty wine racks and a few
bottles of wine; Veronee drank very little and kept only meagre stock to meet the needs of
her occasional guests. The previous owner of the town house had been a lover of wine; he
had died accidentally in a particularly ghastly way -coincidentally, shortly before
Veronee bought the place. Or not so coincidentally, actually.
At one corner of the root cellar, a trapdoor lay under a pile of enormous dried
mushrooms (a subspecies of Lycoperdon giganteum, a full four feet across at the
crown). Under the trapdoor was a spiral stair.
The stair ran down a circular shaft that a cooperative earth mage had dug through the
sand underlying Veronee's house. The mage, too, had expired of unnatural causes at an
early age, a fact the baroness found propitious, as she had no desire for others to learn
of her subterranean secrets.
At the foot of the stair was Veronee's workroom. It was a large chamber, lit by tapers
affixed to the earthen walls. The floor was a wooden platform suspended over the earth on
blocks of stone. About the walls were bookshelves, several inches inward from the earth
itself, avoiding direct contact with the soil. Worktables and chairs were scattered about
the room. Cages stacked against one wall held small animals for Veronee's use.
Two doors led from the workroom: one to the room where Veronee kept her records, and
the other to a smaller chamber containing prison cells.
The baroness had reason to hold people occasionally, usually prior to involving them in
her magical preparations.
The prison chamber had another door; it led to the catacombs themselves. This served a
dual purpose: as a bolthole through which Veronee might flee if the authorities should
descend unannounced, and as a means for her servants to visit the city surreptitiously.
The prison chamber also contained a small stair, leading to what Veronee called her
morgue: little more than a pit, it was used to store corpses until needed.
From the records room, a short stair ran to Veronee's bedroom. Veronee forewent the
traditional coffin in favor of a comfortable feather bed; a pillow filled with earth
sufficed to provide contact with the soil in which she had been buried, one of the unhappy
requirements of her current . . . incarnation.
Veronee stood in her workroom. A corpse, fairly fresh, lay on the table before her. In
her hand was a kitten. She raised a knife high and plunged it down. She spoke Words of
power.
She tossed the dead kitten over her shoulder and completed her spell. The corpse rose
from the worktable and stumbled over to join five other zombies in front of a bookshelf.
The lich entered the room, dry bones piled like firewood in its brownrobed arms. It
tumbled the bones onto Veronee's table. "That's the lot," it whispered.
"What?" said Veronee. "Only seven?"
"I haven't had time to fetch more bodies," whispered the lich irritably.
"We used up most of the morgue in the fight at Five Corners."
"Very well," said Veronee. "It will have to do." She went to the
cages. A large rat stared at her malevolently. She preferred more tractable animals but
had exhausted her supply of kittens and puppies. Rats were smart; they weren't trusting.
She reached into the cage. The rat struck at her hand, but she was too fast. She
grabbed it by the neck. It struggled fiercely.
She spoke a Word and went to the worktable. She picked up her knife and spoke again.
The bones rustled.
Halfway through her spell, a pounding noise came from her prison chamber. She was so
startled that she almost lost her concentration. Determinedly, she focused on the spell.
She spoke faster; gradually, control returned. The pounding noise continued as she
completed the spell.
The lich moved toward the prison chamber to take a look. When Veronee finished, she ran
to join it.
At the far end of the chamber, a heavy door barred the way to the
catacombs. An axe blade protruded through the door. The blade pulled out, readying for
another swing.
"I believe we have company," whispered the lich.
Her mind awhirl, Veronee slammed and bolted the door between the workroom and the
prison chamber. Who was out there? Sir Ethelred was, no doubt, dispatching men to arrest
her even now; but soldiers would come through the streets. Would they not?
She whirled on the zombies. "Kill anything that comes through that door," she
said, pointing to the door she'd locked. They moved to form a semicircle around it.
"Come on," she snapped to the lich. Both of them ran for the spiral stair.
If the attackers weren't men from the palace, who could they be? No one else knew about
the catacombs . . .
Except those damned orcs.
They skittered upward, the lich's foot bones clanging hollowly on the metal stairs.
"Those orcs," Veronee gasped. "They've betrayed me." "Ah,"
whispered the lich. They came to the root cellar. "But to whom?" "To
Pratchitt and the barbarian, fool," she snarled.
"Shall I close the trapdoor?"
"No," Veronee said. "I have to think." Pratchitt and the others
must be attacking below. The zombies would hold them off for a while. But how would she
get the statue into her carriage without zombies to lift it?
Timaeus, thought the baroness. An excellent idea. What a pleasure it would be to use
the fool against his friends.
"Those zombies won't hold them long," the lich whispered. "Very
well," said Veronee. "Get Cook."
"Ah," said the lich. It shrugged and climbed the wooden stairs to the
kitchen.
While she waited, Veronee cursed herself for her stupidity. The orcs were both stupid
and greedy: cleverness could outwit them and gold could buy them. She had been foolish to
leave them unattended.
Still, she thought, if I ever encounter Garfok and Drizhnakh again, they will wish they
were dead. Then, after a while, they'll wish they weren't dead.
Veronee chuckled to herself and readied her silver knife.
Bony fingers opened the door to the kitchen. A tiny, gray-haired woman looked up
tiredly. "Bitch wants you," whispered the lich.
Cook stood up and sighed. She trudged to the cellar door, muttering something. She
climbed laboriously down the stairs, clutching the wooden bannister for dear life.
Resignedly, the lich followed after.
"Thank you, dear," said the baroness when Cook reached the cellar floor. The
old woman bobbed in a perfunctory curtsey. "Amatagung!" Veronee shouted.
Cook looked up with a puzzled expression. With a flourish, the baroness sliced into her
own palm, drawing a line of blood. She stepped sideways and began a slow dance.
Cook, terrified, backed directly into the lich's arms. Its bony fingers grabbed her and
held her tightly.
The baroness's chanting came to a climax. With a single stroke of her knife, perfectly
timed with the steps of her dance, she cut Cook's throat. The baroness knelt with the
woman on the cold stone floor, sucking greedily at the throat. After a moment, she stepped
back, wiped her mouth, sighed with satiety, and finished severing the head, chanting Words
of power.
Finished with her spell, she held Cook's head before her. Blood dripped from the stump
of the neck. Cook's eyes moved, looking sluggishly about the room.
"Good," whispered Veronee. Quickly, she moved to the spiral stair and tossed
the head down the shaft.
"Come," she said to the lich.
Timaeus tottered around the parlor. The room was spinning. He was beginning to regret
having asked Rupert for a whiskey. He'd been drinking all afternoon; the whiskey was
proving to be the final straw.
He tried to focus on the title of a book. He was pulling it off the shelf when the door
flung open and the baroness Veronee hurried into the room. "Timaeus!" she cried.
"They are here!"
Timaeus looked up. "Who?" he asked thickly.
"The servants of darkness!" she cried, taking his hand. "They attack
from below. Come, we must flee." She tugged him toward the door. "But my
lady," said Rupert, entering the study. "We cannot hope to
outdistance them; they have magical steeds."
"Then all is lost," Veronee said and threw herself into an armchair, weeping.
Timaeus stared at her, aghast. Before he could comfort her, Rupert spoke.
"I will stay," said Rupert bravely. "Perhaps by sacrificing my miserable
life, I can hope to buy you some scant seconds."
Timaeus's mind was moving fuzzily, but he had a fair idea what was expected of him
under the circumstances. Noblesse oblige, and all that.
"Nay, faithful servant," he said unsteadily, "attend your mistress. I
shall stay and serve what use I may."
Veronee rose and flung herself into his arms. "Oh, bravest Tim," she said,
and kissed him soundly. "I will remember you always." She took his hand and
tugged him toward the door. "Come," she said. "They will attack through the
cellar, from the catacombs."
"What?" said Timaeus. "You must face them there."
"I shall do what I may," said Timaeus. He was beginning to wonder how he'd
gotten himself into this one.
Veronee led him through the kitchen and down into a root cellar. She pointed to the
spiral stair. "There is where they will come."
"Righto," said Timaeus, reaching for his pipe.
"Then . . . farewell, dearest Tim," she said, kissed him once more, and
scurried out the door.
Garni plunged the axe into the door again.
Morglop stood with Kraki, right behind the dwarf. Their weapons were out. They were
ready to charge through the door.
Wentworth crouched beside the door, an explosive flask in his hands. Wizards stood in a
semicircle behind Morglop and Kraki, readying spells. "They won't know what hit
'em," said one Boar to another.
Sidney was at the rear with several Boars, guarding the orcs. The last thing anyone
needed was to worry about a stab in the back from their green-skinned "allies."
"It's going," grunted Garni. On his next swing, the door splintered. Spells
poured through the opening. The prison chamber resounded with green flashes, red
explosions, a burst of yellow light. Arrows shot through the door. Fighting men poured in,
swords and axes ready. . . .
"Is empty," said Kraki with frustration, dancing about the room. He looked
distinctly upset.
Morglop prowled the room, double-checking to make sure that no danger lurked. A spell
had melted the bars of one of the prison cells into surreal shapes. Char marks could be
seen on the walls.
"Boy, we sure showed them," said one Boar to another. Morglop snorted.
"We've lost the element of surprise," said Wentworth, surveying the room
through his monocle.
"Yes," said Morglop. Bashing down doors with axes was not the way to sneak up
on someone.
Morglop went to the door on the far wall, the one that led to Veronee's work chamber.
He tested the knob. The door was locked. He waved to Garni. "Another door," he
said.
"Right," said the dwarf, hefting his axe.
"Hell vith this!" yelled Kraki. He hurtled toward the door, shoulder first,
sword in his trailing hand. Morglop stepped out of the barbarian's way. Kraki impacted the
door. It burst off its hinges and slammed onto the floor of the room beyond.
Kraki fell to hands and knees on top of the door. He looked up. Seven zombies were
about to kill him. He raised his sword and parried desperately.
The others scrambled toward the door. No one was in position; Kraki had acted too
abruptly.
Wentworth turned a dangerous color of red. "After him!" he screamed at
Morglop.
"I can't," said the cyclops. He hovered by the door, trying to wedge his way
through, but the zombies kept Kraki hemmed in against the opening. Several wizards
gathered behind Morglop, wondering whether to chance
a spell. The doorway gave them a narrow line of sight into the room beyond, but Kraki
was dodging wildly as he struggled with the zombies. A spell might as easily hit him as an
enemy.
The barbarian was already wounded in two places. He was a superb swordsman, but seven
opponents were more than he could handle.
"Do something!" shrieked Wentworth.
"Care to be more specific?" snorted Morglop.
A beam of black light shot through the door, inches from Morglop's eye. He reared back
in surprise.
The beam struck one of the waiting wizards. The man's face wrinkled and his hair turned
white. He clutched his chest, stumbled, and fell prone. Morglop stared past the zombies. A
severed human head hung behind
them, floating in midair. Blood dripped from its neck. Its eyes focussed on the
cyclops. A black beam shot. . . .
Morglop darted to the side. The black beam struck the door frame; the wood instantly
rotted and turned to dust.
"Everyone out of doorway," Morglop shouted. The order was unnecessary.
Everyone was already scrambling away from the opening and to the sides of the room.
Kraki, no fool, backed through the door, parrying wildly. "Morglop!" he
yelled. "Vhen they follow, fight from side of door." Then, he ducked out of the
head's line of sight, ready for the first zombie to come through the door.
But they didn't come.
Kraki sneaked a peek. The head stayed in the workroom. The zombies were completely
motionless. Veronee's order had been very explicit: "Kill anything that comes through
that door." Only one thing had come through the door, and Kraki had left again.
Patiently, they waited for something else to kill.
Father Thwaite was crouching over the wizard that the black beam had struck.
"What's wrong with him?" Morglop asked.
"He's dead," said Thwaite.
"Dead?" echoed Wentworth. "How did he die?" Thwaite looked at the
alchemist. "Of old age."
Wentworth raised an eyebrow, then shrugged. After all, they were dealing with
necromancy.
"We're pinned down," said Sidney.
"That," said Wentworth, polishing his monocle, "is about the size
o it." "How about a fireball?" asked a young Boar in a chain mail
byrnie. Morglop rolled his eye.
"These cellars are too small," Jasper answered testily. "A fireball
would fry us to cinders."
"Oh," said the Boar.
They sat or stood in silence for a moment. "Now what?" asked Wentworth.
"Why dontcha give up while da givin' is good?" suggested Garfok. "Before
da baroness gets here."
"Shut up," Sidney said, poking the orc with her blade.
"Gosh," said an elf maiden finally. She wore a green cap with a point that
flopped over one eye, green leggings, and curly-toed shoes. She had a bow over her back.
There were little cozies over her arrow points. "I can get that mean monster!"
Everyone stared at her. Elves, thought Jasper. He knew it was uncivilized of him to
harbor prejudice for an allied species, but he hated elves. They were so damned . . .
cute.
"You can, eh?" Wentworth said.
"Sure, mister!" she said brightly. She knelt against the wall, right by the
edge of the door, and nocked her bow. While the others watched, she pulled the bowstring
back to her ear, leaned into the door opening, and let fly. She leaned back out of the
doorway.
A black beam shot through the door and splashed harmlessly against the far wall.
The elf maid nocked another arrow, leaned into the doorway again, and let fly again.
She hesitated, then stood up, square in the middle of the doorway.
Nothing happened to her.
She stuck her tongue out at the zombies, then turned to Jasper. "See?" she
said brightly. "Told ya."
Warily, Jasper flitted into the doorway. Beyond the still-motionless zombies, the
severed head swivelled and bobbed wildly, one arrow protruding from each eye.
"Good work," Jasper said grudgingly. The elf maiden giggled. Morglop stepped
into the doorway. The zombies stood in a rough semicircle about the opening. They were as
motionless as the corpses they were. The cyclops stepped through the door.
Instantly, the corpses raised their weapons and closed on him. He stepped back over the
lintel.
The corpses halted as instantly as they had moved. "Strange," said Morglop.
"Why don't they attack?"
Father Thwaite peered through the doorway. "Zombies have no volition," he
said. "They merely follow orders. They were probably ordered to attack anything that
comes through the door. You're on the other side of the door."
"Good," said Morglop. "So why not throw rocks at them until they
die?"
"That would work," said Father Thwaite. "But this may be somewhat
quicker." He pulled out a flask of brandy, hesitated, took a hefty swig, then began
to chant. Within moments, a blue glow had imbued the flask. He took an aspergillum from
his robe, poured the brandy into it, and, standing on tiptoes, leaned through the door to
sprinkle brandy on the zombies.
With the first sprinkle of brandy, one zombie fell to its knees. With a second, it fell
lifeless to the stone floor. Soon, the zombies were nothing but sprawled corpses.
The group drifted into the workroom. The statue wasn't here. The severed head kept on
bumping into Kraki blindly. He brushed it away. "Up stairway?" he suggested.
Morglop peered up the spiral stair. He shrugged. "Wentworth," he said,
"let's get organized."
Timaeus sniffed suspiciously at a mushroom and put it aside.
He peered down the spiral stairs. It filled the shaft, meaning he had no way of knowing
what was down there. He lit his pipe (bang!), and settled back on a sack of
potatoes to wait for the foe.
Sounds of combat floated up the stairs. Timaeus frowned and listened closely. After a
while, the noise stopped.
Some minutes later, a footstep clanged on the metal stairway. Timaeus couldn't see who
his foe was, but someone was coming up the stairs. He cleared his throat and said a Word.
A ball of flames appeared in his right hand. He tossed it negligently down the
stairway.
It bounced down along the spiral. There was an explosion.
Flames gushed back up the shaft, enveloping Timaeus.
His greatcoat began to burn. "Shoddy workmanship," he muttered, batting at it
with his hands. He got the fire out. His clothing smoking, he peered down the stairway.
"That should hold them," he said, and sucked on his pipe contentedly. A small
ball of flame rolled under Morglop's feet and into the room. He wondered what it was.
Garni knew. Instantly, he dived over the stairway bannister, putting the metal of the
stair between himself and the fireball.
Sidney dived under a worktable.
Morglop noticed their reactions and dived for the floor himself. Like most of the
Boars, he was an instant too late.
The small ball of flames became a big ball of flames. There was a loud noise.
After a while, the smoke cleared enough for Garni to see the room. Several of the Boars
were down, Wentworth among them. Jasper flitted about the room, but he moved more slowly
than usual.
"Cleric!" Garni said weakly.
Father Thwaite was ministering to someone else. He paused long enough to look at Garni,
and say, "Use your healing draught." Wentworth awoke to find Sidney holding a
flask to his lips. He sput
tered, then drank deeply. "Necromancy," said Sidney bitterly. "You said
there was necromancy. You never said anything about fire magic." Wentworth sat up and
wiped his mouth with a sleeve. "Didn't sense
any," he said. He pulled out his dragon's tooth and threw it into the air. It hung
motionless for a moment, then turned black and pointed at the severed head, still floating
aimlessly around the room, arrows poking from its eyes.
"Yes, yes, I know that already," snapped Wentworth, rising gingerly to his
feet.
The tooth swivelled, hesitated, then pointed to a zombie corpse. "Right,"
said Wentworth, disgusted. "I know about that too. And the
other zombies," he said with irritation, as the tooth began to point to another.
The tooth pointed directly at him and turned yellow. "Yes, I know I'm an
alchemist, thank you very much," muttered Wentworth. "Fire magic. All right? How
about fire magic?"
The tooth swung about, as if uncertain. Then, it darted to the stairwell and pointed
straight up.
"There!" said Wentworth triumphantly. "See?"
Sidney stared at him as if he were mad. "Gosh, Mr. Wizard," she said, lapsing
into elvish tones. "I'm so impressed. There's a fire mage up there, I bet! Thanks for
warning us, Mr. Wizard, sir."
Wentworth turned crimson. He opened the ivory box in which the dragon tooth's was
normally stored, walked over, held the box open around the tooth, and snapped it shut.
"That," Morglop said to the Boar in the chain mail byrnie, "is why you
don't use fireballs."
Kraki conferred with Morglop. Jasper flew over to join them. "How ve get up
stairs?" Kraki asked.
Morglop studied the staircase. "Run?" he suggested.
This sounded like suicide, even to Kraki. He shrugged. "Hokay," he said.
"Wait a sec, will you, lads?" said Jasper. "Why don't I run a recce,
eh?" "Vhat?" said Kraki. Without waiting for an answer, Jasper began to fly
up the staircase in a tight green helix.
"He means, he'll go and take a look," explained Morglop.
As he flew up the stairs, Jasper mustered his concentration. He whispered Words,
readying a spell. He was hoping to take his foe by surprise. He shot out of the stairwell
and into another earthen chamber, this one
lit by a single torch. A man in a greatcoat sat on a sack of potatoes, his mouth open
in surprise. Smoke curled over his head.
Jasper shouted the final Word of his spell. Green light enveloped his foe. Jasper
plunged deep into his enemy's mind, seizing control of the man's body. . . .
Timaeus slumped over onto the potato sack. His eyes were glazed. His pipe hit a
mushroom. He drooled onto the burlap.
Jasper flitted around the fire mage, studying him. Why in heaven was Timaeus here? And
why had he thrown that fireball?
Gingerly, Jasper began to feel through Timaeus's mind. To his surprise,
Jasper found a compulsion, a desire to help a woman in distress. . . . The spell was
crude, short term, easy to break. A magician of some other branch of the art must have
imposed it on Timaeus. Jasper released the fire mage. "I say, d'Asperge, old
boy," he said. "What's all this about, then, eh.
Timaeus blinked and sat up groggily. "J . . . de Mobray?" he said
unbelievingly.
"Spot on."
Timaeus reached for his pipe. It wasn't in its accustomed pocket. He noticed it on the
mushroom and reached for it. "What happened?" he said. "I remember a green
light . . . then I blacked out."
"I'm the green light, of course," said Jasper. "What the devil do you
mean by fireballing me?"
Timaeus stared at the point of green light. "Fireballing you?" he said in
some confusion.
"And," said Jasper, "your friends Sidney Stollitt, Nick Pratchitt,
Garni, that Kraki fellow . . ."
Timaeus puffed fiercely on his pipe. "Forces of evil," he muttered
disgustedly. "'Farewell, dearest Tim!"' He scowled.
"Beg pardon?" said Jasper.
Timaeus's ears were an interesting pink. "Er . . . is everybody all right?"
he asked.
Jasper sighed. "No fatalities, I believe," he said. "Thank Dion,"
said Timaeus.
They had found the parlor. The injured were draped in couches and chairs. Father
Thwaite had found Veronee's modest cellar, and several were sipping sherry.
Wentworth stood in the center of the room looking harried. "No statue?" he
said unbelievingly. "None at all? Not even a bust? A lawn ornament? A toy soldier,
for Cuthbert's sake?"
"We've been all over the joint," said Sidney. "The baroness doesn't have
Stantius. Or if she does, it isn't here."
Wentworth turned to Kraki. "Nothing?" he said despairingly.
"Nothing," said Kraki.
"Unh uh," said the elf maiden. "Zilch," said Garni.
There was silence for a moment.
Wentworth gave a little hop of frustration. He hurled his monocle to the floor. It
cracked. He turned to Jasper. "This was your idea," he yelled.
"Me?" said Jasper in an injured tone. "Me? Hmm, ah, well. That is to
say. It was my idea, wasn't it?"
"No point in recriminations," said Sidney tiredly. "The question is: now
what?"
"Vhere is orcs?" said Kraki.
Sidney sat up straight. "Oh, hell," she said. "I haven't seen them since
the fireball."
Drizhnakh, Garfok, and Spug hustled down the catacomb.
"Har har," giggled Spug. "We sure showed dem dumb youmans, huh,
guys?"
"We was lucky," said Garfok petulantly. "Dey got smeared, and wasn't
payin' too much attention. Dat's all."
"Well, anyway," said Spug, "we gots free. Right guys? We is okay
now." "You maroon," sneered Drizhnakh. "We is in da sewers of a city
populated by hostile youmans, every one of dem scared shitless of orcs and as likely to
gut you as say hello. We got no money, no chanst of gettin' any, and no place to go."
Spug sucked on his tusks sadly. "Well," he said, "at least we is
free." "Free to starve," muttered Garfok.
"Unh uh," said Spug, cheering up. "Remember what da baroness said?
Dere's plenny of sewage to drink an' rats to eat down here. Remember guys?"
"Days right," said Garfok, a little happier. "It ain't so bad,
Drizhnakh."
"Oi," said Drizhnakh. Perhaps Garfok was right, he thought. Drizhnakh was
rather partial to rat.
XVIII.
A peasheful evening, Vic thought. He liked warm, summer storms. At least, he liked them
when he had shelter. He stood, dry under the eaves of the Inn of the Villein Impaled, a
bottle of wine in one hand. His pigeon nestled in the eaves, its head under one wing. Vic
took a pull on his flask.
The air smelled fresh, as it rarely did amid the flatulence of the city. The rain
washed it clean. Puddles pooled on the cobblestone street.
A lazhy evening, Vic thought. A day well done. He raised his bottle of wine to Roddy
and took another swig. A day well done becaushe . . . becaushe . . . now what did I do
today? Shomething important. I remember that. Shomething . . .
Lightning flashed. The downpour redoubled. Vic studied the chaotic intersection of
ripples in the fountain around Valiant's hooves. A carriage, two trotters in its harness,
rumbled into the square. Vic peered at it with interest.
Rupert brought the carriage to a halt. Lightning flashed, revealing the statue of
Roderick. Rupert hiked up the collar of his cloak; a trickle of water escaped down his
back.
The baroness, snug within the carriage, twitched back a curtain and peered into the
rain.
"Now what?" whispered the lich.
The baroness smiled. "Rupert," she called sweetly, "can I see you for a
moment?"
Cursing, the butler got down from his perch and stepped into a puddle. He muttered a
brief oath, opened the carriage door, and climbed inside. "Yes, my lady?" he
said, crouching in the carriage interior.
"Amatagung!" said the baroness. The lich grabbed Rupert's arms.
"Wait a minute," said Rupert.
The baroness grinned and spoke another Word.
"What about my back wages?" Rupert said desperately. "What would you do
with them in hell?" whispered the lich.
"Would it help to say I'm sorry about nabbing the silver?" said Rupert. The
baroness drew her knife. "Chin up," whispered the lich.
Rupert knew this was not intended as consolation. Doggedly, he wedged his chin into his
collar.
The lich stuck a bony finger under Rupert's chin and lifted.
Straining, Rupert tried to keep his head down. The lich was too strong. Rupert realized
he was a dead man. Defiantly, he lifted his head and stared proudly into Veronee's eyes.
She sliced his throat open. Blood flowed.
"I endeavor," mouthed Rupert's lips as the life departed his body, "to
give satisfaction." Neither Veronee nor the lich noticed.
Veronee drank deeply of Rupert's blood. Strength coursed through her limbs.
"And it's so hard to find good servants these days," the lich whispered.
Veronee ignored it. She opened the carriage door and stared at the statue. She'd have to
wade through the fountain. Her boots would be ruined.
The spell would not last long; she was burning Rupert's life energy at a considerable
rate. But while the magic lasted, she ought to be able to lift a ton or two of athenor.
She shrugged, stepped into the puddle, and waded toward the statue. The water was cold.
She climbed up Roddy's pedestal and gripped the statue's knees.
She lifted. She pulled. She strained.
The statue wouldn't budge.
She felt the force of her spell ebbing.
This was inexplicable. She could heft an elephant as if it were a three-month babe. Why
couldn't she lift the statue? Was there another magician about?
The only other person in the square was an ancient codger, standing under the eaves of
the Inn of the Villein Impaled with a bottle of wine in one hand. He held the bottle to
his mouth, sucked back a swallow, and gave Veronee a toothless grin.
The old man was clearly no danger. However, Veronee thought, he might do to power
another spell. She stalked over to him. "How would you like tuppence?" she said
soothingly. There was a pigeon in the rafters of the inn, she noted.
"Tuppenshe?" Vic said. "Sure," he said, holding out his palm.
The baroness gave him a ha'penny. "I need you in my carriage," she
said. "You'll get the rest there."
Vic didn't move. "Forget it," he said. She turned. "What?"
"I shaid, forget it," he said. "You won't get . . . won't get . .
."What was it so important that she not get?
Veronee stared at him. Her eyes narrowed. She pointed at the old man and spoke a single
Word. It resounded across the square like the crack of thunder.
A beam of brilliant black light shot toward Vic. Rain sizzled in its wake. Vic raised a
hand. The beam struck his palm. It dissipated into the rain in a spray of a thousand
colors.
Vic smiled. "Shtill got it," he congratulated himself. Veronee gasped and
backed toward her carriage. "What was that all about?" the pigeon asked Vic.
The Boars had begun to drift away. The fight was evidently over, and it was getting on
toward dinner time. "Hope you find it, Jazz," said the woman with the eye patch.
Jasper winced at the familiarity. Since he was largely invisible, she didn't notice. She
looked down the stoop of Veronee's house and into the rain. "Oh, well," she
said, and ran down the stoop and up the street.
"Maybe the baroness had the statue when she left," suggested the Boar in the
byrnie. He didn't look inclined to leave, so Jasper shut the door. "I don't think
so," said Timaeus wearily. "She left in a coach. A statue
as heavy as ours would have weighed it down. I would have noticed that." "She
never had it at all," said Wentworth with finality. "We jumped to the conclusion
that she had it on rather inadequate evidence."
Jasper cleared his throat guiltily but said nothing. "Vhat about dinner?"
said Kraki.
"Wait," said Sidney. "Okay, if she never had it, someone else does. We
don't know who."
"Very helpful," snapped Wentworth.
"We know they took it down the tunnel," said Father Thwaite.
"Correct," said Wentworth. "To the vacant lot. Where it disappeared into
thin air."
"Could be," said Sidney. "Could magic do that?" Morglop chuckled.
"Take a look at Jasper," he said.
They all did. The point of green light shifted back and forth with mild embarrassment.
"Yes, well," said Jasper. He had, he supposed, disappeared into thin air. About
twenty years previously. In a manner of speaking.
"We've been all over that lot," said Sidney, "looking for evidence. But
we didn't find anything."
"What about the dragon's tooth?" said Garni.
Wentworth stared at the dwarf for a long moment. "Ah," he said at last.
"Not a bad idea."
A carriage careened through the streets of Urf Durfal, a carriage pulled by demon
horses. Their necks were flayed open, their flanks streaked with blood; they hauled the
carriage with unearthly speed. A glow of sinister light streamed forth from around the
carriage doors.
Inside, bone gripped flesh.
The carriage hit a pothole. The lich and Veronee were thrown across the compartment.
They fetched up against the door, then tumbled to the floor. The lich dug its thumb bones
into Veronee's neck. She gasped out a Word.
The undead horses hurtled onward through the streets.
Veronee brought up her hands and wrenched the lich's fingers away. It stabbed for her
eyes and missed.
If the lich survived, it would bring the story of her failure to Arst-Kara-Morn.
Hence, she had no alternative but to destroy it.
Ergo, to preserve its own existence, it must destroy her.
They thundered out the Eastern Gate and down the Alcalan Pike. The pike was, if
anything, less well paved than the city streets. Veronee was flung against the luggage
rack, then to the back of the seat. Gasping for breath, she spoke another Word.
The lich scrambled toward her across the carpet.
The carriage hurtled into the night. Within, two creatures, neither now human, battled
on.
It was drizzling steadily. The breeze stirred rain-laden weeds. The earth of the vacant
lot was soggy beneath their boots. They were down to a dozen: Timaeus's friends, the three
Fullbrights, and three other Boars.
A frightened face peered at them from the shantytown. The vagabonds, beggars, and
dispossessed peasants who camped out here did not expect visitors, not this late, not in
the rain. Visitors meant hoodlums out to bash in a few heads and steal the shanty
dwellers' meagre possessions.
Sidney's light cotton clothing was soaked through. She glanced at
Timaeus; he looked, if it were possible, even more uncomfortable and bedraggled than
she.
"Now what?" asked Nick.
They stood in a loose circle around the remains of the collapsed tunnel. Mud-laden
water drizzled down into the opening; soon, it would disappear entirely.
Wentworth removed the dragon's tooth from its ivory box. "Avagrrine!" he
said.
The tooth rose from his palm. It hung in midair. It swivelled uncertainly, as if
searching. . . .
It steadied. It pointed away from the tunnel. Garni held his lantern higher to get a
better look. The tooth was brown.
"Earth magic," pronounced Wentworth. "Makes sense," Timaeus
grunted.
"Undoubtedly," said Wentworth. He spoke another Word. The tooth moved
forward. The party followed.
They came to a mound of dirt. Earlier in the day, it had been roughly human in shape.
Now, it was nothing more than a vague pile.
The dragon's tooth turned sky blue. "Air magic," said Wentworth. The tooth
pointed upward at an angle and began to climb into the rainy sky. "Jasper!" said
Wentworth. "Follow it, will you, old boy?"
"Of course, of course," said the point of green light. It flitted after the
tooth.
"We must be dealing with two wizards," Wentworth explained. "An earth
mage and an air mage. Once they got it out of the tunnels, the air mage took over and
summoned an air elemental to carry the statue."
The party followed on the ground below Jasper, craning to watch him. The tooth was no
longer visible, but Jasper shone brightly enough to be seen.
"I say," Jasper called back. "It's flashing blue and silver!"
"An illusionist, too?" said Wentworth. This was getting out of hand. "To
cloak it in invisibility," suggested Timaeus, "so that no one would gawp at a
huge statue sailing overhead."
"I suppose," said Wentworth.
They came to the edge of the lot and stepped into the street. Jasper sailed over a
building. Everyone ran, splashing through puddles, to get around the building before
Jasper disappeared across the next street. "Red!" called Jasper.
"Fire magic?" said Timaeus.
"Yes," said Wentworth uncertainly. They scurried on another hundred feet.
"Purple!" shouted Jasper. "What?" said Wentworth.
"Purple," Jasper repeated. "Violet, lilac, mauve. Are you deaf?"
"What's purple?" Garni asked.
"Deuced if I know," muttered Wentworth. They followed Jasper, craning.
"Orange!" said Jasper. He skirted a small temple. They followed.
"Yellow!" said Jasper.
"Alchemy?" said Wentworth in a puzzled tone. He was getting a glazed look in
his eyes.
"Gold!" said Jasper. He went over another building. This time, they had to
run around the block. He was already disappearing over the next block, and they had to run
around it, too.
"Pink!" Jasper called faintly.
"We are dealing," gasped Wentworth, "with a magical conspiracy of
mammoth proportions. There must be dozens of wizards-dozens!"
They dashed into Roderick Square and halted. Timaeus held his sides and panted. He
wasn't used to this much exertion.
The tooth was slanting downward now. It headed directly toward the statue. It flared
silver again, then sailed on past Mad Roddy (and Valiant, of course), across the square,
to the Inn of the Villein Impaled.
It came to rest a foot off the ground, pointing directly toward the recumbent form of .
. .
Vic peeled open an eye. It was dry under the eaves. Just right for a nap. He was
surrounded by a motley group of wizards, fighting men, and thieves. "Shpare a copper
for an old man?" he wheezed, sitting up. "Oh, evening, Geoffrey."
The tooth flickered from one color to another. As Wentworth watched, agape, the colors
flickered faster and faster, until there was nothing left but a white blur.
Vic focused on the dragon's tooth. "Ah," he said, and rubbed an eye.
"Damn thing must be defective," said Wentworth. He grabbed the tooth, held it by
his ear, and shook it experimentally.
Vic chortled. He stood up and held out a hand. "Give it to me," he said.
"Old man," Wentworth said, "we don't have"
"Give it to him," Timaeus said faintly.
Wentworth dropped the tooth into Vic's palm. Vic pointed it to Wentworth. It flared
yellow. "Alchemy," Vic said. He pointed the tooth at Timaeus. It turned red.
"Fire," Vic said. He pointed the tooth at the pigeon, who stood under the eaves,
watching the proceedings beadily. The tooth flared green. "Nature magic," Vic
said.
"What do you mean?" said the pigeon. They looked at it, startled.
Vic walked across the square, holding the tooth. The others trailed him. He splashed
through the puddle around the statue, and touched the tooth to Valiant. The tooth turned
silver. Vic turned back to Wentworth. "Illusion," Vic said. He spoke a Word.
Stantius stood in the rain. He was still painted brown. Rain rolled down the paint.
"Shee?" Vic said, handing the tooth back to Wentworth. "It worksh."
Wentworth choked. "You are a mage?" he asked the old man.
Vic cackled. "You bet your ash, shonny," he said. Wentworth looked pained.
"Why did you steal the statue?" Sidney demanded.
"But . . ." Wentworth said, "there had to have been a dozen magicians. .
. ."
"Or," Timaeus said, "one polymage."
"That's absurd," Jasper said. "There hasn't been a full-fledged polymage
for centur"
They were all silent for a long moment. Vic was the focus of all eyes. The only noise
was the patter of rain.
Vic shifted uneasily from one foot to another. "Sure I'm a mage," he said.
"Bet your ash." He cackled.
Jasper flitted about the statue in an erratic way. "Extraordinary," he said.
"What's that?" said Sidney.
"A spirit is bound into this object," he said. "What?" said Father
Thwaite. "A human spirit?"
"Perhaps," said Jasper. "The spirit of a sapient, surely. I've only
encountered this once before-I had a sword, once, with a spirit and mind of its own.
Unusual form of magic."
"What is it thinking?" said Timaeus.
"Sorry?" said Jasper. "Oh, nothing as far as I can tell. That is, a
mind, if present, is not active. Spirit and mind are separable, you know."
"Yes," said Timaeus, "I know."
"Ve find statue," Kraki pointed out. "Now, ve have dinner, hokay? Old
man tell us story over food."
Vic's eyes acquired a glazed look. He mumbled and began to wander off. "Vic!"
said Father Thwaite urgently. "Vic!" He took the old man's arm. Vic looked up.
His eyes cleared. "Oh, Geoffrey," he said. "Evening." "Vic,"
said Thwaite. "You have to do something about the statue." "Shtatue?
Shtatue? That'sh right. Now . . . ?"
Thwaite pointed at the statue. "You have to hide it again," he said. Vic
peered at the statue. A look of comprehension passed across his face. He spoke a Word.
Stantius became Roderick (and Valiant) once more. "Food now?" said Kraki.
Vic looked at the barbarian. "Sure," he said. "My treat."
"Sure, Vic," said Father Thwaite soothingly. "Your treat." He began
to steer the old man gently toward the inn.
"No," said Vic. "We'll go to my club."
Timaeus raised a skeptical eyebrow. Vic's shirt was multiply patched and threadbare.
His pants had holes at the knees. He wore leggings made of rags. "Your club?"
Timaeus said.
"Sure," said Vic. "The Cloud."
Timaeus almost swallowed his pipe. The Cloud Club was the most prestigious gentlemen's
society in all of Athelstan. Its members looked down on members of the Millennium,
Timaeus's own club, as Millennials looked down on peasants. "The Cloud," he said
severely, "does not admit urinestained vagabonds."
Vic cackled. He spoke a Word. He spoke several. There was a stiff breeze. It scattered
rain.
There was a questioning noise on the wind. Vic spoke again.
The air elemental bore them aloft, into the sky. There was nothing between them and a
fall, no carpet, no magical steed.
Morglop moaned and closed his eye tight.
Sidney grinned manically as they plunged through the night sky. "Don't look so
happy," Timaeus told her, whizzing past. "Consider whose magic keeps us
up."
She lost her grin.
"I only hope," muttered Father Thwaite, "that he doesn't forget where
he's taking us before we get there."
The pigeon fluttered desperately to keep up.
Sir Ethelred Ethelbert sat forlornly on the coverlet of the four-poster bed. He brushed
his hand over a tassel. Part of the coverlet was sticky with coagulated blood. Sir
Ethelred looked away from it.
They'd taken Mortimer away. Sadly, Sir Ethelred looked toward the French doors that led
to the balcony. The doors banged, swinging in the wet breeze.
Since Mortimer had never had children, the heir presumptive was Baron Harald of Meep,
Mortimer's nephew. Sir Ethelred sighed. Harald was
nineteen and a complete fool. His main pursuit was hunting, both deer and the local
peasant girls. Sir Ethelred gloomily considered the prospect of being foreign minister to
such a lout.
At least, he supposed, it should be possible to get Harald to go to Ishkabibble's aid.
It would probably be more difficult to prevent the loon from going to war with everyone
else.
Sir Ethelred looked at the pitiful pile of clothing by the bed. Damn Veronee. He hoped
his men found her, but feared they would not. She was a wily one.
Gods knew, Mortimer had been a trial at times. Still, whatever his drawbacks as a
monarch, he had been a superb mycologist, among the best in the world. He had been
passionate about his subject. And he had been sensible enough to leave the governance of
the realm in reasonably capable hands:
Most of the time, anyway.
Well. Time to get moving. Someone had to see that the Fifth Frontier got fed. And to
initiate funeral proceedings. And see that the barons and the populace were informed. And
put out an announcement on the news crystal. And send a messenger with a fast horse to
Baron Harald. . . .
Sir Ethelred got to his feet. Where the devil was Jameson when a man needed him?
"Egad," said Sir Ethelred, peering out toward the terrace. What was the
heroic statue of Roderick doing out there?
He went to the French doors and studied the bronze in amazement. "I sit here in
Castle Durf with the best espionage bureau in the human lands," he muttered to
himself, "and I still haven't the foggiest notion what goes on."
Part III.
ANOTHER QUEST
I.
Soaked and chilled, they fluttered to the landing of the Cloud Club. The club was a
cloud. It was not built on a cloud, it was built into a
cloud. The cloud was tethered by thick rope cables to one of the bridges over the River
Jones. The walls of the club were fleecy; parts white, parts gray, parts rosy with
magically captured sunset light. The architecture was fanciful and airy.
The Grand Hall of the club was built into the lowest layer of the cloud; its floor and
one entire wall were constructed of solid air, permitting the diners a glorious view of
the city of Urf Durfal and Athelstan's rolling hills at least, when it wasn't
raining cats and dogs.
Access to the aerial club was, necessarily, by air. Some members could fly to it of
their own volition. Others hired flying carpets. The club itself maintained a ferry
service, a flying carriage pulled by swans. The concierge was therefore not surprised when
thirteen persons of assorted races tumbled to the soft, white cloud deck which served as a
landing strip.
The group moved toward the reception desk.
They were uniformly soaked. Several were wounded. The only reason the concierge didn't
order them tossed over the edge was thatwell, they had flown here under their
own power. Obviously, there must be more to this group than met the eye.
Vic trudged up to the desk. Behind it, the concierge stood resplendent in a brilliant
crimson uniform with golden tassels. Behind him was a pegboard. Small metal circles hung
from the pegs. Inside each circle, the name of a club member was engraved. "How may I
help you, sir?" the concierge said.
"I'm a member," Vic said. "Theshe're my gueshtsh."
The man leaned over the desk and peered at Vic's garb. "Ah," he said
skeptically. "And your name, sir?"
"Vincianus Polymage," Vic said.
The concierge turned to the pegboard and scanned it. How was he going to get rid of
this lunatic? The fellow's friends looked frightfully well armed. The board of directors
would have his neck if he disturbed the club's members in the process of evicting this
clown. He cleared his throat. "I'm afraid there's no Vincby Dion," he
said. He reached up. From the left-most, highest peg on the board hung a rusty metal
circle. He tugged at it. It was rusted to the peg, which itself was nearly rusted through;
the peg broke off. The doorman brought the circle close to his eyes. He swallowed.
Vincianus Polymage was indeed a member. Moreover, according to the code on the rusty
circle, his dues were paid up. In fact, they were paid in advance-for the next ten
thousand years.
"Yes, sir," said the concierge faintly. "Everything appears to be in
order, sir. Will you and your companions be dining tonight?"
"Hi," said the waiter. "My name is Jeremy, and I'll be your waiter for
this evening."
The ancient geezer stared at him malevolently. "You tell your true name to
everyone who asksh, shonny?" he said. "You do that around here, you'll get
turned to a frog fashter'n you can shay `ribbit.' They shtill got frogsh' legsh on the
menu?"
The waiter was somewhat at a loss. "Ah . . . no, sir, but I can ask the chef . .
." He noticed with a start that a pigeon was standing on the linen tablecloth.
"Shoo!" said Jeremy, waving his hand at the pigeon. "Shoo!"
"Cut it out, mac," said the pigeon.
Jeremy's eyes bugged out.
"Leave him alone," said Vic, waving a liver-spotted hand. "Get ush three
bottlesh of Chateau d'Alfar."
"Very good, sir. The ought-nine?"
Vic stared at him. A confused look came into the oldster's eyes. He started counting
his fingers and mumbling.
"The ought-nine is fine," said Timaeus.
"What year ish it, anyway?" the geezer hissed in a loud stage whisper.
"Never mind," Father Thwaite said gently. "Ought-nine was a good year for
the northern elvish appellation."
"Would you like to hear about the specials?" said Jeremy. "Can I have
some bar nuts?" asked the pigeon.
Jeremy blinked. "I'll see what I can do," he said faintly.
"I vant roast boar," said Kraki.
"A portion of roast boar," said Jeremy, jotting the order on his pad.
"No," said Kraki. "Vone roast boar."
"That's what I said, sir," said Jeremy. "One roast boar."
"He wants the whole boar," said Nick.
"Sir?" said Jeremy.
"Is right," said Kraki. "Vone roast boar." "Yes, sir,"
said Jeremy. He gulped.
"I'd like to hear about the specials," said Sidney.
Jeremy cleared his throat. "Very good, madam," he said. "Our specials
tonight include filet of dragonelle pan-fried in beurre noir with asparagus; roc
egg omelet with shrimp, fresh tomatoes, and coriander; and a greep bouillabaisse."
"Isn't bouillabaisse a fish dish?" asked Garni. "Yes, sir," said
Jeremy.
"I thought greeps were nuts."
"Sir? By no means, sir. They are indeed fruits de mer . . . "
GREEP BOUILLABAISSE
"They are indeed fruits de mer, flown fresh at great expense by dragon
riders from the southern seas.
"I can claim a certain expertise in this matter, for I was born in southern
climes.
"Ah, how I yearn for the clean breeze of the south! For the salt spray, the azure
skies, the crystal sands!
"I was raised on a remote coral isle. Few other humans lived nearby, so I made my
friends among the merfolk. Oh, happy were they! And happy was I, to watch them frolic
among the waves. Though I was clumsy in the sea, lacking webbed fingers, gills, and
flukes, I learned from them to swim as best a human may. Together, we explored the reefs
and grottoes of the shore.
"And I fell in love.
"Oh, do not be shocked, good sirs, good ladies! Though I was a man and she but a
fish, our love was strong and true!
"Thalassa was her name. We hid our love from everyone, for both of us knew the
penalty for miscegenation. We knew, too, that any issue we might have would be an unhappy
hybrid, clumsy in both water and air, unable himself to breed. Yet we persisted.
"We'd meet on the rocks by the eastern shore, and I would strip and join her in
the sea. She'd tell me of the beauty of the reef and of the strange unity of life beneath
the waves; I'd tell her of the people and the creatures of the land. Once, I brought her a
bouquet of flowers; their beauty, strange to her, entranced her. She took them with her
when she left. The next day, she was crying when we met. `They cannot survive in salt
water,' she said dolorously. `Nor can you.'
"I knew it was true. I knew how hopeless was our love. But there was nothing to be
done, so I thought.
"I thought wrong. For she knew . . .
"One day, she appeared, eyes shining. She kissed me and told me she'd found a
mermage who'd taught her a spell. She could, she told me, turn me mer.
T"How we rejoiced! How happy I was! At last, we could be together. "She
recited her spell. Gills appeared along my neck. My legs merged into a single fluke. And
webbing appeared between my fingers. I plunged into the sea, and together, webbed hand in
webbed hand, we swam into her world.
"Thalassa was of simple birth, as was I; she introduced me to her parents. I
joined a gang of fishermers to make my living; and, respectably employed, gained the favor
of her folks. Soon, we were engaged.
"We lived in beauty. You who have never seen below the waves, I cannot tell you of
its glories. The fish that populate the reefs are like flowers in their prime. Strange
life waves gently in the currents. There are no storms, no drastic cold or heat, no need
for shelter. We drifted across the ocean, hearts and hands entwined.
"I loved my work. The merfolk raised seaweed, as we raise grain. But mostly, they
eat fish. Each morning, we ventured forth, with nets and spears, in search of prey. We
sent out scouts to locate schools of fish for our nets.
"Swordfish, we hunted with spears. Fluke, lobster, conch, and crab, we harvested;
but above all else, we sought the greep. For the merfolk prize the greep's flesh above all
others.
"Have you ever seen the greep run? In the spring when they school, they turn the
sea silver with their bodies. They leap into the air and plunge back in again. There are
so many, sometimes, that the splashes of their leaps sound a constant roar, like that of a
waterfall.
"Each spring, the merfolk gather and hunt the greep while they can. For once the
greep have bred, they scatter across the ocean and can be caught only by ones and twos.
But while they run, they can be captured in their thousands. For the merfolk, the greep
run marks the springtime.
"Well I remember their small silver bodies, thrashing against the net. Well do I
remember my fellow fishers, laughing bubbles in the water as we
gathered up our catch. Well do I remember dolphins, gamboling through the school,
eating their own fill of the ocean's bounty. Ah, the greep run was a time for rejoicing.
"Greeps are not large fish; no more than six inches long. But the merfolk have a
legend of a monstrous greep, a greep cubits in length. The Old Greep of the Sea, he is
called. And it is said that whosoever captures him is granted a single wish.
"I heard the legend, but thought nothing of it.
"Not all the fishers in our group were male. The merfolk think nothing of sending
merwomen to the hunt. Our gang had several; but the one I knew best was Mare.
"She was a lithe little creature, a faster swimmer than any of us. She was
positioned to my left on the net, so we saw much of each other. We became friends and used
to joke as we swam toward our prey.
"One day, during the greep run, we labored home with a monstrous catch. Everyone
was exhilarated and exhausted. We'd do well off the catch; and the next day promised a
catch just as fine.
"We went to celebrate at a grotto where merfolk purchase essences. They do not
drink as humans do; instead, they uncork small bottles, release the liquid contents into
the sea, and inhale this through the gills. The effect is both like and unlike bibulation.
"I overindulged. And Mare swam alongside me. She kissed me, and we left the grotto
for a private niche among the reefs.
"Once the deed was done, I began to choke. Mare looked at me with horror and
revulsion. My fluke, which she had thought handsome, had separated in twain. My gills were
scabbing over. She fled from me in fright.
"I barely surfaced before I could breathe the waters no more. I was miles from the
island, but I'd been a good swimmer virtually from birth. I made it to land with the last
of my strength.
"I stumbled to my parents' house. They had given me up for dead. `Where have you
been?' my father asked.
"I gasped out my tale. Horror passed across their faces. " `You slept with .
. . a fish?' my mother asked.
"'Get out of my house,' my father said.
"I slept on the beach. The next day, I went to the special place where Thalassa
and I used to meet. She never came.
"But her father did. `You have ruined my daughter,' he screamed, and threw a
trident at me. It missed. He could not pursue me on land. `Animal!' he yelled, thrashing
about the bay.
"'What happened?' I asked. He told me the tale.
"Driven by her love for me, Thalassa had sought out and captured the Old Greep of
the Sea. She had asked that I be made mer, and he had agreed. `But,' the Old Greep said,
`the enchantment is powered by the love between you. Should you ever be unfaithful to him,
or he to you, he will revert to human form.'
"Laughing, Thalassa told him that would never happen. We were too much in love.
"Too much in love. "And I betrayed her.
"'She will find no suitor now,' said her father, cursing me. `No one will
marry a lover of animals.'
"My love was lost. My parents disowned me. And so I fled my land, fled for the
cold north, away from Thalassa, away from the merfolk, away from the greeps, away from
everything I knew."
. . . sobbed Jeremy. He ran toward the kitchen, crying.
"Well," said Jasper after a pause. "I can't say I think much of the
service here."
Vic was sprawled in his chair, his head hanging back, his mouth open, revealing
toothless gums. He snored.
"Vhat about my boar?" asked Kraki.
"Waiter!" Wentworth yelled. Reluctantly, a white-coated young man approached.
"Sir?" he said.
"We want to order," said Wentworth. "This isn't my table . . ."
"Right," said Wentworth. "It's the table of your weepy young friend
Jeremy. After you take our order, you may go console him in the kitchen." The waiter
blinked. "All right, sir," he said, mystified. "Can I tell you about our
specials?"
"Absolutely not. We want one whole roast boar." "Sir?"
"A whole roast boar. Are you having any difficulty understanding me?"
"No, sir. Will you have salad with that?"
"Pah!" Kraki spat. "Is for rabbits."
"No, I think not," said Wentworth. "The boar is for him. And I'll have
fish."
"What sort of fish, sir?"
"Any sort at all, except greep."
"And you, madam?" the waiter addressed Sidney. "I'd like a chop,"
she said.
"What kind?"
"Any kind, other than greep."
Father Thwaite ordered a salad, of any type, as long as it contained no greep. Nick
ordered a stew, failing to specify type, other than a complete absence of greep. Jasper
ordered mineral water (without greeps), and the filet of dragonelle, subject to the
waiter's firm assurance that the sauce contained not the slightest smidgen of greep.
Morglop ordered the roc egg omelet. "No greep," he muttered. Timaeus, going with
the tide, ordered steak tartare.
"Without greeps, sir?" asked the waiter. "Correct," said Timaeus.
Garni had a pastrami on rye. Without greeps.
"Sidney," said Wentworth, "wake Vincianus and find out what he wants,
will you?"
Vic wanted greeps. Everyone stared at him. "Are you sure?" Jasper said.
"What'sh the matter with you guysh?" said the old man querulously.
"Never had greepsh?"
Everyone shuddered, except for Timaeus, who was rather partial to a greep now and
again.
"Now, Vic," said Sidney. "Why don't you tell us how you stole the
statue?"
"Shteal?" said the old man. "Never shtole anything in my life." He
sounded highly offended.
"Appropriated," Timaeus suggested soothingly. "Absconded with.
Borrowed."
Vic stared at him as if he were mad. "Where'sh the wine I ordered?" he said.
"Wine!" said Wentworth, slapping his forehead. "Damnation. I knew I'd
forgotten something."
"We'll order some when he gets back," said Sidney. "Tell us about the
damn statue!"
Vic looked at her with a wounded, puzzled expression.
"The statue," she said slowly. "The statue in Roderick Square."
Vic began to mumble. He took a piece of bread from the basket, and began to gum the
crust.
"Father," Sidney said, "he's drifting. What can we do?"
Thwaite looked up. "Nothing," he said. "Vies like that. He'll clear up
in a little while. To a degree."
"You know the gentleman?" Jasper asked. "For many years."
"But you didn't know he was a polymage?"
"Certainly not. He never displayed any magical powers in my presence."
"What do you know about him?"
"He's lived on the streets of Five Corners Parish for longer than anyone can
remember. He's kind to children. His mind wanders. He tells long, pointless stories."
"I can vouch for that," said Timaeus.
"You mean," said Wentworth, "that he's senile?" "That's about
the size of it, yes."
They stared at the old man.
"Copper for an old man?" Vic said to a passing waiter. The waiter stared at
him strangely.
"This," announced Wentworth, "is insane. He's got more magical power
than the entire local chapter of the Sodality combined, but he can't remember what year it
is. We're never going to get a coherent story out of him."
"Well," said Father Thwaite, after a silence, "I've found that if you
begin to tell Vic what you remember of one of his stories, he sometimes picks up the
thread"
"But we don't know what the story is!" said Wentworth with
exasperation.
Nick took a sip of his water. "Well, the orcs told me a little bit about it,"
he said.
Everyone looked at him. "Go on," said Sidney.
"They said that it came from the Orclands. The orcish colony in the Caverns of
Cytorax was established by a group of refugees, fleeing some civil war. They brought the
statue with them."
"Civil war? Among the orcs?" said Wentworth frowning. "I've never heard
of such a thing. Usually, Arst-Kara-Morn keeps a pretty tight leash on things. . . ."
"Ah," said Timaeus, "but there was such a civil war. In the late 3700s,
I believe. Shortly after Stantius III was captured in the battle of Durfalus-and then
taken to the Orclands!"
"Yes?" said Wentworth, leaning over the table and peering at Timaeus through
his cracked monocle. "And then?"
Timaeus shrugged. "Nobody knows," he said. "I talked to a professor of
history at the university. He says that there are rumors that some great ritual magic was
to be performed on the plain of Arst-Kara-Morn, but no one knows why or what it
involved."
Everyone looked at Vic. "Do you know anything about that?" said Father
Thwaite in a calm voice.
"'Bout what, Geoffrey?" asked Vic. A bit of saliva-soaked bread adhered to
his chin.
"Ritual magic in Arst-Kara-Morn?" "Sho what elshe is new?" Vic
shrugged. Thwaite sighed. "I guess not," he said.
"Hmm," Jasper mused. "Suppose you had an enemy king. What would you do
with him?"
"Hold him for ransom?" suggested Nick.
"I was always told that the health of the king is the health of the
mountains," said Garni. "At least, that's the way it is among dwarves. Could you
torture the king to weaken your enemies or something like that?"
"Of course!" said Timaeus. "Nothing quite so crude, but . . . the
fundamental principle of magic is the Law of Similarity. There is no distinction,
magically, between, say, a woman and a lock of the woman's hair; the objects are similar,
so that the lock of hair can be manipulated magically to affect the woman. A king is the
health of the land, in a literal sense. A king is his species. By capturing the
king, you may capture his people!"
Jasper bounced up and down over his chair. "By Cuthbert!" he said. "Do
you mean to say that the ritual magic in Arst-Kara-Morn was the Dark Lords attempting to
bind humanity to their will through Stantius?"
"Why not?" said Timaeus. "That would certainly tip the balance of power
in their favor, don't you think?"
"This is a great deal of speculation built upon a rather flimsy basis of
fact," said Wentworth. "Why didn't it work, if this is true? Why do we not have
a king who leads us in the services of darkness?"
At this moment, the waiter arrived with food. He unfolded a stand by Vic's seat, set
his platter on the stand, and began to remove dishes from it, placing them before the
diners. Sidney was the first served.
"Something went wrong," Sidney suggested. She was tempted to begin on her
chop, but decided to wait until the others were served. "The ritual got screwed up.
Maybe Stantius was killed, but instead of binding the new king to his service, the Dark
Lord stopped any king from being chosen."
"There is a spirit in the statue!" said Jasper excitedly. "Stantius's
spirit!" "Do you know that it's Stantius's spirit?" said Wentworth.
"Er, well, no. But if it were Stantius's spirit, that would explain why
there has been no king for two millennia. Stantius's spirit has not departed this plane of
existence; therefore he is, in some sense, living; so the gods have not chosen a new
king."
"Perhaps," said Wentworth. "But all you have is the word of a couple of
orcs (we know how reliable that is) and a great deal of supposition."
"I'm sorry," said the waiter. "Who's having the greeps?"
"Him," said Kraki, pointing to Vic.
"Vic," said Father Thwaite, "does the statue contain Stantius's
spirit?" Vic looked at Thwaite. "Shorry, Geoffrey?"
"I said, does the statue contain Stantius's spirit?"
"Doesh the shtatue contain Shtantiush'sh shpirit?" He appeared to mull this
over for a minute. The waiter leaned beside him to set the plate of greeps on the table.
"Yesh!" shouted Vic, springing to his feet. The plate went flying. The waiter
hurtled into the stand. The rest of dishes spilled to the ground. "The shtatue!"
shouted Vic, wild-eyed, rising from his chair and quivering in excitement. "For a
thousand yearsh have I shought the shtatue, the shtatue that containsh the shpirit of
Shantiush Human King. It musht be freed!"
"I am most dreadfully sorry, sir," said the waiter, trying to mop the greeps
off Vic's filthy shirt with a napkin. "Extremely clumsy of me. I do beg your
pardon."
"Freed, Vic?" said Father Thwaite. "What do you mean?"
"Get away from me, boy," shouted Vic, pushing at the waiter petulantly.
"I musht find the shtatue and take it to Arsht-Kara-Morn to unwork the Dark Lord'sh
shpell and releashe the shpirit of Shtantiush, that humanity may once again have a
king!"
All eyes in the restaurant were on the shouting, gesticulating old man. "I musht
gather companionsh to join me on my quesht," he bellowed. Suddenly, he stopped. He
looked around the Cloud Club querulously, then frowned. "Where'sh my wine?" he
said.
The waiter was on hands and knees, trying to scrape up the greeps. "Wine,
sir?" he said, looking up.
"Chateau d'Alfar," Vic said automatically, sitting back down. The waiter
stood up and headed for the kitchen.
"What quest?" said Father Thwaite.
"Quesht? Quesht?" said Vic. "I shaid wine, not quesht."
"The quest to take Stantius's statue to Arst-Kara-Morn," said Father Thwaite.
"Oh, that quesht," said Vic. "Never happen. Damn shtatue'sh been
losht for two thoushand yearsh. What happened to my wine?"
"Would you need companions for such a quest?"
"Yesh, of courshe," muttered Vic rubbing his eyes. "Alwaysh need
companionsh for a quesht. Pain in the neck, really, but it'sh traditional. If anyone found
the damn thing, they'd be the onesh to take." He yawned widely. "Time for a
nap," he said, and leaned back in his chair.
"Vic?" said Father Thwaite. There was no reply. "Vic?"
"Let me get this straight," said Sidney. "He wants us to go to
Arst-Kara-Morn with him."
"A place," said Nick, "where they'd rather gut you like a trout than say
hello."
"Lugging a statue that weighs a ton," said Garni, "across three thousand
miles of hostile terrain."
"A statue," said Timaeus, "that we're suppose to hide from the
opposition while it pumps out magical energy like a whole pantheon of gods." Vic
began to snore.
"Vith," said Kraki, "a senile geezer who can't even remember vhat year
it is as our guide."
"Your wine, sir?" said the waiter, presenting a bottle. Vic snored.
Everyone stared at him.
"Never mind the damned wine," snapped Wentworth. "What about our
food?"
THE END OR, AT ANY EVENT,
THE SHAMELESS CLIFF-HANGER
Notes
The main trade currency of the human lands is the pound argentum-which is equal
to one pound of silver, as the pound sterling was originally. Different polities mint
their own coins, but all coin is hard money, and the pound-shilling-pence system has been
universally adopted. There are twenty shillings to the pound and twelve pence to the
shilling, meaning that each penny weights one-twentieth of a (troy) ounce. Nick says that
one ounce of gold is worth one pound argentum; if he is correct, gold is somewhat
more common in his world than in our own. On earth, gold usually goes for fifteen to
sixteen times as much, per ounce, as silver; but there are only twelve troy ounces to the
troy pound, not sixteen. Perhaps Nick is confusing the troy pound with the pound avoirdupoisa
supposition suggested by the fact that he talks of Father Thwaite's weight in the same
passage.
"Essence of belladonna" is, in fact, atropine, a drug refined from the
belladonna plant. Its appearance here is, of course, not in keeping with the otherwise
Renaissance technology of the world; in our world, it was first extracted in the
mid-nineteenth century. I posit that the fascination of witches and alchemists with
medicinal plants and herbs leads to alternative, magical methods of extraction. The
symptoms and dosages described are correct; however, I believe atropine is no longer used
as an anaesthetic. It is still sometimes used in the treatment of certain poisons.
The orcish Hymn of Propitiation can be sung to the tune of Beethoven's Ode to Joy (if
anyone cares).
Several archaic units of measure are used. A cubit is traditionally the distance
between the tip of one's middle finger and the elbowabout eighteen inches. A stone
is a unit of weight, that, depending on type, can vary from eight to twenty-two pounds;
the traditional English stone is fourteen pounds.