Azure Bonds
By Kate Novak and Jeff Grubb
1
The Hidden Lady
She woke to the noise of dogs—two distinct barkings beneath her open inn
window. A high-pitched yip confronted a deep, throaty growl. Alias lay on the
tan-stained cotton sheets and pictured a long-haired puppy cast out from its
wealthy owner's household, fending off some huge boxer or Vassan wolfhound.
As with men and other savage races, the show of force was as important to
the dogs as force itself. The yipping canine was overmatched, yet its barking
went on for what seemed to Alias an eternity. Finally, the dog with the deeper
growl reached the end of its patience and snarled savagely. The sound of
toppling trash brought Alias fully awake.
She opened her eyes, listening for a dying squeal from the smaller dog, but
surprisingly the next thing she heard was a series of deep yelps from the large
dog. The sound faded away as the large dog fled from the window.
Alias threw off the light blanket and swung her feet to the floor. She rose
and immediately regretted it. Her head felt as though molten lead had been
poured behind her eyes, and her mouth was as dry as the sands of Anauroch.
She blinked in the reddish light. Is it dawn or twilight? she wondered.
Pressing the heels of her palms into her eyes, she yawned. Through the open window,
the sea breezes from the Lake of Dragons wafted into the room, along with the
far-off cries of fishermen returning with their catch.
Twilight, then, she decided. She shook her head, trying to clear the
cobwebs. Must have slept through the day, she thought. When did I get here? For
that matter, where's here? And what was I doing before I came here?
Alias snorted derisively. What she'd been doing was obvious. This wasn't the
first time she'd awakened in a strange place after a drunken celebration.
Nonetheless, her surroundings seemed familiar. The inn was built in the same
fashion as a hundred others at this end of the Sea of Fallen Stars, and her
room held the typical trappings: a bed cobbled together of a mixed pile of
wood, topped with a straw tick and sheets that hadn't been aggressively washed
in months; a small second-hand dressing table; a single straight-backed chair
draped with her armor and clothing; a small rag rug at the foot of the bed; a
brass oil lamp chained to the table; a chamber pot; and a single door. The
window, inset with colorless circles of crown glass that let in the light of
the setting sun, opened inward on side hinges that creaked lightly in the
breeze.
Alias got out of bed and padded barefoot to the chair. She furrowed her
brows, trying to remember the last few days. There was a sailing trip.
Something went wrong and I had to get out of a seaport quickly, she thought.
Random images of lizard men, shadowy swordsmen, and magic-users blurred in
her memory. She shrugged. It couldn't have been too important. I wouldn't get
drunk if there was trouble, she assured herself.
She reached for her tunic and suddenly realized that this
was
important, that she was in trouble. Serious trouble.
Along the inside of her sword arm, from wrist to elbow, writhed an elaborate
tattoo unlike any she had ever seen before. A pattern coiled about five large,
distinct symbols was set deep into her flesh, all done in shades of blue.
She held up her arm in the light of the dying sun. The symbols caught the
rays and glowed as if they were stained glass lit from behind. She flexed her
arm and twisted it back and forth. It wasn't really a tattoo at all, she
realized, noting how her skin rippled across the surface of the massive
inscriptions, as though they were buried beneath the surface of her flesh.
Engrossed by the symbols, Alias unconsciously sat on the edge of the bed in
the fading light. Afraid the symbols might have some hypnotic quality, she
studied them with her fingernails pressed into her palms so the pain would
distract her from whatever power they might try to exert over her.
The first symbol, at the bend of her arm, was a dagger surrounded by blue
fire. The tip of the dagger rested on the second symbol, a trio of interlocking
circles. Beneath this was a dot and a squiggle which reminded Alias of an
insect's leg. The leg danced above the fourth symbol—an azure hand with a
fanged mouth in the center of its palm. The last symbol consisted of three
concentric circles, each a more intense blue, so that the centermost circle was
the white-blue of a lightning strike and almost unbearable to look at. At the
base of her wrist the pattern wound about an empty space, as if a sixth symbol
was yet to be added.
Alias cursed, rattling off the names of as many gods as she could
immediately think of. When neither Tymora nor Waukeen nor any of the others
manifested themselves, she sighed and reached for her gear. She considered
bolting out of the room, sword in hand, prepared to smite anyone she could hold
responsible. She also considered dropping to her knees and praying for a divine
revelation of what she had done to deserve this. Neither action was likely to
do her any good, so she settled for getting dressed.
Alias tugged her tunic over her head and stepped into her leather leggings.
She frowned at the clothing. Why are these so stiff? I bought them over a year
ago. They should be broken in by now. Unless they're replacements, she mused.
There was no mistaking the newness of this set of clothing-it even smelled new.
But I don't remember buying any new clothes recently. Is this a spare set I
shoved into the bottom of my pack and forgot? she wondered. She looked around
for her pack, but it wasn't among her belongings. It might have been stolen,
she realized, but then it was equally likely she lost it or even hocked it.
She slipped her shirt of light chain over her head but decided against
attaching the breast, shoulder, arm, and knee plates. She felt a rocking
sensation in the pit of her stomach. I know there was a sea trip. Did I get
this. . . tattoo before I sailed or after I arrived?
She pulled on her hard-soled boots. The soft leather uppers reached nearly
to her knees. She checked for her daggers. Each boot pocket held a slender,
balanced wedge of silvered steel. All that remained on the chair was her plate
mail and her cloak. Her fire-scorched longsword and the eagle-shaped barrette
she used to keep her hair in place lay on the dresser. Worse than her missing
pack, there was no money among her belongings, but she was still too concerned
about the tattoo to worry about money.
This memory loss and tattoo may be nothing, she tried to tell herself as she
reached for the barrette. Holding the silver clasp in her teeth she wound up
her long reddish hair and bound it to the back of her head with the barrette.
She remembered Ikanamon the Gray Mage telling her about the time he got so
drunk and obnoxious that his fellow party members had a vulgar scene involving
centaurs tattooed on his backside. Maybe this is just a prank, too, she
reassured herself. A clerical cure will get rid of it for me.
The small hairs on the back of her neck rose, and Alias realized that she
was being watched. Turning slowly toward the window, she locked gazes with a
reptilian creature peering in at her from the alley.
Looking like a cross between a lizard and a troglodyte, the beast's head
just reached above the level of the windowsill. His snout was thinner and more
refined than the lizard men Alias had fought before, and he had a huge fin
which began just between his eyes and continued over the top of his skull. He
had no lips, only sharp, disjointed teeth, and his eyes were the yellow of dead
things. In his claws he held the smaller of the two dogs Alias had heard
earlier. The puppy, unharmed, had short, white hair, not long as Alias had
imagined. Both creatures watched her with an intense curiosity, the lizard
still as stone, the puppy wagging its tail, with its pink tongue lolling
stupidly out of one side of its mouth.
Alias reacted instantly with the practiced grace of an experienced
adventuress. She drew one of the daggers from her boot and, with a flick of her
tattooed wrist, shot it at her observer. The creature pitched backward without
a sound, but the dog fell into the room with a frightened yip. The dagger sank
half an inch into the oak window frame.
Grasping her flame-seared sword, Alias flung herself across the room in one
fluid motion When she reached the window, however, the creature was gone and
the alleyway empty. The short-haired dog yipped at her feet, rising on its hind
legs and placing its front paws halfway up her boots
"I don't suppose you know anything about this?" she asked the dog.
The puppy merely wagged its tail and whimpered.
Alias picked up the small creature, petted it briery, then dropped it
outside the window. The beast barked at her a few times, then began sniffing
the rubbish.
*****
"The lady has risen from the dead!" shouted the barkeep in a merry
voice as Alias entered the common room. She did not know this particular
barkeep, but knew others just like him who ran inns from the Living City to
Water-deep. He was a loud, boisterous man, full of
"hail-fellow-well-met" attitudes, favoring adventurers in his trade
because the additional gold they usually carried made up for the damage their
barroom arguments caused.
A few heads turned to look at her, but there were no familiar faces among
them. Alias had decided to wear her armor plate after all. She looked more
suited for battle than for a few drinks, but many of the merchants,
mercenaries, and townsfolk were similarly armed and armored, so she fit in.
Like most of those in the room, Alias wore her weapon at her side. Like all of
those doing so, she had the blade's grip tied to its sheath by white cord,
fashioned in "peace knot."
She took a table near an interior wall, away from any windows, where she
could keep an eye on both doors to the common area, and the barkeep as well. He
was a portly, balding man, obviously guilty of sampling his own stock.
He took her attention as a request for service, and after a few obligatory
passes with a rag over the bar, he filled a large mug from the tap and brought
it over to her table. Foam ran down the mug's sides, and beads of water
condensed where the rivulets did not run.
"Hair o' the dog what bit you?" offered the barkeep.
"On the house?" asked Alias.
"On the bill," the barkeep replied. "I like to keep things on
a cash-and-carry basis. Don't worry, you're still covered."
For the moment Alias was more interested in the blank spaces in her memory
than in who was covering her tab. "I was here last night?" she asked.
"Yes, lady."
"Doing?" Alias raised an eyebrow.
"Why, sleeping it off. And it must have been a Hades raising drunk
indeed, for it is the seventh day o' Mirtul." When Alias stared at him
blankly, lie explained, 'You been here since the evening o' the fourth, done
nothing but sleep the whole while."
"Did I come alone?"
"Yes. Well, maybe not. May I?" He pointed to the empty seat at the
table. Alias nodded, and he lowered his ponderous weight into the chair, which
groaned under the load.
"One o' my regulars, Mitcher Trollslayer," he continued,
"stumbled over you that evening after the last call. You wuz laid out on
my front stoop like a sacrifice to Bane."
The barkeep drew the circle of Tvinora on his chest to ward off any trouble
uttering the evil name might bring. "Anyway, there you wuz with this sack
o' money alongside. I put you up. using the money in the sack to cover your
tab. Here it is, too, with only the cost o the room deducted." From his
apron pocket he fished out a small satin sack "Doesn't count the beer, o
course."
Aliais shook the contents from the sack. A small, greenish gem, a couple of
Lantan trade bars, some Waterdeep coinage, and a scattering of Cormyrian coins.
She shoved a silver falcon at the barkeep. "I don't remember coming here.
Someone must have left me. Did you see anyone?"
"I figgered you must have been carousing with a bunch o' mates who,
when the effects caught up with you, left you on mv doorstep with enough cash
to guarantee your comfort. No one told us about you until Mitcher found vou on
his way out. You wuz alone."
Aiias looked at the mug as the foam on top diminished to reveal a watery
amber liquid. It smelled worse than the rubbish outside. "Why wouldn't my
'mates' bring me inside?" she asked.
The barkeep shrugged. The mates-leaving-the-lady-on-the-doorstep theory was
apparently his favorite, and it was obvious that he had been telling and
retelling it over the past few evenings. He was reluctant to change what seemed
to him a concise and well-rounded tale.
"No one has asked after me?" Alias pressed.
"Not a one, lady. Perhaps they forgot about you."
"Perhaps. No lizards?"
The barkeep sniffed. "We keep the premises clean. We wuz waiting for
you to wake before cleaning your room."
Alias raised a hand. "No lizard-creatures, then? Something that looks
like a lizard-creature?"
The barkeep shrugged again. "Perhaps the last brew you had haunted you
some. You recall what you wuz drinking?"
"I recall precious little, I fear. I don't even know what town I'm
in."
"No mere town, but the gem of Cormyr, the finest city o' the Forest Country.
You are in Suzail, lady, home o' His Most Serene and Wise Majesty, Azoun
IV."
Alias had a mental map in her head of the region. Cormyr was a growing
nation, sitting astride the trade routes from the Sword Coast to the Inner Sea.
The name of its ruler struck a responsive chord. Is he a friend? An enemy? Why
can't I remember things?
"Last question, wise barkeep," she said, holding up another silver
orb, "and I will let you go." She turned the hand holding the coin to
reveal the inside of her arm and its bright tattoo. "Did I have this when
I arrived?"
"Aye, lady," said the barkeep. "It wuz there when we found
you. Mitcher said the Witches of Rashemen wear such tattoos, but a Turmishman
said he wuz full of bee droppings. There wuz some mutterings, but I put my foot
down and, as you see, the sky hasn't fallen on my inn. I considered you a good
omen, at that."
"Why?"
"The name of this house. The Hidden Lady."
Alias nodded. Taking this as a dismissal, the barkeep scurried back to his
bar, rattling the orbs in his hand as he went.
Alias reviewed what the barkeep had told her. It makes sense, she thought.
Adventurers have been known to dump off drunken companions, leaving a tattoo as
a reminder. But why these symbols? They mean nothing to me.
Alias gulped a mouthful of ale, then fought the urge to spit it across the
table. The brew tasted like fermented swill. She forced herself to swallow it,
wondering if the wretched taste of the beer had been why her unknown
benefactors had left her outside and not entered the establishment,
"I hate mysteries," she muttered with annoyance. She toyed with
the idea of pitching the nearly full mug at the barkeep, accusing him of
poisoning the clientele. When in doubt, she thought, start a brawl.
She pushed the beer away, her attention diverted. The barkeep was talking to
a tall man wearing robes of crimson highlighted with thin white stripes and an
ivory white cloak with red trim. The barkeep motioned a pudgy hand toward
Alias's table, and the man turned to look at her.
His skin was dusky and his hair a curly brown mane banded with gold cords,
hung to his shoulders. He had a moustache, and his beard was cut straight
across at the bottom like a coal shovel. His eyes were blue. On his forehead
were tattooed three blue dots, and a sapphire was embedded in his left earlobe.
Alias recognized him as a southerner and knew the dots marked him as a Turmish
scholar of religion, reading, and magic. The earring meant he was married. But
she did not recognize the man himself.
Nevertheless, he made his way from the bar to her table. Alias rose as he
approached—not from politeness, but to give herself the chance to size him up.
He stood several inches taller than Alias—and she was taller than most women
and many other men. Beneath his soft, flowing robes, the man had a reasonably
sturdy frame. However his muscles did not appear to be trained for battle or
hardship, as were her own. He might be a mage, she decided, or a merchant.
"I hope you are well, lady?" His voice had the cultured tone of
someone tutored in the local tongue by a scholar.
Alias scowled at his features. "Do I know you, Turmite?"
His expression turned stormy. "No. If you did, you would know our
people prefer to be called Turmishmen or Turms.''
Alias sat down and motioned him into the seat opposite her. She liked his
control in the face of her insult. "You care for my drink? I've lost the
desire."
Nodding, the Turmishman took a long pull on the mug. If it was fermented
pig-swill, as Alias suspected, then such drinks were common in the south, she
decided, because the stranger seemed to savor his swallow.
"I take it you are the Turmishman who declared I was not a witch?"
The man nodded and wiped a bit of foam from his moustache. "Your
friendly innkeep was too afraid to take you in, and the lout who found you was
ready to have you burned. Or at least relieve you of your purse."
"But you knew I was not a witch? '
"I know that the Witches of Rashemen, if they ever leave their frozen
climes, know better than to decorate their bodies with tattoos proclaiming
their origins."
Alias nodded. ''I'm not of that sisterhood." At least as far as I know,
she thought inwardly, since I can't swear to what I've been doing for the past
week or so.
She hesitated, then asked, "Did you see who brought me here?"
The Turmishman shook his head. "I was at this very table when the
northerner left and then came right back in, babbling about a dead witch on the
front steps. Everyone here investigated, and I convinced them your glyphs were
harmless, though I have no idea what they are. I must confess, to being most
curious about them. May I see them again?"
Alias frowned but held out her arm, palm upward, revealing the symbols. In
the dim common room they seemed even brighter than before, glowing from within.
The Turmishman looked at them and shook his head, still mystified. "I
have never seen the likes of these before. Where are you from?"
"I . . . get around." After another pause she added, "I was
born in Westgate, but I ran off and never returned."
"I've seen naught like this in Westgate, and I have traveled the Inner
Sea from there to Thay. I must confess, though, I am by no means a sage. May I
cast a spell on them?"
Alias involuntarily jerked her arm back. "You a mage?"
The Turmishman grinned, displaying a line of bright white teeth. "Of no
small water. I am Akabar Bel Akash of House Akash, mage and merchant. Do not
fear. I have no wish to entrap you by magics. I only wish to know if the
marking's origin is in magic."
Alias glared across the table at the Turmishman. He was a merchant-mage. One
of those greengrocers who dabbled with the art, but probably wasn't skilled
enough to cut it as just a sorcerer. Still, he ought to be capable of detecting
magic, and he looked sincere. She needed to know more about the tattoo, and
here was this Turmishman offering his services for free She held out her arm.
"I am Alias. Magic does not frighten me, am be quick about it."
Akabar Bel Akash leaned over the symbols and began mumbling words quickly
and quietly. If the runes on her arm were magical, Alias knew, they would
radiate a dim glow.
The merchant-mage chanted, and Alias felt the muscles of her arm writhe
beneath her skin as though they were snakes. The symbols danced along her arm
as if mocking the Turmishman.
Suddenly, strands of hellish blue light, intense as lightning flashes, shot
from the symbols on her arm, illuminating the whole room. The beacons of color
crackled along the beams overhead and were reflected off all the bottles and
armor in the tavern, turning the surprised faces of every patron in the room to
a deathly blue.
Akabar Bel Akash had not been expecting so violent a reaction to his magical
inquiry. He toppled backward in surprise, chair and all. His flailing arm
caught the half-drained mug of beer and sent it flying across the commons room.
The droplets of spilled ale took on the appearance of a cluster of blue
fireflies.
Alias caught sight of the barkeep frozen in the blue light. An instant
later, the portly man regained his senses and dove like a sounding whale behind
the bar. His patrons were a tougher lot; many of them were desperately working
loose the peace knots of their weapons.
Grabbing her cloak from the back of her chair, Alias twisted it tight around
her arm to muffle the light. The blue glow leaked out of the cloak's edges, and
she held the arm close to her body. In an overloud voice she announced,
"No problem, no problem! My friend here was just showing me a new magical
trick that he hasn't quite learned yet."
Alias quickly circled around the table. She leaned over the tall mage's
sprawled form and, to demonstrate that there was nothing wrong, helped pull him
to his feet. Already most of the patrons had returned to their drinks, but
there was a good deal of scowling and muttering.
Grasping the collar of his white-striped crimson vestments, Alias held
Akabar's face close to her own and whispered in the tight voice she reserved to
threaten people. "Never, ever, do that again," then added with a
hiss, "I should have known better than to trust a greengrocer. I'm going
to a real spell-caster to get rid of this tattoo right now Don't be here when I
come back, Turmite."
With that, she spun and, clutching her cloak-wrapped arm to her belly,
strode out of the inn. She caught sight of the barkeep's head surfacing from
behind the bar just as she pushed the door open.
Cursing, Alias stormed three blocks before she dared to duck into an
alleyway and unwrap the cloak. The symbols on her arm had returned to their
normal appearance, if one could consider a tattoo that looked like pieces of
translucent glass set beneath the skin normal.
Alias cursed again, this time without venom or passion, and headed toward
the Promenade, Suzail's main street, looking for a temple thai might still have
clerics awake at this hour.
2
Winefiddle and the Assassins
The first two temples she tried, the Shrine of Lliira and the Silent Room,
the Temple of Deneir, were locked. Both were posted with identical signs
stating they were closed until dawn services.
She passed by the Towers of Good Fortune—the huge temple to Tymora—because
it looked too expensive, and the Shrine to Tyr, because it looked too prim and
stuffy.
Upon reaching the Shrine of Oghma, Alias glared at the note tacked to the
door. She ripped the paper from the tiny nails and let it flutter down the
stairs. Pounding on the door with the side of her fist, her assault was
answered by a sleepy caretaker who cracked the temple door open all of two
inches and peered out at her suspiciously.
"I need a curse removed! Immediately!" she gasped with her best
maiden-in-distress voice. The caretaker's look softened, but he shook his head,
explaining that the holy mother was out of town arranging a wedding and that
they had only acolytes within, new officiates who lacked the power to deal with
such things.
"Try Tyr Grimjaws, Miss," he suggested.
Alias backtracked to the Shrine of Tyr the Just only to find her entry
barred by two heavily armed guards. "Unless it's life or death," one
informed her, "you'll have to wait." Apparently the church of Tyr had
hired an adventuring party to deal with a dragon terrorizing the Storm Horn
Mountains. The party's dealings with the monster had been anything but
successful. The priests of Tyr were all occupied with healing the survivors and
resurrecting the bodies of their comrades who had not been incinerated.
Alias was feeling desperate by the time she screwed up her courage to enter
the Towers of Good Fortune, the Temple of Tymora. At least there was no sign on
its front gates. She jerked on the bellpull incessantly until a priest
appeared, yawning but not cross. A corpulent, pasty-faced man, he waddled
forward to unbar the gates.
"I must speak with your superior immediately," Alias demanded.
"This is an emergency."
The priest bowed as much as his bulk would allow and stood up again,
grinning. "Curate Winefiddle at your service. An improbable name for a
priest, I know, but we must play the cards we're dealt, right? I'm afraid,
lady, that I'm all there is. His worship and the others are helping the minions
of Tyr with healing and resurrecting the would-be dragon slayers. Unless, by my
superiors, you meant to have a word with Lady Luck herself. It's possible, but
very costly, in more ways than one. I wouldn't recommend it."
Alias shook her head. Before the curate could babble anymore, she burst out,
"I need a curse removed."
"Now, that does sound serious. Come in." Winefiddle ushered her
past the silver-plated altar to Tymora, Lady Luck, and into a private study for
an audience. An oil lamp lit the musty chamber. Dark oak cabinets lined the
walls. A single, high window framed the night sky. The curate offered her a seat
and plopped down into a chair beside her.
"Now, tell me about this curse," he prompted her.
Alias explained how she'd awakened after her unusually long sleep and
discovered the tattoo on her arm. At a loss for any other theory, she told him
the barkeep's story that she was a drunk left on the doorstep of The Hidden
Lady. Then, she related what had happened when the Turmish merchant-mage had
cast a spell to detect magic on the tattoo. "I don't remember getting
it—the tattoo," she concluded. "I would never have agreed to it, not
even drunk. This has to be some sort of stupid prank pulled on me while I was
unconscious, but I have no idea who would have done it."
Alias did not bother to mention her hazy memory of the past few weeks—it was
too embarrassing—and she omitted the incident with the lizard as
inconsequential.
Curate Winefiddle nodded reassuringly, as if Alias had brought him nothing
more troublesome than a kitten with earmites. "No problem," he
declared. "There remains only the question of how you would like to
arrange payment?"
Alias knew from experience that her coins were an insufficient
"offering." She pulled out the only real valuable in her money
sack—the small, greenish gem.
Winefiddle accepted the terms with a smile and a nod. "No. Don't put it
there," he admonished her before she set it down on the desk. "Very
unlucky. Drop it in the poor box as you leave."
Alias nodded. Winefiddle began removing a number of tattered scrolls from a
cabinet. "The one advantage to serving an adventurer's goddess," he
yawned as he spoke, "is a steady stream of worshippers in need of your
special services, worshippers willing to pay in magical items."
The cleric stifled another yawn, and Alias gave him a blank look she
bestowed on fools she needed to tolerate. As far as she was concerned, clerics
were merely puttering quasi-mages who couldn't cast spells without worrying
about converts, theology, relics, and other nonsense. If they weren't so useful
when sickness, famine, and war struck, they would probably have died out
altogether, Alias decided, taking their gods with them. Perhaps the gods knew
that, and that's why they put up with the fools.
Winefiddle pulled bundles of scrolls from the cabinet with all the grace of
a fishmonger hoisting salmon. He hummed as he checked their tags. Alias sat
there as quietly and patiently as possible, wishing she had stopped at another
inn for a pouch of decent rum. Finally, the priest pulled two from the lot that
seemed to please him.
Despite Alias's warning of what had happened in The Hidden Lady, Winefiddle
wanted to begin with a standard magical detection. He waved aside her
objections, insisting, "I need to see this extreme reaction myself.
Nothing to be afraid of since we know what to expect this time, right?"
Alias submitted with a grudging sigh. The cleric passed his silver disk of
Tymora over her outstretched arm. The words he muttered were different from the
Turmish mage's, but the effect was the same. Alias shuddered as the symbols
writhed beneath her skin, and she squinted in anticipation of the bright,
sapphire radiance which soon lit every corner of the musty study.
Winefiddle's eyebrows disappeared into his low hairline, amazed at the
brilliance of the glow. Alias clenched her muscles involuntarily, and the rays
swayed about the room like signal beacons, bouncing off the darkened window and
the priest's silver holy symbol.
The glow peaked and began to ebb slowly Winefiddle cleared his throat
nervously a few times before he reached for the larger of the two scrolls on
the desk. In the blue light he looked less pasty and more powerful, but Alias
was beginning to wonder if he knew what he was doing.
"You really think that piece of paper's going to be strong
enough?" she asked doubtfully. Maybe I should put this off until morning,
she thought. The Shrine of Oghma or the Temple of Deneir might have more competent
help.
"This scroll was written by the hand of the Arch-cleric Mzentul
himself, it should remove these horrors without delay." He stroked his
chin thoughtfully and added, "It being such an old and irreplaceable
scroll, perhaps you wouldn't mind, should you come into further funds . ."
Alias gave an impatient nod, and Winefiddle undid the scroll's leather
binding. With one hand on her arm and the other holding the scroll, he began to
read.
"Dominus, Deliverus," he intoned. A cold shudder ran down Alias's
spine, a feeling quickly overwhelmed by a burning sensation on her forearm. The
pain was familiar, but she could not remember why. Is this how the magics felt
that put the damned thing here?
The fire on her arm intensified, and she clamped her jaw shut to avoid
crying out. She couldn't have been in more pain if molten metal had been poured
over her sword arm.
"Ketris, Ogos, Diam—" Winefiddle continued, breathing heavily, his
teeth clenched. Alias wondered if he could feel the heat of her arm beneath his
hand.
Light beams arced from Alias's arm like water from a fountain, but instead
of spilling to the floor, they wrapped around her until she was surrounded by
blue light.
Suddenly, she wrenched her arm away from the cleric's grasp and reached down
to her boot for her throwing dagger. As if she was in some horrible nightmare
her arm moved of its own accord, like a viper she could not control.
The priest had ignored the swordswoman's arm jerking from his grasp. It
wasn't really necessary that he hold onto it, and he could not afford to lose
his concentration and break off his incantation. "Mistra, Hodah, Mzentil,
Coy!" he finished triumphantly.
Winefiddle looked up at his client. She was still bathed in a blue light
from the symbols, and her face was a mask of rage. A low, feral snarl issued
from her lips. He caught the flash of silver as Alias thrust the knife toward
him. With an unexpected dexterity, he shifted sideways.
The weapon sliced through his robes and bit into his flesh, but it was
stopped by his lowest rib.
Alias looked down in horror at her hand—it moved with its own volition.
Blood from the dagger bubbled and burned as it dripped over the glowing tattoo.
Suddenly, the scroll Winefiddle had been reading burst into flame, its magic
used. The curate threw the burning page in Alias's face.
The swordswoman swatted the fiery parchment away, and the priest circled
around her. Just as he reached the door, Alias felt an electric pulse run down
her right arm. She tried to grab the wrist with her left hand, but she was too
late. The arm hurled the dagger at the priest. The weapon whirred past his ear
and buried itself in the doorjamb. Yanking the door open so hard that it banged
against the wall behind it, the priest fled from the study.
Alias raced after him, no longer in control of any part of her body. She
tried to pull the silvered steel weapon from the wood as she passed by, but the
blade had buried itself too deep; she abandoned it so as not to lose sight of
her prey.
Alias found Winefiddle climbing the steps to the silver altar. She leaped
after him and grabbed at the back of the chain around his neck, the chain that
held his holy symbol—the silver disk of Tymora. She yanked on it hard, trying
to throttle him with it.
Winefiddle lost his balance and tumbled backward down the steps into his
assailant, knocking her over as well. The priest's fall was broken by Alias's
body, but the swordswoman was not so lucky. The crack her head made on the
marble stone echoed through the temple, and the priest's great bulk on top of
her forced all the air from her lungs.
When Alias opened her eyes again, she was still lying on the floor. The
light on her arm had faded to a very dim glow. Her head was throbbing with
unbearable agony. Gods' she thought, as panic gripped her heart. I killed a
priest! These hell-spawned markings made me kill a priest; No one will ever
believe it wasn't my fault.
She tried to sit up, knowing she had to flee, but the pain in her head made
it impossible. Then she heard chanting.
Winefiddle knelt beside her—not dead after all. In the dimness of the temple
lamps Alias could see his hands were glowing very slightly. He held them over
the wound in his side and then over her forehead. The throbbing subsided.
"How are you feeling?" the curate asked.
"All right, I guess," she muttered, sitting up slowly. She was
unable to meet the priest's eyes. "I might have killed you," she
whispered.
"Not very likely," Winefiddle replied lightly. "We are in
Tymora's temple, and Her luck was with me, not you."
His nonchalance startled Alias. She had to make him understand, even if it
didn't matter to him. "It wasn't me, though," she explained. "My
arm ... it took me over somehow."
"Yes. The symbols must have instructions to destroy anyone who would
try to remove them, discouraging you from seeking out help. I thought you
looked possessed—but it couldn't have been a real possession."
"Why not?"
"An alarm would have gone off if any possessed person approached the
altar. You didn't set it off. I don't think you're cursed exactly either, or
the scroll I used would have worked. The symbols on your arm are magical, but
they aren't just magical. There's some mechanistic component to them that
protects them from being exorcised."
"But I have to get them off," Alias insisted. "I can't run
around with markings that make me try to kill priests. Who knows what else they
might make me do?"
"Indeed," Winefiddle agreed, "but removing them might prove
to be complicated and costly. If it can be done, it would require the power of
many clerics and mages, as well as a surgeon. And you would have no guarantee
that the markings would let you live through the procedure. It might be easier
and safer for you to cut off the arm and retire."
"No!"
"But these markings are very dangerous. You could learn to fight
left-handed," Winefiddle suggested.
"I can already do that," Alias declared. "That's not the
point. I'm not going to let these things, or whoever put them on me, ruin my
life. Besides, suppose they had roots or something that went into my
body."
"Well, then, I would advise you to learn all you can about the
markings. None of them are familiar to me. Perhaps if you can discover their
origins, you can discover who put them on you and get them to remove them for
you."
Alias looked down at the blue glyphs. None of them were familiar to her
either. Even the Turmishman, Akabar Bel Akash, had found them unusual.
"That'll take a sage's service, and sages aren't cheap."
"True," Winefiddle agreed. "However, I happen to know of a
very good one who might be willing to exchange his services for yours. His name
is Dimswart. He lives about half a day's ride outside of Suzail."
"What kind of services might he be looking for?" Alias asked
suspiciously.
"Better to let him explain that," Winefiddle said evasively.
Five minutes later Alias left the temple, a letter of introduction in her
pocket, along with the small greenish gem originally intended for Tymora's poor
box. She had made a motion toward the box with her hand as she passed it, but
the gem remained firmly in her grip. As she had pointed out, sages weren't
cheap. Her services might not be sufficient to barter with this Dimswart, she
told herself.
As she walked away from the temple, an uneasy suspicion occurred to her that
perhaps it wasn't her own frugalness that prompted her to hold onto the gem,
but some desire of the sigils not to reward the priest who had tried to help
her remove them.
The cobblestone Promenade of Suzail appeared deserted, but as soon as Alias
left the temple court a tall figure in rustling crimson-and-white robes stepped
from the shadows. He hesitated, uncertain whether he should follow the
adventuress or try to discover her business with Tymora. He made for the temple
doors.
Then three more figures, dressed in dark leathers, emerged from a dark
alley. Ignoring the first figure they trailed after Alias. One last figure
followed these three—a figure holding a massive tail over his shoulder.
*****
Alias was in no hurry to return to The Hidden Lady. Three days of sleep had
left her quite awake. She wandered down to Suzail's docks. The last of the
schooners had shut down for the evening, and only a few firepots from the
warehouses lit the water. The sea air rolled into the city, smelling
considerably fresher than three-days worth of unlaundered linens.
She ran through a mental list of individuals who might be responsible for
having her marked with the symbols and drew a blank. Any enemies she'd made
were either ignorant of her name or dead. No friends who were still drawing
breath would do something like this. That left someone new—a stranger who had
picked her off the street as a suitable vessel for trying out a new piece of
magic.
Alias came to the end of the wooden plank sidewalk. The beach spread out in
a thin white line to her right. The night sky had grown overcast. Like my life,
she thought. She began walking along the shoreline on the sand.
Even if a complete stranger had done this to her, she was still left
wondering where and when it had happened. Now that she thought about it, her
memory was missing more than just a few weeks. More time than an alcoholic
binge could really account for, she decided.
She could recall long-ago adventures quite clearly—like stealing one of the
Eyes of Bane from an evil temple in Baldur's Gate with the Adventurers of the
Black Hawk, or her earliest sojourns with the Company of the Swanmays.
Her mind went all fuzzy, trying to remember recent events like the sea trip.
And there was a sea trip, she insisted to herself, worried that she
would forget that as well by the next morning. Was the lizard-creature on the
same ship? I think so. Maybe it's the pet of the magician behind this mess.
Alias walked a quarter-mile along the beach before she drew her traitorous
arm from beneath her cloak. The pain had dimmed, but the symbols still glowed
faintly, like lichen. Cursing did no good, but she cursed anyway. If they can
make me attack a priest, what else can they make me do?
If she attacked someone else, she could end up with a bad reputation. No one
would hire her as a guard, and there weren't many adventuring companies who'd
have anything to do with her. It was one thing to kill people in self-defense or
in combat under command of king or church, but if she were to slay some
innocent, unarmed person . . .
Alias was lost in her thoughts, absentmindedly digging a half-covered shell
from the sand with the side of her boot, so she failed to notice the trio stalking
her. The rushing sound of the surf covered the noise of their approach. One
hung back and began chanting a spell, while the other two rushed the
swordswoman.
The spell-caster's incantation, a high-pitched female voice, inadvertently
warned Alias of danger. The swordswoman whirled around and discovered the pair
of armed men advancing on her. They carried clubs, but light from the
cloud-wrapped moon did not reflect off their black leather armor—armor that was
the trademark of a particularly dangerous underworld class.
Assassins! Alias grabbed at the hilt of her sword and nearly jerked herself
off her feet before remembering the blade was still tied to its scabbard. The
awkward movement pulled her forward so, by dumb luck, she rolled within the
swing of the first assailant and away from the second. With one hand she tried
to foil the knot at her sword.
Then the spell-caster's magic let loose—a pair of missiles of hissing
energy, leaving a wake of glittering dust in their path. The bolts dove at
Alias like hunting falcons and caught her in the left shoulder. The arm below
that shoulder went dead from the shock, and the force knocked the swordswoman
backward on the sand. Ignore the pain, just get the knot, she ordered herself.
Fortunately, the first assailant was an amateur. He rushed forward while his
wiser companion circled. Alias brought her leg up hard and connected. The fool
dropped his club, clutching himself in pain.
Get the knot, get the knot, her mind chanted as the fingers of her right
hand tore frantically at the binding on her sword. Don't think about the
spell-caster: Work the knot!
Alias attempted to rise, and the second assailant swung at her from behind,
catching her left shoulder again. She rolled with the blow and came up at last
with sword in hand. The first assassin had recovered, so that Alias stood on
the beach facing both armed assailants, shifting her eyes from one to the
other. Worse than that, she could hear the rising chant in the distance of
another spell.
The chant died with a sudden muffled scream, and the two assassins
half-turned in surprise. Alias lunged, catching the first in the belly. She
lost her grip on her sword's hilt as the assassin crumbled to the sand.
The remaining black figure thrust his club like a sword, seeking to catch
Alias between the ribs. Alias dodged backward, so the force of his lunge
knocked the assassin off balance. She reached to the top of her boot with her
good hand and flung a dagger underhand. Her aim was true, and the second
assailant fell, hands clawing at the protruding hilt, staining the sand with
his blood.
Alias breathed deeply and recovered her weapons. Both men were dead She
rubbed her sore shoulder, feeling the tingling of life returning to it. Then
she remembered the spell-caster Has she fled, or is she waiting in the shadows?
Alias moved cautiously in the direction the magic missiles had come from.
The spell-caster lay face down in the sand about twenty yards away, a nasty
gash across her back. Bending over her body was the lizard-creature. It's just
as ugly in the moonlight as it had been in the dusk, Alias thought. In one paw
the creature held an odd-looking blade that had too much steel and not enough
grip. The tip of the blade was an oversized diamond shape edged with curved teeth
that curled backward. The teeth were bathed in the mage's blood.
Alias raised her own sword into a guard position. The lizard looked up and
hissed. Is that a hostile sign? she wondered. She tightened her grip on her own
blade. The beast rose from the mage's body. Swordswoman and lizard stood
motionless, each waiting for the other to move first.
Finally, the lizard-creature gave a muted snarl as it twisted its odd-shaped
blade in its hands, spinning the weapon like a baton once, twice, thrice . . .
And drove it, point first, into the ground at Alias's feet The creature
dropped to one knee beside the grounded blade, head down, offering its bare
neck to Alias's weapon.
Alias raised her sword over the creature. I failed to kill the thing this
afternoon, she realized, and I'll never have a better chance to deal with it.
Putting it out of my misery would be the simplest, most logical thing to do.
Four dead bodies on a beach attract no more attention than three.
The lizard remained in its kneeling position, not reaching for its blade.
The creature seemed to be holding us breath.
Alias hesitated, You'd think I was a follower of Bhaal, God of Murder. First
I try to kill a priest, and now I'm ready to slay a foe who's surrendered. For
that matter I don't know that it's a foe, The creature took out the magic-user
for me. It's offering me its services like a knight.
Alias tapped the lizard-creature on the shoulder with the flat of the blade.
"Okay, you can live." Her voice sounded overloud and pompous.
"But one false move and you're dragon bait. Read me? Dra-gon bait."
The creature nodded and pointed to its chest with a long, clawed finger.
Alias rubbed her temples with annoyance. "No, you're not named
Dragonbait. If you give me any trouble, you'll become dragon bait."
The creature repeated the gesture toward itself.
Alias sighed. "Dragonbait it is, then." She pointed toward
herself. "Alias," she said. "Now let's search these bodies and
get out of here before the watch arrives."
Dragonbait nodded and, using an overlong thumb-claw, started cutting the
strings of the magician's purse.
3
Dragonbait and Dimswart
Dragonbait was like no other creature Alias had ever seen before in all her
travels through the Realms. He wasn't a real lizard, at least not of the
species she'd helped drive back from the city of Daggerford. As she noted when
she'd seen the creature at sunset, his snout was thinner at the tip and more
rounded than a lizard-creature's, and he sported a head fin like a troglodyte.
Given time for more leisurely study, she could see many other differences.
For one thing, the sharp teeth at the front of his mouth gave way to the
peglike molars of a salad eater, and though he walked on his hind legs, his
posture was hardly erect. The creature tilted forward some at the hips,
balanced by a tail as long again as his torso. With such an odd posture, his
head only reached to her shoulder, about five feet high. Finally, the scales
that pebbled his hide were so small and smooth he looked as though he were
covered in expensive beadwork, like a noblewoman's evening gown.
At any rate, for something more lizardish than human, he was pretty
intelligent. At least, that is, the lizard made an excellent servant. Upon
their return to The Hidden Lady, he busied himself helping her off with her
boots, straightening her room, and fetching food for a late night snack.
"I see you found your lizard," the innkeeper commented cheerily to
Alias, upon discovering the five-foot lizard with a cold meat pie and pudding
in his paws.
Except for a few catlike hisses, snarls, and mewling sounds, Dragonbait
remained mute. If the creature had his own language he did not bother to use
it. Alias found she could get him to fetch and carry things on command, but he
responded to questions with the blank look of a beast.
She needed to know when she'd first met him, what he knew of her memory
loss, and especially what he knew of the tattoo. In frustration and desperation
she began shouting questions. Her anger only invoked in the lizard a tilted
head and a puzzled expression.
Alias lay back on the bed, defeated. Dragonbait made a sympathetic mewling. Struck
with an inspiration, Alias shouted down to the innkeep for an inkpot, quill,
and parchment. When the items were brought up, she set them on the table and
sat Dragonbait down before them.
The lizard sniffed at the inkpot, and his nostrils flared and closed up in
annoyance. He used the quill point to pick clean the spaces between his teeth.
Alias flopped back on her bed, laughing. Lady Luck was playing some cruel
joke on her. Here was a creature who might be a key to the fog surrounding her
life, and he could explain nothing to her. She leaned back against the
headboard and closed her eyes. Dragonbait curled up on the rag rug on the floor
at the foot of the bed and wrapped his arms around the curious sword he
carried.
Alias feigned sleep for a while, just to be sure her new companion had no
plans to give her a second smile, across the throat with his sword. She wasn't
really expecting any trouble, but trust was for corpses. She studied the lizard
through half-closed eyelids. Asleep, he looked even more innocuous. Like a
child, he kept his powerful lower legs pulled up to his stomach. With yellowish
claws retracted into his clover-shaped feet, and with his long, muscled tail
tucked up between his legs, the tip lying across his eyes, and with his snout resting
on the hilt of his sword, Dragonbait reminded Alias of a furless cat curled
about its master's shoe.
The sword was as curious as its owner. It looked top-heavy and badly
balanced. Forging that diamond-shaped tip, and the jagged teeth curling from it,
could not have been easy, and wielding it seemed impossible. Alias wondered how
anyone could keep hold of that tiny, one-handed grip. Had she not seen its
handiwork on the beach, she would have believed the blade to be ceremonial
gear.
Dragonbait had no other belongings, unless she counted the tattered,
ill-fitting clothes he wore, no doubt out of modesty, since they certainly
couldn't be keeping the creature warm. A torn jerkin covered his chest, and a
splotch of ragged cloth knotted at the side hung down from his hips.
What makes me think he's not a she? Granted, there's nothing feminine about
his torso, but lizards don't have breasts or need wide hips for birthing, now
do they? Alias shook her head. No. He's a male. Some sixth sense made her sure
of it.
She looked again at the rags he wore. Aren't lizards supposed to hate the
cold? I'll have to find him a cloak, something with a deep hood to hide that
snout.
Watching the lizard sleeping at her feet, making plans for his comfort, she
could no longer feel threatened by him. But she still could not sleep. Slipping
quietly out of the bed, she padded over to the small dressing table where
Dragonbait had carefully laid out the booty from their would-be ambushers.
Dragonbait gave a snarl in his sleep as she raised the flame on the oil lamp,
then he turned over, still resting on his sword.
Some watchdog, Alias thought. She turned back to the scattered assassin
equipment and sat down at the table to examine it. The daggers—three from the
mage, one from each club-wielding assassin—were quite ordinary. The pair of
small vials stoppered with wax were much more interesting. Carefully Alias
cracked the top of one, and a rich cinnamon smell wafted up. She quicklv
restoppered the bottle.
Peranox. A deadly contact poison from the South. Nasty stuff even in the
hands of competent assassins, Alias thought. Disaster for first-time bunglers.
If the pair had used poisoned daggers instead of clubs, I would be lying dead
on the beach instead of them.
Why did they choose clubs to attack? she wondered. Did they want to make my
death look like an amateur job? She shook out the sack Dragonbait had cut from
the mage. The standard assortment of magical spell-trappings skittered across
the wooden desktop—moldy spiderwebs, bits of eyelashes trapped in amber, and
dead insects. The only difference, she thought, between a magic-user's pockets
and those of a small boy's is that there is less week-old candy in the mage's
pockets. After brushing away the debris, Alias found a few coins and a gold
ring set with a blue stone.
Something remained stuck in the sack. She shook the bag harder. A talis card
fell out onto the desktop, face-down, it bore an insignia of a laughing sun on
its back.
Alias pocketed the coins and ring for later inspection and flipped the card
over. She drew a sharp breath that caused Dragonbait to start in his sleep.
The card was the Primary of Flames, here represented by a dagger trapped in
entwining tire. The card's pattern was twin to She uppermost symbol of Alias's tattoo.
Alias felt a twinge from her arm as she compared the two.
She picked up the card and squinted at it. It was home made. Though the
laughing sun was made by an embossing stamp, the rest of the workmanship was
pretty shabby. Were the other symbols on my arm from other parts of the deck
this card came from? she pondered.
At least that explained the assassins' actions. Alias recalled how clumsily
they'd wielded the clubs, as though they were swords. They were unused to the
more primitive weapon but were forced to wield it so as not to harm her
accidentally with an edged weapon. They wanted to capture me alive, she
concluded. That's why they passed on the poison, too. They must have been
keeping the peranox in reserve for anyone who got in their way.
Like a five foot lizard maybe?
She rose from her seat and, stepping over the soundly snoozing Dragonbait,
closed and secured the windows. Windows were open when I woke up this
morn—evening. They could have got me then but didn't. Maybe they didn't know
where I was until they spotted me on the street Someone must have left me here
to keep me safe. But who?
She fished the ring from her pocket, twisted it, and said quietly, "I
wish you'd tell me what in Tartarus is going on," but no djinn issued from
the ring to enlighten her, nor did Dragonbait break his rhythmic breathing, sit
up, and explain all the mysteries troubling her. Frowning, she tucked the ring
back into her pocket.
She lay down on her bed and stared at the ceiling, fingers laced behind her
head.
*****
She was not aware she had fallen asleep until a bell from some temple
signaled noon. She opened her eyes to see Dragonbait standing at her bedside
with breakfast on a pewter tray—bread and slices of spring fruit with cream.
Alias planned her next move while they shared the meal.
"I could rent a horse and ride out to the sage's home in half a day.
Save a lot of time," she said to Dragonbait. Even if he didn't understand
her, it helped her put her thoughts in order to say them aloud. "But if I
purchase a horse and ride it out through the town gate, I might as well hire a
loudmouthed herald to announce my departure. Besides, we have to conserve our
meager funds. Sages aren't cheap. And I don't even know if you can ride."
Dragonbait watched her while she spoke exactly as if he understood her.
"And I don't want to leave you behind, do I?"
The lizard stretched his neck forward and tilted his head as though he were
confused.
The swordswoman sniffed and laughed. Dragonbait returned to licking the
cream out of his bowl.
No, I definitely want to keep him around, she thought. He feels familiar—as
though I've traveled with him before. Maybe he was on the sea trip with me. If
I lose track of him, he might fade from my memory, too. Besides, I owe him for
saving my life last night. Taking him into my service is the least I can do.
After sending the barkeep's daughter out for a cloak to hide her companion's
"lizardness," Alias pulled on her boots and rearmored herself. When
his cloak arrived, Dragonbait sniffed at it and growled, but when it became
clear Alias was not going to let the creature out of the inn in daylight he
relented and, seeming every inch the paladin forced to drink with thieves, he
slipped on the garment.
The idea of a lizard with vanity amused Alias. She wondered if he was some
magical creature, bred to act as combination jester/servant/bodyguard, like
something out of a childhood tale. With a shudder, she was reminded of the
story of the golem supposedly responsible for the spreading Anauroch desert, a
creature ordered to shovel sand into the region and then forgotten by the
wizard who gave the order. Why is it I can recall stupid old stories when last
ride, last month, much of last year is a blank? Angrily, she shoved the
legendary images into the back of her mind.
Their walk out of Suzail was pleasant and uneventful. Alias deliberately set
out in the wrong direction and doubled back twice in case anyone had followed
her from the inn Dragonbait proved to be as tireless a hiker as she, and they
reached their destination just before dusk.
Dimswart Manor was a sizable farm, an estate just large enough to be
considered a suitable "summer home" by a Waterdeep noble. A red-tiled
roof set with three chimneys crowned the solid stonework walls of the main
house. Alias scowled, knowing that a sage who lived so well would not sell his
services cheap.
Despite the gathering gloom, there was a great amount of activity around the
house as she approached, as if the grounds were the site of some tremendous siege.
Gardeners were trimming hedges and lawns and reorganizing flowerbeds. At the
rear of the house, canvasmen were laying out the poles of a huge tent. Dwarvish
stoneworkers were arguing heatedly with elvish landscapers over the correct
placement of their creations of rock and wood, while a tired-looking gnome
tried to mediate between them.
In the midst of the chaos stood a tall, straight-shouldered woman with a
sunburst of red hair. She hustled about from worker to worker, consulting with
each from rolls of plans tucked under her arms. As Alias approached the house,
she could hear the woman shouting for some elves to start hanging lanterns in
the newly replanted trees.
Alias pounded on the front door with the hilt of her dagger. She had to
knock twice before a parlor maid, loaded down with tapestries, opened the door.
"Sorry, but the mis tress isn't hiring any more entertainment
people."
Alias shoved her boot in the door before the girl could close it. "I've
come to see the sage—on personal business."
"The master's very busy. Perhaps you could come—"
Alias stepped into the hall and gripped the girl's shoulder. She smacked
Winefiddle's letter of introduction down on top of the pile of tapestries the
servant was carrying. "Give him this. It's from the Temple of Tymora.
Urgent."
"Yes, ma'am," the maid nodded, showing a little more courtesy.
"Would you take a seat and wait right here, please? I'll send someone to
stable your pet."
Alias squeezed the girl's shoulder firmly, and hissed with annoyance,
"He's not my pet." Then she sat down on a bench against the wall.
Dragonbait sat beside her.
The servant blanched, nodded, and hurried away.
While she waited, Alias scowled at the opulence of her surroundings: an
estate full of servants; new, gold-threaded tapestries hung in the hall,
undoubtedly replacing the older, less stylish ones carried off by the parlor
maid; landscaping that required the services of four separate races; a wedding
tent big enough to billet an army, and likely enough food and drink to feed
them as well.
No wonder sages aren't cheap. Dimswart should be delighted to see me. How
else is he going to help defray all these costs? Whatever happened to ancient,
cranky, unmarried sages who preferred pursuing knowledge over wordly goods?
To keep from fidgeting, she studied Dragonbait. He waited more patiently
than she did. The lizard sat with his tail over his shoulder, flicking the tip
back and forth in front of his face, following it with his eyes.
What is he? she wondered with aggravation. Maybe the sage can shed some
light on his origins. Not likely, though. If I've never seen anything like him
in all my travels, what chance is there that he's in any of the sage's books?
Despite the obvious chaos of the household, a butler finally arrived to escort
her to the sage's study.
If Alias had met Dimswart before her visit to Suzail, she might have
ungenerously described his build as chunky. But compared to the innkeep of The
Hidden Lady and Winefiddle, the sage appeared broad-shouldered but lean. He rose
from his seat by the fire and clasped her extended hand in both his meaty paws.
"Well met, well met," he said, smiling like a halfling with an
extra king in the deck. "Sit down here by the fire, and tell me what a
humble book-banger can do for a warrioress."
Warrioress? Now there's a title you don't hear every day, Alias thought. It marked
Dimswart as a very old-fashioned sort of sage. "It's a little
complicated," Alias began.
"We should start with the essentials," Dimswart cut in. "If
you will indulge me, I'd like to exercise my skill. Leah, our maid, told me I
was to expect a sorceress and her familiar. But this creature—" he nodded
toward Dragonbait— "is too large to be a familiar, and few sorcerers carry
quite so much steel about their person."
"All I said to your maid," Alias interjected, "was that
Dragonbait wasn't a pet."
"Quite," Dimswart agreed, motioning for her to have a seat
opposite him. "We are very reclusive out here in the country, though, and
Leah, never having seen such a creature, leaped to the conclusion that if it
wasn't a pet, it must be a familiar, so you must be a sorceress. You are not.
You're a hired sword. From your lack of old scars, I'd say you were either a
very new one or a very good one, and you have strange tastes in traveling
companions."
Dragonbait cleared his nostrils in a noticeable hwumpf, as he stood
by the fire, watching the sage.
Dimswart continued. "You're a native of ... let's see, brown hair with
a tinge of red, hazel eyes, strong cheeks, good carriage . . . Westgate, I'd
say, though from your fair complexion I'd guess it's been a while since you've
lived there."
Alias tried to interrupt, but the smiling sage pressed on.
"Furthermore, you're not some hot-blooded youth looking for information
to lead you to riches beyond belief; you have a problem, personal and
immediate. A serious problem, otherwise you would never have come to consult
with an over-priced, over-educated land-grubber."
Alias spied Winefiddle's letter of introduction lying on the table beside
the sage with its seal still intact. "What method do you use, wire under
the wax, or do you just hold the letter up to a strong light?"
"You wound my fragile ego, lady. I swear to you I have not yet opened
the good curate's letter. I prefer to start afresh. That way nothing can
prejudice my reasoning."
Alias shrugged, willing to take the sage at his word—for now, at least.
Dimswart resumed. "You sit at ease, but you keep your right arm beneath
a cloak. Hmmmm."
Alias waited for him to give up guessing and let her explain, but after a
theatrical beat the man snapped his fingers, saying quickly, "You have a
tattoo, or a series of tattoos, that resists all normal magical attempts to
cure. They are on your right arm and . . . they are blue, aren't they?"
Alias's brow knit in a puzzled furrow. Winefiddle had shown her the letter
before he'd sealed it. There was nothing in it about the color of the tattoo.
'How do you know that?" she asked with astonishment—certain he had some
sort of trick, but completely unable to guess what it was.
"Good artists never reveal their secrets." Dimswart winked.
"But maybe, if we hit it off, I'll let you in on this little one. Now, how
about giving me a look at that arm."
Alias, feeling like a much chewed bit of marrowbone, held out her arm in the
firelight. The room was warm, and drops of perspiration beaded the skin over
the symbols.
"Hmmm," was all Dimswart said for several moments, and he said it
several times. He reached for a magnifying glassware and studied the symbols on
her arm even more closely. Dragonbait positioned himself behind Alias's chair
and tried to see what the sage did. Dimswart raised his head so the lizard
could peer once through the glass, watching bemused as Dragonbait pulled back,
apparently astonished at the sight of human flesh in such detail.
"A nice piece of work, that," said Dimswart, snapping his
magnifier into its case and leaning back in his chair. "The sigils aren't
composed of mere pinprick punctures in the flesh like an ordinary tattoo. Each
one is made up of tiny runes and patterns packed close together. They appear to
have great depth as well, and yet—" the sage kneaded her forearm gently,
like a surgeon feeling for a broken bone "— there doesn't seem to be any
substance to them. They look as though they are buried beneath your skin. Your
flesh above must be invisible, or we could not see the symbols. They also seem
to move. All in all, a most fascinating series of illusions. Very artistic. And
positively unique. I'd stake my reputation on it. Do they hurt?"
"Not now, no. The tattoo ached some when detect magic spells were cast
on it though, and it burned like the Nine Hells when Winefiddle cast a remove
curse on it."
"How about when magic is cast on you in general? Like a curative
spell?"
Alias thought of the assassin's magic missiles from the previous evening.
Fat lot of good the signs did for her then Why hadn't it flashed into the eyes
of her assailants when she really needed it to? "No effect, as far as I
know." She shrugged. "I'm really not in the mood to experiment on
which spells do what," she added.
"I don't doubt you're not," Dimswart replied sympathetically.
"Who have you crossed recently? Any dark lords from deep within the pits
of the Nine Hells? Steal any unholy artifacts? Break the hearts of any
cavaliers whose older siblings dabble in the dark arts? No?"
Dimswart sat back and pulled a pipe from inside his vest and began stuffing
it with tobacco. He leaned toward the fire for a brand, but Dragonbait beat him
to it, holding a flaming twig up to the pipe bowl as the sage puffed on the
mouthpiece. The sage might have been waited on all his life by scaly servants,
his reaction to the lizard was so casual.
"You have him well trained," Dimswart noted. "Where did you
get him?"
"We met at the seaside," Alias answered.
Dimswart lapsed into a thoughtful silence, forgetting to puff on his pipe,
so that it went out. Finally he asked, "When did you notice this . . .
condition?"
"When I woke up last night."
"From a long sleep?"
"Three days, I'm told," Alias admitted. "Though I've slept
nearly as long after overindulgences with ale. When I first woke, I thought I'd
been drinking, but now I'm not so sure. I have a lot of missing memories,
several months worth, and that's unusual for me."
"No doubt, no doubt." Dimswart pulled his pipe from his mouth and
leaned toward her. "What's the last thing you remember before you picked
up this little token?"
Alias sighed. "I don't really know. I clearly remember leaving my
company, the Adventurers of the Black Hawk, on good terms about a year ago.
They were going south. I never liked the warm climes, so I took my share and
left. Drifted. Light work, you know. Caravan guard, body guard, challenges in
bars. When I woke up I had a vague memory of a recent sea voyage—but it's all
too hazy. I..." Alias halted for moment, trying to pull her memories out
of the darkness. "I met Dragonbait last night, but I think I knew him from
before." She shook her head. "I just don't remember."
"Does Dragonbait talk?" Dimswart asked.
Alias shook her head. "What about these symbols? You called them
signals?"
"Sig-ils," corrected the sage, spreading out the pronunciation.
"Sigils are a higher kind of symbol. They're like a signature symbolizing
a greater power. Clerics use the ones belonging to their churches. Mages invent
their own and protect them, sometimes quite jealously. They aren't really
magical, but on a document they carry the authority of their owners, and on any
other object they indicate uncontestable ownership of a valuable
property."
Alias felt herself growing hot, hotter than could be accounted for by the
fire. It was a heat from anger burning within. "I've been branded as
someone's slave?"
"Possibly," said Dimswart, "though that's a very special brand.
Something that intricate could only have been done with the help of magic—magic
that resists its own diminishment. I suspect it's responsible for clouding up
your memories. If you knew how you got it, you might be able to remove it.
That's probably the way it thinks."
"What do you mean, 'it thinks? You mean it's alive?"
"Not in the sense that you or I or this polite lizard is, no. But in
terms of a magical creation with its own will to survive, given the desires of
its creators, yes. Just as an automaton or golem or summoned creature is
alive."
Alias slumped in her chair. "So where does that leave me?" This
might be more expensive than she had anticipated.
"Quite frankly, it leaves you in trouble," said the sage, pulling
on his pipe and finding that it had gone out. He waved away the fresh brand
Dragonbait offered. "Unless we find out what those sigils are."
Alias drew her gaze away from the fire and fixed it firmly on the sage.
"What will it cost?" she asked. Her look warned she was in no mood to
haggle.
"You're not that rich." Dimswart held up a hand. "Yes, I know
that, too. You do seem a fairly competent adventuress, however, and I need
someone like that at the moment.
"You've undoubtedly noticed the hubbub outside." The sage jerked
his thumb toward the study door, and Alias nodded. "My daughter, Gaylyn,
is getting married. Last of the brood, thank the gods. I may finally get some
peace and quiet. Anyway, her young squire is from a noble family here in
Cormyr—the Wyvernspurs of Immersea, some distant relations of the crown. The
upshot is, in order to impress these new in-laws, I have to lay out quite a
spread indeed, and to that end I've worked wonders: big tent, finest chefs
liberated from the crown's kitchens, silver wrought for the occasion, and four
clerics for the ceremony. Stuff from which boring songs are written." He
gave a cynical laugh.
"I also sent for a bard," he sighed. "No ordinary songster
earning meals in a noble's court, but one of the greats. The renowned Olav
Ruskettle, from across the Dragon Reach. The caravan Ruskettle was traveling in
was attacked by the Storm Horns Dragon. Have you heard about it?"
"I heard that the dragon has chewed up another adventuring company
since the caravan."
"Yes. Well, in the caravan with Ruskettle was a merchant who brought me
an eyewitness account of the attack. Ruskettle tried to sing the beast into
submission, the mark of a great bard. The beast apparently liked the music, but
instead of submitting, took Ruskettle in her claws and headed back for her
lair. Suzail sent out a group of adventurers in retaliation, but they were, as
you said, chewed up. I did, however, manage to obtain from the survivors the
location of the monster's lair and a secret 'back door' into it. My question
for you is: Will you help a sage who is desperate to avoid breaking his
youngest daughter's heart?"
Alias thought for a moment, then asked, "You want the dragon
dead?"
"I want the bard, Ruskettle, to play at my daughter's wedding,"
the sage responded. "Clerics of Suzail want the dragon dead. Deal with
them if you want to kill dragons."
Alias shook her head. "I'd rather sneak in, reappropriate your bard,
and sneak out. I prefer to leave dragonslaying to those in good standing with
their gods."
"It's agreed, then," said the sage. "I'll take time out from
the wedding preparations. There are a million-and-one things to do yet, but
Leona, my wife, can handle them better than I. Besides, I'll feel more useful
helping you find out what those sigils mean. In the meantime, you'll bring me
my bard. Let's see that arm."
Dimswart drew Alias over to his desk. He opened up a fat volume to an empty
page, and with a pen and astonishing skill, quickly copied the insignias on
Alias's sword arm. "None of these are familiar to you?" he asked.
"I've seen one of them on a card carried by assassins who, I believe,
intended only to capture me."
"Really? How very interesting. Very interesting."
"Now, where do I find your dragon?"
"The merchant I mentioned before will take you there. He has some
interest in helping free this bard as well." The sage called out,
"Come on in, Akash," and a figure breezed in-clad in a familiar
crimson robe striped with white.
Akabar Bel Akash bowed formally. "We meet again, lady. As I told you,
Sir Dimswart, she would leap at the opportunity to aid us." The Turmishman
beamed with pleasure.
Alias scowled, first at him, then at the sage. Akabar ignored her glare.
Dimswart, having revealed the source of his information, arched his eyebrows
like a stage magician demonstrating the trickery behind his feats.
Dragonbait, realizing no one was interested in smoking, blew out the burning
brand he'd been playing with and threw it into the fireplace.
4
Akabar and the Back Door
Alias shivered in the damp darkness of the cavern and silently wished the
vengeance of Tyr and Tempus down on the heads of Akabar and Dimswart and even
Winefiddle for getting her into this predicament. And while they were at it,
thrice-damn that mysterious lizard and damn thrice more the demon-spawn who
branded her!
The mystical sigils glowed like stained glass on a murky day, illuminating
Alias so that she stood out like a beacon in the pitch dark of the cold,
dripping cave. When she exhaled, the streams of her breath danced like small
azure elementals before her eyes.
At the beginning of her vigil, Alias had kept the treacherous arm with its
glowing brands beneath her cloak. She was waiting for the merchant-mage,
Akabar, to return from scouting out the passages leading to the dragon's lair.
After spending a half-hour huddled in the dark, though, it occurred to her that
most dwellers of this cold, wet, limbo would be able to see the heat from her
body and smell her above-world scent while she remained blind. Dumb, dumb,
dumb, she chided herself and cast aside the cloak. At least now she could see
anything that attacked her.
Where is that damned mage? she wondered for the half a hundredth time.
Tymora! He could have scouted from here to Sembia by now. How far can this
cavern go?
She knew her impatience had little to do with how long the mage was taking.
Mostly it had to do with not liking to have to rely on anyone—especially not
some greengrocer.
Alias chuckled every time she remembered how, before they'd left Dimswart
Manor, Akabar Bel Akash had informed her in that stiff, formal, southern way
that House Akash did not sell vegetables. Tymora; He was so naive. He didn't
even know he was a greengrocer.
"Riding a wagon along protected trading routes in a guarded merchant
caravan doesn't make you an adventurer," she had informed him. "Until
you've hiked more than twenty miles a day, slept in a ditch, and eaten
something that tried to kill you first, you're not an adventurer. Anyone who
isn't an adventurer is a greengrocer."
But the merchant-mage had insisted that he come along and render what
assistance was in his power, and Dimswart had insisted she take him with her.
What reasons the Turmishman could possibly have for helping to rescue the
kidnapped bard, Alias could not imagine. She had deliberately not asked, and
Akabar had not volunteered his reasons. He had them, and that was enough,
There was something about Akabar Bel Akash that annoyed her—something that
wasn't really his fault, but which she blamed him for nonetheless.
As the three of them, Akabar, Alias, and Dragonbait, began their three-day
journey into the mountains—walking because Alias still felt uncomfortable
advertising her presence with horses—Akabar had insisted on telling her all
about himself—about the fertile land of Turmish, about customs in the south,
and about his wives. He had two, and they were shopping for a third co-wife,
which was why he was in this savage land in the first place—to earn money for
the new partner. He told of his voyage across the pirate-infested Sea of Fallen
Stars, the outrageous import taxes he'd had to pay on landing at Saerloon in
Sembia, and his profitable detour from Hilp up to Arabel and around the Great
Wood of Cormyr. He ended with the disastrous caravan attack by the dragon on
the road from Waymoot.
Alias had ground her teeth impatiently, There had been nothing for her to
say. She could not remember what she'd been doing or how she got to Cormyr. She
had not even been able to answer questions about Dragonbait. The whole trip out
she had remained as silent as a stone, angry that anyone had the ability to
remember when she could not.
The thing that Akabar described the most was the thing that distressed Alias
the most—his sea voyage. He had begun by discussing Earthspur, the center of
the pirate activity dreaded by sailors, its lawless organization of cutthroats,
and the well-known bombards that protected it Then, he had given her a humorous
description of the fear-ridden Sembian ship captain continually scanning the
horizon for the pirates who, he assured Akabar, were lying in wait for a prize
such as his ship. The mage then described all the interesting creatures that
made their home in the Inner Sea, followed by an essay on ship life. Yet,
despite all this talk, the period around Alias's own sea trip remained as
fog-ridden as the port of Ilipur.
Finally, it had occurred to the mage that the swords-woman might have
adventures of her own which, though unshared, would make his tales sound dull.
Embarrassed and crushed by the weight of her silence, he had slid into an
equally solemn mood. It had never occurred to him the frustration he had put
her through.
As Alias stood alone in the water-carved cavern, she realized she could not
pin down exactly where the borders of her memory loss were. Pieces of her past
seemed to have dropped out. Her mind was like a swamp connecting dry land and
open water. There was no exact point where murky waters swallowed her memories;
islands of certain recollection spotted every time period.
Even worse—without the days, rides, or months of connecting space, the past
seemed to belong to someone else, another Alias who stopped, gained the mystic
runes, then moved on as another person entirely, bearing the same name. Since
she'd awakened in The Hidden Lady, she'd used the battle-skills of the old
Alias, skills as finely honed as they were automatic. Although there was some
comfort in the fact that she hadn't forgotten her craft, there was something
disturbing about the way she felt when she assumed a fighting stance.
Instincts took over. She didn't have time to think and plan. Only react.
Like a guardian golem. She remembered Dimswart saying the sigils were alive the
way a golem was. Are the brands making me fight, like they made me try to kill
Winefiddle? Should I be giving them credit for my ability? She shook off this
notion instantly and angrily. I was a good swordswoman before I got these
things, she thought, and I'll be a good one long after I've gotten rid of them.
Then the most disturbing idea of all occurred to her. Perhaps I died and was
resurrected by someone who decided to take his price out of my hide. Literally.
Don't those newly raised from Death's Dominions feel uneasy and disquieted?
More than a few of her companions, after their first visit to the afterlife,
chose to retire—to live as farmers, smiths, greengrocers. Speaking of which,
she thought with annoyance, where is that damned mage, anyway?
Alias was beginning to consider retreating through the passage back to the
outside. Something must have gone wrong for Akabar to take so long to return.
Before she'd made up her mind, the downward passageway brightened and a
glowing orb floated up into her cavern. The size of a melon and radiating an
orange light, the orb held the image of the merchant-mage's head.
"What kept you, Turmite?" she asked with a sniff.
"I had to wait until the dragon bedded down," replied the mage.
His voice was muffled by the effects of his spell, a meld of wizard eye—so he
could spy out the territory from the entrance to the tunnel in relative
safety—and a special phantasmal force—so he could report his findings back to
Alias. "It wouldn't do to have Her Evilness awake when you tried to sneak
in. It would spoil our surprise.
"My spell is almost exhausted, and I must leave our mission's
completion to you, swordslady. Ahead of you lie a few gentle curves, no serious
drops. The ceiling is low about fifty yards ahead, then the passage narrows to
shoulder width. It lets out on a ledge above the main cavern floor. Our bard is
in a small cage atop a dais on the far side of the cavern." The mage's
image began blurring, as if a snow-storm had erupted within the orange sphere.
"Spell's wearing off. Anything I should do with your pet?"
"He's not my pe—" Alias began, but Akabar's spell was breaking up
too quickly to waste time arguing. "Just keep him from entering the
cavern," she ordered. "And don't get him mad at you. The last
spell-caster who did didn't live long enough to regret it."
"Gods' luck to you." Akabar's voice sounded a long way off. His
image was gone, and the orange sphere was shrinking. "I hope you know what
you're doing. You have fought dragons before?"
"This will be my first," she answered quietly, but the sphere was
gone and there was no reply from Akabar. I wonder if he heard me, she thought.
Better if he didn't.
*****
Five hundred yards behind and somewhat above her, at the cavern entrance
overlooking the road from Waymoot to Suzail, Akabar the Turmishman came out of
his trance. Dragonbait was still crouched at the mage's feet, watching the
cavern entrance intently. The air about them was warm, humming with large
bumblebees dotting, diving, and dodging about the mountain daisies.
Akabar sat down and leaned against a rock. He made quick thanks to his
southern gods that he was not the one about to face a dragon in its lair. He
pulled an apple from his backpack and bit into it. Dragonbait twitched at the
sound of the crunch, but the creature did not takes his eyes off the cavern
mouth that had swallowed Alias.
*****
Alias continued cautiously along the tunnel Akabar had scouted out for her.
The Turmish mage's report had been reasonably accurate in so far as there were
no hairpin curves and none of the drops were impassable, but the passage was
not so smooth that she looked forward to a possible hasty retreat. The low ceiling
didn't bother her, but she was a trifle alarmed at the sound her armor made
scraping against the walls when the corridor narrowed. Less frightening, but
quite annoying, was having to slosh through the small, icy stream that had
carved out the tunnel— something Akabar had failed to note. Too bad I can't
shrink into an orange melon and float effortlessly along this passageway, she
grumbled to herself.
Still, she was grateful that they had learned of this back door. With any
luck, the dragon wasn't aware of it, or at least ignored it as too small to
worry about.
A splattering noise warned her that the stream was nearing a considerable
drop, and she slowed accordingly. She wrapped her glowing arm back in her cloak
to hide her presence from the dragon. She reached the end of the tunnel and
stepped out onto the ledge Akabar had mentioned. The stream fell twenty feet or
so into a small pool on the cavern floor. Excellent! The waterfall will cover
any noise I make climbing down.
Light filtered in from another, larger passage in the side of the cavern.
This passage provided the dragon egress from its lair. Holes in the domed
ceiling let in more rays of light. At first Alias was glad of the light because
it drowned out the dim glow of her sigils, and she unwrapped her arm. Then she
noticed the black, cawing birds fluttering in and out of the holes in the
ceiling.
Crows! Nine hells! Alias cursed under her breath. Crows were bad luck—not
just a sign for the superstitious, but a danger for anyone relying on stealth. One
of their raucous cries raised in challenge of her intrusion into their
territory would be enough to wake the dead. For the most part, the birds
roosted in crannies near the ceiling, though a few circled in the thermals
rising from the dragon's body. Since I have no intention of approaching the
dragon, there's no reason for them to get excited, she reassured herself.
The great beast itself lay curled catlike. Alias had no doubt that the
monster was a light sleeper. She wouldn't be surprised to discover brittle
twigs or bells scattered across the main entrance. It was even possible that
the dragon was capable of casting magical spell guards to wake her if anyone
crossed the threshold into her treasure hold.
And what a hoard that hold held! Even by a dragon's standards the loot was
immense. It included not only chests of gold lions and other precious coins,
but split bags filled with trade bars, tapestries, and bolts of satin and
velvet, marble statues, and bound books. Many of these items were still packed
in the wagons that had been picked up and flown here by the monster. The dragon
lay between the front entrance and the mounds of shimmering wealth, but nothing
blocked Alias's access to the beast's hoard.
If the treasure was enough to start the adventuress sweating with gold
fever, the bones were enough to quench that fire. Alias could spot piles of
white as large as the treasure itself. Most were the remains of cattle and
other large beasts the dragon used for food, but more than a few human skulls
gleamed among all that ivory—the remains of adventurers Alias did not intend to
join.
Alias leaned against the rock and watched the dragon's massive chest scales
rise and fall with the deep breathing of slumber. Akabar's description of the
monster had been accurate. The drab rust scales that darkened to a purplish hue
toward the belly confirmed that the creature was a female, and her huge size
could only come with great age.
The crows danced over the beast's hide, picking at the bugs beneath her
scales. Alias realized the crows were actually ravens with wingspans as wide as
she was tall. They only looked small, dwarfed by the size of the dragon.
Alias tore her eyes away from her unwitting hostess. No sense in hypnotizing
myself with awe, she thought as she peered across the cavern for the bard's
cage. She spotted it perched solidly atop an altar carved into the rock. This
must have once been a temple, she decided. To what god?
The body in the cage lay slumped against the bars. Tymora, Alias prayed
silently, don't let me be too late. The figure rolled over, apparently in its
sleep, and Alias sighed with relief. She prepared to enter the lair.
As quietly as possible, she secured a rope to a stalagmite on the ledge
where she stood. She kept herself facing the dragon as much as possible as she
climbed down, using only her arm muscles, not daring to push against the wall
to break her descent for fear of setting loose rock clattering down. A few
ravens spied her and retreated to the roof, but others continued scavenging on
the dragon's hide.
Slipping warily between the piles of treasure, Alias checked the ground
carefully so she didn't accidentally crunch her foot down on a dry bone and
tested her footing lightly so she didn't slip on any loose stacks of coins. She
threw off the temptation creeping over her to grab something valuable and flee.
She was here for one thing only. Once that had been secured, well... maybe on
the way out she might manage a few sacks of gold.
She tiptoed up the stairs leading to the altar. The cavern air was filled
with the wheeze of the dragon's breathing, the splash of the waterfall, and the
occasional croak of a raven. Not until she'd reached the top did Alias take her
eyes from the floor and study the cage. It was sloppily lashed but quite
sturdy. A small form lay in its center, balled up tightly in a cloak of
expensive, gaudy brocade. Alias spied a plait of fire-red hair fastened with a
green bow.
Damned mage. He should have checked more closely. This is a little girl, not
a bard. I've risked all this for nothing. Ruskettle is no doubt already
residing in the dragon's belly, to make room for this new toy.
The swordswoman was so angry that she spun about, intent on leaving that
very instant, but she turned back to face the cage. She would rescue the
prisoner anyway, not from any sentiment or human kindness, but just for the
pleasure of shaking the child in Akabar's face and proving to him what a fool
he was. Sliding her sword between the bars, she gently poked the cloaked
bundle.
The brocade-wrapped form turned over rapidly, causing the cage to groan
slightly where the ropes held its timbers in place. The package opened to
reveal not a child, but a small creature dressed in garb that made Akabar's
crimson and white robes seem conservative. A creature without footgear, but
long, curly red hair on her hands and feet that matched the mop on her head. A
halfling! Alias whined silently. And a female halfling at that.
"Rescue at last!" cheered the halfling in a happy whisper.
"Shh!" warned Alias. Why did it have to be a halfling? How come no
one mentioned Ruskettle was a halfling? Or even that Ruskettle was a she?
Suddenly, Alias sensed the deadly quiet. The stream spattered on, but the
dragon's regular breathing and the crows' occasional caws had stopped. The
halfling's eyes widened, transfixed by something behind and above Alias.
Something horrible cleared its throat with a cough like a bag of lead coins
dropped off a tower.
With a sigh of resignation, Alias turned around slowly.
"Looking for something in particular?" asked the dragon. "Or
are we just browsing?"
5
Mist
The dragon, though she had not bothered to rise, was no longer balled up
like a cute kitten by a fireside. Her front paws curled beneath her bulk, her
body rested comfortably below the level of her rear haunches, and her neck
curved in a relaxed S-shape. Even seated in this way, her jaws hung twice as
far above the ground as Alias's perch on the raised altar, and her reptilian
golden eyes looked down from another ten feet higher than that.
From what little Alias could see of her belly, it was a twisted mass of
scarred, purple and violet scales. Several of the scars were still fresh and
oozing—compliments of the adventuring party that had tried to defeat her but
failed.
With those long tendrils hanging down from her chin and face, Alias thought,
she looks like a cat. I guess that makes me the mouse. Then the swordswoman
noticed, tucked behind the monster's left ear, a raven regarding her with a
stare as unblinking as the dragon's—the only one that had not retreated to the
ceiling. The dragon's spy.
"Poor dear," rumbled the dragon. "Are you ill-versed in the
common tongue? Where do they send these robbers from, anyway?
Asken bey
Amnite? No. You don't look like a southerner.
Cheyeska col Thay? Not
that either. Do you speak am' language known to the Sea of Fallen Stars? I
detest not knowdng where my next meal is coming from."
The dragon's ramblings shook Alias from her trance. The beast had transfixed
her with a gaze that would have done a basilisk proud, yet here she was,
nattering like some fishmonger's wife. Alias tried to speak several times,
until the words found purchase in her throat and she spat out, "I come
from Cormyr." For the moment, she added mentally.
"Oh, so you are native flesh," said the dragon, coiling her neck
back as if to view Alias in this new light. "How precious. I do hate
foreign mystery meat. They put such odd things in their bodies."
Alias blinked hard, fighting the sudden drowsiness that descended on her.
First the dragon's gaze, then its rich, rumbling words, seemed to drain the energy
from her body, as if the rest she had received earlier in the week had done her
no good. This must be what they call dragon-fear, Alias realized. She shook
herself out of the lethargy.
"I am no foreigner, but Alias of the Inner Sea, swordsmaster and adventuress,"
she announced.
"Oh, really?" replied the dragon. "You must forgive me for
not knowing anything about you, but I've been so out of touch. I am
Mistinarperadnacles Hai Draco. You may call me Mist. And I'll call you . . .
supper? Yes, it's about time for a light, early supper. So nice of you to
deliver yourself."
The dragon shifted its weight, and Alias saw for the first time the front
paws of the beast, huge, three-toed triangles, each corner of the triangles
sporting a claw. Further up each foot glinted an opposing dew claw. All the
claws were as crimson as fresh blood.
Alias held up her sword with both hands—not to attack, but as a warning
gesture. She replied, "You must forgive my unwillingness to serve as your
meal, O great and powerful Mistinarperadnacles, but instead I think I will
challenge you to the Feint of Honor."
"The Feint of Honor?" Mist echoed the last words with a tone of
surprise. Then she chuckled, a sound that echoed like thunder about the cavern.
"What can you know about the Feint of Honor, O Supper?"
Alias stepped back until her back was touching the wicker of the cage and
replied, "It is the proper name given to the ritual combat of subdual
instigated in the most ancient of times by the wisest of dragons."
Mist sniffed, "And I presume you know why?"
"Because, in the most ancient of times, your people fought amongst
themselves so fiercely that many promising wyrms died. Indeed, scholars believe
you may have wiped yourselves off the face of the land had not the Feint been decreed."
Alias pressed her calf against the cage bars in hopes that the halfling would
notice the dagger in her boot.
"Yes. True enough." The dragon nodded, settling back on her
haunches. "Having heard of this custom, all manner of militia and
mercenary have come barrelling into my home and the homes of my brethren,
beating on us with the flat of their blades, firing blunt-headed fowling
arrows, and generally disturbing our rest until we are forced to destroy them
just to regain our composure. A little knowledge is a dangerous thing. It
implies a lot of ignorance." Mist twisted her neck so that her jaws were
uncomfortably close to Alias's head. "You see, the Feint is a code for
dragons. It has nothing to do with you puny, but delicious, mortals."
"Not so, O Mistinarperadnacles. True, many humans may attempt subdual
without following the formal codes, and their senses are as
bootless as
a
halfling. And he who walks in here without sense, walks in here
unarmed.
You are then entirely within your rights to exterminate them as you see
fit." Alias felt a pat behind her knee, a signal, she hoped, that the
halfling had understood, but she had no sensation of her dagger being slid from
her boot. "But you may not with honor deny a challenge properly made—"
"Your speech is oddly accented," said the dragon. "I think
you come from beyond Cormyr."
"Unless, of course," Alias continued, "you are a common
dragon. Then, of course, you may behave as you will."
Fire flared in Mist's eyes. "And do you know the formal codes, O Supper?"
"I know first to ask the dragon's name if it is not already
known," replied Alias.
"Common courtesy, at the very least, common sense as well."
"At this point, I must say you have offended me. You have monopolized
the services of this halfling, an offense to art; you have kept her imprisoned
in this cage, an offense to humanity; and you have referred to me as Supper, an
offense to my honor. For these barbarities, Mistinarperadnacles, red mistress
of flame and sunsets, I challenge you!"
"Quite nice," said the dragon. "Your composure does you
credit. You astonish me, young one. This is a custom veiled in antiquity. I
don't believe one sage in a hundred could recall the formalities so precisely.
Just where did you acquire this knowledge?"
Alias did know the answer to that question. She remembered it, but she did
not know how. Instead of trying to answer Mist's questions, she continued with
the terms of challenge.
"My weapon will be this single blade." Alias indicated her sword
with a nod of her head. "You may use your claws. No biting, no breathing
fire, and no magic."
Steam was beginning to rise up from Mist's nostrils, indicating the beast
was no longer amused or intrigued, but losing her patience. Alias continued
hurriedly, "We fight until the first three hits or until the other
surrenders. If I am victor, I demand you free the halfling Ruskettle and allow
both of us to leave your lair safe and free."
"What? No demands for a chest of gold or for me to leave this happy
land and never to return?" Mist mocked her.
"None," Alias replied flatly. According to the code, the more
demands she made, the more compromises she would have to make toward the
dragon's terms. If they even came to terms. Steam now poured from Mist in great
billows.
She could breathe fire anytime, Alias thought. If her ego and pride don't
bind her to the ancient code, I'm dead meat.
"It is a sad state of affairs," Mist growled, "when a dragon
cannot use those gifts invested in her by Tiamat. At the very least, I must use
my claws and my teeth. We will fight until you are dead or you convince me to
surrender. In compensation, if you win, I will grant you a chest of gold. I am
a generous spirit, you see."
"Accepted," Alias replied without hesitation.
The dragon reared back, her head raised into the stone dome high above. The
raven flapped noisily from her head. Surprised, Mist could only foolishly
repeat, "Accepted," thus locking herself into the agreement.
"The code is honored, the pact is made," Alias declared and lunged
forward beneath the dragon's chest. She slashed out with her sword, catching
the beast just below the forward knee. The blow was not forceful enough to cut
into the scales, but it hurt. The dragon roared, and her knee buckled so that
she toppled forward. Alias dashed between her hind legs. Careful to avoid the
creature's tail, the swordswoman dragged her blade across Mist's purple-plated
rump, knocking loose a few half-healed plates.
Mist howled and spun about. Her gleaming eyes seemed to burrow into Alias.
"Foul!" she hissed. "You used the sharp side of your
blade."
"Our contract did not limit me to the flat of my weapon, wyrm!"
Alias shouted, dodging backward to avoid the slash of the triple scythes at the
end of the dragon's paw.
"O ho!" Mist cackled, following up her first assault with a thrust
from the other front paw. Alias twisted and rolled away as claw tips scored
deep into the wall she'd had at her back a moment before. "So you are now
a lawyer as well as a fighter!" Mist taunted as she yanked her claw from
the rock, causing a small avalanche of stone to topple down.
Alias retreated back among the treasure and bone piles, sparing only a
glance for the now-empty cage on the altar. She averted her eyes quickly so as
not to alert Mist to the halfling's escape. Have to keep the wyrm's attention
on me, Alias thought. Unfortunately, that should be no problem.
Instead of lunging her neck toward the warrior, Mist retreated and rose to
her hind legs, unfurling her wings. The leathery folds of flesh caught the
subterranean breeze like sails, then fanned the air back in powerful waves
toward Alias's corner of the cave.
The last raven retreated to the roof to avoid the assault but Alias had no
way to evade the force of the wind. She was lifted from the ground and buffeted
over several large treasure chests. Her rough passage knocked the arm and leg
guards off one side of her armor and left her pinned beneath a granite statue
of some forgotten Hillsfar noble.
She began squirming out from beneath the stone, but Mist loped forward and
laid her chin down on top of the statue. Her fetid breath made Alias gag.
Mist's mouth tendrils curled in glee. Alias closed her eyes, certain she was
about to have her head bitten off.
"So, little lawyer," Mist hissed, "I can slay you now by
fire, for who would know I violated the codes?"
"Well, me for one," came a high-pitched but resonant voice from
above. "And you know the old saying—tell a bard, and you tell the
world."
Mist whirled around in surprise. The halfling bard stood on the ledge by the
opening to Alias's back door. She leaned weakly against the rock wall, but her
eyes sparkled with mischief and vengeance. Alias took advantage of Mist's
inattention to escape from the embrace of the Hillsfar noble and began to climb
up a wagon loaded with treasure.
Ruskettle strummed a chord on her tiny yarting, a miniature guitar with
seven catgut strings. "Now let's see, this is spur of the moment, mind,
but how about—" The bard began to sing:
I heard the mighty rush of fire
From the ledge above the cave.
The attack of a common coward
No dragon, just a knave.
She broke her oath in combat,
Now shunned by one and all.
Not even other dragons
Will have her in their hall.
"Then of course we'll need a chorus for everyone to join in on,"
Ruskettle continued hurriedly:
Oh, listen to the story
Of the scandal of the wyrms.
Red Mistinarperadnacles,
Rumored mad and quite infirm.
With a single belch of fire,
This fool dragon with no shame,
Her honor she has vaporized
Like the Mist that is her name.
Alias cringed at the lyrics' strained meters, but had to admire the singer's
nerve. Great clouds of steam filled the dome above Mist's head. The bard hadn't
a chance of outrunning the fires that had to be burning inside the wyrm.
Instead of escaping, though, Alias noted, she risked her hide to gain time for
me to wriggle out of danger.
Goaded forward by the image of a roasted halfling and a failed mission,
Alias launched herself from the lid of a large cask toward the dragon's head.
She fell short of her mark, but managed to catch a fistful of the tendrils
hanging from Mist's chin. Arching her back and kicking her legs like an
acrobat, the swordswoman swung herself backward, over the side of the dragon's
mouth, past her dripping, exposed teeth, beyond her steaming nostrils, and
landed squarely on the bridge of the dragon's nose.
Alias wedged her blade between Mist's eyes, so that the creature's pupils
crossed, trying to focus on her foe.
"Match was until surrender," Alias panted, sweat rolling down her
face in rivulets. Her exhaustion deepened with her proximity to the dragon's
steaming and foul exhalations, yet she tightened her grip on her hilt. "Do
you surrender, wyrm, or shall we see how much of your brain I can reach when I
plunge my blade into one of your eyes?"
For Alias, the next few moments were frozen in time. Steam rose about her
and water splattered to the floor, but the principals of the tableau stood
motionless: the dragon considering the value of her eyesight and the length of
the warrior's blade, Alias trying to remain perched on the creature's scaly
nose, Ruskettle awaiting the outcome, so eager to witness it she would not flee
like a sensible person.
Finally Mist hissed, "This time, little lawyer, you win."
"I accept your surrender," Alias replied. She kept her gaze on the
creature and her sword over Mist's nose. No blanket of condensing steam poured
from the beast's mouth to indicate she had cooled her inner fires.
Mist has no intention of honoring the pact, Alias realized. She wants me
dead even more than ever, but she doesn't dare try to kill me unless she can
get the tell-tale bard with the same blow. All she has to do is breathe fire
once I'm standing beside Ruskettle.
Alias's mind scrambled for a scheme to delay the dragon's attack, hoping
that the halfling had enough wits to play along. "I'd like to be let down
over there by my friend," the swordswoman said.
"But, of course," Mist replied, her tone full of sugary venom. The
dragon kept her head perfectly steady as she swung her neck over to the ledge,
anxious that Alias should not slip or lean on the blade and drive it into an
eye.
Alias hesitated before she stepped off Mist's snout. Winking at the
halfling, she said, "That ring of fire resistance makes you a lot braver
than usual, bard."
"What? Oh, yeah. The ring of fire resistance. Well, you know my motto:
If you got it, might as well flaunt it. You think I'd have risked singing to a
dragon without one?"
Alias leaped from Mist's head to the ledge and sidled behind the halfling,
as if to use her tiny body for a shield. The swordswoman's heart pounded as she
ordered the dragon, "Now go fetch the chest of gold you promised me."
Mist's eyes narrowed to tiny slits. Steam rose from her nostrils. Tymora,
make her believe the ruse! Alias prayed silently. The dragon turned her head
away from the ledge and lumbered toward a pile of gold. Alias swallowed hard.
"Why didn't you kill her when you had the chance?" Ruskettle
whispered through clenched teeth.
"And fall to my death or get crushed by a dragon in her death throes?
No, thank you. That wasn't what I was paid for. Now, let's get out of
here."
"What?" the bard asked.
"We're leaving," Alias replied, grabbing a handful of the
halfling's cloak. Alias slipped into the passageway leading out of the lair,
trying to tug the halfling with her, but Ruskettle jerked herself loose.
"We have to wait for the gold," the bard insisted.
With an exasperated growl, Alias grasped the small woman by her shoulders,
pulled her into the passage, and shoved her in the lead.
Their way dimly lit by the runes embedded in Alias's flesh, Alias prodded
and pushed at the halfling until they reached the upper cavern where the
swordswoman had waited for Akabar's scouting report. Once they reached this
point, however, Ruskettle twisted from her grip and dropped angrily to the
floor. Alias slipped her sword arm into her cloak before the halfling caught
sight of the glow of the sigils.
"Why'd you do that?" the bard demanded. "She was going to get
us some gold!"
"Stupidhalfling!" Alias panted, her words running together.
"Mist is a red dragon! That makes her as greedy and as untrustworthy as an
Amnite merchant! The only thing that stopped her from burning us to cinders was
the fear you would escape and tell someone."
"But she believed your story about me having a ring of fire
resistance."
"For the moment. But if she had sniffed any jewelry on you when she
first kidnapped you, she would have made you take it off. You aren't wearing
any rings. Any minute-now she's going to remember that, and then—"
Cool air from the outside rushed down the passage. Alias could picture Mist
sitting by the ledge, inhaling deeply, smoke from her hidden forges pouring out
of her snout.
"Come on!" the swordswoman shouted, picking up the halfling,
tucking her under her arm, and running for the surface exit. Ruskettle was
unexpectedly heavy, and between the extra weight and having to check her
footing, Alias felt as though she were running underwater.
A roar began behind her, a deep rumbling sound. Harsh cries followed—ravens,
she realized, caught in the conflagration. Her back grew uncomfortably warm as
the dragon's breath chased her down the passage. If she didn't reach the exit
quickly, the approaching wall of super-heated air would do her in before the
beast's metal-twisting flames even reached her.
The heat grew unbearable, and Alias wondered if she might already be burned
so badly that she would die but her muscles and mind didn't know that yet. The
halfling was still squirming in her arms as she made a final leap toward the
opening in the mountainside, praying to Tymora that she would clear it before
the hot air singed her flesh and the fire stripped it from her bones.
The moment Alias cleared the stone passage, Dragonbait's tail snaked out
from the right. The powerful muscles in the scaly, green ribbon knocked the
swordswoman and her passenger down the slope of greasy grass.
Alias looked back. The opening where she had been only an instant before was
now filled with flame and soot. The rock about the cave entrance melted in the
heat, twisting and flowing until the passage was sealed shut. Silence settled
over the mountainside.
Dragonbait rubbed his mildly scorched tail and gave a reptilian whimper.
Akabar, upon hearing the sound of the dragon's inhalation, had assumed a safer
position several paces away from the back door. He now looked down at the
soot-blackened women with amusement.
Alias looked down at Ruskettle, and it suddenly dawned on her why the
halfling had been so heavy. On her tumble down the hill, the bard had lost, in
order, Alias's dagger, two pouches of gold coins, an opal the size of a
cockatrice egg, a handful of jade statuettes, a ratty scroll, and a large,
ornate book marked with the sigil of Akabar Bel Akash.
For half a score of heartbeats, Alias lay among the flowers of the mountain
meadow. She gasped in the thin mountain air, trying to will away the stabbing
pain in her chest and the searing agony across her back. She imagined the
dragon-heated metal of her chain shirt burning through her jerkin and inwardly
cringed.
Dragonbait, having knocked her and the halfling out of the direct path of the
dragon's breath, was at her side immediately, his clawlike hands on her
shoulders, helping her rise. He smelled heavily of woodsmoke, but his
chivalrous aid helped make Alias feel a little better.
Farther down the slope, the halfling was scurrying about, trying to recover
the items lost in her tumble. She grabbed one of the leather-bound tomes, but a
sandal-clad foot suddenly appeared and held it tight to the ground.
"I believe," Akabar Bel Akash said, "that this particular
item is mine."
The halfling gulped. "You were the wizard in the caravan," she
piped, wheels visibly turning behind her eyes. "Of course. I brought this
from the dragon's lair to . . ." she sighed deeply, "... to return to
you."
Akabar harumphed and, keeping his foot atop the book, reached over and
picked up the age-torn scroll lying near it.
"That's for you, too," the halfling offered, jamming the opal and
the jade figures back into her pockets.
Alias had by this time removed her charred cloak and shucked off her chain
mail shirt. The cloak was a total loss; the heavy cloth had taken the brunt of
the blast. The heat had been enough to fuse portions of her chain into solid
lumps along the back and leave the light leather jerkin beneath hard and
cracked. The leather must have insulated her back just enough though, for what
she could see of her skin there, while pink, was not charred.
Blind Tymora's luck, Alias thought. Her back ached as though she had a
sunburn, but no more. She abruptly shouted to the others, "Let's get a
move on!"
The newly rescued bard ambled up the hill with the mage. Akabar held his
recovered tome pressed tightly under his arm and used his hand to hold open the
battered scroll, scanning its contents as he approached Alias.
The halfling planted each foot firmly at shoulder-width, and stuck out her
hand toward the swordswoman. "We haven't been properly introduced.
Ruskettle is the name, song and merriment the—"
"Not now," hushed Alias. "Look. In about five minutes, ten
minutes at most, the red reptile is going to check to be sure we're dead.
She'll come lurching out of the cave entrance. It's at least a mile to decent
tree cover. . . ."
Dragonbait sniffed the air and growled. The halfling turned to the lizard and
offered her still outstretched hand. Dragonbait backed away a step and bared
his teeth. Ruskettle hastily lowered her arm.
"If we flee," Alias said, "it's likely we'll be caught in the
open and fried." She arched her eyebrows and looked at the mage.
"Any suggestions?"
"Seal her in?" Akabar offered.
"Sure," countered Alias. "Have an avalanche handy?"
"Mayhaps," the Turmishman replied with a grin. He held up the
scroll he'd been perusing. It was crammed with tightly calligraphed symbols.
"This title says it is a spell to conjure a wall of stone."
Alias's eyes lit up. "Can you cast it?"
The magic-user nodded. "All I need do is use a simple trick to read the
magic. That will evoke the powers locked within the text. Of course, it may not
work." He spread his hands in a gesture of uncertainty.
"Half a chance is better than none," the warrior insisted.
"Let's try it out on the beast's front door. Dragonbait!"
The lizard stopped staring at the halfling and followed the swordswoman and
the mage over the scattered boulders that ringed the mountain. The halfling
brought up the rear.
They don't stand on ceremony much here, it occurred to Ruskettle moodily. As
she walked, she pocketed her latest acquisitions, a ring and a small vial
smelling of cinnamon.
By the time they reached the lair's main entrance, steam was billowing from
within. The cavern's front opening was small but still quite wide enough for a
dragon to pass through. From somewhere deep within, beyond their sight, a deep,
throaty muttering rose and fell.
"Can the dragon use spells?" Akabar asked the halfling, concerned
that the beast might have other, hidden talents.
"No. She's just cursing," the halfling explained. "The old
girl talks to herself, deciding what she should do, where she should go, who
she should eat, and so on. All that stuff."
Alias said grimly, "Can we just seal her in and get out of here before
she reaches a decision?"
Akabar held the scroll out at arm's length and began intoning its spell in a
low, melodic voice. Every so often, he would glance up at the entrance, then
back to the paper.
Alias looked at her sword arm, but the symbols remained inert. Relief was
quickly replaced by a sensation of horror as she spotted Ruskettle ambling over
the stones directly toward the cavern's mouth.
The small humanoid took up a position some twenty yards from the cavern and
cupped her hands before her mouth. She bellowed, or at least shouted as loud as
a small creature could, "Heyyy, Misty!"
All at once, the mutterings in the cavern stopped.
Alias held her breath. Akabar looked up and almost scrambled the spell by
missing an inflection. He continued to read aloud, though faster than before.
Alias looked for Dragonbait, but the lizard was bounding over the rock-strewn
hillside toward the halfling.
Ruskettle continued her taunting. "We made it, you big sack of shoe
leather! We got out, and I'm going to tell everyone you're an oath-breaker! You
jackass-faced salamander!"
Dragonbait was only halfway to the halfling's position when a deep rumbling
came from within the mountain, like the sound of an erupting volcano. The mage
quickened his verbal pace yet again. Alias was torn between worrying that the
mage's speed would spoil the scroll's spell and that the wall created wouldn't
be large enough to cover the lair's entrance or strong enough to stop a dragon.
"Oath-breaker, Fight-faker!" brayed the halfling. Twin amber
lights appeared far within the cavern, growing larger by the second. They
framed a red, open mouth set with swordlike teeth.
"Flame-brain, Lame-brain, Tame-brain,
oooff—" The
half-ling's jeers were lost in a sharp exhalation as Dragonbait slammed into
her, knocking her down the hillside for the second time in ten minutes.
The rising roar of the oncoming dragon now hurt Alias's ears. Akabar was
shouting as well, spitting out the last phrases of the incantation. The scroll
itself was being consumed by the force of the magics and was burning bright
yellow in the merchant-mage's hands.
Everything broke loose in the span of a breath. Mist's body appeared from
the darkness, visible in the sunlight that shone only a little way into the
cavern. The dragon was flying low and fast, about to shoot through the small
opening, falling upon the party like a hawk among sparrows.
Then there was a great
whooshing noise, and a huge wall of stone
blocked the party's view of the monster. They heard, however, a bone-crushing
smash coming from the far side of the wall, and saw the barrier arc outward at
its center, trying to contain the force of several tons of wyrm flying at top
speed.
When the wall bulged, Alias was sure that the magical mortar would give.
Astonishingly, it held, even losing half of the bulge by springing back some.
Silence descended on the mountain meadow. Akabar collapsed by the burned
remains of the scroll and put his head in his hands.
Ruskettle picked herself off the ground, scowled at the lizard, and shouted
down at Alias, "That was hard work. When do we eat?"
6
Olive and the Crystal Elemental
For the next few miles, as they wound down the hillside and into the cover
of deeper woods, Alias kept checking over her shoulder. Despite having sealed
Mist in, the swordswoman half-expected the dragon to dive on them from the sky,
bathing the entire forest in flames. Logic insisted that Mist had to be at
least slightly injured from her sudden collision, and it would take her at
least a day to dig her way out, but Alias felt more comfortable playing it safe
by assuming that Mist was pursuing them.
The swordswoman made the party turn off the road onto the first trail into
the woods, so it was nearly dusk by the time they reached the stone circle
where she and Akabar and Dragonbait had spent the night before.
In the setting sunlight, the red hewn rock of the druid circle blazed as
though the hillock on which it stood was afire. According to the map Dimswart
had given Alias, this site had long been abandoned by the clerics of nature,
yet the pines encircling the clearing showed no sign of encroaching and
reclaiming the area. Alias wondered whether the trees were discouraged by the
rocky, frost-cracked soil or thwarted by some lingering magic.
At any rate, the bare space discouraged her as well. Last night they had
found the clearing too cold to use as a camping site. Twenty feet down the slope
under the cover of the pine branches, on the soft carpet of pine needles, they
were sheltered from the wind and considerably warmer. This night, the trees
would also shelter them from Mist's gaze. Alias was glad to have good reasons
to avoid the stone circle. The giant columns, set in no detectable order, made
her uncomfortable. She and Dragonbait hurriedly retrieved the party's gear from
its hiding place in the hollow at the foot of one of the sandstone rocks.
Akabar was puffing on smoky, sparking pine needles when Alias and the lizard
returned to the dark camp under the trees. While Akabar prepared dinner, Alias,
wrapped in a cloak from the cache, patrolled the edge of the clearing,
occasionally glancing at the bard.
Ruskettle was short, even for a halfling. Not even three feet high. There
was nothing childlike about her figure, though. She was in the full bloom of
womanhood, with plenty of curves, but she also had a slender waist and none of
the plumpness most members of her race had. Her leanness, the muscles of her
calves, her deep tan, all indicated to Alias that the bard was an adventuress
like herself. Yet, Alias was not prepared to like or trust her at all. The bard
hadn't made the slightest effort to help Dragonbait and Akabar set up camp or prepare
their meal. Besides, halflings were trouble. Alias had never met an exception
to the rule.
She joined the others for dinner, seating herself opposite Ruskettle, still
watching her intently.
"I don't know how to thank you properly," the halfling bard
mumbled between bites of smoke-cured mutton. "The halflings of the south
have a saying: I owe you my life, your belongings are safe with me."
The mutton leg, which might have lasted Alias and Akabar another two days,
was quickly disappearing. Ruskettle tossed her long, curly hair over her
shoulder and motioned with her clay bowl for another helping of soup, still
chewing as though her life depended on it.
Akabar furrowed his eyebrows at the small creature's gluttony, but he ladled
out another portion of the hearty gruel, a thick barley stock with bits of
salted coney seasoned with herbs from the merchant-mage's copious pockets.
"I can see you're keeping our food safe," Alias joked. "Are
you sure it's the musical ability of Olav Ruskettle that is renowned, and not
her appetite?"
The bard swallowed and wiped her mouth. "The name's Olive, dear. Olive
Ruskettle. Don't worry. Everyone makes that mistake."
"Dimswart said it was Olav," Alias muttered as a tiny fear crept
over her. Perhaps she had rescued the wrong person.
"Well, I should know my own name, don't you think? The problem is that
some fool clerk made a mistake writing it down once on some official document
and ever since I've had to correct people."
"I see," Alias replied suspiciously, wondering whether Mistress
Ruskettle wasn't wanted under the name of Olav for something more serious than
straining rhymes.
"As for my appetite," Olive Ruskettle explained, washing down a
loaf of bread with a long pull on a waterskin, "you should know that that
witch of a dragon, while having a civilized appreciation for my musical
talents, had a lot to learn about the care and feeding of a halfling. Her own
eating habits were anything but regular, and I had a devil of a time convincing
her that I could not live on raw venison. Then I discovered that her cooking
technique left something to be desired. If you had not come along, my
dear," she said shaking her head sadly and patting Alias's boot, "I'm
afraid my little bones would have joined those of the heroes littering the
floor of the dragon's lair."
As the bard continued to make up for a ride's worth of lost meals, Alias
thought of the heroes' bones littering the caverns of Mist. Heroes with all the
bravado and lack of sense of the halfling. Alias shook her head remembering the
bard's outrageous behavior at the mouth of Mist's lair.
Alias's first adventuring party, the Swanmays, had been like that, all flash
and fanfare. One encounter with trolls had taught them the wiser course of
stealth and surprise.
She remembered the battle with the trolls clearly, as though it had happened
last week. So why can't I remember last week? she thought with frustration. She
was so wrapped up in her thoughts that Akabar nudged her.
"I'm sorry, what?" she asked.
"I said, 'Do you think we'll return in time?' For the wedding, I
mean."
"We'd better, or all this effort was for nothing," Alias answered,
oblivious to the feelings of the halfling.
Olive Ruskettle apparently took no offense. Her mind was also on other things.
"As anxious as I am to make my Cormyrian debut, I simply haven't the
strength to keep pace with you. I shall have to have a mount."
"I don't care for sore feet and aching muscles any more than you,
Mistress Ruskettle," Alias replied. "We walked here for secrecy's
sake, but, since we seem to have eluded the dragon, horses sound like an
excellent idea. How lucky for us you managed to acquire so much of the dragon's
wealth while I was fighting for your freedom and life. We can purchase mounts
at the first farm we come to."
Olive moved the mutton bone away from her face long enough to give Alias an
unabashed grin. "I assure you, my feet made a bee-line for safety while
you so valiantly risked your life to rescue me. My hands would have felt left
out if they'd been any less useful, don't you know?" She waved the bone in
the direction of the sacks of treasure. "Please, feel free to consider
this the party's treasure to be used to cover expenses. Whatever remains should
be divided evenly among those who survive our encounters. Even—" she
cocked an eyebrow in Akabar's direction "—if some were less useful than
others."
Akabar's brow furrowed in astonishment at the woman's nerve. "That is
very human of you, small one," he said. "Particularly since that
spellbook you pulled from the dragon's lair was my own. Most strange, though,
because that book was missing from my wagon since the first day out of Arabel,
which was, I believe, where you joined our caravan, several days before the
dragon attacked us."
"Most strange, indeed," Olive agreed, returning Akabar's level
glare. "But"—her eyes returned to her soup bowl, and she took a gulp
of broth before continuing—"these are strange times, so the sages say.
Mannish kingdoms war and plot while old gods, long forgotten, stir in their
restless sleep." She lifted the soup bowl as if making a toast.
"Let's celebrate your good fortune at having your valuable tome returned
to you, instead of probing into yet more mysteries." She drained the soup
bowl and held it out again. "Is there, perchance, any more soup?"
Akabar drained the last of the pot into Olive's bowl. Olive leaned toward
the treasure pile, plucked the magical book from the coins and carvings, and
held it out to the wizard as he held out her soup bowl. Both parties gave the
other a smile that was less than earnest as the exchange was made.
Akabar inspected his book for signs of damage. Alias reached for a tiny
pouch near the treasure pile and loosened the string about its neck.
"Not that," Olive objected. "Those are some of my personal
effects." But Alias had already dumped the contents of the pouch on the
ground. A collection of keys, picks, and wires glittered in the dirt. A small
gold ring rolled toward the fire.
"Oops, sorry," Alias said nonchalantly as Olive snatched the ring
from the ground. "You know, that ring looks familiar," she added
before the bard had a chance to pocket it.
"Oh, this? I picked it up in the dragon's lair as well."
"I have one just like it. Same blue stone set in gold."
"Maybe you dropped it when you were fighting the dragon," Olive
suggested. "Can you prove it's yours?"
Alias regarded the halfling's nervy challenge with considerable amusement.
Olive slipped the ring on her finger. At first it jangled about, too large
for her tiny digits, but a moment later it shrank to a perfect fit. "Oooo.
It's magic. Was yours magic? What did it do?"
Alias was unable to reply since she had not bothered to experiment with the
ring she'd looted from the assassins. But she knew now as well as Akabar just
how safe her possessions were in the care of the halfling bard.
Akabar looked up from his books, which he'd been checking for damage.
"You had best be cautious with that thing, little one" he warned.
"Nonsense," Olive said with a sniff. "There's no danger as
long as you know the right way to deal with these things. All you have to do is
hold your hand over your head—" the half-ling demonstrated, while Akabar
stepped backward and Alias rose to her feet "—and command the ring, 'Show
your power to me.' If that doesn't work then there are certain key words you
should—"
They never heard the rest of the bard's lecture. Suddenly the ring's power
did indeed display itself. Akabar's tome began to glow a soft blue, as did a
ring on his finger and the one on Olive's. Alias's sigils outshone them all,
emitting blue beams crazily about the pine forest.
"Damn!" the swordswoman shouted, tears brimming in her eyes. She
wrapped her cloak tightly around her body, though a blue glow peeked out at the
hem and neckline.
"What was that?" Olive gasped, her eyes glued to Alias.
"Detect magic, I imagine," Akabar answered, moving to the
swordswoman's side. "You aren't in any pain, I trust?"
"I'm fine," Alias muttered between clenched teeth.
Olive continued to stare at the swordswoman as though she'd grown a second
head. "You have a magical arm!"
"Ignore it," Alias muttered.
"But, it's really magical! Incredibly magical! More magical than
anything I've ever seen. I'll bet you could have sliced Mist into pieces. Maybe
we should go back and try it."
"I said, ignore it!" Alias shouted.
For the next several minutes an embarrassed silence reigned in the camp.
Akabar cleaned out the dinner pot and used it to heat water for tea. Olive
finished her soup and polished the mutton bone nearly to ivory. Alias clutched
her wrapped arm close to her until the sigils' light began to dim.
Dragonbait laid more wood on the fire, and then stepped outside the campsite
to stand in the darkness, facing the hill-top, as though he expected danger
from that direction.
"So, tell me, mage," the halfling piped up, obviously
uncomfortable without chatter about her. "Where did you find your
familiar?" She indicated Dragonbait by nodding her head in his direction.
"I've seen nothing like him from the Sword Coast all the way south to
magical Halruaa."
Alias snapped, "Dragonbait is my companion, Ruskettle, not the mage's
familiar. I did not find him. He found me. He has proved more than
useful."
"Aye, I've noticed. Especially at pulling halflings out of the fire. I
meant no offense, I assure you. It's just that I've never heard of a lizard
acting as a manservant before. But then I've never heard of a magical arm
before either"
Alias gritted her teeth. If the halfling wasn't going to give her curiosity
a rest, it was time to go on the offensive. "You know, I've never heard of
a halfling bard before."
"Well, that's easily explained," Olive smiled. "I gained my
training in the south; things are very different there."
"I am from the south as well," said Akabar. "And now that the
lady mentions it, I have never encountered a bard of the halfling race,
either."
"Ah," replied Olive, staring sadly into her empty bowl.
"Well, you are from Turmish, I seem to remember."
"Yeees," the mage said, anticipating what was to come.
"Well, I was trained farther south than that."
"Anywhere near Chondath?" Akabar asked.
"Chondath? Yes, just a wee bit farther south than that."
"Sespech?"
"Yes, Sespech. There is a barding college there with a fine teacher who
taught me all I know." The halfling flashed Akabar a beaming smile.
"How odd," drawled the mage, tugging at the edge of his beard.
"One of my wives comes from Sespech, on the Vilhon Reach, and while she is
quite talkative about the merits of her native land, she has never mentioned
halfling bards."
"Ohhh. No, no, no, no," corrected Olive. "You're talking
about Sespech between the Vilhon and the Nagawater. I was referring to a place
much farther south. How far south have your travels taken you?"
"I've traded as far south as Innarlith, on the Lake of Steam," the
mage said. The halfling nodded.
"Our company ..." Alias wrinkled her brow, trying to dredge up
memories as bright but as liquid as quicksilver. "Our company fought on
the Shining Plains. Yes, that's right, and we traveled through Amn once or
twice."
The halfling looked at Alias a moment, confused by her interruption about
places farther to the west and outside the realm of the discussion. She
shrugged and continued her far-fetched explanation to the mage. "And in
Innarlith there were dwarves from the Great Rift?" she asked.
"Yes, from Eartheart," Akabar replied.
"Well," Olive concluded triumphantly, "below the Great Rift,
on the Southern Sea, is the land of Luiren. We have a Sespech there, and a
Chondath, which are small but bustling towns, the namesakes no doubt of your
larger nations. Anyway, in Sespech, the one in Luiren, I was trained, having
made a long pilgrimage from Cormyr. I was attempting to return to my homeland
when that fool wyrm plucked me from my wagon."
"Dimswart says you came from across the Dragon Reach," Alias said,
puzzled.
"No, I come from Cormyr. You see, traveling by boat does not agree with
me, so I journeyed to Luiren around the western edge of the Inner Sea. Desiring
to see even more of the Realms, I returned from Luiren around the eastern edge
of the Inner Sea, through many wild and dangerous lands. I made a name for
myself in the nations of Aglarond and Impiltur. I had just entered Procampur
when I received Master Dimswart's most generous offer to entertain at his
daughter's wedding. And glad I was to come home, Procampur being a stuffy town,
too restrictive for an artiste."
Alias and Akabar exchanged glances. Akabar looked frustrated, but Alias had
to smile at the halfling's tale. There had to be at least a dozen lies tangled
up in her story, but it wasn't worth the trouble proving it. Olive, like any
other halfling, would only invent more lies to cover the originals. Better to
wait until she accidentally let the truth slip out.
Alias stood up and stretched. "Going to be a cold night. We need more
wood." She walked toward the clearing where the moonlight revealed fallen
limbs.
"So, what's her story?" Olive whispered to Akabar, jerking her
head at Alias's retreating figure.
"Story?" echoed Akabar. "To what are you referring?"
"She has a magical arm!" Ruskettle's voice rose half an octave.
Akabar shrugged. He was taking a lot of pleasure in thwarting the woman's
unbearable curiosity.
"Look, mage," Olive sighed. "I owe her. I want to help."
Akabar's feelings softened somewhat. "Not that I believe you for a
moment," he said, "but just in case your words are earnest, I will
tell you. The glyphs on the lady's arm are magical, not the arm itself. Some
unknown power carved them into her flesh, but she cannot remember the event. As
a matter of fact, she cannot remember the events of several of the past months.
In exchange for the meaning of the glyphs, she has agreed to deliver you safely
to Master Dimswart. The best service you can do her is to come along peacefully
and perform well at this wedding."
Olive pondered the information for a few minutes, then she speculated aloud,
"So anything could have happened during the time she can't remember. She
could have been a slave, or a concubine to a powerful sorcerer, or married to a
foreign prince—a princess dripping in jewelry."
"Or a wandering swordswoman," added Akabar.
"Or a princess," Olive repeated to herself, "dripping in
jewelry, her lover killed, her kingdom usurped, and her memory lost through the
fell magics of her enemies."
Akabar shook his head at the bard's wandering fantasy. He was reaching for
another log to throw on the fire when a strong wind suddenly rushed down from
the hilltop. The pines danced with alarming energy, and sparks from the
campfire scattered across the ground. The ground shook, and over the howl of
the wind came a malicious laugh that brought both mage and halfling to their
feet.
"Alias!" Akabar shouted, dashing toward the clearing.
Olive Ruskettle grabbed a brand from the campfire and rushed after him. If
Alias had some wealth, the halfling realized, she could prove profitable to
have in one's debt.
*****
While Ruskettle was trying to persuade Akabar Bel Akash to tell her about
Alias, the swordswoman was searching for Dragonbait. She'd assumed he had gone
off to collect more firewood. If that were the case, Alias thought, he would
have returned by now. He kept eyeing the hilltop. I'll bet he's gone to
investigate that stone circle.
With a sigh Alias began climbing the hill.
A shadow at the edge of the clearing moved, accompanied by a scrabbling
sound. The lightning-blue beams emanating from the sigils had died away, but
the cursed patterns still gave off light enough to rival the moon. Alias drew
her arm from her cloak and held it up. A large shape by the base of a pine
tree, startled by the second light source, scampered down the hill into the
darkness. Only a porcupine, peeling tree bark for dinner, O great warrior,
Alias mocked herself. But don't worry, you scared it off.
Chuckling, she doubled her pace until she reached the center of the stone
circle. The half moon hung overhead like a gold lion coin split apart by
looting pirates. In the moonlight, the red stones appeared black and their
edges and corners, dulled by the wind and rain, blurred into the darkness. She
wondered why more enduring and brighter rock had not been used in the circle's
construction. All the druid temples she'd ever visited before had been built of
granite, not sandstone, and placed among oaks, not pines.
She jumped on a rock and surveyed the landscape. The tops of the encircling
pines stood out against the moonlit sky like triangular crenelations of a
castle wall. The original path to the temple was overgrown with brambles which
reflected the moonlight. Of Dragonbait there was no sign.
Some parts of the hill dropped away in miniature canyons, and Alias began to
worry that perhaps he had slipped or fallen down one of these. She shivered in
the cold air. She'd suddenly felt very vulnerable. Like a fool, she'd forgotten
her sword. She jumped from the rock and headed down the slope toward the
campsite.
A glint of metal on the ground caught her eye. She veered from her intended
path and moved toward it. At the foot of a larger than man-sized boulder lay
Dragonbait's oddly shaped sword. Alias leaped forward and lifted the gleaming
blade off the ground. The weapon's weight astonished her. It felt no heavier
than a fencing foil, and its balance was not awkward in the least. It also felt
warm to the touch—not just the grip, but the blade as well.
A shadow stirred on the boulder. Alias spun about with Dragonbait's sword
raised, keeping the stone to her back, but there was no one there. Slowly,
Alias turned back toward the boulder. Then she saw that, unlike all the other
rock about the hilltop, this one was clear, like a huge hunk of quartz, and the
shadow she'd thought moved across it had really moved in it. She pressed
her face to the stone.
Thrashing at the heart of the rock, like a fly caught in pinesap, was the
lizard's twisting form. "Dragonbait!"
Suddenly, something heavy struck the back of her legs below the knees and
she toppled backward, crying out in surprise. A violent wind sprang from
nowhere, slapping the pines about the clearing.
She tried to roll away from whatever enemy had felled her, but something
held her ankles fast. She stared at her feet in horror. They were bound in
crystalline manacles, and her horror grew into panic as the rock crept farther
up her legs in a twisting motion, like a vine climbing a pole.
Using Dragonbait's sword, Alias beat on the stone bonds with fury, not
considering what damage she might do to the weapon or even to herself. The
blade did not shatter, but cut through the engulfing stone as though it were
liquid. Like sap, or syrup, the clear stone oozed back over the hack marks and
continued growing faster than she could chop. Soon the stone oozed beneath her
legging plates where she could not reach it, miring her tightly in place.
The ground trembled. With a squelching thuck a dome of earth rose
before her, carrying with it the crystal boulder that imprisoned Dragonbait.
Alias looked up in horror and realized that the rounded eruption was a huge,
monstrous rock head. Dragonbait's prison rested on top of the head, a lump
above its temple. Farther down, two eve-disks glowed a sickening yellow. Below
these was a gaping maw smelling of sulfur.
The sound that issued from the mouth sent an ice dagger slicing down Alias's
spine. The head laughed, a familiar, hoarse, wheezing laugh. Familiar, she was
sure, to her old self, the self whose memory was missing, lost in whatever
darkness this monster had sprung from.
A moment later, a great stone arm rose from beneath the earth. The
creature's chest rose from its mossy bed as well, dark red earth set with a
glowing blue symbol of interlocking rings— just like the set on her arm.
With a sickening lurch, Alias felt herself hoisted above the ground. The
stone about her legs proved to be part of the amorphous fist attached to the
arm of the monster. The monster held her up to its face. As she swung upside
down in the hellish yellow glare of its eyes, she felt her sigils jump and
writhe and flare as brightly as they had when Winefiddie had tried to dispel
them, until an aura of near blinding blue shone all about her, the monster's
head, and the crystal prison holding Dragonbait.
The creature laughed again. Its chortle unnerved her, and she hacked at its
fist, its face, its eyes, anything she could reach with Dragonbait's blade. The
sword passed through the creature's body; its "flesh" was the
consistency of peat, but neither the creature's eyes or voice registered any
pain The hoarse laughter brought a lost memory fluttering across her inner
vision, but like a bat in the darkness, shp felt it but could not grasp it.
The monster raised her up to its temple and held her against its head so
that she stood next to Dragonbait's crystal cell. The lizard gestured to
himself, a motion that caught her attention. She took a deep breath in an
effort to calm herself while she watched him miming the same motions over and
over. First he would raise his hands together over his head, then pound them
against the transparent wall of his trap, then slap himself on the forehead.
Huh?
Raise, pound, slap. Raise, pound, slap.
The creature of earth tugged its other arm from the soil The newly freed
fist held a gemlike twin of Dragonbait^ prison. The earthen giant brought this
second crystal up to where it caught the blue rays from Alias's sigils and
scattered them into the dark night. Then the great stone cracked and split
along its center. The blue light of her cursed runes revealed a clear, rippling
slime within the crystal's open heart. Any moment she would become another bug
in amber.
Raise, pound, slap.
Why does Dragonbait keep slapping himself on the head? she wondered.
Dragonbait pointed at her. She slapped herself on the head. He shook his
head furiously and pointed at the crystal over his head.
"Not my head!" she yelled excitedly, finally understanding.
"The creature's head!"
Clenching both her fists about the hilt of Dragonbait's weapon and twisting
her body, Alias smashed Dragonbait's sword against the lizard's crystal prison.
Steel screeched on rock, and the force of the blow traveled up Alias's arm,
leaving it numb. The crystal split like an eggshell, and Dragonbait spilled out
of the jagged hole, followed by a mucky ooze that poured down the monster's
face.
The monster shrieked, a baneful cry that carried leagues on the wind and
seemed to set off a gale that bent large pines and snapped their heavy
branches. A moan issued from the earth, echoed by the rocks of the stone
circle, and then the huge beast's shoulders slumped and began to flow back into
the ground.
Patting her hand gently, Dragonbait took his sword from her numbed grip. He
slashed at the rock hand that held her, and the stone flowed away from her legs
like sand. They were free, but there was a forty foot drop from the monster's
head to the ground, and Alias was reluctant to make the leap.
She spotted Olive Ruskettle below, throwing daggers at the behemoth. The
halfling's weapons buried themselves in the monster's chest. The tiny blades
couldn't possibly hurt the monster more than a bee sting would harm a human warrior,
yet the monster cried out again like a feral child.
More goo oozed from the shattered crystal on the monster's head. The wound
was undoubtedly mortal, but Alias worried now that she and Dragonbait might be
crushed by the monster's death throes. Dragonbait tugged on Alias's arm and
forced her to half-leap, half-slide to the rock monster's shoulders.
Akabar's voice rose in a chant, and a lance of rainbow fight struck the
creature in the chest above the dimming rune of interlocking circles. The rainbow
broke into a thousand small motes, spreading across the creature in a dancing,
swirling pattern.
With one arm about Alias's waist, Dragonbait began climbing down the
monster's back, using his hand and foot claws to keep his grip. Dragonbait
jumped the last ten feet just as Akabar's magic consumed the creature's torso
and slid up its head and arms. The moon shone through the stone wherever the
rainbow light covered it.
The creature gave one last plaintive groan and faded into the night. Even
the torn earth where it had risen fell neatly back into place. Akabar and Olive
ran toward Alias, shouting victory cries. Behind her, she smelled the woodsmoke
scent that seemed to cling to the lizard. A clawed hand squeezed her numbed
shoulder gently, and Alias felt warmth flow into the limb. Dragonbait looked up
at her, and she felt sure there was concern in his eyes, though they looked as
dead yellow as ever. The lizard drew back as the halfling and the mage reached
Alias's side.
"Did you see?" Olive asked. "While this one was struggling to
remember his spell," she jerked her head in Akabar's direction, "I
wounded it to the quick with two daggers to its heart. My aim was never better.
What was it, anyway?"
Akabar looked down at the bard in disbelief. "Perhaps later you would
care to hone your abilities by throwing at the side of a barn," he
suggested dryly. "That was some type of earth elemental, though not one of
the standard breed normally called up by magic-users. Perhaps it was from the
Plane of Minerals, which abuts the Earthen Plane. At any rate, it was a
conjured creature, or my dispel magic chant would not have worked on it."
He turned to address Alias. "I'm sorry I cast my spell before you could
finish climbing down, but I judged you were safer falling than being crushed
beneath the monster."
"Quite right," Alias answered, nodding her head, though she was
obviously preoccupied with some other thought.
"Someone summoned something that big just to capture you?" Olive
gasped. "You must be someone important."
Akabar turned to study Dragonbait, who sat on a rock, studying his blade in
the moonlight. The lizard-creature ran a clawed thumb along the edge and
growled like a cat. "It seems you've nicked his blade," Akabar said
to Alias, pointing to the lizard. Dragonbait pulled something from his belt
pouch. Alias watched as Dragonbait began sliding a whetstone along the steel
edge.
"He seems more worried about his weapon's condition than yours,"
the halfling sniffed.
"Quite right," Alias repeated. She shivered. Pulling her cloak
about her, she headed back down the hill to the campfire. Her head still echoed
with the stone creature's hoarse laughter. Familiar, she thought, familiar as
an old friend. Familiar as death.
7
The Wedding Reception
In the backyard of Dimswart Manor, two days journey from the mountains, in
the countryside near Suzail, laughter and the clink of fine crystal filled the
wedding tent. Now and then the multi-colored cloth walls shivered as some
high-spirited child ran into the slender, black vloon wood rods supporting the
sides. The white roof wafted alarmingly each time some tired or drunken soul
leaned against the huge center pole that supported the tent roof.
Alias and Akabar had arrived late the previous night, mud-spattered and
exhausted, but with a famous bard on the pony between them. Dragonbait loped
along behind them since he refused to ride. Fortunately, he'd had no trouble
keeping up with the group.
The lady of the house welcomed them with as much hospitality as she could,
considering her home was already full of visitors, all certain of their supreme
importance in the scheme of things. Small but comfortable rooms were found for
the adventurers in the servant's wing.
Their hostess insisted they attend the wedding, though it was obvious to
Alias that she did so only because it would be awkward to ask them to leave.
Gratitude for the service they'd just rendered was the last thing on Lady
Leona's mind. She had given Alias the distinct impression that, in her opinion,
fighting a dragon was a snap compared to planning a wedding for three hundred
people.
More suitable attire was found for the female guest—a sky-blue strapless
gown with leggings and a capelet. One accessory had been added, a pair of
arm-length, fingerless gloves, no doubt supplied to cover up her
"affliction."
Alias was uncomfortable in the gown, despite the good fit and excellent
cloth. She felt naked without her armor, and she kept tripping over the skirt.
You'd think I'd never worn a dress in my life, she chided herself the third
time she'd neglected to lift the hem and stepped on it. After all, I wasn't
born in armor.
As far as her unreliable memory could recollect, she had worn dresses before
becoming an adventurer. Even after she took up the sword, she'd risked teasing
from the male members of her party and allowed herself the luxury of a more
feminine wardrobe while she stayed in town.
That thought reminded her of her purpose in remaining here. Dimswart had
uncovered information on the sigils, but wouldn't have time to review it with
her until after the wedding. She scanned the crowd anxiously for the father of
the bride, hoping that he might have a moment to give her some clue, something
that would make the wait, in this warm tent full of frivolous people, bearable.
Dimswart was mingling through the crowd, looking as jolly as a trader who
has deceived the tax collector. When Alias spotted him, he was lending a
friendly ear to a gathering of his daughter's friends, no doubt hearing a
saintly version of the bride's last night of freedom. Shrieks and giggles
emanating from the bride's quarters had kept Alias awake into the small hours
of the morning. Yet, the bride looked fresh as morning, and though she was
important enough to warrant a seat, she would not stay in it. Instead, she
roamed the tent and the lawn in her white gown, with the crest of her upswept
hair bobbing like peacock feathers.
Nothing holding that girl up but the stays in her bodice, and nothing
keeping her moving but nervous energy, Alias thought. The bride, Gaylyn, had
greeted everyone, even taken a moment to thank Alias for all her help. It was
doubtful she knew exactly what Alias had done, since she'd greeted many people
with the same platitude, but she seemed in earnest. She'd go far in court,
Alias decided, even without help from her new in-laws.
The groom, Lord Frefford Wyvernspur, towed along by his new bride, sparkled
almost as brilliantly, dressed in the green and gold of his family, the
Wyvernspurs of Immersea.
The wedding was the social event of the season and, in a spirit of festive
goodwill, the imported nobility bumped elbows against the local
hoi palloi.
His Majesty, Azoun IV, remained in court in Suzail on the advice of the court
wizard, Vangerdahast. However, a number of lesser Cormyrian lords and ladies
were present to benefit from meetings and conversations with the heads of
rising Suzail merchant households and local freeman leaders.
Alias caught a glimpse of swirling crimson and white on the far side of the
tent. Akabar's head poked above the press of shorter Cormyrians. Tired of being
a stranger among so many, she decided that even the foreigner's company would
be preferable to standing alone. Elbowing her way through the crowd, she caught
fragments of conversation.
"Well, if you ask me," said one bass voice, "they should have
had a cleric of Ilmater there. God of endurance, suffering, and
perseverance."
Alias gave a derisive snort. Considering the confusion caused by having four
clerics at the marriage ceremony, a fifth might just have helped start a jihad.
The swordswoman recalled the moment when both the bishop of Chauntea and the
patron of Oghma stepped forward at the same time to offer the blessing. For
seven heartbeats the priest and priestess stood, staring stonily at each other
until the male bishop bowed deeply and surrendered the floor.
"If you must know," a disconnected whisper confided, "we
dressed in blackface and wrote filthy slogans on the side of the citadel.
Horrible, horrible things about Princess Tanalasta and a centaur."
A strong political statement, Alias thought sarcastically.
"Go ahead, Giogi," a slurred female voice encouraged some unseen
gentleman. "Do your impression of His Majesty. Giogi does the most
on-target imitation, you can just close your eyes and picture the old stuffed
codger. You know that line he always uses, 'Let me state, O people of Cormyr,
my people.' Everyone says that even Azoun himself would do a double take.
Pleeease, Giogi."
Yes, please, Giogi, the swordswoman begged silently. Anything to keep the
woman from whining.
"No, you're quite wrong," a gravelly male voice replied in a
different conversation. "The problems in the Moonshaes are completely
local. The rise of their goddess has nothing to do with the tenets of
Chauntea's faith."
Alias shook her head incredulously at the speaker's arrogant assurance. As a
traveled adventurer she knew better. No problem was ever completely local;
problems rippled through the Realms from shore to shore. Now where did I hear
that line before? she wondered.
"Lady Alias?" a familiar voice addressed her. "I trust you're
having a fine time?"
Alias turned and blinked twice to accustom her eyes to the shadowed side of
the tent. Dimswart stood, his comrade-in-ale, the priest Winefiddle, right
behind. Each held a foaming mug of beer.
"Yes, yes I am," Alias replied politely, brushing a loose strand
of hair from her face. "I was just trying to cross the room, but it's like
wading through soft sand." She could not meet the eyes of the cleric. In
addition to trying to kill him, she had also cheated his church of his fee.
But Winefiddle smiled absently at her, and the sage nodded in blank
agreement. Their faces were both more flushed than the heat in the tent
warranted, and they swayed from side to side, bumping into each other.
Giving her elbow a little fatherly squeeze, Dimswart bellowed over the
noise, "We'll talk about your little problem just as soon as Leona and I
get the children off. That way I'll get out of the clean-up." He laughed,
and some of the ale sloshed from his mug. "Have you eaten? Had a mug?"
Alias shook her head, and Winefiddle pressed his flagon into her hands.
"Hardly touched," he slurred.
Alias smiled nervously and, not wishing to give the curate any further cause
for offense, took a swig. The ale was as vile as The Hidden Lady's.
"No more, thanks," Alias said, passing the mug back to Winefiddle.
"I think I'd better keep keep my wits about me."
The curate shrugged and took a long, hearty draught. Alias excused herself
and plunged back into the crowd in the direction she'd last seen Akabar's head.
She spotted Olive Ruskettle seated on a small bench in front of the wedding
table, leaning low over her yarting as she tuned it so she could hear the
strings over the noise of the crowd.
Alias's attention was drawn away to Akabar, who was watching something with
great amusement. Empty crystal cups rose and fell above the heads of the crowd
in an ever increasing number. How odd. I would have thought jugglers too common
for Lady Leona, Alias puzzled.
"Higher taxes will be the death of me," complained a voice in the milling
crowd.
"A lovely couple," an elderly woman declared. "I wonder if
he's told her about his second cousin. The one who went quite mad and became an
adventurer, you remember?"
"Oh, go ahead, Giogi," wheedled the slurred female voice Alias
recognized from earlier. "Just once. He really does sound just like King
Azoun."
Finally, Alias squeezed between the multi-hued bodies and stood beside
Akabar. Upon spying the juggler though, she growled with annoyance. Dragonbait
lay on the ground dressed in fool's motley, tossing and catching seven pieces
of Lady Leona's crystal with all four feet and his tail. Akabar was just
tossing an eighth cup into the fray.
The clear hemisphere landed in the lizard's right front claw and scribed a
complicated journey behind its mates from right front to left rear to right
rear to left front to tail, and finally bounced up in a high arc by the tail to
land again in the right front claw. Already an admiring crowd had gathered,
allowing the lizard more open space in the mob than anyone else had received.
"What's he doing here?" Alias hissed to Akabar.
"It's called juggling. Don't you have that in the north?" The mage
grinned as he added a cup to the bobbing glassware.
"I can see that," Alias replied, beginning to lose her patience.
"Why?"
Akabar shrugged. "Some northern women assumed he was a pet and began
tossing him food. In their excitement, they began bombarding him, actually.
Rather than appear impolite he began juggling what he couldn't eat. I thought
it would be easier and cleaner to toss cups than fruit salad."
"But he's not supposed to be here," Alias insisted through
clenched teeth. "I told him to stay in my room."
Suddenly, Lady Leona broke through the crowd, and the party-goers went
deathly quiet. The noisiest members of the group turned away hastily to engage
themselves in the more civilized pastime of conversation.
The mother of the bride gave a polite but firm cough, such as a god might make
on the last day's dawning. Dragon-bait lost his concentration, and eight cups
tumbled to the grass. The ninth cup bounced off his nose, and he looked up
sheepishly at Lady Leona.
Dimswart's wife glared at Alias. "If you are quite through with your
pet, I would like to signal for the professional entertainment to begin."
"He's not my . . ." began Alias, but Lady Leona swirled about and
headed for the wedding party's table. The crowd parted for her as a rank of
archers breaks at the arrival of a formation of lancers.
Alias hustled the lizard to his feet. "Where did you get that
ridiculous getup?" she asked, tugging on the silk motley.
Dragonbait smiled and spun about so she could see the whole outfit. Little
bells attached to the costume jangled.
Alias sighed. "Pick up the cups," she ordered, pointing to the
crystal on the ground.
With exaggerated care the lizard obeyed, stacking the glittering hemispheres
on the table with the punch bowl.
Lady Leona's voice rang out from the wedding table. "Attention,
everyone. Lords and ladies." The tent quieted to a low hum, and the mother
of the bride continued. "I am very pleased to introduce Olive Ruskettle,
master bard and songsmith. Mistress Ruskettle has composed an ode to
commemorate the joining of our two families."
Polite applause followed, and then people were still again.
Alias decided to take advantage of the temporary emptiness of the doorway to
escort Dragonbait back to their room. She grabbed a handful of the baggy motley
and began tugging him away from the crowd. Whimpering slightly, he pointed at
Olive.
"I think he wants to hear the bard sing," Akabar said.
Alias sighed in resignation.
Dragonbait folded his arms and tilted his head, the very archetype of a
music connoisseur. Except for being a lizard.
Ruskettle began strumming the yarting. The opening chords sounded to Alias
like those the bard had used to taunt the dragon three days ago.
Though the halfling sang well and her tune was catchy, conversations
continued about the edges of the tent, out of earshot of the hostess.
Alias caught the words of a nasal voice. "As I said to Sir Rafner,
taxes. Raise taxes."
"She seems awfully short for a bard," remarked one of the bride's
girlfriends, "but I wouldn't know good music if it attacked me in the
dark."
"Not much, just fourteen or fifteen mugs," a drunken voice
insisted from the ale table.
"Giogi, do it for me, please?"
For gods' sake, Giogi, Alias thought, would you just get it over with?
Giogioni Wyvernspur sighed. Minda would not quit asking him to repeat the
imitation until he complied. He should never have done it for her in the first
place. Giogi was not a young man of much sense, but he had enough to realize
that his cousin Freffie's wedding reception was not the sort of place one did
imitations of one's sovereign king. His only hope lay in getting it over with
quickly and quietly.
Alias heard a young man's voice reply, "All right."
"Hooray, Giogi!" the woman cheered.
"Finally," Alias mumbled.
"Let me gather myself," Giogi said. Then his voice changed,
becoming deeper, huskier, masking the squeakiness of youth and taking on a
mountain lander's burr.
"My Cormytes. My People. As your king, as King Azoun, and as King Azoun
IV, I must say that the need to raise your taxes is a result of the direct
depravations of ..." The voice dropped to a whisper. "Vangy, who is
being depraved this time?"
Alias's breath quickened. She focused her attention on Giogi's altered
voice. To her, the rest of the chatter died away, leaving only the husky tone.
A powerfully sinister feeling swept over her, leaving her dizzy. The crowd was
suffocating her. Her arm began to ache miserably. Nearby she heard a growl.
Panic rose in Alias. Her body was moving of its own accord, just as it had
when she nearly killed Winefiddle. She tried to hold herself still, fight the
urge to lunge at the Wyvernspur noble, but without success. Far off she heard
women screaming and men shouting. Something nearby was burning.
Standing right beside Alias, Akabar felt her stiffen. He noticed the smell
of smoke almost immediately. With horror he watched the glove that covered her
tattoos blister and burn away. Then he heard Alias snarl like a dog, and saw
her face contort into a mask of rage.
Dragonbait turned to look at her in confusion. When Akabar laid a hand on
her left arm to offer his assistance, she shoved both man and beast away with
unbelievable strength, propelling herself in the opposite direction. With
murder in her eyes, Alias leaped onto Giogi.
She landed on top of him with a scream, her hands about his throat in an
instant. She might have wrung his neck, but she caught sight of a long, sharp
knife used to cut pies and cake. She reached for it, but lost her grip on the
young man as she did so. Giogi managed to twist away from her, and she plunged
the pastry blade into the table where he'd been pinned only a moment before.
"I say, I wasn't that bad," the green-and-gold-clad noble
sputtered, "I didn't want to do it, really. It's just that Minda kept
begging me, you know?"
Alias yanked the blade from the tabletop and drew a fresh bead on her
target. Giogi backpedaled furiously. Women screamed and several Wyvernspur
menfolk, seeing their kin beseiged, shouted a battle cry and moved in on the
attacker. Alias kept them all at bay with the knife. One cocky fellow got too
close and received a slash across his cheek to show for it.
Several of the groom's relatives, faced with a mad assassin, fled the area
as quickly as possible, leaving the tent sides flapping where they'd torn up
the stakes.
Olive, her ode interrupted, her audience gone, moved toward the fight. She
helped Akabar up from the ground as she demanded, "Just what does she
think she's doing?"
"I think the sigils," Akabar explained in a whisper, "are
trying to make her kill that man because he sounds like the king of
Cormyr."
Olive glanced over at Giogi, who was now crawling along the ground.
"But he doesn't look anything like Azoun."
"The sigils don't know that," Akabar pointed out, wracking his
brain for some way to put the warrior woman out of commission without injuring
her too severely.
A northerner of huge girth tried tackling her from behind. Alias pivoted,
jammed an elbow into the man's belly, and backhanded him in the face with the
handle of the knife. Bleeding from the nose, the man fell into the crowd.
Having lost her target, Alias's eyes swept through the tent. She spotted
Giogi cowering beneath the punch table. She dove for him just as he managed to
scramble to the other side.
Dimswart, realizing that it would not look good if one of his clients
murdered one of his new in-laws, grabbed Akabar's shoulder. "Do
something," he demanded.
Akabar nodded his head, but he hadn't prepared any magical spells that would
be useful at a wedding celebration-turned-brawl.
Olive seized control of the situation by grabbing Dragonbait. "We have
to stop her!"
The lizard cocked his head in confusion.
In a flash of inspiration Akabar cried, "Stop her, before she gets
hurt!"
Dragonbait nodded. Dodging the confused, fleeing guests, he tackled the
central pole of the tent. The huge beam slid across the grass, pulling the
walls up and the roof down. Stakes ripped from the ground, and the pole toppled
over with a thud, bringing acres of tent down and putting an end to the
pandemonium with a great
whoosh.
8
The Sigils
Akabar was one of the first to emerge from under the cloth, his red and
white silk robes only slightly stained with grass. He immediately scanned the
area for Alias's figure, but his view of the grounds was blocked by the growing
throng of refugees. He waited by the edge of the collapsed structure, assisting
others to their feet and hoping the swordswoman would appear.
When Giogi emerged from beneath the tent, he kept crawling until he bumped
into the knees of a dowager Wyvernspur.
"Giogioni, you are a fool," the lady declared. "This civil
unrest is a direct consequence of your open disrespect for our sovereign. I've
warned you time and again that you were courting disaster."
"Yes, Aunt Dorath."
"Get off your knees, you idiot."
"Yes, Aunt Dorath."
The bride and groom and their attendants rolled out from the tent, giggling
hysterically. Lady Leona emerged near Dragonbait, looking less than amused.
Upon seeing whose scaly hand had helped her rise, the woman jerked her arm back
while blasting the Turmishman with a withering glare. She looked about
impatiently for Sir Dimswart.
When the sage finally appeared, empty mug in hand, Leona drew him aside. In
quiet but threatening tones she declared, "I will not have Gaylyn's
wedding day ruined. I am taking our guests into the garden to continue with the
celebration. You must deal with this . . . situation."
Spying Olive Ruskettle, who was smoothing out her bulging pockets as best
she could, Leona made her way to the bard and escorted her to the garden.
Dimswart turned to Akabar. "Your adventuress has caused a great deal of
trouble." His voice was even, but his upraised eyebrows made his point.
"If you could have spared fifteen minutes from testing ale this
morning," Akabar said in equally polite tones, "and not kept her
waiting, this would not have happened."
"You forget she is my hireling," Dimswart said. "I am not
hers."
"In the south we say the gods bless all duties faithfully performed.
Alias has accomplished her task, while you have yet to complete your end of the
bargain."
Dimswart grimaced but accepted the chastisement with good grace. Like many
sages, he liked to consider himself a man of the people. It wasn't in him to
behave haughtily. "That's still no reason to start a brawl at my
daughter's wedding," he replied with a sniff.
"It was not her, I believe, but the sigils."
"Really?" Dimswart's scholarly curiosity was peaked.
Akabar described how Alias's glove had burned just prior to the attack.
"Fascinating," the sage muttered. "Where did she go?"
A handful of servants rolled back the tent, revealing a few more guests, but
no Alias. The refreshment tables stood on the bare lawn like the skeletal
remains of some huge beast. The ale keg was immediately carried off to the
garden, followed by the punch bowl and tables to hold them. The food was a
little crushed, but already reserves were being carried from the kitchen.
Akabar spotted Dragonbait circling the beaten grass where the tent had
stood, emitting interrogative whines.
"He sounds confused," Dimswart commented.
Akabar went to the lizard. "We'll find her, don't worry."
Dragonbait gave him a distressed look and issued a sort of chirp.
"You look in her room," he ordered the lizard. "I'll search
the stable."
Their search of the house and grounds came up empty. Akabar found Dragonbait
on the lawn, staring off at the horizon.
"We'll have to try the roads," the mage said. "I need to
study my spells. You pack and ready the horses."
An hour later, Akabar, dressed for traveling, cornered Dimswart, demanding
Alias's information.
With a shrug the sage ushered him into his study and reviewed what he had
discovered about the sigils on the swordswoman's arm.
"Where will you search?" Dimswart asked Akabar when they'd
finished.
"I'm not certain," the mage answered. "There's a good chance
she's gone back to Suzail, since that's where we first met. But if she's gone
in another direction ..." His voice trailed off, and he shrugged his
shoulders.
"Why are you bothering, Akash? She's nothing to do with you. You just
met the woman."
"She needs help. Isn't that reason enough?"
"A lot of people in the Realms need help. That doesn't usually get them
the attention of wealthy Turmish merchants. House Akash probably wouldn't think
too highly of you galloping off after some northern warrioress."
That was true enough, Akabar knew. House Akash, his first wife's firm and
its partner, Kasim, his second wife's business, would probably never
understand. He shrugged again. "The dragon destroyed my inventory. I have
no other duties in this region."
"Any other merchant would cut his losses and head home while he still
could," Dimswart pointed out. "But not you. You've got it bad,
haven't you, my friend?"
Akabar stiffened angrily.
"Adventure-lust," Dimswart sighed. "Not content to remain a
greengrocer, are you?"
No, I'm not, Akabar realized. How is it this northerner understands me
better than I understood myself?
"You could have picked an easier quest to begin with," Dimswart
continued. "This woman, these sigils, are very dangerous. They represent
very evil powers."
"You have a saving up north, do you not, concerning the number of times
opportunity knocks. Besides, I like her.
"No reason why you shouldn't. She's talented, headstrong, arrogant. The
two of you have so much in common."
Akabar grinned. "All the things upon which my friendship with you is
based.
Amarast, Master Dimswart."
"Amarast, Akash."
Dragonbait was waiting in the stables with the three horses they had bought
after freeing Olive Ruskettle. He left Olive's mount, a pony she had named High
Roll. behind for the halfling. Akabar had named the first horse, a white
stallion, Windove, in honor of its speed. The pack horse, a black gelding, they
jokingly called Lightning because it was the only mount docile enough to allow
Dragonbait's touch. Alias had chosen a purebred chestnut for herself.
"That one's a real lady killer," she had said when they bought it.
"Lady Killer," Akabar whispered as he patted Alias's horse before
mounting Windove. He shuddered, wondering if the chestnut's name hadn't been a
bad omen.
He and Dragonbait walked the horses out of the stable and away from Dimswart
Manor. The mage led them toward the main road to Suzail. Dragonbait, still
dressed in motley, snuffled and snorted in the road's dust. Akabar had just
mounted when he caught the sound of short legs trotting toward them. A shrill
voice blew over the hill.
"Akabar, you charlatan, wait up! You're likely to get hurt traveling
out here alone!"
"If we double time it," the mage said to Dragonbait without
looking back, "we can probably lose her in the dust."
Upon hearing the halfling's voice, however, Dragonbait's face broke out in a
grin and he halted, keeping a firm grip on Lightning's reins. Since the pack
horse held most of Akabar's belongings, the merchant-mage had no choice but to
wait, too, as Olive Ruskettle came charging over the hill, bouncing up and down
on her pony.
"You can't leave yet," Akabar said. "The celebration is
supposed to last until midnight."
"Look," Olive said, "I've done my three sets. If I don't put
my foot down, that Leona woman will have me singing till I lose my voice. They
don't pay me enough to lose my voice."
"They won't pay you at all if you don't give them satisfaction."
"Show's what you know, clod. I'm an artiste. I get paid in advance.
Now, which way do you think our lady's heading?"
Akabar scowled. He wondered if it were really true that someone as
supposedly wise as Dimswart had paid Ruskettle in advance, yet it seemed
impossible that the woman would leave without what was owed her—and not just to
help Alias. Akabar remembered the way she'd smoothed her pockets after crawling
from under the tent. Even if she hasn't been paid, he realized, she's already
picked up her share of the wedding loot.
Akabar's fists clenched in frustration, but there was nothing he could do.
"We are going to look for her in Suzail. It's only a half day from here,
and she knows the city."
"Ah, Suzail, gem of Cormyr, home of his most serene and wise
marshmallowness, Azoun IV. Think she's going after the king after practicing on
that Wyvernspur buffoon?"
Akabar scowled. "Your disrespect for your own lawful king is
appalling."
Olive laughed. "Down south your leaders behead people for that sort of
talk, don't they? We halflings have a saying: If you take your leaders too
seriously, they're going to start taking themselves too seriously. Azoun's all
right, for a human. But he is a marshmallow. He let his pet wizard keep him at
court today, didn't he?"
"Perhaps the mage Vangerdahast had some idea of the danger there,"
Akabar said.
"Which leaves my original question. Do you think our madwoman's going
to try something foolish in Suzail?"
"I fail to see what interest you have in the matter."
"I already told you, I owe her. I pay my debts."
"With whose money, I wonder?"
The halfling gave the mage a sly smile, unruffled by his distrust. From what
Olive had seen, Alias did not rely on him for advice, and it was Alias who
interested her. The halfling had no doubt the attractive warrior and her
magical arm would lead to a fortune. And even if the swords-woman didn't, she
would make a good subject for a song.
As they traveled south, Akabar remained buried deep in his own thoughts,
trying to make up contingency plans should they discover Alias was not in
Suzail, or worse, that she was, as Olive had suggested, attempting to
assassinate King Azoun. Dragonbait loped along beside the pony High Roll, with
the bells from his jester's costume jangling. Olive chattered away to the
lizard about all the celebrations she'd played at. Akabar wished she
had
lost her voice singing.
At dusk, three hours later, Dragonbait suddenly stopped moving. He tilted
his head and placed his hand over his chest. Then, he moved on down the road
with more energy.
"Think he's picked up her scent?" the bard asked. Akabar studied
Dragonbait. "He senses something."
They arrived in Suzail shortly after dark. Without hesitation Dragonbait led
them right to The Hidden Lady and into the tavern room. Akabar wondered if the
lizard could sense Alias's presence, or if, like a dog, he simply expected her
to be there. Whatever the case, there she was.
She sat in a booth at the back. The hem of her blue gown was dirty and
tattered. Her legs were drawn up to her chest in a tight ball, and her head lay
on her knees. She was crooning a love song, explaining the tears of Selune—the
mysterious glittering shards that followed the moon's path. In all her travels,
the bard had heard neither the haunting lyrics nor the lovely melody, marred
somewhat by the swords-woman's sniffling and drunken timing.
A toppled mug oozed thick mead over the oak table in front of Alias. She
took no notice of the group as they approached—until Akabar's height blocked
out the light from the hanging lamp that illuminated her table. She stirred
herself and, with some effort, raised her head to look up at the trio. Her eyes
were rimmed with red.
"Go 'way," she croaked.
"Are you all right?" Akabar asked.
"It's a shame you had to leave," Ruskettle chirped up. "I
thought I might not survive the crush of people when the tent fell, but it was
all for the best. Imagine trying to sing to three hundred people in there. The
party got much better after we moved. Everyone said so."
Dragonbait looked at Alias with his head cocked, making a soft mewling
noise. The bells on his jester's hat jingled when he moved his head.
Again Alias told them, "Go away," but her voice was much softer.
The barkeep came to the booth. "Did you want company, lady?" he
asked protectively.
When Alias did not reply, the barkeep asked the others what they were
having.
Dragonbait pointed to the overturned mug of mead. Akabar ordered white wine.
"I'll have a Red Rum Swirl," Ruskettle said.
"Never met one," the barkeep answered.
"How 'bout a Dragon's Bite?" the bard asked.
"What's that when it's at home?" the barkeep asked.
"All right. A Yeti's Breath. You must know that one."
The barkeep shook his head.
The halfling sighed. "Rivengut then."
"Sorrv, all out. Don't get much call for it so's I don't order much of
it."
"I'll have a Black Boar then."
"I'll see what I can do."
Before the man could walk away, the southern mage took his arm gently and
whispered, "How many has she had?"
The barkeep held up two fingers.
"Two? Just two?" Akabar mouthed.
The bartender shrugged his shoulders, unable to explain Alias's
intoxication.
Akabar slid into the booth next to Olive. Dragonbait perched on the stool at
the end of the table. "Would you like another drink?" the mage asked
Alias.
"They can't make good liquor in this god-forsaken hellhole," said
the woman warrior, not raising her head.
"I'll say," agreed the halfling, "Imagine not knowing how to
make a Yeti's Breath. Now there's a drink with . .. um." Olive grew silent
under Akabar's glare.
Dragonbait reached over and placed his hand on Alias's shoulder. She tried
to shrug it off at first, but when the lizard gave a little worried chirp she
let the hand remain.
The barkeep brought their drinks and another mead for Alias.
"Perhaps a tray of food would be in order," Akabar suggested.
"Great idea," Olive agreed. "I'm starving. Would you like to
hear the ode to the couple?" she asked Alias. "Since you didn't get
to hear all of it before. They made me repeat it three times afterward.
Everyone was so impressed by it."
"Not now," Akabar answered quietly, elbowing the bard.
Ruskettle frowned and guzzled her drink. She set her glass back down on the
table and took a deep breath. "Hey! That wasn't a Black Boar.
Barkeep!"
"It happened again, just like the last time," Alias said softly,
her voice cracking on the final word. "I should have known it was coming.
I remember my arm hurt. I didn't want to lunge at that poor fool or grab that
knife, but I wasn't in control. It was like a nightmare. Then the tent fell. I
ducked out before anyone else and took off.
"I couldn't stop myself from running. Whatever was controlling me would
have made me run until I dropped, but I caught a ride into Suzail on a farmer's
wagon. When I remembered the information Dimswart had for me, I tried to jump
off and go back, but I couldn't move. It wasn't until twilight that I was free
to do as I choose. I came here. I didn't know where else to go." She put
her head down again on her knees, and her lean form shook with sobbing.
Dragonbait pulled the hair back from her face and tucked it behind her ear.
He stroked her head gently. Ruskettle waved her empty glass, trying to attract
the barkeep's attention, but finally settled for stealing Alias's untouched mug
of mead.
Akabar stared at the table until the warrior had calmed down. Then he asked,
"So, was it the sigils that made you drink yourself into a stupor?"
Alias's head snapped up, and she glared at the mage. "Listen, Turmite,
you don't know what it's like to not remember anything. To not know if you're
going to forget even more things. To not know who you're going to attack next.
First a priest, then a Corrnyrian noble—"
Olive, whose mind had been occupied with memorizing snatches of the song
Alias had been singing when they arrived, looked up suddenly, asking, "Did
you say a priest?"
"Didn't Akabar tell you?" Alias retorted icily. "I tried to
kill the priest who attempted to remove this curse. But it wasn't a curse, it's
a thing alive in me."
"The thing, not you, tried to kill the priest," Akabar corrected.
"What difference does it make? I can't get rid of it. It's not going to
let me go back to Dimswart to get the information he found for me. Gods! I'm
lucky it didn't make me kill Dimswart."
"Maybe this thing was keeping you from the scene of the crime, so to
speak," Akabar suggested. "Unless it can make you deaf, I hardly see
how it can prevent you from learning Dimswart's information."
"What?"
"I brought Dimswart's information."
Ruskettle's ears perked up, and the bells on Dragonbait's cap jingled again
as he tilted his head with interest.
"Well?" Alias prompted.
"First, I want you to promise me something."
"I don't have to promise you anything. This is my information. I earned
it."
"True. But who knows what might happen if you try to return to the
sage's manor to ask for it."
Alias snarled at the mage. "You desert snake—"
"All I want," Akabar interjected, "is for you to let me
accompany you on your quest to remove this thing."
"Are you crazy?" Alias hissed. "Don't I have enough trouble
without dragging my frien—complete strangers in on it."
"Who better to drag in it than frien—complete strangers?" Akabar
smiled, then he lifted his head proudly. "Besides, I still owe you a debt
of honor for helping me to recover my spell book."
Yes, Alias realized, even if he wasn't so anxious to prove he isn't a
greengrocer, he'd help me because he's the type who takes debts of honor
seriously. "I'm not exactly socially acceptable these days," Alias
pointed out weakly.
"As a rule, men of my nationality are not invited to many parties in
the north," Akabar replied with a shrug.
While Akabar was insinuating himself into Alias's quest, Olive was
frantically trying to make up her mind. People who tried to kill priests
weren't, as a rule, to be trusted, she argued with herself. But it would make
such a fascinating addition to the song. Better make it a lay. Or maybe even a
book.
The Magic Arm Chronicles, as told by Olive Ruskettle. All thoughts
of danger faded before the imaginary promise of gold and fame. Besides, Olive
told herself, I have to find out the rest of that song about the tears of
Selune.
"Hang on," the halfling interrupted. "If anyone owes this
swordswoman a debt of gratitude, it's me. She saved my life. If you take this
one along," Olive said to Alias, jerking her head toward Akabar,
"you're going to need someone to keep him out of trouble. A fast
thinker."
The corner of Alias's mouth twitched in amusement. She had no illusions
about Olive. Pure greed motivated her. Still, the halfling's debt was even
greater than Akabar's. It was likely she'd prove more hindrance than help, but
at least she was an experienced traveler.
"My journey may prove perilous," Alias warned, hoping to
discourage the small woman.
Olive shrugged. "As the halflings in Luiren say, 'From perils come
pearls and power.' I've seen my share of danger"
"And more than your share of pearls, I'll warrant," Akabar
muttered under his breath.
Alias looked at Dragonbait. "I don't suppose you'll be leaving my side
either."
The lizard tilted his head with a jingle.
Something inside Alias's chest grabbed her heart. She had an uncomfortable
suspicion the lizard wouldn't know what to do if he wasn't serving her.
Alias sighed. "All right. You can help, but remember—I tried to talk
you out of it." She turned to Akabar. "Now what did Dimswart tell
you?"
The mage pulled a small package from a pocket. He unknotted the yellow cord
that bound it and flipped away its leather wrapping. Within lay five copper
plates.
"Flaming dagger," said the mage, laying the first plate on the
table. A flaming dagger sigil was etched into the soft metal surface, and
beneath it in neat, delicate letters of Thorass, was a paragraph of
explanation. "Interlocking rings, mouth in a palm, three concentric
circles, and a squiggle that looks like an insect leg." Akabar laid down a
corresponding copper with each description. "Which would you like me to
cover first?" he asked Alias.
Alias pointed to the plate with the flaming dagger. "The assassins who
attacked me carried a card with this design."
Nodding, Akabar stacked the five plates together with the dagger on top.
"The symbol is derived from a Talis deck. In Turmish, we use the suit of
birds, but here in the north it has been converted to the suit of daggers. In
either case, the suit represents money and theft of the same. The symbol was
adopted by a small group of thieves and assassins in Westgate that calls itself
the Redeemer's Guild, but the group is more commonly known as the Fire
Knives—from its calling card.
"The Fire Knives are not native to Westgate, but came originally from
Cormyr where they ran a very profitable operation. Until, that is, they
incurred the wrath of His Royal Majesty, Azoun IV. He broke their charter,
executed their leaders, and sent the rest packing across the Lake of Dragons.
They set up shop anew in Westgate, with the permission of the local crime
lords, the Night Masks. Naturally, they have no love for Cormyr, its king, or
its people."
"Do any of them carry their symbol as a brand or tattoo?" Alias
asked.
Akabar shook his head. "It has never been reported that they do. Of
course, your attack on someone who sounded just like King Azoun was the sort of
thing they desire. Somehow, they might have ensorceled you to do so."
"Then why did they attack me the other night?"
"Perhaps they thought you discovered their plan and would warn His
Majesty," the halfling guessed.
"No," Alias said. "I had no idea I was going to do something
like I did. Besides, they went to a lot of trouble to capture, not kill
me."
"Perhaps they were planning on delivering you to the king's
court," Akabar mused. "You know, Azoun might have come to the
wedding. His mage, Vangerdahast, advised him against it. At least, that was the
rumor I heard."
"It's just coincidence that I ended up at Dimswart's," Alias
replied.
Akabar shrugged. "Perhaps. But if Azoun had attended—"
"I'd have tried to kill him instead of that fool Wyvernspur."
"Not a chance," Olive said. "Vangerdahast goes everywhere
with His Marshmallowness. He would have fried you with a lightning bolt before
you got within an arm's length."
"I don't think this conjecture will get us very far," Akabar said,
confused. "Shall I continue with the other sigils?"
Alias nodded, and Akabar held up the card bearing the sign of three rings,
each interlocked with the other two. "The trinity of rings is pretty
common as well. It was used by several trading houses about the Inner Sea until
the Year of Dust, over two centuries ago, when it was taken up as a banner by a
pirate gang in Earthspur. After a few years new pirate leaders toppled the old
and adopted a new banner.
"Since then the circles have been used as a signature mark for a notable
Cormyrian portrait artist, as a stamp for a Procampurian silversmith, and the
sign of an alehouse in Yhaunn in Sembia. The alehouse, by the way, was
fireballed fifty years ago by a wizard because their symbol happened to be his
sigil. He claimed the exclusive right to use it. He was a pompous northerner
known as Zrie Prakis."
"I knew some fell wizard had to be involved," muttered Alias.
Akabar held up a finger to continue. "Prakis protected his mark
religiously, seeking out any others who used it and destroying those who would
not give it up. It's a mark of his success that the symbol is now considered
unlucky among many taverns, silversmiths, and artists. However, Zrie Prakis was
supposed to have died in a magical battle some forty years ago, somewhere near
Westgate."
"Someone must have made a mistake," Olive pointed out. "After
all, when two mages are fighting, no one in their right mind gets close enough
to tell who's winning. This was the symbol on the crystal elemental that
attacked us in the Stone circle, isn't it?"
Alias nodded, remembering how the sigil had blazed from the monster's chest.
"Anyway," Akabar concluded, "Master Dimswart got a cleric to
do a divination for him. The exact question was: Does Zrie Prakis, whose symbol
was the triple rings, still live? The answer was: No."
"Well, I'm not a work of art or a silver dinner service," Alias
said. "That leaves me branded by a defunct pirate gang or an alehouse.
Neither very likely candidates."
Akabar, though tempted, did not disagree with her about the alehouse. He
held up the next copper plate engraved with the insect leg-shaped squiggle.
"The sorceress who destroyed Zrie Prakis was named Cassana of Westgate.
This happens to be her sigil. To the best of Dimswart's knowledge, Cassana still
makes her abode in Westgate. She's reputed to be fairly powerful, but she's
extremely reclusive. No one's seen her for years. She's not dead, but she must
be getting on in years."
"Maybe this Prakis fellow had an apprentice," Olive suggested.
"The apprentice is greedy for power, see, and he teams up with his
master's enemy, this Cassana, and tells her how to defeat him. Then, when
Cassana kills Prakis, the apprentice takes his master's sigil."
Akabar's eyes narrowed into slits. "Your expertise on the workings of
betrayal is quite interesting."
Olive smiled sweetly. "Over the years I've made a study of all the evil
you humans perpetrate on one another."
Alias's head began to throb. Anxious to get this discussion over with, she
pulled out the next copper plate, but the writing blurred before her eyes. She
held the plate up to Akabar. "What about this mouth in the hand?" she
asked.
"Dimswart found this most curious," answered the mage, running his
fingers along the engraved fangs in the mouth. "This is a holy symbol—or
the unholy symbol, rather—of a cult that has been dead for a thousand years or
more. They worshipped Moander the Darkbringer. He, she, or it—the texts keep
changing the pronoun over time—had a huge temple complex in the days of Myth
Drannor, the elven kingdom, and was a continual menace to the forest peoples.
Eventually, the elves burned the complex to the ground, slaying all its priests
and banishing the god-thing from the Realms.
"The town of Yulash was built on the site of the complex, but Yulash
has itself long since been turned to rubble. Hillsfar and Zhentil Keep are
continually battling over its strategic location. Dimswart gave me the name of
another sage who may know more, but he warned me that getting an appointment
with this person may prove to be a problem"
Alias held up the last copper plate. The blue upon blue bull's-eye was
represented on sheet metal by three concentric rings, its deepening shades of
color not represented at all, but described in the upper right hand corner. Nothing
was written below the sigil. Alias looked up at Akabar, her eyebrows raised.
The mage shifted nervously. "Dimswart has seen naught like this in his
travels or his books. He thinks it's something new, perhaps an up-and-coming
power. Note that the two magic-user's sigils are grouped together, but this
sigil follows the marking of a dead and banished god."
"So Dimswart thinks it may be another cult," said Alias. She
picked up her now empty mug and stared into it. The halfling studied the
ceiling beams.
"Actually, that was my own observation," Akabar replied.
"Balancing the sigils seemed logical to me, but . . ."
"But we may not be dealing with balanced or logical people," Alias
concluded for him.
Akabar nodded. "The evidence that the Fire Knives are involved is
pretty incontrovertible. The attack of the summoned earth elemental would seem
to indicate that some mage is definitely at work here as well. The pattern
circling the symbols is common throughout nations of the Inner Sea, symbolizing
unions or contracts. Ivy and rose vines are generally used for weddings,
dragons for royal charters ..."
"Serpents for evil pacts," Alias added in reference to the
serpentine pattern that wound around the runes on her arm.
"What about the sixth party?" Olive asked.
"What sixth party?" Akabar demanded.
Alias held out her arm, wondering herself what Olive was talking about.
The bard pointed to the swordswoman's wrist, where the serpentine pattern
that linked the five sigils wound about an empty space.
"There's nothing there, you fool," Akabar snorted.
"Not yet, there isn't," Olive said. "Maybe Alias escaped
before they got around to adding it, or maybe they're waiting for a sixth
member to pay up their dues. Maybe a sigil's going to grow there."
Alias shivered and curled her arms back around her knees.
Akabar tried giving the bard a kick on the ankle to shut her up, but the
little woman's feet swung too far off the floor for him to reach.
"As much as I'd hate to slander a patron," Olive continued,
"I think you need better advice than Dimswart's given you."
Alias was inclined to agree. "Where'd this other sage live, the one
Dimswart recommended?" she asked Akabar.
"Shadowdale. That's rather far off though," the mage pointed out.
"It would be simpler to investigate Westgate first."
The barkeep came to their table and wordlessly unloaded a platter of
sandwiches and fresh drinks.
"Shadowdale is on the way to Yulash," Alias said.
"But it makes more sense to head for Westgate," Akabar argued.
"The Fire—" he looked up at the barkeep "—two of the five guilty
parties work out of Westgate. Another one died there." He smiled at the
barkeep. "Thank you. That should do nicely for some time," he said,
dismissing the man. "We can reach Westgate by ship in two or three days.
If we can discover nothing there, then a trek to the north would make more
sense."
Alias remained silent, feeling nauseated at the sight of food. With a last
paternal glance toward the swordswoman, the barkeep left the table and returned
to his other duties.
Olive picked up the five copper plates and began idly shuffling them. Her
little hands moved the pieces with amazing dexterity.
Annoyed, Akabar reached over and lifted the sigil engravings from the
halfling's palm. He rewrapped and tied them and handed the bundle to Alias.
"So, shall I arrange passage for the morning?"
"I'm almost positive I came to Suzail by boat," she mused.
"By ship," Akabar corrected.
"Couldn't we travel to High Horn and circle around the Lake of
Dragons?" Olive suggested. "The roads to Westgate are pretty
good."
Akabar remembered the little woman had claimed to dislike sea journeys.
"We're going to Yulash," Alias said quietly.
"What?" both the bard and the mage demanded in unison.
"Suppose I came to Suzail from Westgate," Alias whispered,
"fleeing from whoever did this to me—the Fire Knives or this Cassana
person. Instinct tells me to avoid Westgate. I don't know why—1 can't remember.
Maybe I was there and tried taking care of someone else the Fire Knives don't care
for—then I could be wanted by the law, as well as by the underworld. Besides, I
don't want to take on two enemies at once. I've already waltzed into one
dragon's lair this month. I don't intend to do it again for at least another
year. In Yulash, as far as we know, I have only one enemy. Also, this master
sage you mentioned is on the road to Yulash. We may get more information from
him."
"But the temple in Yulash is destroyed," Akabar objected.
"Yulash is in the hands of the Zhentarim, and they're not. . . decent
people. It is too dangerous."
Alias frowned. "Look, Akash, whose quest is this, anyway? You want to
accompany me, you can come with me to Yulash. If you're afraid, you can go to
Westgate without me, or better yet, just go home and forget about me."
Akabar colored. Whether he was more angry that Alias would not take his sage
counsel or embarrassed that his honor and courage had been called into
question, Olive could not tell for sure. She chimed in, "If this sage in
Shadowdale can help, we may not even have to go to Yulash."
Alias turned to glare at the halfling. "I'm going to Yulash," she
hissed. "I leave in the morning!" With that, she rose from the table,
staggered two feet, and passed out on the wooden floor.
"Better make that late morning," Akabar sighed. He rose to settle
accounts with the barkeep while Dragonbait and Ruskettle hauled the fallen
warrior to her room.
9
Trek Through Cormyr
It was almost noon when the party left Suzail. Akabar had spent the morning
purchasing supplies. His was the easy job.
Olive and Dragonbait had the dubious honor of tumbling Alias out of bed so
she could lead them to Yulash. The swordswoman cursed them both feebly. When
they finally got her to sit, she threw up. Finally, they got her cleaned up and
dressed. She moaned all the while and wept some, too.
"To hear her complain," Olive sniffed, "you'd think she was a
fifteen-year-old debutante suffering from her first drunk. Is she always like
this?" she asked Dragonbait.
The lizard made no sound or gesture in reply.
The halfling looked about the room for another bottle of liquor. According
to the barkeep, the swordswoman had had only two mugs of mead. Granted, it was
good, potent stuff and the barkeep's mugs were a generous size, but that
couldn't possibly be enough to leave a seasoned warrior so incapacitated, Olive
decided. Yet, there was no sign of alcohol in any of Alias's belongings.
Olive remembered her aunt who would go into a crying jag after a single
glass of wine. It wasn't the booze, her mother had explained to her, it was the
feeling in her heart when she drank. The halfling wondered how anyone could be
so depressed. Alias had her health, gold in her purse, she wasn't love-struck
over anyone, and this afternoon she'd he three steps ahead of the law on open
road. Who could ask for more? Humans! Go figure. Olive sighed and ran a coo!,
damp rag about Alias's face.
By the time a scowling Alias stumbled out of the inn, her hood up to shade
her eyes against the bright sunlight, Akabar was waiting with the party's
horses and pony saddled and packed.
If Alias had any appreciation for Akabar's efforts and skills as a
quartermaster, she didn't bother to note it aloud. "I have to make a stop
somewhere," she whispered, nudging Lady Killer into motion. The others
followed her to the Towers of Good Fortune.
"Wait here," she ordered. The mage and the halfling remained
mounted as she entered the temple to Tymora. Dragonbait scratched Lightning's
muzzle thoughtfully.
Alias kept her hood up even in the dim light of the church. There were three
priests and about twenty people seated in the congregation hall, some
whispering, others praying silently. She knew it was unlikely Winefiddle had
returned so soon from Dimswart's, but she really didn't want to run into him in
case he had.
So she stood near the doorway, studying the carving of Lady Luck in front of
the altar. The image of Tymora had short hair, tousled like Alias's. The
goddess's figure was more boyish, but no more muscled than the swordswoman's.
The sideways shift of her eyes and the half-grin gave her a crafty look Alias
had noted a few times on Olive's face. Halflings, she remembered, worshipped an
image of Tymora that resembled a halfling female. Alias tried to remember the
last time she'd grinned that way.
All I've had lately, she thought, is bad luck. I don't even believe in luck.
What am I doing here? At her elbow was the poor box where she was supposed to
have left the green gem the night Winefiddle had tried to remove the runes on
her arm, the night she'd try to kill him.
Personally, she addressed the goddess in her thoughts. If someone tried to
kill one of my priests and then cheated me out of what they owed me and then
came back and tried to make it up to me by paying me even more, I don't think
I'd feel any better disposed toward them.
From her purse she drew out the opal Olive had liberated from Mist's lair.
The huge gem felt warm and smooth in her palm. She dropped it into the poor
box. Just in case you aren't like me, she thought. She turned about and left
the temple.
Alias just didn't have the energy to lay a false trail out of the city. She
led her party through the east gate which led directly to the road north. She
rode along without a sound
Wracking his brain for something to say that might make her feel even a tiny
bit better, Akabar came up with, "I had noticed, as regards liquid
refreshment, that the emphasis north of the Inner Sea is on strength as opposed
to flavor. It is no doubt a common thing for a person to be caught unawares by
the power of the beverages served here—"
The mage soon regretted having said anything. Alias made no reply, but, even
worse, the bard launched into a defense of the drinks of the northern Realms.
Her comparison of a Delayed Blast with a Flaming Gullet did nothing to disprove
Akabar's original point, and only served to turn the swordswoman a more
distressing shade of green.
Akabar remained as quiet as Alias after that, but Olive continued chattering
to Dragonbait for some time. When she got tired of talking to the mute creature,
she sang. She was on the thirteenth verse of her fifth ballad when Alias
finally spoke,
"Olive, please, try to show some consideration for the dying," the
warrior whispered.
"Oh. I'm sorry, Alias. Are you still feeling poorly?"
"I meant you."
"But, I feel fine," the halfling replied in confusion.
"If you don't shut up, I'm going to have to kill you. Then you won't
feel fine at all."
The bard gulped and remained silent for about half a mile. Finally, though,
she dropped back some ways from the party so she could continue humming softly
without incurring the swordswoman's wrath. Dragonbait slowed down to join her,
perhaps out of pity, though Akabar suspected the lizard really was a music
lover.
"Cheerful people are so depressing," Alias muttered.
The mage smiled, and they rode on in silence.
After a good night's rest at an inn in Hilp, Alias seemed fully recovered.
As they progressed northward, Alias kept a watchful eye on Dragonbait, who
loped along beside the horses. She'd admonished him to let her know if they
went too fast. The lizard had responded by running around the horses with a
curious bouncing gait and then turning three cartwheels.
Alias even tolerated the halfling's prattle and went so far as to try
teaching the bard a ballad she claimed to have learned from a Harper.
"Not a Harper!" Olive gasped, obviously impressed.
Alias nodded.
"I don't understand," Akabar said. "What is so special about
playing the harp?"
Olive shook her head and sighed.
"Up north," Alias explained, "one who plays the harp is a
harpist. A Harper is something rather different."
"What then?" the mage asked.
"Well, they're usually bards or rangers, though sometimes they ask
other adventurers to join them. They ..." Alias hesitated. It would sound
so banal to say it aloud. "They work for good things," she answered
quickly and then launched into the ballad for Olive.
Akabar mused over Alias's words. He now recalled having heard a story or two
about these Harper people, but he had not paid much attention. They were
supposed to be a mysterious, powerful bunch, but Alias's reaction interested
him more. The woman had seemed flustered when giving her explanation.
He listened now to her singing. Her voice was better than the bard's. It had
a clear, lilting quality. The song she sang was better than any of Olive's,
too. Like the song she'd sung about the tears of Selune, two nights ago in The
Hidden Lady, the lyrics were haunting. They told of the Fall of Myth Drannor,
the splendid elven city, now a ruin in the woods.
The song caused Akabar to begin speculating on Alias's lost past. Only now
his speculations were even wilder than Olive's had been. Suppose she was more
than just a mercenary. Certainly evil things were after her. Had she, to put it
in her own words, "worked for good things" so well that she was
considered a threat? Had she been enchanted with those fell runes on her arm so
that she would do some evil and thereby destroy her reputation?
"You know," Olive said after she'd managed to pluck out the melody
to Alias's song on her yarting, "I've often wondered how one gets to be a
Harper. Do you volunteer for a position, or do you have to be asked?"
Alias shrugged. "I've no idea." Inwardly she smiled, trying to
picture the powerful and righteous Harpers accepting the help of a greedy,
arrogant pickpocket of a halfling with pretensions to bardhood. Alias felt too
good at the moment however, to destroy Olive's grandiose illusions.
They skirted the countryside about the city of Immersea. ancestral home of
the Wyvernspurs, and made camp at dusk beside the road. Rain drizzled the
entire next day, and they traveled mostly in silence.
They reached Arabel by nightfall. The inns were crowded with merchants and
adventurers all taking advantage of the city's shelter. Alias's group had to
settle for a remote inn by the city wall, but they were grateful to have
shelter from the rain.
Alias found the noise and light and driving rain strangely comforting. The
violence of the elements made her own inner turmoil seem mild in comparison.
Her rage at being branded and used faded somewhat, humbled by the anger of the
sky.
The next morning dawned bright and clear.
"I estimate it will take us two rides to reach Vulash," Alias said
before they set out.
"Not possible," Akabar disagreed. "The distance is much
greater than that."
"Two rides if the weather holds good and no disasters hit us."
"It will take at least twenty days," Akabar said.
"Isn't that what I just said?" Alias snapped.
"Not at all. You said it would be only two rides. An impossibility,
even for a very strong horse."
Olive started giggling. "He thinks you mean a ride, not a ride."
"Huh?" both mage and warrior asked at once.
"A ride up north," Olive explained to Akabar, "is ten days."
"No man can ride for more than two or three days without becoming
exhausted," Akabar insisted.
"Forget it," Alias said. "Twenty days. We're going to spend
the next six camping at night. I don't want to risk any trouble from the
soldiers at Castle Crag, the north Cormyrian outpost," she explained to
Akabar. "We'll skirt around it."
She outlined the rest of their route as they traveled. Once through Gnoll
Pass, she planned to leave the main road, which detoured east through Tilverton
and, instead, travel along a ranger's path, which led straight through the
Stonelands to Shadow Gap. Olive was indignant at missing the sights of
Tilverton, which boasted an inn of some renown, but Alias was adamant.
Olive sulked quietly, which was more nerve-racking than her constant
chatter. Finally, Alias began describing the North Gate Inn, which lay at the
top of Shadow Gap. She painted so rosy a picture that Olive began to look
forward to seeing the mountain resort.
The pattern of the next several days—riding, setting up camp, dinner
(prepared with surprising skill by Akabar), breaking camp—repeated over and
over, restored Alias's confidence. This was the life she knew best—although a
few saddlesores and aching muscles told her that she'd spent a lot of the time
lost to her memory taking things too easy. Singing songs with Olive on
horseback by day and lying beneath the stars at night gave Alias a feeling of
contentment that had too long been missing. The sigils on her arms retreated in
importance, becoming no more a threat to her and those around her than mosquito
bites.
Stranger still, the farther north and away from the shores of the Inner Sea
they traveled, the more cheerful Alias began to feel. Akabar was sorry to leave
the green woods and fields of Cormyr, but the winds whipping across the stony
soil of the vast plain north of the Storm Horns delighted Alias. She would face
into the wind and smile, as though it blew away all her miseries. Despite the
fact that they had to veer off the trail or cower in undergrowth occasionally
to avoid parties of ores and goblins, the warrior grew steadily calmer.
Alias's new tranquility even prompted her one evening to apologize to Akabar
as they stood watch together. She'd begun to feel guilty about the way she'd
shamed him into following her north.
Akabar, too proud to show himself offended by so small a thing, shrugged off
her apology, but Alias persisted in tryine to explain her reasoning.
"I know you're a wise man," she said, waving aside the pro. tests
his modesty compelled him to make. "Fools don't get to be mages, and all
your reasons for going to Westgate were good ones. But when you've been an
adventurer for as long as I have, you begin to think with your gut. I had a gut
feeling that Westgate was a mistake. Poking around in Yulash feels more like
the right thing to do."
Akabar didn't know what to say. He was afraid to spoil her newfound peace of
mind by speaking his own. Secretly, he was afraid the sigils were maneuvering
the swordswoman toward Yulash. Once the site of a temple to great evil, it
remained a place of unquestionable danger.
"You've also been very kind, helping me through a bad time and
accompanying me. I've never led a party before. Usually, I traveled with bands
who debated and voted on their plans. Anyway, I just wanted you to know that I
didn't take your advice lightly, and I won't in the future, should you, well,
give me any more."
Her sincerity left Akabar speechless for several moments Finally, he managed
to say, "You honor me with your trust.
It was a ritual Turmish saying. Strangely enough, Alias knew the proper
reply. "Your honor is my own."
They were silent for a while, until Akabar could no longer resist his
curiosity. "Do you remember ever having visited Turmish?" he asked.
Alias shook her head. "No, I don't remember."
The next evening, their fifth out of Arabel, they camped at the base of the
foothills of Shadow Gap, the high pass between the southern extension of the
Desertsmouth Mountains.
10
Giogioni Wyvernspur
Giogioni Wyvernspur, sitting in the muddy road, cursed his bad luck. After
all the misfortunes that befell me at Cousin Freffie's wedding, he complained
to himself, you'd think it was time for a little sunshine to fall into my life.
But no. I've got a cloud of Tymora's blackest luck following me.
"Daisyeye, come back here!" he shouted as he picked himself off
the ground and tried, as best he could, to brush the wet mud from his velvet
britches. "That's the problem with really good horses—they spook so damned
easily."
The mare that had thrown him was now out of sight, having galloped around a
bend in the country road.
"If it isn't one thing, it's another," Giogi muttered. He began to
relate his adventure aloud, rehearsing it for his chums. "First I made a
fool of myself at Minda's behest and did that silly imitation of Azoun. This
caused the bard's lovely but quite mad sell-sword to attack me with a cake
knife. Then Darol seized the opportunity to make himself look like a hero in
front of Minda and got himself slashed across the face. Minda positively
swooned with admiration when she saw his scar, and she gave the scurrilous cove
permission to accompany her carriage to Suzail.
"Naturally, I considered I might play up to Minda's sympathies as well.
After all, I was the one the lady in blue tried to assassinate. I'm not
completely witless. I knew this was not a good time to visit court. Aunt Doroth
is a horrible gossip and just a little too palsy with His Majesty's pet wizard,
Vangerdahast. And if Aunt Doroth doesn't let the whole sordid affair leak out,
you can bet Darol will find a way to let His Majesty know all about my
remarkable impersonation.
"So while everyone is riding off to the capitol, I'm forced to travel
back to Immersea, all alone, on horseback. Though I must say that Dimswart
fellow was quite decent, putting me up for an extra two days until I recovered from
my shock. I left early in the morning, traveling up the road to Waymoot. I was
thanking Chauntea for the nice weather when Daisyeye reared up on her hind
quarters and galloped up the road, leaving me in the mud."
Suddenly realizing that if he didn't catch Daisyeye in a hurry he'd never
reach Waymoot by nightfall and would be forced to stay in some roadside inn, or
worse, a farmer's bed, Giogi set off after his mount. He hummed what he called
"that catchy little number" written by that Ruskettle woman for
Freffie and Gaylyn. Rounding the curve in the road, he noticed a clicking
noise.
"Is that you, Daisyeye? You naughty girl. Whatever possessed you to run
off like—" Giogioni halted in his tracks, his words constricting in his
throat. Very cautiously, he took a step backward, then another.
"Just where do you think you're going?" an imperious voice
demanded.
The young Wyvernspur froze, unable to answer the red dragon who had
addressed him. Quite aside from the shock of discovering poor Daisyeye serving as
the red dragon's entree—quite a shock since there was blood oozing all over the
cobblestone, and Daisyeye's eyes remained open in death as though accusing him
of something—he couldn't get over the size of the monster. A single one of its
paws could block traffic along the road, and Daisyeye looked like a chicken leg
next to the beast's maw.
"Well?" the dragon asked.
"I-I-I—"
"Oh dear, a stutterer," the dragon sighed. "Try to relax. The
words will come out more easily."
"—don't want to disturb your meal. I'll just be moving on. Don't mind
me," Giogioni gasped.
The dragon swished its big russet tail around so that the scaly appendage
made a curl about Giogioni, blocking all avenues of escape. "You've been
so kind to provide me with lunch," the monster said, swallowing another
gobbet of Daisyeye's haunch, "the least I can do is offer you a
lift."
"Oh, that's very kind, but I wouldn't want to trouble you any."
Giogioni took another step backward.
"Freeze!" the dragon ordered.
Giogioni froze.
"What's your name?"
"Giogioni Wyvernspur. Ah, everyone calls me Giogi."
"How quaint." The dragon sliced off the straps to Daisyeye's
saddle with a single claw and shoved it over to Giogioni's feet. "Have a
seat."
Giogioni collapsed onto the saddle, feeling a little green. I never realized
that such a pretty horse could look so awful with her middle slit open, he
thought, reaching down into his saddlebag and pulling out the flask of Rivengut
he always kept there. Thank Oghma, he prayed silently, it was more than half
full.
"D-d-do you mind if I pour myself a drink?" he asked the dragon.
"Be my guest."
Giogioni took a long, hard pull on the flask of liquor. "If I might
ask, what shall I call you?"
"Mist."
"Is that all?"
"That's all," the beast snapped and went back to rasping her
tongue along Daisyeye's ribs.
Giogioni took another swig of Rivengut. If he was going to be dessert, he
decided, he didn't want to feel it. He wondered idly if he would be served en
flambe,
so to speak.
"I heard you singing," Mist said when there was nothing left of
Daisyeye but shattered bones. "Catchy little tune."
"Yes, something composed by that new bard, Olive Rus- oh, gods!"
The man gulped. "You're
that Mist."
Suspicious, Mist cocked an eybrow and asked, "Just what did Mistress
Ruskettle have to say about me?"
"Nothing, nothing. Er—just that she was your prison— uh—guest."
"She still traveling with that tramp, Alias of Westgate?"
"The red-headed sword-sell, er, I mean, sell-sword? Maybe. If she could
find—um, I have no idea."
Mist grinned from ear to ear—not an attractive sight with parts of Daisyeye
still caught between her teeth. She rested a claw on Giogioni's shoulder.
"We musn't have any secrets, my dear boy."
"I don't know, really I don't. She went a little crazy at the wedding,
this Alias person, that is, and then she ran off."
"Which way did Ruskettle go?" Mist asked.
Giogioni gulped. Only a cad would betray that cute little bard. He was
determined not to be a cad.
A little steam escaped from Mist's nostrils, but enough Wyvernspur blood—and
Rivengut—pumped through Giogioni's veins to give him the courage to keep
silent.
"Very well," the dragon sighed. "If that's the way it has to
be." She slipped a claw through the back of the man's shirt and lifted him
from the ground.
"Oh, gods!" he gasped, sure he was about to follow Daisyeye into
heaven. Instead of swallowing him, though, the dragon lifted him up, beat her
massive wings, and took off from the ground.
Mist spiralled up over the Cormyrian countryside. When she reached a
cruising altitude of one thousand feet she barked, "Look down,
Giogi."
"No, please! I'm not very good with heights."
"You'll be an expert on them in a moment, for all of eight seconds—at
which time you'll hit the ground rather hard— unless you tell me which way
Ruskettle went."
"Suzail!" Giogioni gasped. "She headed toward Suzail! On a
small pony named High Roll."
"Such a nice boy. I knew we could come to an understanding. Now, I need
a message taken to King Azoun."
"Oh. I'd be happy to, but there's just a teensy problem. You see, at
the moment, I'm not very welcome in court. I wouldn't be the best person to
represent your interests."
"That's too bad, Giogi," Mist said. "If you can't help me
out, I don't have any more use for you, and if I don't have any more use for
you, I may as well just drop you here."
"No! No. I'll do it. Anything. Just don't drop me, please!"
Mist smiled, and dove toward the earth.
*****
Azoun IV focused his telescope at a point west of the city walls, on the
Fields of the Dead. "What cheek," he muttered. The dragon, Mist, had
taken up a post on Suzail's burial ground, outside the gates of the city, but
near enough to be seen by any of the populace who cared to swarm on top of the
walls. And swarm they did, too intrigued by the preening wild beast to fear for
their lives. No work would get done in the city until the monster left.
"If only we still had the Seventh Division in the city," His
Majesty sighed.
Vangerdahast spoke from the doorway, where he awaited reports from his own
network of spies. "I assure you, Your Highness, that Tilverton's need of
them was greater than our own. Besides, Lord Giogioni said that she would fly
off only if attacked, and then her offer will be rescinded."
"It would have to be a sudden, single deathblow. I don't suppose any
foolhardy adventurers have come forward, offering their services?" Azoun
turned from the window to address his court wizard.
Vangerdahast shook his head. "The wyrm has chosen her ground too well.
There is no cover for a sneak attack, and she will leave before sunset, so we
cannot use the darkness to any advantage. Mist is too wise to fly over the city
and set off the magical wards protecting it."
"Well, I don't like this. Dealing with a creature like that goes
against my grain."
"Her offer is quite generous, Your Highness, if she keeps her word and
departs the area forever. In addition to making the merchant caravan routes
safe again, there are livestock and Your Highness's own hunting grounds to
consider, both of which Mist has seriously depleted of late."
"I can't believe I'm hearing this from you, Vangy. Naturally I'd expect
the merchants to jump at the chance of ridding us of the dragon at the price of
a human sacrifice. I, however, must consider the safety of all my people, even
some poor, little adventuress."
"This Alias claimed to be from Westgate, Your Highness,"
Vangerdahast said, already putting her in the past tense.
"Even worse. How would it look to the outside world, foreign traders
and travelers, if I simply turned over one of their own just to rid my realm of
a dragon?"
"If it please Your Highness, there is something more you should know
about this poor, little adventuress. Something to indicate a more sinister
nature."
Azoun tapped his foot impatiently. "Well?"
"Perhaps you should hear it from a firsthand witness: Vangerdahast
suggested, nodding toward the young man who stood in a corner, working hard at
steadying his nerves with large snifters of brandy.
"Giogioni!" Azoun snapped. "What do you know about this Alias
of Westgate?"
"Me?" Giogioni squeaked, turning toward Azoun.
"You," the wizard insisted. "It would be best if His Highness
heard it in your own words,"
"I suppose so," Giogioni whispered, though he didn't suppose so at
all.
"Spit it out, boy," Azoun ordered.
"She was at the wedding, Freffie's, uh, Lord Frefford's. She attacked
me. Tried to kill me. Would have succeeded, too, if the crowd hadn't gotten in
her way."
"What was this lady killer doing at the wedding of Lord Frefford and
Sage Dimswart's daughter?" Azoun asked.
"Dimswart said he was doing some research for her because she was under
some curse," Giogioni blurted.
"Dimswart would have to come up with an excuse," Vangerdahast
said.
Azoun wrinkled his brow in confusion. "Why would this woman try to kill
you?"
"She thought I was you," Giogioni answered with a gulp
"What nonsense. You don't look anything like me."
"No, Your Highness," Giogioni agreed.
"He does, however, do a remarkable impression of Your Highness's
voice," Vangerdahast explained.
"He does? You do?"
Giogioni nodded weakly.
"Well, let's hear it," Azoun said.
Giogioni's jaw dropped, and his face went pale.
"Come on, boy," Azoun prompted him.
"If you please, Your Highness," the Wyvernspur nobleman gulped,
"I would rather n—"
"That's an order!"
Giogioni gulped. "M-m-my Cormytes," he began. "My people, as
your king, as King Azoun, and as King Azoun IV, I must say that the need to
raise your taxes is a result of the depravations of-of-of th-this
d-dragon."
"I don't sound like that," Azoun said, scowling.
"With respect. Your Highness," Vangerdahast intervened, "you
do."
"I don't stutter like that," Azoun objected.
"No, Your Highness. Lord Giogioni's stutter is a consequence of the
shock he's had. Ordinarily, his impression of you would be much better.
Apparently, he was giving a performance at the wedding when he was
attacked."
"But he still doesn't look like me."
"No, but perhaps this Alias woman thought you were in disguise. You
have been known to travel incognito. Any good assassin would know that.
If she did indeed come from Westgate, there can be little question exactly who
sent her."
"No," Azoun agreed, remembering the numerous threats made by the
Fire Knives when he banished them from his kingdom. Their new headquarters was
in Westgate.
There was a knock on the tower room door, and Vangerdahast left to answer
it.
Azoun looked at Giogioni, who swayed slightly. Wyvernspur blood must be
getting thin for one little dragon to upset him so, the king thought.
"Better sit down, boy," he said kindly. "Not there, that's my
chair," Azoun corrected him before the young man sank onto His Majesty's
own royal, purple cushion.
Vangerdahast returned to the conference table. In his wake was a portly,
balding man in a tavernkeeper's apron.
"Who's this?" Azoun asked.
The man bowed his head. "Phocius Green, Your Highness. Owner of the inn
and tavern The Hidden Lady."
Azoun shot a questioning glance over the barkeep's head to Vangerdahast.
"The woman Alias stayed several evenings in The Hidden Lady," the
wizard explained.
"Oh. You came to tell us about her?" Azoun asked the bar-keep.
"Begging Your Majesty's pardon, but I was summoned."
"Oh?" Azoun looked surprised.
Vangerdahast explained further. "Since I have been unable to track this
Alias woman by magical means, a suspicious circumstance in and of itself, I
summoned Goodman Green here. I knew the woman had stayed at his inn, because
one of Your Majesty's citizens reported her last week to the town guard.
Apparently, he thought she was a Rashemen witch."
"Mitcher Trollslayer," the barkeep muttered.
"What made the man think that?" Azoun asked.
"She was branded with a bizarre tattoo," the wizard explained.
"A member of the Council of Mages went to the inn to register her, but the
woman was unconscious, so the councilman let her be."
"Please, Your Highness," the barkeep interrupted. "She was no
witch, just a sell-sword. She came in with so much iron on her she wouldn't've
been able to cast a light even if she were magic."
"Where is she now?" His Majesty asked.
The barkeep shrugged. "She left nearly a ride ago, Your Highness."
"When exactly?" Vangerdahast asked.
The barkeep thought for a moment. "The fifteenth, Your Lordship."
"Eight days. Do you know which way she was heading?" the wizard
asked.
The barkeep stiffened. He turned to address his answer to the king.
"Please, Your Highness, you aren't going to tell the dragon where she is,
are you? She hasn't done any harm, She's just an adventuress with some bad
luck."
"What makes you think she has something to do with the dragon?"
Azoun asked.
"Well, she fought it, now didn't she?" the barkeep said.
"Freed Olive Ruskettle, the famous bard. The bard herself told me."
"That's right," Giogioni piped up from his chair. "She told
us all about it at the wedding party. Ruskettle told us, that is. Wonderful
bard."
Having confirmed the barkeep's story, Giogi went back to slurping His
Majesty's brandy and humming snatches of Ruskettle's wedding song.
"Did you know about that, Vangy?" Azoun asked.
The royal wizard colored slightly. "No, Your Highness."
Azoun turned to the barkeep. "For the time being we need to know where
this Alias is. She may be nothing more than a sell-sword, but she could be
something much more dangerous. We must know all about her. Now, which way was
she heading?"
The barkeep sighed. "She and the bard and the Turmish mage said
something about going to Westgate, then they said something about going to
Yulash."
"Yulash?" Azoun exclaimed. "How bizarre."
"The two towns are in opposite directions," the wizard pointed
out. "Which way did they decide to go?"
The barkeep thought for a moment again. He remembered the Turmish mage
listing all the reasons for going to Westgate. The barkeep was a loyal subject
to his king, but he didn't quite trust the wizard Vangerdahast. To him, Alias
would always be the hidden lady and hence, like the name of his inn, good luck.
She had looked so miserable the last night she'd stayed at his hostel. The
barkeep was not keen on turning her over to the undoubtedly less than tender
ministrations of the royal wizard.
"The lady wanted to go to Yulash," he told Vangerdahast.
"Thank you for your cooperation, Goodman Green," the wizard
replied. "You may leave now."
The barkeep bowed his head to the king and left the tower room.
Vangerdahast's eyes followed him thoughtfully.
"I don't know many assassins who rescue bards in distress," Azoun
said to his wizard.
"But many make deals with dragons, Your Highness, and as is the way
with their kind, they often cheat on their agreements. The dragon might only be
interested in collecting an unpaid debt."
"But why would the bard lie about her rescue?"
"This Olive Ruskettle is a halfling. She may not be a bard."
Giogioni rose from his chair. "Now, hold on just a moment," he
said. "She's a fine bard. What gives you the right to slander people just
because they're short?"
Vangerdahast fixed the noble with a cold stare.
"Well, I thought she was good," Giogioni muttered, sitting back
down.
King Azoun struggled with his conscience and his reason. On one hand, if
this woman were an assassin, he wasn't troubled by letting the dragon take care
of her. On the other hand, if she were some innocent victim of a curse, he
wasn't going to sleep well that night. Still, it was a long road to Yulash. The
dragon might not find her, he reasoned, and Alias had defeated it once already.
Ridding Cormyr of a dragon was no small accomplishment for a king.
He nodded his assent to Vangerdahast's plan.
"Lord Giogioni," the wizard said. "Upon receiving the
dragon's promise to leave and never return to Cormyr, you will inform the
creature that Alias of Westgate left Suzail eight days ago. To the best of your
knowledge, the adventuress was headed toward Yulash."
Giogioni rose to his feet with a sigh, bowed his head, and left on his
mission.
"Perhaps now that he's served as Your Majesty's messenger, he might
consider rendering you some other service."
"Such as?"
"Investigating Westgate," the wizard suggested.
Azoun's brow furrowed in anger. "You mean that barkeep was lying! Why
didn't you tell me?"
Vangerdahast shook his head. "No, Goodman Green was telling the truth,
though perhaps not all of it. The woman and her companions were seen leaving by
the Eastgate, which leads to the road north."
"So, why send Giogi to Westgate?"
"The barkeep may have been mistaken. Alias could make it to Yulash and
back to Westgate without the dragon finding her. Someone who knows her
appearance and holds your interests to heart should be sent there, just in
case."
Azoun nodded. He turned back to the window and peered over the western wall
again. "You remember, Vangy, when I was your pupil and you used to give me
those tests in ethics?"
"Yes, Your Highness."
"I always hated them. Still do."
"Only now, Your Highness," Vangerdahast replied softly, "they
are no longer tests."
11
Shadow Gap
Whenever Alias saw Shadow Gap she thought of some weary titan dragging his
axe behind him as he stepped over the hills. At least that was how she imagined
the creation of the steep-sided, steep-sloped gorge that split the mountains in
two.
No more than an hour of noon sunlight ever reached the floor of the pass. At
all other times, it remained in the shadow of the mountains, hence its name.
The gap was barren, save for a scattering of short, scrubby bushes. The road
through it wound upward in an interminable series of hairpin curves and
ascending switchbacks, resembling a dry wash. Alias had passed through the gap
as a caravan guard many times and remembered how, in the spring, water followed
the same course down the hill as the merchant wagons.
Heavily laden wagons draped with thick rugs and waterproof slickers would
rumble up the gorge at a snail's pace. The lord merchants urged the drivers on,
while mercenary sell-swords watched the cliffs for ambush. Occasionally, a
procession of pilgrims on foot interruputed the flow, oblivious to the bustling
world around them. More rarely a wizard's wagon, with lumber sprouting fresh,
spring leaves, clattered through the vale on ancient wheels, pulled by oxen,
gorgons, or more fantastic beasts.
Today, all that was absent, banished as if by magic. The vale was emptier
than a tax collector's Yule party. The only sound the travelers heard was the
clopping of the horse hooves beneath them. Alias wondered what could have
halted the trade so completely. A war, perhaps, or rumor of one. But she'd
heard nothing of that sort in Cormyr, and the Cormyrians were not, as a rule,
insular.
Akabar, having never passed through the gap before, rode at the head of the
party as if nothing was amiss. Behind him, Olive found the stillness jarring.
Dragonbait hissed once, never p. good sign, and Alias caught a whiff of
something that smelled like ham. She furrowed her brow in puzzlement and
sniffed again. Nothing. Must have imagined it, she thought, but she made sure
that her longsword was loose in its scabbard and her knives were handy.
Something croaked her name, harsh and low, and she came up with a dagger in
hand. The others seemed not to hear the voice.
Did the wind carry it to her ears alone? Or did sorcery? she wondered,
remembering the attack at the abandoned druid's circle, where the wind had
drowned out her cries for help.
The swordswoman reigned in her horse behind the others and listened. The
sound came again, a harsh, dying croak that called her name, this time from one
of the scrub bushes on Alias's left.
Spotting Alias behind them, Olive harrumphed.
Akabar called back, "Alias? Are—"
Suddenly, the bush near Alias rustled and exploded in a flurry of feathers.
Old reflexes took over, and Alias felt like some mechanical toy. She aimed,
snapped her wrist back, and flicked her knife forward, loosing the dagger.
The spinning weapon struck the bird, a huge raven, at the base of its left
wing and stuck there. A smaller creature would have been skewered, but the
raven took to the air with the blade embedded in its flesh—the dagger's
gold-wrapped hilt jutting out and flashing in the sun.
Hissing, Dragonbait drew his sword.
"Lee-as, Lee-as, Lee-as," the bird shrieked as it rose straight
up, spun, and flapped in an ungainly manner toward the nearest cliff wall, taking
Alias's weapon with it.
The woman warrior shook her head angrily. The unnatural silence had
unsettled her, and her little flash of paranoia had cost her a good throwing
dagger.
"I thought it was something more dangerous than a blasted bird,"
Alias said, rejoining the group. "I thought it was calling my name."
Then she laughed, one of the first deep hearted laughs she'd permitted herself
in gods knew how-long.
"It was only a robberwing," the mage said, surprised by her
reaction. "They're quite common on the southern shores of the Inner Sea. I
thought they were well-known in the north, too. They take shiny objects on
occasion, but otherwise they're harmless."
"In Waterdeep," chimed in the halfling, "a corrupt lord
trained a flock of robberwings to steal for him."
"Natives of Waterdeep," replied the mage, "have all sorts of
odd ways to pass the time . . . when they aren't counting their money."
"Robberwings are considered an ill omen in Thay," Olive added.
Dragonbait hissed again. His dead, yellow eyes glared at the cliff where the
raven had disappeared.
Alias's laughter subsided. "It's all right, Dragonbait," she said,
patting him on the back. "I know it was just a raven." She turned to
the others. "It's just that I was expecting ... a dragon. Or a harpy. Or
at least a nest of blood-sucking stirges. I feel a little foolish at having
lost a weapon to ... just a bird."
"A lost weapon's like a lost meal," said the halfling, wheeling
around on her pony. "Replaceable, but you have to know where to look. Speaking
of which, are we going to sit here until dark or press on to this marvelous inn
of yours?"
"We press on," Alias said.
"Thank heavens," the bard said, kicking her pony past Akabar's
stallion. "Great adventure can wait. Hark, I hear something calling my
name, too." She held her hand up to her ear. "It's a warm bed and
something else ... a hot meal, one not spiced to within an inch of my
life."
Ruskettle peeked out from under her wide-brimmed hat to catch Akabar's
reaction, but his face remained impassive. Five nights before, Olive had
complained about the mage's cooking and announced that, if Akabar didn't go
easier on the pepper, she'd be forced to take a hand in the cooking herself.
Since then, she had continued to complain about the spicing, but had yet to
lift a finger to help prepare meals.
The halfling set her pony in a trot. Akabar followed, looking regal on his
white mount. Dragonbait waited for Alias to pass him, then brought up the rear,
still watching the cliffside warily.
"Don't worry," Alias told him. "I can get another dagger when
we reach Shadowdale."
Dragonbait did not look away from the cliffs for a long time.
Olive's dreams of a warm bed and a less-seasoned meal were shattered when
they topped the last set of switchbacks. Instead of a charming house and a
warm, welcoming cup of mulled wine, they found the remains of a great hall, its
massive timbers blackened by flame, its stone floor littered with slate from
the collapsed roof.
"Don't tell me, let me guess," Olive snapped angrily. "This
place has gone downhill somewhat since you last visited it."
"Obviously, the clientele has changed," Akabar said dryly,
gingerly poking his foot through the rubble. He, too, had been looking forward
to a comfortable bed.
"Nine circles of Hell," Alias muttered. Above the shattered roof,
the last rays of the evening sun were playing against the eastern cliff,
turning it as red as blood.
"There are no bodies," Akabar pointed out, "and the fire
damage looks several months old, so I don't think there can be much danger. As
to comforts, there's still some roof left in that corner and the firepit is
serviceable. Shall we stay or ride on?"
Alias sighed. "We may as well stay."
Inwardly, she was thankful for the mage's calm assessment. She had been
looking forward to collapsing in the inn, and her disappointed muscles revolted
at the thought of riding any farther.
Akabar nodded. "Stay it is."
"I say we should go," Olive objected vehemently. "There's
still daylight left, and we can be a few miles beyond this place when whatever
did this comes back."
"As I said—this damage occurred some time ago," the mage argued.
"Increasing the likelihood that whatever caused it will return," retorted
the bard.
"There are no bodies," Akabar insisted.
"That's even worse," Olive cried, her voice growing shrill.
"It just proves that whatever did this burns or swallows people whole,
probably vomiting up their bones in its lair. Look!" Ruskettle lifted up a
very large, heavy, two-handed sword. "Not even the owner of this sword
could defend himself." She dropped the blade in disgust.
"Or—" Alias interrupted, "—or it proves that this was just an
ordinary fire—an accident—and everyone got out in time or other humans buried
the corpses. Try not to overreact, Olive."
"Me?" Olive squeaked. "You're the one who tried to skewer a
robberwing for calling out your name. If it were just an ordinary fire, why
didn't they rebuild the inn? Why isn't anyone using the pass?"
Alias shrugged. "They'd have to import the building materials, and that
would take a few months. I'm sure we simply went through the pass on a slow
day." She knew her last comment was improbable, but she also knew she'd
feel foolish giving in to the halfling's anxieties.
"Ha! This is just the kind of place you tell children about to keep
them from straying into the woods."
Alias reached under her stallion to unbuckle the saddle straps. "Well,
Olive," she said, lifting the saddle from her horse, "just be sure
you don't stray too far, then."
Olive growled in frustration and left to tend to her pony.
Dragonbait, who was snuffling over a pile of timbers, snarled once.
"See!" Olive turned excitedly. "Even Dragonbait votes we
should go."
Alias laughed. "He's more likely snarling at a garden spider. Besides,
Dragonbait doesn't get a vote. He can't talk. He barely understands what we're
saying."
"He understands well enough when it really matters," Olive
muttered.
"Pardon?"
"I said, we could be halfway down the gap, away from this place before
night fell."
"Then we'd have to eat a cold supper," the mage teased.
That was food for thought to the halfling. In the end, she decided safety
was more important than comfort. "It wouldn't matter, vou'd only add too
much spice anyway."
"Perhaps you should show me how to do it properly."
"I wouldn't dream of depriving you of the joy of figuring it out for
yourself," Olive replied. "Besides, I have a more important job this
evening." She drew out a set of pasteboard cards from a jacket pocket.
"Oh? And what job is that?" Alias asked with a smile.
"Teaching your lizard to vote," the halfling announced grabbing
Dragonbait firmly by the arm and hustling him to a far corner of the ruins.
"You keep an eye on Olive, Dragonbait," Alias called. "Don't
let her wander into the woods."
Akabar started the fire, using pieces of charred wood from the inn. The mage
struck a spark off his flint onto some wool and soon had a small blaze going.
Alias squatted on her haunches and blew into the flames, spreading them among
the drier tinder until the heavier kindling caught.
Akabar pulled out a pan, some cooking utensils, and a package of meat from a
saddle bag. "Lamb, I think." Carving the meat into strips, he added,
"We're going to have to start hunting soon."
"I know," Alias sighed, staring into the flames. "If I hadn't
been such a frightened ninny and had hit that bird square on, I'd still have my
dagger and we'd be eating fresh meat tonight."
"Your aim can't always be perfect," he said.
"Why not?"
The mage laughed. He poured a splash of oil into the cooking pan and
balanced it on two large logs which straddled the fire. "You're only
human."
"What's that got to do with it?"
"Why is perfection so important?" he asked her.
"Why is being alive important?" she returned. "One miss too
many and I could end up someone else's supper."
"You lead a hard life."
"It's worth it," the swordswoman insisted.
"Why?"
Alias shrugged. "The feeling of being free, I guess."
"Free of needing others?"
Alias did not reply. She fished a brush from her saddle bag and walked over
to where Lady Killer stood munching the stiff mountain grass.
The mage smiled as he watched her grooming the purebred stallion. If she took
that brush to her own hair, he thought, she would look as well bred. Akabar
believed he understood why she spent her affection on the horse. The creature
would never betray her, it didn't really need her, and it didn't ask questions.
Rather like her other companion, the lizard.
He shook off the pity he felt for her, knowing that if she saw it, she would
go for his throat. The oil in the pan spat, and the mage added the strips of
lamb.
The mountain air was chill. Before long. Alias returned to the fire to warm
her hands.
"Do you think a dragon may have caused this damage?" Akabar asked.
The thought had been preying on his mind, but he had not wanted to appear
nervous.
"No," Alias replied. "A dragon wouldn't leave things so neat.
It'd burrow through the stones on the floor, looking for treasure. The damage
was probably caused by an ordinary fire. Unless two mages decided to fight it
out here with heavy magic."
"I was just wondering," the mage explained as he covered a pan of
boiling broth and millet, "because you said Mist had ravens as familiars.
This is the height of the trading season. It is unusual, is it not, for this
route to be so deserted?"
"Yes," Alias admitted. "But it might have nothing to do with
the inn's destruction. Trade routes go out of fashion for other reasons than
monsters. Sometimes it's just the rumor of monsters, put out by secret
societies to discourage competition. Wars. Too little grain to trade. Import
taxes and tolls. You know more about trading. What do you think?"
"I think something is wrong, but it may or may not concern . . .
us."
"You mean me, of course. And my affliction."
"Have there been any problems?" the mage asked.
"Not since the wedding."
Alias watched as Akabar lifted the lid from the pan and crushed a fistful of
dried peppers over the steaming grain, letting most of it settle in a quarter
of the pan.
"I take it that's Olive's portion," Alias noted, smiling.
The mage grinned fiendishly. "The vengeance of wizards and cooks can be
subtle but terrible. Each day I add another quarter fistful. Eventually
Mistress Ruskettle will help prepare a meal, or her tongue will fall out of her
head."
"More likely, you'll run out of spices."
Akabar chuckled.
Alias looked over to the far corner of the ruined inn, where Olive sat
cross-legged before Dragonbait. The bard held a card in front of the lizard and
said something Alias could not hear. Dragonbait looked at the card with a
deadpan stare, then abruptly plucked it out of her hand and started to nibble
on the edge.
"The halfling has less chance for success than a fat school priest
trying to convert kobolds," Alias said with a smirk.
"You remind me of my younger wife. What she cannot see, she will not
believe. When I return, she'll sit and count the money I bring home, but she'll
laugh in disbelief at the wondrous things I tell her about the north
country."
"She'll be laughing pretty hard about this troupe," Alias
predicted.
"Perhaps when you have finished your quest you might accompany me back
to Alaghon, where my wives base our business."
His tone was light, but Alias felt something underlying it, something deeper
that he struggled to keep from surfacing. "I hope that wasn't an
invitation to join your little harem, Turmite." She intended the remark to
sound like a sneer, but it became more of a question.
Akabar sighed inwardly; he'd made her shy away again. He forced a smile he
did not feel. "The invitation was only for a traveling companion, not a
future bedmate. I hoped to prove to my wives that women of the north wield
dangerous weapons and travel where they please. You need not fear my desires.
Turmish women keep their mates so enraptured with their amorous abilities that
foreign women pall by comparison."
"I see," Alias replied, looking down into the fire to keep her
grin from showing.
"Besides," continued Akabar, "as I've explained once, they
have veto power over co-wives. They would never approve of you joining the
family. You're much too hot-tempered, and my older wife is offended by the
smell of damp wool."
Alias laughed and threw the horse brush at him. "You smell like damp
wool, too, Turmite." She gave a tug on his cloak.
Akabar shrugged. "Yes, but my wives cannot veto me."
Olive and Dragonbait joined them at the fireside, the only warmth and light
for miles now that the sun had set. The lizard carried wood for the fire. The
bard was all smiles.
"I've done it," Olive declared.
"Done what?" Akabar asked, tasting his concoction.
"Taught Dragonbait to speak to us," the bard said. Fixing Alias
with a reproachful stare, she added, "It's surprising no one thought of it
before."
"So, let's hear what he says," Alias said, holding out a piece of
flat trailbread for Akabar to spread with the meat and grain mixture.
"It doesn't work like that," the bard explained. She pulled out a
deck of Talis cards from her pocket. "He doesn't speak any tongue I
recognize, but he can understand us. Watch." Ruskettle leafed through the
cards, pulling out two.
"The Holed Plate, Primary of Stones, means yes," Olive said.
"The Flaming Dagger, no. He picked that one himself."
"I wonder why," Alias smirked.
"I ask him a question and he can give the answer. Watch." She
turned back to the creature and, smiling like a maiden aunt. Alias thought, she
asked, "Dragonbait, are you a lizard?"
The lizard-creature held up the Holed Plate indicating yes.
"Are you hungry?" Olive asked in the same cheerful tone.
Dragonbait held up the same card. Another yes.
"Should we stay in this haunted place?" Olive demanded, suddenly
stern, pointing to the burned rafters.
Dragonbait lifted the Flaming Dagger card.
Olive turned back to face the swordswoman and mage. "You see. You've
held this poor creature, virtually as a bondservant, for weeks now without even
trying to communicate with him. I reached his mind in a single session."
Olive shook her head sadly. "I wonder why you humans are running the world
at all."
Alias studied Dragonbait curiously. She had tried to communicate with him
back at The Hidden Lady without success. Why did I give up so soon? she
wondered, but she knew the answer to that. Dragonbait seemed to understand what
she wanted without her even having to ask, and besides, he'd offered her his
sword, which made her his leader. Still ... is it possible that I didn't want
to know anything he could tell me? She felt more than a little annoyed with
herself.
Akabar polished off his supper and licked his fingers.
"Congratulations," he said to Olive, handing her a folded meat and
millet sandwich filled from the far side of the skillet. "May I try?"
"Of course," the halfling replied, relinquishing her seat beside
the lizard. "Answers told, mysteries revealed."
Akabar sat in front of the lizard, frowning in deep concentration.
"Dragonbait," he asked, "can you understand me?"
The lizard held up the Flaming Dagger. No.
"Well," the mage said, "at least he's honest." With a
smile he asked, "Is the halfling a perfect fool?"
Dragonbait lifted up the Holed Plate. Yes.
Alias giggled.
Akabar screwed his face into a scowl. "Would you mind very much if we
threw her on the fire for kindling?"
The Flaming Dagger. No.
Akabar burst into laughter. "Idiot bard! You've trained him to show the
yes card when you smile and the no card when you frown. He's a quick study, but
there are trained monkeys in Calisham who know that trick. Now, eat your dinner
before it gets cold." He and Alias turned back to the pan for second
helpings.
"The way you spice food, it could melt steel for hours," the
halfling grumbled. Before she took a bite of the peppery mixture, she glared at
Dragonbait, saying, "I bet you're proud of yourself, lizard."
Dragonbait held up the Holed Plate, cocked his head at the halfling, and a
strange clicking sound came through his stubby teeth. Olive felt certain he was
laughing at her.
12
The Dream and the Kalmari
The evening sky over Shadow Gap was overcast except in the far south, where
a few stars glittered between the mantle of clouds and the horizon. Alias
exhaled slowly, watching the vapor from her breath rise and drift away in the
cool mountain air. Despite the chill, she was quite comfortable. Akabar had not
stinted on warm clothing and blankets for their trip north.
On second watch. Alias looked over at Akabar, who lay under only one wool
cover, and his arms over that. Gently, she dropped a fur hide over him from
chin to knees. In no time he pushed most of it aside, and his arms, clad only
in his flimsy robe, once again lay exposed to the cold air.
Either he's got some magic trick to keep warm, or he carries the heat of the
southern sun inside him, Alias thought.
Olive, under the pretext of keeping the extra bedding dry and safe from
marauding beasts, slept on top of most of them. In sleep she looked deceptively
childlike and innocent, the swordswoman thought. But Akabar, with his beard and
the sun-wrinkles about his eyes, looked older.
Alias studied the sleeping Dragonbait, trying to decide if he looked older
or younger. He slept as peacefully as a child, yet even with his tail drawn up
between his legs and curled beneath his head, the power of his warrior's frame
was apparent. Alias wondered if he didn't sleep, as the saying went, the sleep
of the righteous, untroubled by his dreams because he lived up to his own
standard of goodness.
He was neither a slow riser nor one to awaken with a start. Whenever she
awakened him, he opened his eyes curiously, smiled that toothy grin, and gave a
pleasant chirp. The few times the party had shifted camp in the middle of the
night to avoid being stumbled upon by goblins and ores, Alias had discovered
the lizard already awake, lying very still, sniffing the air, his hand wrapped
around the hilt of his sword.
She wrapped one of her own blankets about the lizard's shoulders, a custom
she'd adopted from her travels with the Company of the Swanmays. She'd missed
the sisterly concern the seven members, all women, had had for one another, but
she hadn't felt comfortable enough among the strangers with whom she now
traveled to perform so intimate a gesture . . . until tonight.
She thought very hard about Dragonbait, about all he'd done for her, all she
knew about him, all the things she felt about him. He was the least human of
her companions, he couldn't talk to her, and she had little idea what went
through his mind, yet Dragonbait was the only member of the party she trusted
completely. Regardless of what Olive had said about failing to communicate with
him, she knew that the two of them, lizard and swordswoman, had an
understanding.
"You're not my bondservant, are you?" Alias whispered to the
sleeping lizard. "You're my brother."
She'd never really had any siblings, at least as far as she knew. Her
mother, an uncommunicative fisherman's widow, had never told her of any, and
when her mother died, just after Alias reached her teens, no long-lost
relatives appeared at her wake. The following year Alias ran off to avoid being
bonded to a decent but unimaginative weaver. It wasn't until she had insinuated
herself into the Swanmays that she felt any kinship to anyone. The Swanmays had
relished the risks and beauty of the open wilderness as much as she did. Just
remembering them now made her throat tighten with emotion.
Yet, the feeling she had for Dragonbait, one she was certain he shared,
could not possibly be based on mutual interests. As far as she knew, they had
none. His behavior toward her was most definitely the tender protectiveness of
a brother. Oddly enough, Alias realized that she felt the same way about him.
And the strength of that feeling without, as she perceived, any logical foundation,
was what made her so certain there was no one closer to her in all the world.
Despite the admission of her feelings for the lizard, she was no closer to
remembering anything about their past association than before.
Her relationship with Olive was as clear as glass. Alias knew she could
trust the halfling to look after the halfling first, the party's possessions
second, and everyone else probably not at all. Though the bard had shown one
flash of bravado in Mist's lair, taunting the dragon long enough for Alias to
get back on her feet, bravado was not the same as courage, and had nothing at
all to do with heroism. Alias realized that Olive would weigh every risk
against how much treasure she estimated lay at the end of Alias's quest.
Akabar was a little more complicated. He was on a quest of his own to prove
to himself that he was more than a Turmish merchant. Eager to collect his own
adventures to relate to his profiteering wives and, Alias conjectured, probably
anxious to keep from returning so soon to a family with little tolerance for
such nonsense as adventures. Alias was certain that if he hadn't stumbled
across her case, he'd have found some other adventurer to lavish his attentions
on. She felt she could trust him not to deceive her, but she wasn't going to
count on him to lay down his life for her. She knew the mage possibly had one
other reason for accompanying her, but he had been wise enough to deny it, so
she wasn't going to dwell on it.
She wasn't aware she was falling asleep, but when the wreckage of the inn
began to shimmer and reform into the building she remembered from years ago,
she knew she'd drifted into some dream. Angrily she tried to shake herself
awake, frightened that her dereliction of duty would bring great harm to the party,
but she had no success.
The inn took on an increasing solidity. First, the thick timber walls
returned, their joints sealed with dabbed mud. Doors and tables and chairs and
the bar seemed to rise from the ground. Without moving, Alias found herself seated
at a small table by the firepit.
Alerted by the groaning beams above, Alias looked up. Overhead, the charred
timbers grew whole, the drooping section of ceiling that had survived the fire
straightened. Planed boards crisscrossed the timbers and, though she could not
see them, Alias heard the clatter of pottery shingles as they multiplied across
the boards outside. Chains began to snake downward from iron hooks which
sprouted from the main timbers. The ends of the chains blossomed into
gourd-shaped lamps, burning oil from small wicks.
The flame in the firepit flared into a roaring blaze, and the North Gate Inn
began filling with customers, though they did not enter by the door. Alias
heard them first, the mutter and roar of many people speaking all around her.
She fixed her attention on a booth in the corner where she heard an argument,
but all she could see were shadows.
Of course, I might not be dreaming, Alias considered. This could all be some
fantastic illusion. But the noise would have wakened the others, and they would
still be here sleeping beside me. No, this was a dream, she concluded.
Suddenly there was a tremendous clatter to her right. Her head turned in
time to witness a burly man berating a small servant girl for spilling wine
down the copious cleavage of his female companion. As the youngster protested
her innocence, the man stood up and loomed over her. He was twice her height,
but Alias caught the glint of sharp steel as the servant reached into her apron
pocket.
A loud roar came from the corner booth again, and she turned her attention
back to it. No longer occupied by shadows, it was filled with people of depth
and color. A tired cleric and a young fighter argued some fine religious point.
The cleric insisted that
Tempos was a corruption of the southern
Tempus,
and that
Tempus was the correct pronunciation. This supposition seemed
to madden the fighter, a northern barbarian on his manhood journey, no doubt.
His face, already quite red from several drinks, flushed even darker. He was
preparing his argument by reaching his right hand over his left shoulder to
grasp the lionheaded hilt of the massive sword strapped to his back.
Alias wondered which of the two arguments would be the first to cause a
room-clearing brawl.
"Neither," answered a pleasant voice. Alias started at the reply.
A young man stood beside her table, holding two crystal glasses in one hand and
a dusty bottle in the other. He sat in the chair beside her, setting the items
he carried on the table. "But devastation will arrive shortly," he
assured her with a lopsided grin and a wink. Alias would have judged him to be
not yet twenty, but his suave manner belied her estimate. He wiped off the
bottle and extracted the cork with an expert ease.
The youth's blond hair hung loose about his shoulders and glistened in the
firelight. He had what the members of the Swanmays would agree was a
well-formed figure, yet his blue eyes reflected the firelight back in pinpoints
of red. As attractive as Alias found him, he made her quite nervous. She felt
as if she were waiting for someone in the dream, but this man was not that
person.
"I took the liberty of ordering a wine special. I know you'll like
it." He smiled as he poured copper-colored liquid into both glasses.
"How do you know what's going to happen?" Alias asked.
"We all have our little curses," he whispered, running a finger
down her right arm along the brands. They tingled, an entirely new sensation.
"My curse is that I'm required to read the script before the play
begins." He held up his glass and waited for her to do the same. "In
a few minutes the plot will pick up. Plenty of time to finish your drink."
Alias lifted the delicate crystal by the stem and allowed her host to clink
his own against it. "To drama," he said.
Alias sniffed the beverage warily, afraid to discover yet another Cormyrian
mixture unsuited to her tastes. Instead, a pleasant, tangy scent wafted to her
nostrils. She took a sip and then, without thinking, drained the glass. The
sharp, sweet taste of mountain berries clung to her lips, and the alcohol
coursed through her body like a shock. Her face warmed immediately, as if she stood
in bright sunshine, and the aching muscles of her back relaxed. It wasn't just
the only good thing she'd tasted in a long time. She had a strong suspicion it
would be the best thing she would ever taste.
"Which of these incidents is responsible for the fire?" Alias
asked the young man as he refilled their glasses.
"Neither," the man said. He nodded toward the burly man and his
buxom companion. The servant girl had convinced the man at knife point to
return to his seat and stop fussing. She tossed the woman a dingy towel and
left them.
"Labor troubles are quite common this far north," the youth told
her. "Every potscrubber dreams of becoming a petty lord, inspired by the
few who, with luck and reckless-ness, have done so. The situation here in
Shadow Gap is, of course, exacerbated by the minute population, making not just
good help, but any help at all hard to find."
"And the loud barbarian and cleric?" Alias asked, turning to
discover the reaction of the other patrons when the fighter pulled out his weapon,
but both were engaged in draining large mugs of ale.
"They're old friends from way back. They've had this argument at least
a hundred times before in this very place, and in as many other inns."
"So, what did cause the fire? Does it have anything to do with why the
pass is deserted?"
"Patience, my dear, patience," her drinking companion chided. He
raised her glass to her mouth and tilted the ambrosial liquid so that it flowed
past her lips. Alias grasped the stem and swallowed until the entire draught
was consumed. A greater heat washed over her, and she slipped off her cape.
"You know what your problem is?" the man asked.
"No, what?" She reached for the wine bottle and poured herself a
third glass.
"You aren't used to acquiring information slowly, listening to people
explain things in their own way, experiencing life as it comes. You expect
someone to just pour everything you want to know into you, as though it were a
bottle of wine." He raised the wine bottle and filled his glass again. "Ah!"
he said with glee, his eyes fixed on the doorway. "Finally, a principal
actor."
Alias turned. The man was not the one she was waiting for either. A small
man, he was dressed like a merchant, with a purple robe gathered at his waist
and a fat, over-stuffed hat with a long, swan feather plume on his head.
The small man climbed upon a low, stone platform opposite the fire pit,
waved a parchment scroll over his head, and shouted "Silence!"
Half the conversations died out, but a few scattered patrons continued
chattering. The quieted persons turned their attention to the merchant. Assured
of at least a partial audience, the man unrolled his scroll and began to read.
"Hear, all and sundry, the words of the Iron Throne." The last
words caught the attention of those who had ignored him. Silence blanketed the
room.
The herald paused for effect. Alias frowned. The eyes of the young man
beside her twinkled merrily. "The Iron Throne," her companion
explained in a hushed whisper without taking his eyes from the speaker,
"is a young trading organization, just beginning to compete with the
better established merchant houses. Their favorite strategies include force,
treachery, and magic."
The herald read on. "The Iron Throne is much concerned with the growing
violence in the north, violence fed by the arms merchants who line their own
pockets at the expense of others."
"The Iron Throne should know, their pockets bulge, too!" a heckler
called out, followed by a spattering of applause.
The herald's eyes narrowed. "Hence, the Iron Throne pronounces an
anathema upon the warmongering merchants and will close Shadow Gap for thirty
days."
Boos and catcalls followed.
"It would take four divisions of mercenaries, at least, to hold this
pass," Alias commented.
"You think so?" the young man replied with a laugh. "Wait and
see, shall we?"
"All those within Shadow Gap will be allowed to leave, but they may
carry no weapons of war. Thus will the Iron Throne demonstrate its ability to
keep peace in the region," the herald concluded.
"Bull spittle!" shouted the barbarian in the corner booth, rising
drunkenly to his feet. "The Iron Throne is shipping weapons by the
cartloads to goblins and maggots from Zhentil Keep! They just want to keep the
Dales light in armaments for their Zhentarim masters! It will take more than a
proclamation-spouting toady to keep us from aiding the free people of the
north."
The herald glared malevolently at the barbarian.
Sensing some unseen power, the cleric tried to pull his friend back to his
side, but the barbarian strode over to the herald. The warrior towered above
the smaller man, even though the herald stood on the raised platform. He yanked
the parchment scroll out of the herald's hand and shredded it, tossing the
pieces in the herald's face. "Send that message back to the Iron
Throne."
"You needn't worry about safe delivery of your master's weapons to his
contact in Daggerdale," the herald hissed. "The contact is already
dead, a victim of his own penchant for violence."
The barbarian drew in a shocked breath. "You killed Brenjer, you
murdering swine! I'll show you violence!" He drew his two-handed sword,
swung the massive blade over his head, and struck the herald in the forehead.
The steel sliced through its target down to the waist with the same ease and
sound it would make ripping through taut canvas.
Alias gasped, for the body of the herald did not gush blood or fall to the
floor, as would a carcass of meat. Instead, two ragged shards of purple cloth
drifted to the floor and a black mist rose from them, forming into the shape of
an inverted tear drop above the barbarian.
Two unblinking, yellow eyes glowed within the cloud of dark vapor. Beneath
the eyes a huge gap parted, revealing rows upon rows of needle-sharp teeth.
From this maw came the sound of a thousand snakes hissing in a stone room.
"A kalmari," the youth whispered to Alias. "They're native to
the lands of Thay, used by the Red Wizards and their allies. Some speculate
they are relatives to intellect devourers. Remarkable, isn't it?"
Alias, intent on watching the barbarian deal with the monster, did not
reply. The barbarian passed his sword through the mist, but his blow did no
more damage than it would to smoke. The kalmari gave a rattling laugh, then
distended its jaws so its mouth made up more than half its body. The creature
fell forward over the man and swallowed him in a single gulp, broadsword and
all.
For a moment there was silence while the inn's occupants struggled to
comprehend what had happened. Then the room erupted with a clatter of toppled
chairs and tables and shuffling feet as the inhabitants sought escape.
Clerics and mages intoned the words of half a dozen spells and wardings as
they backed away from the beast.
The kalmari tilted its head back and spit out the barbarian's sword, its
blade propelled upward in a twisting ribbon of flame. The sword flew into the
upper rafters and stuck there, imbedded to the hilt. The flames spread across
the ceiling, engulfing the rafters in a white heat
The kalmari smiled, a wide grin that stretched three-quarters of the way
around its body. The smile lasted only a moment before a battery of offensive
spells struck—bolts of lightning and flame and radiant blue daggers of magic
missile. Alias felt her right arm ache and, looking down, saw that her own
runes glowed.
She tried to rise, intent on aiding in the battle any way she could, but the
youth beside her placed his hand over the sigils on her forearm and, with the
lightest of pressure, held her trapped against the table.
"You'll get your chance," he grinned mysteriously. "What's
your hurry?"
The fires spread with unnatural speed, and soon the entire area, save for
where Alias and her companion sat, was engulfed in flame. Through the dancing
flames Alias could see the kalmari swallowing a mage whole, then belching up
another burst of burning ichor.
Yet Alias felt no heat. A moment later, the flames, the kalmari, and its
opponents diminished to shadows against the walls of the common room. Then,
even the shadows vanished. The inn around her was whole and sturdy, unaffected
by the fire, but nearly barren of inhabitants.
Still seated beside the youth, Alias spotted a solitary figure at a table
across the room. The figure's features were completely concealed by a cloak and
a hood. This is the one I've been waiting for, she told herself with certainty.
But now she was reluctant to make the meeting.
The young man drained the last of his wine and rose to leave.
"Wait!" Alias insisted, grabbing his arm. She wanted to say "Don't
leave me alone with that one," but she knew her words would not influence
him. So instead she asked, "When did this happen?"
"While you were still hunting halfling-stealing dragons west of
Suzail."
Surprised that she got him to answer so easily, she pressed her
interrogation further. "Where is the kalmari?"
"Still at large, defending the area for its masters.'
"How does one ward against it?"
"It fears only the mark of its maker."
"How is it defeated?"
"The kalmari cannot eat anything twice."
"What does it have to do with me?"
"Enough," a woman's voice whispered.
Alias shivered and turned to look at the figure seated across the room. All
about the inn was fog.
The woman's voice cut sharply through the rising vapor. "You've gone
too far, Nameless. You are dismissed."
"But she asked a question," the youth objected. "I want to
answer all her questions."
"You have stalled our interview long enough. I will answer this
question for her. The creature is, after all, mine."
There was something very familiar about the sharp, feminine voice, and Alias
felt her right arm throb. When she stood, her senses began to spin. She cursed
the wine silently and turned to accuse the youth of getting her drunk, but he
was already gone, swallowed in the dream mist.
"Well?" Alias demanded, trying to appear undaunted as the figure
rose and drifted, like a ghost, toward her.
"The kalmari is a meager demonstration of my power," the woman
said, making a sweeping gesture with her right hand, palm up. Her features
remained concealed in the shadows of the hood, but Alias noted that her left
arm was in a sling. "It's just something I had out on loan to the Iron
Throne, who wished to demonstrate their power. Many will think twice before
crossing the will of the Iron Throne."
"But what does this have to do with me?" Alias repeated. She stood
only an arm's length from the woman. Alias realized she could easily reach out
and yank back the woman's hood to reveal her face. Perhaps, Alias hoped, if I
can recognize the face, it will help to explain my lost memory or the tattoo on
my arm. Yet, why do my instincts hold me back tell me to flee fast and far? Is
she a lich or a medusa?
"Why, the kalmari is another of my creatures," the woman laughed.
"I was going to station it here to watch for you. The Iron Crown's fee
only sweetened the pot."
"Another one of your creatures," Alias repeated, certain she had
gained a new insight. "Like the crystal elemental?
The woman snorted derisively. "Please. You insult me, my dear. Such a
heavy-handed, clumsy thing. My creations have always been elegant."
"Then what other creature did you mean?" Alias asked.
"Why, I meant you, my child. You're one of my creatures Of course, I
must share you with the others, but I will always think of you as my own."
The woman held out her good arm in a beckoning gesture, as a mother would
welcome a prodigal daughter. Very slowly and sweetly she said, "Come back
to Westgate, Puppet. We're your masters. You need us, and we want you
back."
Alias's breathing came fast and heavy. "I'm my own master," she
shouted angrily, "not anyone's puppet." With a sudden movement she
jerked the hood from the woman's face.
She looked into her own face.
Alias screamed in her dream and woke with a start. The camp was back to
normal. She sat near a dying fire in a root less hostel. It was only a dream,
she told herself over and over. She wondered how long she'd been asleep.
Only a dream, she thought again. Though a very bad dream. When was the last
time I dreamed like that?
Never, the answer came from the back of her mind. You never dream like that.
Ever.
The dream had to be magically influenced, Alias decided, and the woman in
the dream had to be Cassana, the Westgate sorceress who branded me with one of
these sigils. Why did she look like me?
Alias closed her eyes and concentrated on the woman in the dream. She didn't
look exactly like me, Alias realized The woman looked older. Perhaps she is a
long-lost relative no one ever told me about. Who's Nameless, then?
Alias stood and stretched by the fire's dying embers. Her thoughts remained
fuzzy, and she had a difficult time concentrating on details. Am I still
sleepy, she wondered, or is it possible I'm drunk on dream wine?
Then she heard a noise that set her hackles rising, a noise from her
dream—the sound of a thousand hissing snakes in a stone room. The sound of a
kalmari.
She whirled about, scanning the boundaries of the campsite, but the darkness
defeated her eyes. She glanced over the campsite. Dragonbait lay curled like a
cat. Olive snuggled in a nest of blankets. Akabar—there was only darkness where
Akabar should have been.
Something in the darkness glittered, and Alias recognized the rows of
needle-sharp teeth. Only then was she able to make out the silhouette of the
beast. From the tear-drop shape extended a dark, prehensile tail. The
creature's shadow shifted just enough for Alias to make out Akabar's sleeping
figure. The kalmari wrapped its tail about him and began lifting the mage to
its gaping maw. Muttering in his sleep, the Turmishman struggled feebly, trying
to kick off the blanket entangling his legs, but he did not awaken.
With a shout, Alias leaped forward. Her movement was sloppy and awkward.
Damn dream wine! I'm not sober, she realized as she accidentally kicked the
sleeping Olive. The kalmari, still hovering with its tail firmly wrapped about
the mage, fixed its unblinking, yellow eyes on the warrior.
Alias drew her sword but she hesitated, remembering that the barbarian's
two-handed weapon hadn't even bloodied the monster. If the dream was true, her
weapon was useless. But if the dream was true and the kalmari was indeed one of
Cassana's creatures, then according to Nameless, it could be warded off with
the sorceress's sigil on Alias's arm. If Nameless had been telling the truth. .
. .
Frustrated with all the uncertainties, the swordswoman stopped analyzing the
situation. Still holding her sword, she raised her branded arm over her head,
wrist forward. Her arm felt heavy and sluggish, as though a solid gold shield
were strapped to it. Damn wine! she thought. She gritted her teeth and kept the
arm up. A brilliant, blue light shot from the sigils, illuminating the campsite
and making the black, smoky form of the kalmari easier to discern.
Lacking the eyelids to blink in the strong light, the kalmari's elongated
pupils narrowed to slits, and the creature floated backward the length of a
sword. Its grip on Akabar was still firm, however, and it held its tail
forward, using the mage as a shield.
I can keep the creature back, Alias thought grimly, but how do I get it to
drop Akabar?
In her dream she had asked Nameless how to defeat the kalmari. He had told
her, but the details of the dream were already drifting from her memory. Alias
struggled to remember his words.
He hadn't told me what to do exactly. He'd said something about what the
kalmari couldn't do. It couldn't eat something. It couldn't eat something
twice. What nonsense! Alias thought. If you've eaten something, you can't eat
it again, can you? Unless you're the kind of creature that regurgitates the
bones of your victims.
Behind her came a high-pitched curse from Olive. "What in the burning
lake is that?"
Ignoring the halfling, Alias lunged at the monster, slicing her blade
through the extremity that entrapped the still unconscious Turmishman. The
monster's hissing increased in pitch and volume. It was not Alias's sword that
troubled it, though.
The closer she got to Cassana's creature, the brighter her brands blazed.
Annoyed by the intense light or perhaps, as Nameless had said, afraid of its
mistress's sigil, the kalmari retreated farther, though it did not appear ready
to flee.
Alias's eyes roamed across the floor, looking for remains of the northern
warrior or other travelers already consumed by the kalmari. Finding nothing to
feed the creature, she lunged again, plunging her sword into one of the
monster's eyes. Again, the beast moved away from the light of her arm, but
showed no damage from her sword.
Sword. The barbarian's sword! The kalmari had spit out the barbarian's
sword. A sword with a lion-headed hilt, just like the one Olive had plucked
from the ruins.
The adventuress shot quick glances over her shoulder, her eyes scanning the
rubble-strewn floor. Nothing. Alias cursed silently. It had been there before.
What could have happened to it? Or who—
"Olive!" she shouted. "You found a sword with a lion's head
grip in the ruins earlier."
"I vaguely recall something of that nature," the halfling
answered.
"You must have it, damn it! Give it to me!"
"Really," the halfling huffed. "I was going to give it to you
later as a surprise."
"I don't want to hear any excuses, just go get it!" Alias
screamed.
"But it's on the other side of the wall—on the other side of the
monster!" Olive squeaked. "Why can't you get it?"
"If I move away, it's liable to eat Akabar. It can't touch me, but if
it asked for dessert I'd be inclined to serve you to it. Understand?"
Ruskettle muttered something that sounded like cursing in an unknown
language, but she nevertheless moved to Alias's left, swinging wide around the
edges of the destroyed hostel and the kalmari.
Alias moved to her left, too, keeping the arc of her circle smaller so that
she remained between the monster and the halfling. Then Dragonbait was at her
left shoulder, fully awake, his sword at the ready. The sigils bathed them both
in an eerie blue radiance. With Dragonbait clearing a path for her through the
rubble, the swordswoman managed to back the kalmari into the corner of the
hostel that still stood. Alias suspected the wall would prove no impediment to
the monster's retreat, but perhaps it couldn't pass through the wooden beams
without letting go of the mage.
There was a scrambling noise from the edge of the wall behind the kalmari.
The kalmari's hissing grew louder and more threatening. It twisted ever so
slightly, keeping one eye on the two warriors, while turning the other on the
halfling pawing at the rubble not twenty feet away.
Alias's throat constricted in fear. Olive seemed to take forever pulling out
the massive blade. The weapon stood taller than the halfling, and she could
barely lift it. To Alias's horror, the kalmari turned both eyes on Olive. At
that moment the halfling looked up and froze.
"Olive! Use the sword!" Alias shouted. "Use it to defend
yourself!"
Alias moved to her right, hoping to force the monster to turn its eyes from
the bard, but the leaden feeling in her arm seemed to spread over her entire
body, and she tripped over a fallen roof beam and sprawled across the floor.
Her body's heaviness persisted; her attempts to rise were met with failure.
She felt not just drunk, but as though she'd been drugged. It was an effort
just to raise her head to watch the kalmari close in on the bard. "Set the
sword like a spear!" she cried.
Olive snapped out of her shock and raised the sword. Perhaps she'd only
caught the last few words of Alias's command, or maybe she had some
halfling-berserker blood in her, but Olive did not remain standing still,
waiting for the monster to impale itself on the weapon. Instead, she charged
the creature, holding the sword like a spear. Astonishingly, it looked to Alias
as if Olive might succeed in skewering the monster—until the halfling slipped
on a pile of broken roof shingles. The sword flew from her hands, and the bard
crashed to the floor beneath the kalmari.
The kalmari smiled so broadly that Alias could see its grin from behind. The
creature made the same rattling laugh as in her dream. Alias had a clear view
of Olive's terrified face as the halfling looked into the throat of the
kalmari—about to become an hors d'oeuvre before Akabar's main entree.
A blur of dark green shot across Alias's vision as, with one continuous
motion, Dragonbait dashed toward the barbarian's sword, lifted it, leaped
toward the kalmari, and plunged the weapon in the monster's back. The sword dug
into the kalmari's form with a satisfying
thuck. Dragonbait had to jerk
the weapon out before he could strike again.
The kalmari made a high-pitched whine Alias hoped was a scream. Turning away
from the halting, the creature dropped the mage. Dragonbait swung again, this
time striking the monster above its eyes, and the kalmari whined again, lashing
out with its tail. With lightning reflexes, the lizard-warrior met the strike
with the sword, severing the appendage. The monster whined again, now at an
unbearable pitch, and came at Dragonbait, mouth first, obviously intent on
swallowing the scaly warrior. Dragonbait threw the sword, point first, into the
monster's maw.
The kalmari's smoky body disintegrated into a dozen tiny motes of darkness,
which in turn ruptured into smaller fractions, like a drop of oil shaken in
water. The bits of darkness were blown away on the night breeze. The
barbarian's sword clattered to the floor of the devastated inn.
Shards of light pricked at Alias's vision and then faded. Her head dropped
to the floor, and she allowed the darkness of unconsciousness to take her.
Through it all Akabar had remained asleep, snoring softly.
*****
Alias awoke to the sound of Olive and Akabar arguing. By the sun's position,
she could tell it was late morning. She felt a little hungover, and it took her
a moment to remember the wine Nameless had helped her guzzle.
"Your story is most amusing, little one," the Turmishman was
saying to Olive, "but just not probable. My dreams were pleasant and my
sleep uninterrupted. I would have been awake in an instant if the events you
described had truly occurred."
"I tell you, this thing was huge and black and had more fangs than you
have hairs in your beard. Its mouth opened so wide—" Olive flung her arms
out as far as they would stretch "—that it could have swallowed itself.
Akabar laughed. "It sounds to me as though perhaps my cooking was mer
a lammer for you," the mage commented, using an expression in his
native tongue. "Much and too much," he translated for the halfling.
Alias shook the last bits of sleep from her head. "Olive's telling you
the truth, Akabar. Hard to credit, I'll admit, but she wasn't the only witness
to the attack."
The grin disappeared from Akabar's face. "Why did it strike at me
first, I wonder."
"Maybe you looked the tastiest," Olive suggested.
"The creature was a kalmari, impervious to normal attacks," Alias
said. "It probably recognized you as a mage, and hence the greatest
threat."
Then Alias remembered what Cassana had said in her dream. "I have
reason to believe that it was waiting here for me," she added, "and
that it belonged to one of the wizards who branded me. When I got close to it,
the sigils began to glow again, something that also happened in the presence of
the crystal elemental. Perhaps my foes have judged you too useful to me and
have decided to have you removed. A demonstration to prove the futility of
defiance."
"A kalmari," Akabar mused, no longer puzzled. "Yes, such
things can hold a man in slumber. How did you defeat it?"
"Chopped it with a sword it had already swallowed."
"Ah, yes," the southerner nodded. "They cannot digest steel,
so they spit it out. They can be poisoned by the very secretions that they've
left on the blade.
"You've fought one before?" Alias asked.
"No," Akabar admitted. "I have read of them. They are a
horror attributed to the Red Wizards of Thay, I believe."
Alias nodded.
"Even with a regorged weapon, it could not have been an easy battle.
However did you manage?" he asked Olive.
Alias smiled. No doubt the bard had exaggerated her role in the destruction
of the monster.
Olive looked down at her furry hands. "I got some help from
Dragonbait."
"Where is Dragonbait, anyway?" Alias asked.
"I noticed him climbing that hill," Akabar said, pointing to the
western slope looming over the top of the pass. "He was carrying a
monstrous sword."
"Hmmm. You two start breaking camp," the adventureress ordered.
"I'll fetch him, and we'll be off. I'm not inclined to hang around
here."
Climbing toward the western slope, Alias heard Akabar chiding Olive.
"Why didn't you tell me it was a kalmari instead of babbling on about a
big, black, fang-toothed thing?"
Catching the sound of soft, whistling tones, Alias followed them to a
spring-fed pool, where she found Dragonbait. The lizard had made a set of bird
pipes, and the tune he twisted out of them, while sad and plaintive, was also
exultant, a cry of loss and pain spun into beautiful music. Somehow Alias knew
it was made to honor a fallen hero.
She sat beside the lizard and waited for him to finish. A long, low mound of
dirt stretched before him. When he was finished, he lay the pipes, very gently,
on top of the newly turned earth and bowed his head silently.
A bird twittered in some distant glade. The air smelled of roses. Dragonbait
finally looked up at her and smiled. Not really a happy smile, but a
bittersweet one, though Alias doubted anyone but she could tell the difference.
"That the sword?" she asked, pointing at the thin grave.
Dragonbait nodded.
Alias sighed. "It could be magical. We could use a weapon like
that."
Dragonbait shook his head, though Alias could not tell if he was denying the
sword's possible enchantment or their need for such a thing.
"Someone else will only dig it up," she argued, though her own
heart wasn't really in it.
Dragonbait shook his head again.
Alias sighed. "Okay. We'll leave it as a memorial. Come on now. We've
already lost half a day, and we're tempting untrustworthy gods by staying here
any longer." She patted the lizard's arm as she rose. His tightly knit
scales reminded her of warm jewels, dry and smooth.
As she turned to make her way down the slope, it occurred to her that
Dragonbait couldn't have known about the sword's owner. Unless he had the
ability to sense an object's past or he had read her mind or ... Alias halted
in mid-step and turned around. "Did you dream the same dream?"
The lizard cocked his head as if he didn't understand.
"Never mind," she said, realizing that, though they did
communicate with one another in a fashion, some questions were just too
complicated for her to convey. "Just finish up here. We'll be waiting at
the camp."
Dragonbait remained at the grave for a few moments, then rose and followed
his lady out of the glade. The birds picked up his pipe-song and carried it
throughout Shadow Gap, south into the Stonelands and north into the Dales.
13
Shadowdale
After inspecting his maps Akabar had assumed that Alias had overestimated
the time it would take to reach Yulash. Her experience of the roads north,
however, proved more accurate than the parchment image of the land he had
purchased in Suzail. On his map, the road from Shadow Gap to Shadowdale passed
through clear terrain, but in reality the land was quite different.
The route twisted out of Shadow Gap, and approaching the dalelands it
climbed and descended numerous hillocks. Akabar found the land pleasing to the
eye. Sheltered from the Great Desert by mountains, the Dales were nothing at
all like the barren Stonelands to the south of Shadow Gap. The hills were lush
with greenery and wildflowers.
On the third afternoon outside of Shadow Gap, a storm lost them half a day's
travel. As they cowered in a vale beneath their waxed tarps, the sheet of black
water falling from the sky was broken only by flashes of lightning.
The next day the rain continued, but with only half the ferocity. Horses,
supplies, and clothing drenched, they took a quick vote. They decided to push
on to Shadowdale rather than sleeping on wet ground again, even if it meant
riding all through the day and night. Dragonbait abstained.
With the coming of night, the rain let up, but the moon and stars remained
hidden behind dark clouds. They all shivered with damp and fatigue, but they
pressed on. Just as the dawn light began to highlight ominous purple clouds
with red streaks, they crossed the ancient bridge spanning the Ashaba River and
looked out over Shadowdale.
The town of Shadowdale was the southern entrance to the region of
Shadowdale. Olive rambled on about the myriad legendary adventurers who had
come from Shadowdale or had made it their base or who had retired there. She
had never been there herself, she admitted, but Shadowdale was mentioned in
more ballads, lays, and drinking songs than any other city in all the Realms.
As they passed the Tower of Ashaba, Olive tugged excitedly on the mage's
robes, insisting he take in the sight of the off-center spire with its landing
decks for aerial mounts.
Alias rode on without stopping, too tired to take in the sights. She had
been here before, and the only sight that interested her now was a bed in The
Old Skull, Shadowdale's inn.
Still, it was a relief to find the city standing and not a burned out shell.
She hadn't been back for seven years, ever since the Swanmays had disbanded,
but she had many fond memories of the town.
As they'd crossed the river, she'd spotted two new temples. Otherwise,
nothing had changed since the time when the Swanmays had rescued Alias from
servitude in Westgate and smuggled her north.
Alias had been the youngest of the seven women who made up the Swanmays, and
a thumb-fingered fighter. If not for the shielding of the other members of the
company, she would have been skewered in her first battle. But she'd grown into
a seasoned swordswoman within three seasons, while the company earned its
living guarding caravans through the Elven Wood.
The group had broken up over a foolish argument concerning a worthless man,
and each member had gone her separate way. Alias found that she still cared
enough about them all to wonder what had become of them.
Naturally, Alias had been closest to Kith, since they'd been closest in age.
Kith had been a very beautiful young girl—so lovely she'd made Alias feel
awkward and plain. Kith had been like a sister to her though. They'd even
pricked their thumbs and become blood-sisters. Alias used to plait Kith's long,
silky, chestnut hair and Kith had taught Alias to read and write. Kith had
received her magical training in Shadowdale, from the river witch Sylune.
Maybe I'll visit Sylune before we leave here, Alias thought. If she can tell
me her former pupil's whereabouts, I might look Kith up after I put this sigil
mess behind me. It feels wonderful to remember something so fully. I can
remember it as clearly as though I'm reading it from a book. I only left the
Black Hawks a year ago, but their faces and names are fuzzy. Somehow, though,
returning to Shadowdale has brought back ail my memories of the Swanmays.
"An excellent reason to visit here, even if it weren't on the way to
Yulash," Alias muttered.
"I beg your pardon?" Akabar asked, pulling his horse up alongside
Lady Killer. Olive, on High Roll, and Dragonbait, leading Lightning, clomped
far behind.
"Nothing," Alias replied. Just for a while she wanted to keep to
herself the joy of these clear memories. Akabar could not possibly understand,
and Alias didn't want the memories belittled by someone else's indifference.
The Old Skull had not changed a bit. The stalwart building of timber and
stone still rose three stories high, its upper levels lined with windows.
The smell of smoke mixed with damp clay and fresh-baked bread attracted
Alias's attention to the building next to the inn. She remembered it was the
shop of Meira Lulhannon, a potter and baker. Funny, Alias thought. I don't
remember noticing the smell before. Not that it's unpleasant, but still, you'd
think it would stick in my mind.
The Old Skull's innkeep was Jhaele Silvermane, a pleasant, motherly woman
who had joined the Swanmays for more than one evening of strong tales and
stronger drink. Alias remembered that when she'd last visited the inn, Jhaele's
son had grown sons, so Jhaele had to be at least in her late fifties by now.
Her hair was grayer and the lines around her eyes deeper, but otherwise she
looked just as Alias remembered.
If Jhaele recognized Alias she gave no sign. Alias, for her part, did not
feel up to rehashing the good old days until she'd had ten hours of sleep and
had cleaned herself up. So, from beneath her sopping hood, she asked if the
Green Room, the Onyx, and Warm Fires were available. In The Old Skull, each
room was decorated differently and given individual names, a custom that had,
unfortunately, died out in more civilized and overpopulated regions like
Corrnyr.
Jhaele informed her that all three rooms were vacant and ready for guests.
She gave Alias a curious look as she led the party to the third floor, no doubt
wondering if she was a previous patron.
Olive grumbled about the inordinate number of stairs in human buildings.
Even Dragonbait puffed and growled some. Alias didn't care, though. To her mind
they'd rented the best rooms in the house.
Alias claimed Warm Fires, a room with three separate hearths, all blazing
merrily. Akabar choose the Onyx, with its white carvings. Ruskettle sniffed at
the wilderness scenes on the tapestries that completely covered the walls of
the Green Room.
"This will do in a pinch," she declared, sprawling out on the
bright yellow bedspread, and promptly falling asleep.
"Her room has no windows," Akabar noted to Alias as he closed her
door. "Keeping an eye on her comings and goings will be that much
easier."
"You don't say? That's just the reason the leader of my first
adventuring group always reserved this room," Alias explained. "We
had two sleight-of-hand artistes."
Akabar grinned. "If I'm not here when you wake, I'll probably be
speaking with the sage Dimswart recommended."
"Fine." Alias nodded sleepily.
"Pleasant dreams," he wished her,
"Pleasdream," Alias mumbled, closing her door.
With Dragonbait already curled before the largest hearth, snoring deeply,
Alias stripped off her clothes, wrapped the bed coverings around herself, and
crawled onto the goose down mattress. She was awake only long enough to note
the rain had started again, a steady drizzle which lulled her to sleep within
minutes.
*****
When Alias awoke, the rain had stopped and the sun was low in the western
sky. She rose leisurely, stretching and yawning and wriggling between the warm
sheets, luxuriating in what nine silver pieces a night could buy.
Finally, Alias sat up and looked around. Her clothes were spread before the
blazing hearths. Dragonbait's doing, Alias realized, but where'd he taken
himself to? she wondered.
The warrior yawned, stretched, and padded across the room, collecting what
she would wear. From two floors below came the rythmic thumping of people
dancing. The locals had already begun their evening festivities.
She pulled on her leggings, stiff from drying. Instead of an ordinary tunic,
she chose from her pack a new robe, something made from wool dyed a turquoise
color. Its long sleeves tied around her wrists, hiding her arms completely.
Tonight she would forget her problems for a few hours if she could.
Dragonbait had already polished and dried her armor, but she was sick of
wearing it. Tonight she would forget her profession, too. She wouldn't even
bring her sword, not even peacebonded. She didn't need it for feasting,
drinking, singing, or dancing. Besides, she was known in Shadowdale. No one
here was an enemy.
She slid her remaining dagger in a boot sheath—only because daggers could be
used in games, she told herself. She made a mental note to purchase another, to
replace the lost one, but promptly forgot that, too. Akabar will remember, she
thought with a grin.
Alias knocked on the mage's door. There was no answer, so she went down to
the taproom alone. Olive was already there, holding court for a roomful of
locals. Dragonbait sat at her feet. The halfling held her hands to her mouth,
fingers spread and curled in imitation of fangs and then opened her arms wide.
Alias realized she was recounting her battle with the kalmari.
A sudden anxiety swept over the swordswoman. The foolish halfling might
babble about the sigils. It hadn't occurred to Alias to forbid the bard to
mention them. Stupid, stupid, stupid! she scolded herself. Did she think she
could rely on Olive's halfling sense of propriety?
Tonight of all nights she did not want to be identified as a marked woman, a
magnet for danger.
"Your friend spins quite a tale," a mellow voice beside her
commented. "How much of it is true?"
Alias turned toward the speaker. He was an attractive man, clean-shaven,
well-dressed, with the lean body of a fighter. The only ornament he wore was a
ring of red metal, inlaid with three silver crescents wrapped in blue flames He
had the smooth polish of the Dale's nobility, polite, but not stuffy, yet Alias
could detect a trace of a western accent. He almost, but not quite, lost the
"h" when he said the word "how." He's from Waterdeep, Alias
thought.
"Depends on what she's saying," Alias replied with a smile.
"And how many drinks she's had, of course."
"Of course." The man smiled back. "She says Shadow Gap is
clear of the Iron Throne's monster. If that's true, the people of the Dales owe
you thanks."
"Oh?" Alias said. "Olive hasn't explained how she alone
defeated the monster with nothing but her quick wits and magical voice?"
A charming grin spread over the man's face. "No," he answered,
"she admitted to relying as well on her prowess with a broadsword that
once belonged to a barbarian god, a holy artifact of Tempus, or so we have been
given to understand. Under the constant reminders of the creature at her feet,
we have elicited a confession that you and the creature had some part in the
affair as well."
Alias smiled fondly at Dragonbait. Always where he's needed most, which
right now happens to be keeping an eye on the halfling.
"I get the feeling," the man continued, "that besides making
the halfling share the credit, there's something specific the lizard-thing's
keeping the halfling from mentioning. Her chatter is the usual bard tales about
adventurers, red dragons, elementals, and royal weddings, but in every episode
there is some point where the creature nudges her and she changes course, so to
speak."
Alias had to force herself to remain calm. "We all have our little
secrets, um . . . you haven't told me your name," she said.
"Mourngrym. Mourngrym Amcathra."
"Alias."
Mourngrym bowed his head. "On behalf of the people of the Dales, I
thank you for ridding us of a fell beast."
"Your thanks are graciously accepted," Alias answered, bowing her
own head modestly. Inwardly, however, she felt guilty. The kalmari was in the
gap partly because of her. But she couldn't bring herself to spoil the one
little moment of glory due her by confessing the truth.
Something about Mourngrym's official tone made Alias wonder just who he was.
"Are you one of Lord Doust's men?" she asked.
Mourngrym smiled. "I had that honor until last year, when the good
cleric retired. Not that he was too old for the job, but he wanted to spend
more time with his family. He lives in Arabel now."
"Oh." Alias hadn't heard about that. Why hadn't she heard about
that? Something that important happening, in such an important place, it should
have been talked about for months. She had to have known. It must have been
lost with the memories of the last year. "Who is lord of Shadowdale
now?"
"Me," Mourngrym said, grinning.
Alias blushed deeply.
"I'm sorry," he said softly. "I thought you knew. If there is
anything you need, I'm sure we can provide it. In thanks."
She had the lord of Shadowdale offering her whatever she needed, and all she
could think of was her lost dagger. She wasn't going to bother him with
something that small.
Someone struck up a reel on a songhorn, accompanied by the rhythmic thumping
of a tantan. "How about a dance partner?" Alias asked shyly.
Mourngrym's grin widened. He rose, offered Alias his arm, and led her to the
center of the floor.
The reel was fast and lively, and Alias loved every minute of it. Mourngrym
was a fine dancer, and it had been a long time since Alias had done something
so frivolous. When it was over her partner led her to a chair.
"Not as easy as swinging a sword, is it? What will you have Alias, ale
or wine?" Mourngrym signalled the waiter.
"Wine, please," Alias panted. "I must have danced that reel a
dozen times a night when I was younger. Of course, I wasn't so lucky in my
partners back then. There used to be a dearth of gentlemen in this inn, and
Kith and I always had to dance with each other."
"Kith?" Mourngrym asked.
"She was our mage," Alias explained. "Long ago I was with the
Company of the Swanmays. We guarded caravans through the Elven Wood. We used to
winter here."
The waiter stood at Mourngrym's elbow. "Ale for me, Turko, wine for the
lady. Swanmays," he repeated as Turko hurried off. "Yes, Elminster's
Tales mention them. Six women, all fairly hot-tempered, if I remember
correctly."
"Seven," Alias corrected. "I was the youngest."
"Wasn't the youngest a mage?" asked Mourngrym.
"That was Kith," said Alias. "She was half a year my elder.
She studied under Sylune for a short while."
"Yes, the witch mentioned her once," smiled Mourngrym. "Not
too favorably, as I recall, but spellcasters are a temperamental bunch."
"Speaking of temperamental spellcasters, have you seen the other member
of my party?"
"The Turmishman?" Mourngrym asked. "Aye, he came down late
this afternoon and paid a lad a gold eagle to ask Elminster for an audience. He
waited until about an hour ago, when Elminster's reply came back. The message
was—and I quote Elminster's words—'Hie thy backside to my outer office and
await there on my pleasure.' So your spellcaster is probably pacing the tower
floor right now."
The waiter returned with their drinks.
"Good fortune," Mourngrym toasted, raising his mug.
"Good fortune," Alias agreed before she sipped the cold, pink liquid.
She'd come to the conclusion that part of her curse involved not being able to
enjoy ale. After her dream in Shadow Gap, she'd decided to try wine instead.
The drink the waiter brought her was nowhere near as pleasant as the wine in
her dream, but it was at least palatable and, with any luck, not so potent.
"Poor Akabar," Alias said. "Elminster must be this local
master sage he was so anxious to talk to. Akabar is so responsible, he'll miss
out on all the fun. I hope he isn't wasting his time. Is this Elminster any
good?"
Mourngrym nearly choked on his ale. "Elminster? You used to winter here
and you've never heard of Elminster the sage?"
Alias shook her head. "That was over seven years ago. I take it
Elminster is someone new."
"Only as new as the Sunset Peaks and twice as craggy," the lord of
Shadowdale replied, giving her a strange look. "He's been here forever.
He's the wisest man in the Realms. He's the reason most people come to
Shadowdale, though he doesn't usually hire his services out anymore."
Damn, damn, damn, damn! Alias thought. I've gone and spoiled everything
again. How could I remember so much about this town, and not remember someone
so important?
Alias lowered her eyes. "I'm afraid I have trouble remembering things
sometimes," she explained.
"Well, as you said, that was seven years ago. You were young, and young
people don't often take much note of old sages and their ilk," Mourngrym
answered kindly.
The songhorn began another melody accompanied by Olive on her yarting.
"I remember this song, though," Alias declared. It was an elvish
tune, but its lyrics were in the common tongue. It was about the Standing
Stone, the monument erected to commemorate the pact made between the dalesmen
and the elves of the wood over thirteen centuries ago.
Determined to put the awkward moment behind her, Alias began to sing, her
voice clear and strong. The taproom patrons turned from the musicians to the
swordswoman. Alias shifted her glance from one face to the other, catching the
eyes of her audience, making them feel as if she sang for them. She spotted
Dragonbait smiling at her, keeping rhythm with the end of his tail. The only
eyes she did not catch were Olive's. The bard bent over her yarting strings,
apparently too intent on her fingerings to look up.
When she finished, the room burst into applause. Alias blushed and turned
back to the table. What could have possessed me to show off like that? she
wondered. She had always kept as low a profile as possible in towns. Now she
was behaving like a child. For a moment she thought of the runes, but there was
no tell-tale heat or light coming through her sleeve.
The songhorn player came up to her table. "Excuse me, my lord.
Lady," he addressed Alias, "do you think maybe, if you have time, you
might give me the words to that song? They were just wonderful. Did you write
them yourself?"
"No. I learned that song here, to that melody. You've never heard the
lyrics before?"
The musician shook his head. "No, lady. I learned the tune from an elf,
but he told me it had no words."
"But I learned it here," Alias insisted.
"Sometimes these old songs get lost if they aren't written down,"
Mourngrym said. "Isn't that right, Han?"
"Yes, my lord," the musician agreed.
"I thought it was a common song in the dalelands," Alias said,
growing a little frustrated.
"It will be soon, lady, if you tell me the words. With your permission,
I'll sing it from here to Harrowdale."
"I'll write them down later," Alias promised the musician,
"and leave them with Jhaele before I go."
"Thank you, lady." The young man smiled. "Excuse me," he
said, bowed to Alias, and went back to his stool to play more sets with Olive.
Alias looked up and spotted Jhaele just then. "Would you excuse me,
Your Lordship? There's someone I'd like to say hello to."
"Certainly," Mourngrym said, nodding. He watched Alias walk over
to the innkeep, and then he turned to focus his attention on the musicians. The
swordswoman was acceptable, he decided, a little addled maybe, but nice. From
experience, though, he knew it wouldn't hurt to keep an eye on the halfling.
Alias went up to the bar, smiling at Jhaele. The woman smiled back, but
still gave no sign of recognition, so Alias asked her, "Jhaele, do you
remember the Company of the Swanmay?"
"Yes, I do." The innkeep's smile spread further across her worn
features. "They were hell-raisers, that lot."
"How many were there?"
"Well, let's see, The two fighters, a pair of thieves, a cleric, and
Kith, the would-be mage. Six in all. All women."
"You don't remember me?"
Jhaele stared at Alias for a long moment. "No, I'm sorry, lady. I can't
say that I do. The Swanmays would sometimes pick up strays, but none of them
stayed in my memory, I'm afraid. I won't forget you now, though. Your song was
wonderful. I'm honored you sang it in my taproom."
"But, Jhaele, you taught me that song," Alias insisted.
Jhaele laughed. "You must have me mistaken for another, lady. I can't
sing a note. Never could."
Alias opened her mouth to laugh, thinking Jhaele was teasing her, but the
sincerity in the innkeeper's face unsettled her. She blushed and fled through
the door to the kitchen. Jhaele looked after her, but the swordswoman ran out
the side door into the night.
"Something eating at that one," Jhaele muttered and returned to
her chores at the bar.
The sun had just slipped behind the distant Desertsmouth Mountains, and the
sky was a deep, dark blue. The night air was cold, but Alias was too furious to
notice as she strode hastily away from The Old Skull eastward down the road
toward the common and the river.
"This doesn't make any sense," she growled. "I wasn't some
stray the Swanmays picked up! I was a member! For three seasons!"
It was one thing for this new lord, Mourngrym, to forget the tale of the
Swanmays, but Alias had wintered twice in The Old Skull. She and Kith and
Belinda had spent at least a hundred evenings in Jhaele Silvermane's company.
The innkeep had mulled wine especially for them and taught them bawdy songs
about men in general and certain male adventurers in particular. And Jhaele had
taught her the song about the Standing Stone.
"How could she forget me?" Alias whispered angrily. Her throat constricted
as tears welled in her eyes. She gulped uncomfortably for air.
How can you blame Jhaele, when you don't even remember Elminster? her
conscience said. To hear Mourngrym describe him, you'd think this sage was a
town landmark. I could not possibly have missed noticing him in a town as small
as Shadowdale. And even if I had, according to Mourngrym I should have heard
about him from people in the outside world. He's supposed to be famous.
Maybe, she thought, Mourngrym was exaggerating the sage's renown. Anyway,
Mourngrym hadn't been here seven years ago either, so how could he know for
sure if Elminster was around then? Maybe these Elminster's Tales that
Mourngrym mentioned weren't all that accurate. How could this Elminster mention
the Swanmays and not mention me? How dare he forget me?
Having passed the dozen or so buildings in the heart of town, and exhausted
by her tirade, Alias considered going back to the inn to sleep. Secretly, she
hoped that when she woke up she would discover the disappointments of the
evening had all been part of another bad dream. That's about as likely as my
tattoo disappearing in the morning, she taunted herself. She walked on.
She passed Tulba the weaver's house. Next to it was a small, well-beaten
path leading up to the side of the grassy rise known as the Old Skull. She
could just barely make out a dilapidated sign by the path. It was marked with
an upturned crescent with a ball hovering between its horns.
Alias stepped onto the path to inspect the sign more closely. Below the
symbol, in the common tongue, was written, "No Trespassing. Violators
should notify next of kin. Have a pleasant day. —Elminster."
Alias's eyes traveled the length of the path up to the hillock, where it
ended at a ramshackle building perched awkwardly on the side of the rise. It
was a sort of tower, but so many additions were built against it, cluttered
with further additions leaning against or built on top of them, that it was
hard to pick out the original structure. However, a spire of solid stone
reached at least three stories higher than all the more recent constructions.
Thick vines of flowering kudzu covered the tower and additions.
Alias remembered every other building she had passed, from Lulhannon's
pottery to the weaver's, but the path and the sign and the building were a
blank. Alias had never seen them before. Ever. Not once in the thousand times
she'd traveled this road. It was possible to miss a sage—he might have stayed
inside all winter to protect himself from the cold—but she couldn't have missed
this building.
The path could have been beaten hard in a year, the sign could have
weathered to look that old in seven years, but the building was ancient. Kudzu
grew like crazy, but it would have taken centuries for its vines to grow so thick
and high.
Maybe there were more trees here before, blocking the view, Alias mused. But
then, wouldn't I have seen it from the top of Old Skull? I scrambled up there
often enough with Kith.
With a surge of excitement, Alias began to wonder if Cassana and company
wanted her to forget Elminster for a good reason. Maybe he could tell her more
about her sigils than Dimswart. With a new determination, ignoring the sign,
she strode up the path, planning to join Akabar as he waited on Elminster's
arrival.
Reaching the building, she knocked loudly. She waited several minutes but
there was no reply, even though lights could clearly be seen glittering in the
upper windows of the tower. Certain that someone was within, Alias called out,
"Hello," and knocked again even louder. A shadow went across one of
the windows. Several minutes passed, but still no one answered her or came to
let her in.
With just a trace of embarrassment, Alias tried the doorknob, but it would
not turn. She tried other doors, and even a window, but found them all held
fast. With a huff she spun about and marched back down the footpath.
At the road she turned east and walked down the left-hand fork of the road
that followed the River Ashaba south. "I'm going to find someone who
remembers me," she declared. "Sylune will remember me. She didn't
know me well, but she never forgets anyone."
In her haste she was oblivious to the shouting that came from the tower
behind her.
14
The Scribe and the Old Man
"What do you mean, more forms?" Akabar bellowed, finally losing
his temper. Secretly he hoped that his shouts would gain the attention of someone
besides the bureaucratic fool of a scribe who stood before him—someone with the
insight to understand the importance of his problem, someone who would rescue
him from this morass of paperwork. Someone like Elminster.
"Well, ummm, here," Lhaeo the scribe said and pointed to a place
on a form Akabar had completed over an hour ago. He blinked at the southern
mage through a strange set of thick lenses wrapped in wire which perched
precariously on his nose. "Here, where you mentioned that you have more
than one wife, you should have gone to line twenty-three and listed all your
wives' mothers' names, instead of line twenty-two, where you listed your first
wife's mother's name. That error is going to require a special schedule HL, in
order to keep our files straight."
"Files?" shrieked Akabar. "Look around you!" he
demanded. "Does it look as if anything has been filed here in the last
millennium?"
The question was purely rhetorical. The scribe's outer office, which also
served as a waiting room for those seeking audience with the great Elminster,
was a firetrap waiting for a spark. Parchment scrolls, leatherbound tomes,
sheaves of loose leaves of paper, empty folders clearly labeled
Important
or
Confidential, and bark textbooks stained with berry ink, and chalk
dust lay on every available horizontal surface or leaned against a vertical
surface. Colored streamers, on which were scrawled the most exotic letters,
hung from the ceiling.
Besides the gray slate used to write temporary messages, such as
Attend
Azoun's Coronation and
Warn Myth Drannor of Attack, there were stone
and clay tablets and sheets of soft metals to hold more permanent messages, the
ones to be handed down through history—
Pick Up Laundry and
Pay
Lhaeo.
All this, of course, was a tribute to Lhaeo's ability to intimidate
adventurers and keep them from disturbing Elminster. Akabar sensed this to some
extent. At least, he could not believe that anyone, including Lhaeo, really
gave a bat's dropping for what he wrote down. His perception was that Lhaeo's
forms were some sort of test of his patience or intelligence or desperation. If
he just stuck it out long enough, he was certain, Lhaeo would finally recognize
his worthiness as a candidate and remind his master that a southern mage waited
in the outer office.
However, Akabar had been waiting five hours—three at the inn and two in this
dismal, cramped room. His patience was spent, his intelligence exhausted on
figuring out the ridiculous forms. Desperation was his final strategy. He
considered dashing from the room to the tower, but without Lhaeo's guidance
through the maze of halls and doors and rooms, he wasn't sure he could find it.
Even if I did find the stairs, Akabar mused, I have no guarantee that Elminster
is in the tower.
Lheao shrugged. "You must understand, Elminster is a very busy man.
This is the only way we have of determining if a problem is truly important
enough to warrant interrupting his already overcrowded schedule."
"Just what size dragon does it take to land in this room to merit the
sage's attention?"
"Oh, Elminster doesn't consult with dragons," Lhaeo assured the
mage. "Consults on dragons, perhaps, but not with them. The sage is very,
very busy, and he does not, as a rule, waste his time with dragons. That's what
adventurers are for. And if, um, when you get in to see him, I would advise you
to mention dragons as little as possible."
"Look," Akabar said, "I understand that the sage is busy.
When I got his message to hurry over, I assumed he would see me on his dinner
break or something."
"Dinner break?" The scribe used a delicate finger to push the wire
rims around the lenses higher up his nose. "I don't think Elminster has
taken a dinner break since, let's see . . . umm ... this is the Year of the
Prince, then that makes it. . ." Lhaeo consulted a calendar.
"Does anyone ever make it past this blizzard of parchment?" Akabar
growled.
"Well," Lhaeo sat and thought for half a moment. "There was a
delegation from the Forest of Anauroch."
"Anauroch is a desert, not a forest," Akabar said.
"Well, now it is, yes."
"Was that supposed to be a joke?" Akabar snapped.
"Am I laughing?" the scribe asked, looking at Akabar over the rim
of his glasses.
"No."
"Then it couldn't be a joke, could it?"
"Look," said Akabar, "I realize the sage can't spare time for
everyone. I wouldn't bother him with a petty problem. I'm a mage of no small
water. Another member of the sage community, Master Dimswart of Suzail, was
unable to handle all the complexities of my case. He recommended I see
Elminster. I traveled all this way to do so."
"Oh!" Lhaeo exclaimed, his eyes lighting up behind the thick
lenses. "You're a referral! Well, then we need to start again with a
different set of forms. One moment, I'll get them." The scribe put his
hand in a drawer and drew out a bird's nest of shredded paper. "No, this
can't be them. They must be in that other cabinet."
Akabar counted to ten.
Far below, someone knocked on a door, but in his search for the referral
forms, Lhaeo ignored it.
"Here we go," the scribe announced. "Last copy, too, so we
need to fill out an acquisition memo to file with the local merchants for the
next shipment of parchment." The referral form passed dangerously close to
a candle flame. "Oooch, singed it a little, but, uh, we can just, yes, we
can just make out an addendum form to explain that the singed parchment was my
fault."
From below, someone knocked again, only louder.
"Isn't someone going to answer that?" Akabar asked.
"Well, no."
'Why not?"
'It's way after business hours. We're closed."
"But, I'm here," Akabar said, then nearly bit off his tongue.
"So you are. We'll need another form for that. Nocturnal
visitors."
The knocking stopped.
"Now, please, include as much information on the sage Dimswart as you
can recall. What you asked him on this line, what he answered on this one, what
he didn't tell you on this one. Any reasons you may have to believe he may have
been incorrect on this line."
Akabar dipped a quill in the inkpot and began again. He wished he'd brought
Alias along. Broadswords had such a nice, satisfying way of cutting through red
tape. It wasn't until a minute later, upon discovering there was a form to fill
out because Alias, not he, was the sage's real client, that Akabar lost his
temper again and renewed his loud verbal assault on the sage's scribe.
*****
Sylune's hut was atop a low rise overlooking the road and the River Ashaba.
Alias remembered the dwelling as small but comfortable, covered with vines,
with smoke always drifting from a chimney for a cooking fire. She remembered
Sylune as a radiantly beautiful woman with shining silver hair. Kith had told
her that Sylune was at least a century old but kept young with her magics.
Alias had always suspected that Kith planned to use her power toward the same
goal, improving and maintaining her looks.
The thought put a smile on her face that disappeared as Alias topped the
rise. Illuminated by moonlight, Sylune's hut was nothing but rubble, its
timbers and stone shattered and scattered along the hilltop. A rocky stump,
once the fireplace, was the only indication that a dwelling had once stood
there.
"Bhaal's breath," Alias cursed as she walked through the remains
of the hut. The damage had occurred years ago. Her boots struck an occasional
flagstone, but the majority of the floor had long since disappeared beneath
grass and creepers.
The hairs rose on the back of the swordswoman's neck, and she realized
Shadowdale was no safer a haven for her than Shadow Gap had been. She
immediately regretted leaving her sword in her room. Then she thought, what
difference does it make? The sword was useful against the assassins, but it
could never have cut through the crystal elemental the way Dragonbait's did,
and only the barbarian's sword could have defeated the kalmari.
Reason told her to flee back to the inn and the safety of her companions,
but feelings of pain and anger overwhelmed her and made her fey. I'm sick of
retreating, she thought. I want a fight.
"This is as good a place as any," Alias muttered. Her voice rose
in volume and pitch. "First, there's the old ruin—an abandoned or
burned-out shell. Darkness all around. The stage is set." She began
shouting. "What are you waiting for, O mighty masters? Here's where the nasty,
creeping horror lurches out at me, isn't it?"
She laughed. "What's the matter? Can't make up your minds what to send
this time? How 'bout a beholder, all round with flashing eyes? Oh, no, wait!
I've got it! Send a mind flayer or, better yet, an intellect devourer! It'll
starve, you know, because you're driving me crazy!"
Her raging bellows carried across the Ashaba.
"Show yourselves, you cowards!" she shrieked, losing all control
of her anger. "I'll teach you to make a puppet out of me! Come on, attack
me! I dare you!"
"Well, I don't want to," a reedy voice answered her from the
fireplace. "But if ye don't stop shouting, I will."
Alias whirled around, but all she could see in the dark was a shadow near
the ruined stump of the hearth. She instantly came to her senses and reached
down to grab the dagger from her boot.
"I'm . . . sorry," she whispered, still crouching, ready to cast
the blade if the shadow made any sudden moves. It appeared to be an ordinary
man, but then the kalmari had looked like an ordinary merchant in her dream
until it was ripped asunder and the deadly cloud rose from its shell. "I
thought I was alone up here."
"Talk to thyself often, do ye?"
"Well, I mean, I thought someone might be listening Someone far
off—hopefully."
"Keep shouting like that," said the shadow, "and ye'll bring
the entire dale up here. I was about to lay a watch-fire. Do ye care to help me
tend it?"
Without waiting for an answer, the figure turned awav from her and knelt by
the hearth. Alias stood up straight and the tension she'd felt eased as the
cool metal hilt of the dagger warmed in her palm. The figure by the hearth
hummed an aimless tune while piling the logs and tinder together. There was a
spark, then a second flash, and the dry tinder went up, casting a circle of
light and warmth from the center of the ruined hut.
Illuminated, the shadow transformed into a beanpole of a man, dressed in
weatherbeaten and stained brown robes His gray beard was stringy and unkempt,
and his hood was thrown back to reveal a balding pate which gleamed red from
the flames of the fire. He seemed nothing more than an elderly, crotchety
goatherd.
"If ve aren't going to take advantage of the warmth," the old man
said, "at least come into the light so I can see ye use that dagger."
Alias stepped into the firelight, feeling foolish for having been caught
raging at fate, but even more foolish for having threatened an old man. She sat
down crosslegged before the hearth.
"I'm looking for the river witch Sylune," she explained
The old man sat down facing her and leaned his back against the broken
fireplace wall. He pulled a ball of tobacco from a pocket and used his thumb to
shove it into a thick, clay pipe. He looked at her thoughtfully. "She's
dead" he said quietly.
"What?"
"She's dead," repeated the old man. "Deceased. Here no more.
People die. Even here." He lit the pipe with the end of a burning twig.
"How?" Alias whispered. The news hit her like a blow to the gut.
She had never been close to Kith's mentor, but everywhere she went, anytime she
felt close to getting some answers, her efforts were thwarted. I'd been
counting on Sylune more than I realized, she thought.
"She died battling a dragon," the old man explained. "A
flight of 'em descended on the region a couple winters back. They destroyed a
bunch a' towns. One of 'em took advantage of Elminster bein' out of the
country. When this dragon attacked Shadowdale, Sylune was the only power
around. She didn't stand a chance, but she had this staff."
Alias realized that the old man meant a magical staff, a staff of power.
"She broke it across the critter's nose, and everything went up in a
pillar of flame—the dragon, the staff, and Sylune. It happened right across the
way there." The old man pointed to the other side of the river.
By the moonlight, Alias's eyes could just pick out the naked, burned-out
area of the woods. "Damn," she whispered softly.
"Aye."
There was silence between them for a while. Then the old man spoke again.
"I heard thy singing at Jhaele's," he said. "I never thought I'd
hear that old song again."
"You know it?" Alias's head snapped up.
"I heard it once."
"Where?"
"Ye tell me first," the old man insisted, "where ye learned
it."
"I learned it from Jhaele," Alias said.
The old man laughed. "Jhaele! Impossible. The woman's tone deaf"
Alias shrugged. "She doesn't remember teaching me, but she did. I know
she did," she said vehemently.
The old man peered at Alias through half-closed eyes, considering her
answer. Finally he asked, "Do ye know any other good, old songs? One about
the moon maybe?" He pointed to the bright sphere. "And the lights
that follow it?"
"The Tears of Selune," Alias said.
"It's a love song, isn't it?" the old man asked.
"Yes," Alias answered. "About how the goddess of the moon
weeps because her lover, the sun, is always on the other side of the
world."
"That's the one. Where'd ye learn it?"
"You want me to sing it?" she asked.
"That's not what I asked, now, is it?"
"No."
"Well?" the old man prompted.
Alias did not answer. He'd laughed when she said Jhaele had taught her the
song about the Standing Stone. If she told him she'd learned The Tears of
Selune from a Harper, he probably wouldn't believe that either.
As though he were reading her mind, the old man asked "Do ye think ye
learned it from a Harper maybe?"
It was Alias's turn to stare at him.
"Your short friend, the bard, was singing a song about Myth Drannor.
She said a Harper had taught it to her."
Alias snorted. "Sounds like Olive."
"You savin' she didn't learn it from a Harper?"
"She learned it from me," Alias said.
"Which leaves the question—where did ye learn these songs?"
"A Harper," she admitted.
"I thought so," the old man said smugly. "What was this
Harper's name?"
Alias thought very hard, but she drew a complete blank. "I don't
know," she whispered.
"I thought not," the old man said.
"No, you don't understand. I'm telling you the truth. I just don't
always remember things."
"Oh, I understand, all right. More than ye know. I believe ye. Ye
learned the song from a Harper, but he never told ye his name."
"That's not possible," Alias said, wracking her brain for memories
of the Harper. "We were close. . . ." Her voice trailed off. She
could not even remember the Harper's face, let alone where or how they had met.
"He was a Harper," she insisted.
"He was," the old man echoed.
Warmed by the fire, Alias pushed her sleeves up to her elbows without
thinking.
"An interesting tattoo you have there," the old man said, nodding
at her right arm.
Alias was about to pull her sleeve back down, but the old man snatched her
wrist and pulled her arm toward him. The firelight flickered over the blue
sigils. The markings remained still for the moment: they could almost pass as a
normal tattoo. Yet, Alias felt uncomfortable revealing the sigils to strangers.
"It's not mine," she said.
"Oh. Ye just rented it for the month of Mirtul?'" the old man
joked.
"Someone put it on me without my permission," Alias explained.
"I must have been drunk." She shrugged.
The graybeard raised his eyebrows and squinted. "Nice work, nice work,
indeed. I've seen naught like it. They aren't very nice symbols, are
they?"
"What would you know about them?" Alias asked, trying to yank her
arm back, but the old man's grip was surprisingly firm.
He tapped the sigil at the crook of her arm. "Flame Daggers," he
muttered.
"Fire Knives," Alias corrected.
"Oh, right. Right. They're a guild of Thieves and Assassins from
Cormyr. Young Azoun sent 'em packing. They operate out of a warehouse in
Westgate now."
Surprised by the old man's knowledge, Alias quit struggling and let her arm
rest in his grip.
"And the two below," she prompted him.
He snorted. "What do I look like? A sage?" he retorted.
"Well, yes, kind of," Alias said.
The old man chuckled. "Ye can't live in a town as small as this one
without pickin' up stuff. Elminster's always out advisin' on the lambin' and
the hayin', always tellin' stories. He could tell ye what these were without
blinkin'."
"We've never met," Alias replied with a sniff.
"I suppose not. He doesn't care much for adventurers."
"Oh. I suppose he prefers greengrocers," Alias retorted.
"Greengrocers?"
"Townfolk. Farmers. Traders. People more interested in profit than
adventure,"
The old man chuckled again. "They've got land and a town to show for
it. What have ye got?"
Alias had never thought about that before. She had some gold, but it would
be gone before long. If she'd actually got a chest full of treasure from Mist,
she could have bought herself some property. But then she'd be a greengrocer,
too, and she had no intention of retiring, ever. All she wanted to do was
travel freely throughout the Realms.
"My memories," she answered, but she knew that wasn't saying much,
at least not in her case.
The old man grinned. "Ye are smarter than ye look." He tapped her
wrist where the snake pattern wound about empty space. "There's nothing in
this place."
"I got lucky, escaped before they finished, I think."
"Ye think so, do ye? Maybe."
"Do you know the other sigils?" Alias asked.
The old man was quiet for so long Alias thought he had drifted off to sleep.
He let her arm slip from his grasp. Suddenly, he said, "Zrie and
Cassana!"
Alias started. The old fool couldn't be just a goatherd and know that, unless
. . . unless Olive had managed to babble something in the bar before Dragonbait
could stop her.
"What do you know about them?" she asked.
"It's an old story, one that happened before ye were born—quite a
scandalous one." The old man clucked his tongue and poked at the fire with
a stick, sending sparks and flames flying.
"Well?" prompted Alias.
"A deep subject, that," the old man teased.
"The story," Alias insisted.
"Oh, the story of Zrie Prakis and Cassana?" the graybeard asked.
"It's quite common, ye know."
"I've never heard it," Alias said. "They didn't know the
story in Cormyr."
"Oh, Cormyr;' the old man muttered. "Well, they wouldn't. But
around here, in the Dales and in Sembia, I think everyone knows the tale. They
turned it into an opera in the Living City. It's a long-winded piece where one
character tells another to be quiet in a long, screaming five minute speech,
and the other replies he'll be quiet in another long, loud five minute speech.
Absurd thing, opera."
"The story," Alias whined.
The old man clucked disapprovingly. "Not the patient type, are ye? Ye
know, if ye just sit quiet and listen, ye'11 learn a lot more than if ye poke
at people all the time."
Alias remembered that Nameless had said something very similar. It was true.
She wanted the information poured into her. She didn't like the game of asking
questions and then having to listen to all the roundabout replies prople gave
her. "Please," she asked.
The old man sniffed. "I ought to make you travel to the Living City and
listen to the opera."
Alias glowered.
"Very well. I suppose that I'd better make it the short version before
ve explode, hmm? Ye wouldn't appreciate the poetry of the tale, or the subplots
of the opera, would ye? I'll cut to the heart of the matter.
"Zrie and Cassana met when they were both magelings. They fell in love,
pledged their eternal faithfulness. Then they parted. In one version of the
story their masters send them to the opposite ends of the Inner Sea for their
journeyman quests. In another version, one of them lands in the ethereal plane
and it takes him or her years to return. In the opera Cassana is kidnapped by
pirates.
"Anyway, they each grow vain, proud, haughty, and very powerful. When
they meet again, somewhere in the south, they end up burying their love for one
another in an argument over who is the most powerful. They duel over it, and
Zrie loses big. Cassana kills him. Not real tragic, considering what a
mean-spirited cuss he was, but Cassana feels remorse over slaying her first and
true love. Being, by this time, a basically sick, depraved person herself,
Cassana packs Zrie's charred bones in a glass sarcophagus that she keeps by her
bedside for the rest of her life."
The old man was silent for several moments. "That's all?" Alias
asked.
"Of course, that's all," the old man snapped. "I didn't want
to get ye all hot and bothered by going into too many details. In the opera
ye've got to sit through a description of every pearl on Cassana's gown when
Zrie first meets her. I don't imagine ye're much interested either in the
story's symbolism or the implications it makes about the nature of power and
evil, are ye?"
"No," Alias admitted.
"Then what's your problem?"
Alias shrugged. "Nothing. I was just hoping it would shed some light on
how I got these things." She held up her arm to indicate the sigils.
"Ye could always go to the Living City and catch the opera."
"No, thanks."
"Do ye wish to hear the story about Moander?" the old man asked.
Alias looked up, startled. He did know a lot. He wasn't simply some old
goatherd. To recognize most of the sigils on her arm he had to be some sort of
wise man or mage. Probably an ex-adventurer himself. "I thought the elves
banished him from the Realms," she said.
"They wish," the old man snickered. "No. The best the elves
could do was use powerful enchantments to lock Moander up deep beneath the
ruins of his temple in Yulash. They wiped out his priests and priestesses,
hoping the god's power in this world would shrink to nothing if he was starved
of worship."
"Did he?"
The old man shrugged. "Probably not. A lot of Moander's worshipers
survived and fled south, where they resurrected the priesthood. Every now and
then Zhentil Keep or Hillsfar forces—whichever one happens to be squatting in
the ruins of Yulash at the time—come across a party of Moander worshipers
trying to release their god. They're usually executed as looters, but they keep
trying. There was this prophesy, see, about a non-born child freeing the
Darkbringer—that's what they call Moander. The priests of Moander have tried to
force the event, no need to go into the gory details about how they try and get
non-born children, but so far they've all failed. Non-born child—mean anything
to ye?"
Alias shook her head. "No. I remember being born."
The old man laughed as though she had said something funny.
Alias asked, "You know anything about this last one?" She pointed
to the blue-on-blue-on-hlue bull's eye between Meander's symbol and the blank
space at her wrist.
"Its a new one on me."
"That's just great," Alias muttered. She shoved the shavings of
the twig into the fire, wiped her dagger clean, and sheathed it. "I knew
the other ones already. This is the one I have to find out about."
"Why?"
"Because I don't know anything about it," Alias said, exasperated.
"Ye think it will make a big difference in thy life?"
"It might," she insisted.
"If I were ye, I'd work on the assumption that it is big and
evil."
"Kind of broad assumptions."
"No broader than the one ye've obviously made about the sixth space by
your wrist," the old man said.
"It's empty," Alias objected.
"There's nothing worse than nothing."
Reminded of her missing memories, Alias could not disagree. "You've
been some help. Can I pay you something?" she asked, uncertain whether she
would offend his pride.
"All ye have to show for thy adventuring life are thy memories,"
he reminded her. "Were ye planning to pay me in those?"
Alias smiled. "I have some gold."
"1 don't need gold. Suppose I asked ye to never sing again. Ever. Would
ye do that?"
"That bad, am I?" she joked.
"I'm serious."
Alias looked into the old man's eyes. He held her gaze without blinking.
"This is about those songs, isn't it? You didn't tell me—Who did you
hear them from?"
"Probably from the same person ye did."
"A Harper?" Alias asked.
The old man nodded.
"What was his name?"
The old man did not answer.
"Tell me his name." Alias lunged forward and shook the man by the
shoulders. "Say his name."
A slow grin crept over the old man's mouth. "Why don't ye say it?"
he asked.
"Because I don't remember it!" she shouted, shaking him with every
word.
The old man put his hand up to her cheek and stroked it gently. "I'm
sorry," he said.
Alias took a deep breath and released the old man. She slid out of his
reach. "It's not your fault," she answered. "I just forget
things sometimes. I'm sorry I shook you. I don't know what came over me."
"Not remembering makes ye angry?"
Alias hesitated. It didn't make her angry. She looked into the old man's
eyes. "It makes me frightened, and that makes me angry."
"A terrible curse, not remembering," he whispered.
Alias shrugged. "Could be worse. Could have forgotten my own
name."
"What's that?" the old man asked.
"Alias."
"Unusual name."
"It's pretty common in Westgate," Alias said.
"Is it, now?" The old man chuckled.
"Why won't you tell me the Harper's name?" Alias asked.
"I'm an old man. . . ." His voice trailed off.
"Are you saying you forgot it, too?"
Her companion did not reply.
"You won't lie about it, will you. You haven't forgotten. Why won't you
tell me?"
"Harpers are a secret organization."
"You've taken some sort of oath?"
"I can't tell ye," the old man said. "I'm sorry."
Alias sighed.
"If I told ye about the sigil ye don't know, would ye agree not to
sing?"
"You do know it!" Alias growled.
The old man shook his head. "No. But I might be able to find out. Would
ye pay me what I ask?"
Alias tilted her head in puzzlement. It was a stupid request, but she had to
consider if the information were worth the price. It might help her keep a step
ahead of Cassana, Fire Knives, and company if she could discover the last
secret partner. And, after all, she was a swordswoman, not a damned bard. Olive
might be a little disappointed if she stopped teaching her songs, but no one
else would care.
Except me, she thought, Singing has consoled me when I grieved and brought
me joy and pleasure when times were better. Everyone sang. Even people with no
talent for it. Nine circles of Hell! Even orcs sang. How could anyone ask
anyone else to give that up? Why? It isn't my singing the old man objects to,
she realized, but the songs themselves. But they're good songs. Everyone likes
them. A Harper taught them to me.
Suddenly, the old man made Alias nervous. She slid farther away from him and
rose to her feet. "I won't!" she answered. "They're good songs!
They deserve to be sung! How can you ask such a thing? It's cruel, wicked,
evil!" She backed away from the fire, turned, and fled down the path.
The path lay in the hill's moonshadow. Alias had a difficult time picking
out the trail. She sunk her right foot into a chuckhole filled with water. She
lost her balance and came down hard on her left knee, her body sprawled across
the wet, muddy ground.
She heard a chuckle on the path behind her. She could see her own shadow in
the soft, glowing light coming up behind her. Then a hand reached down under
her arm and lifted her to her feet. It was the old man's left hand. In his
right he held a yellow crystal that illuminated the area around them evenly,
without the annoying flicker of a lamp.
"Are ye all right?" he asked.
Alias yanked away from her rescuer without replying. Her right ankle ached
some, but she did not think it was a serious sprain.
"Ye'd better take this," the old man suggested. "It's a
finder's stone. Help's the lost find their way." He held the glowing
crystal out toward her. His features, lit from below, looked sinister.
I ought to give him a shove and run off again, she thought, but she couldn't
resist the temptation to ask, "How much is it gonna cost me?"
"Mourngrym thought we should help out supplyin' ye, in thanks for
takin' care of the monster in the gap. Just doin' my bit."
At the mention of Mourngrym's name, Alias felt a little calmer. The lord of
Shadowdale had been gracious, and, well, normal, even if some of his citizens
were a little strange. She reached out with her sword arm. The blue sigils
reflected back the light, but remained still. She took that as an indication
the stone wasn't some harmful magic, like the crystal elemental or the kalmari.
She took the stone from the old man's hand.
She looked up at the old man and held his eyes for a dozen heartbeats.
"Why?" she whispered.
"Try to remember this, Alias," he said, "good and evil aren't
always." He turned about and began climbing back up the hill.
"Aren't always what?" Alias called after him.
"Good and evil," he called back.
Alias watched until his retreating form disappeared into the darkness. She
had no idea what he meant, but she was grateful for the light.
"Thank you," she whispered. Then she jumped. She thought she heard
the old man whisper, "Ye're welcome, Alias," right in her ear. Only a
freak breeze and my imagination, she tried to assure herself. Even so, she
scurried down the path and headed back to town, tired of the night's
adventuring.
*****
Back atop the hillock that once held the hut of the river witch Sylune, the
old man used a stick of charred wood to sketch out Alias's five sigils on one
of the flagstones. He tapped the unknown one with his stick and frowned.
"Why is it," he muttered, "that the years seem to fly by, but
the nights seem to last forever?"
15
Olive's Deal and Dragonbait's Secret
It was long past midnight when Olive weaved her way to bed. The local
merchants had been thankful for the figurative nose-tweaking Ruskettle and her
companions had given the Iron Throne by destroying the kalmari, and they showed
their appreciation in the form of several kegs of Jhaele's finest ale.
It was no Luiren Rivengut, Olive thought, but still a potent brew. With
Akabar off kissing up to some high sage, her high-and-mighty ladyship
disappearing into the night, and the lizard watching everything mutely from a
corner, someone had to accept all the congratulations and free brew being
passed around.
Actually, Olive had a dim recollection of Alias returning to the inn. At the
time, the bard had feared the sell-sword might resume her foray into musical
entertainment, but Alias had simply hurried to her room.
The trouble with humans, thought the halfling as she rested on the second
story landing, is that they're no fun at parties.
She glared at the stairs she had yet to climb. And their buildings are the
wrong size, she added. No doubt her ladyship thinks it amusing making me climb
steps that come up to my knees.
Olive wondered if some servant would carry her up to her room if she
pretended to pass out. More likely, she realized, they'd call out her ladyship
or her pet lizard to dispose of my body. It doesn't matter, anyway. I'd never
willingly suffer the indignity of being carried by a human. It's bad enough
putting up with the pats on her head. Some day, Olive knew, she'd take a bite
out of one of those hands— when she could afford to be considered a
"tempermental" artist.
"Happy thoughts, Olive-girl," she muttered to herself. That was
her motto when living among humans. No matter how patronizing or cruel or
stupid they are, she told herself, keep a smile plastered to your face. Tonight
wasn't too hard. This celebration, she realized, was the group's first tangible
reward since they rescued me from the dragon.
Olive ordinarily would have considered herself a fool for offering to share
the loot she'd secreted from the red's lair, but the halfling had been grateful
to Alias for her rescue. She'd even forgiven the sell-sword for lugging her
around like a sack of potatos as they made their escape.
For a foolish human, Olive thought, her ladyship sure knew what made dragons
tick. Olive shivered at the thought that, were it not for Alias, she would
still be a prisoner beneath the Storm Horns, wasting away until she was too
feeble to sing. Then the dragon would make a light meal of her, an appetizer
before a hearty meal of a herd of cattle or a brace of villagers.
This thought distressed Olive so badly that she craved the comfort of a late
snack. However, the thought of all those stairs deterred her from raiding the
kitchen.
She scrambled up the remaining stairs quickly, to get then; over with. then
zigzagged down the long corridor to the Green Room. She was sober enough,
however, to notice the bits of shaved wood on the floor before the door.
Olive had put the wood shavings between the door and the jamb at halfling
waist-level, where a human was unlikely to spot them fluttering to the floor
should they open the door. In her mind rose the image of someone malicious
pawing through her things, looking for treasure.
The halfling knew that the mage hadn't come back yet and the lizard was
still sitting by the taproom hearth. Could it be her high-and-mightiness? Olive
wondered. Or an outsider?
Olive turned the knob slowly and eased tlie door open a crack. With her eye
to the opening, she could see the human-sized overstuffed chair and tea table
that stood opposite the bed. A single, tallow taper illuminated the room,
affording Olive a sight to warm the chilliest of halfling hearts. A small
figure seated in the chair was counting and recounting high stacks of thin,
glittering, silverish coins.
"Ahem," Olive coughed politely.
The small, seated figure looked up. An inhumanly wide grin spread across his
childish face. He was a male halfling dressed in the robes of a southerner.
"Excellent," her guest said. "I wondered how long it would be
before you stopped taking bows and decided to retire for the evening."
"An artist never tires of her audience," Olive replied as she
entered the room, scanning it for other intruders. There was no one else.
"Though, alas, the opposite is often true," she added.
"But there are audiences, and there are audiences."
"True enough. But that is a discussion for another day. Who now graces
my presence with this display of breaking and entering?"
The little figure slid from the chair and took a moment to smooth his robes.
Then, he thrust out a hand and said, "Call me Phalse."
Olive closed the door behind her and stepped forward. She gave Phalse's hand
a single, brief squeeze, as was the custom among halflings. "False
what?" she asked.
"Just Phalse will suffice for now," the intruder answered, smiling
smugly.
He had the most peculiar eyes, Olive noted. Dark blue where the whites
should have been, sky blue irises and pupils the blue-white of hot iron. It
must be some trick of the candlelight, she decided.
"You are Olive Ruskettle, companion to the warrior Alias?"
"We're traveling in the same direction," Olive corrected, hoisting
herself onto the mattress and perching on the edge. Phalse hopped back into the
chair and leaned back against the cushions with his legs stretched out across
the seat.
"And your destination is ... ?"
"I'll know when I get there," Olive replied. "Bards need to
travel, to gain information, pass on tales."
"I see," Phalse said. "I think i have a tale for you."
Carefully, he pushed a single stack of coins across the tea table in Olive's
direction.
The bard kept her eves on the coins. From the bed, she could see they were
not silver, but platinum. Keeping her voice as level as she could, she said,
"I'm always interested in tales."
"I thought you might be," said the other halfling, flashing another
wide grin, a grin too wide for a human and almost too wide for a halfling.
"It's a tale about two people who were traveling in the same direction.
One was a woman, the other a human female."
"Is this woman a bard?" Olive asked.
"If it makes a suitable story," Phalse replied, pushing another
stack of coins toward Olive.
"This human female had done something horrible. She was a very sick
human female—she carried a curse, you see, a curse which could not easily be
removed. Fortunately, certain powers were seeking to capture and imprison her
until such time as a cure might be found for her.
"Unfortunately, part of this human female's curse was that she
deliberately avoided these powers. As a matter of fact, this human female
killed all the agents sent to bring her back to those who would help her. Of
course, the woman who was a bard knew nothing of this; she did not realize what
peril she was in."
A third stack of platinum joined the first two.
"Horrors," Olive said, her voice still even, her eyes still glued
to the money on the tea table. "What could this woman who was a bard
possibly do when she found out these things? I take it this human female was
much, much bigger and stronger than the woman who was a bard?"
"True," Phalse said, "but according to the tale a helpful
stranger approached the woman and offered her a ring set with a yellow
stone." He twisted his wrist and revealed a golden band set with a large,
jagged crystal.
"Nice palm," Olive complimented. "I almost didn't see it.
What does this tale say is the ring's power? '
"The tale doesn't say, exactly. Only that the stranger offers it to the
woman who is a bard as a token of appreciation from these powers, should she
agree to continue traveling in the human female's direction and keep an eye on
her."
"I fail to see why any woman, bard or no, would hang around a human
female if she were so powerful and posed such a threat. Would this human female
have a short, dragon guardian and a human mage for companions?"
"It would make a good tale," Phalse agreed.
"Personally, were I this woman," Olive said, "I would seek to
put great distance between me and the human female in question, having been
warned that she poses such a danger. What could possibly encourage the woman in
your tale to remain near this dangerous human female?"
"Well, for one thing, this woman wanted to do the right thing and help
these powers find this human female before she did anymore horrible things.
This woman who was a bard was brave and clever enough to manage it."
Phalse shoved his remaining stacks of coins toward the others. One of the
stacks toppled, and the slender coins bounced and rolled about the floor in a
mercantile dance. Phalse did not interrupt their ringing, clattering music. He
simply continued to smile.
As Olive watched the spilled coins, her mind raced toward a decision. She
had no reason to doubt this "tale" was not a true one, and several
incidents supported it. Alias had, by her own admission, attempted to murder a
priest and later, right before Olive's very eyes, tried to assassinate a
Cormyrian nobleman. Who knows what else she had done? Olive thought. The tale
would explain why Alias chose to travel north to Yulash and avoid Westgate, as
well.
If her ladyship's road leads to imprisonment and not treasure, Olive
realized, this would be a good time to begin saving for the inevitable rainy
day. Besides, the sell-sword knows a lot of interesting songs. Naturally, we'll
have to come to a parting of the ways in the future. She sings just a little
too well, and she sings for free—very unprofessional. I have enough problems
without adding competition from my own bodyguard to the list.
"If I'm to wear this ring myself," the bard said, "I have to
know what it's for. I'm no fool."
"The ring will let these powers know your location at all times, so
they won't lose track of the human female's trail. Then these powers can all
close in on her at once, making her capture a little less . . . messy."
"Is that all?"
"That is sufficient. For the moment."
"If these powers are so powerful, why don't they just use scrying magic
to keep track of her?"
"Alas, something very peculiar about the woman prevents them or anyone
else from doing so."
"How'd you—um—this stranger know where to look for her to offer the
woman bard this ring then?"
"The human woman is known to frequent certain haunts. These were staked
out by various agents, including the humble stranger."
"Couldn't they plant the ring on the human female?" Olive asked.
"No," Phalse explained. "It must be carried by a halfl—by the
woman who was a bard."
"What makes this humble stranger so certain that the woman who's a bard
won't accept his offer and then throw away the ring and leave the company of
this dangerous human female?"
"In that case, she could easily be found by serving magic, and she
would be dealt with . . . accordingly."
"The woman who was a bard might develop doubts about the humble
stranger's motives and throw away the ring and remain in the company of the
human female"
"In that case, eventually, the powers seeking out the human female will
find some other way of tracking her. Then the woman who is a bard will realize
she should have kept her end of the bargain. Alas, by then it may be too late,
since the servants these powers might have to employ to capture the human
female are neither gentle nor kindly beings. And the humble stranger would not
be inclined to intervene on behalf of the woman who was a bard to ensure her
safety." Phalse's smile was now as wide as a cat's, revealing a mouth full
of sharpened teeth.
"You're not a halfling," Olive said, a note of surprise escaping
into her otherwise steady speech.
"Dear Olive, I am as much a halfling as you are a bard." Phalse's
smile spread until it almost split his head.
Olive gave Phalse a blank stare.
"Oh, I realize that everyone you've run into so far assumes that a
halfling bard is merely one of those wonderful things they have never
experienced, but the well-traveled will always recognize you for a charlatan."
"I can sing, play, and compose original verse," Olive replied, her
tone quite chill. "It seems to me, therefore, that the burden of proof
lies on my detractors. Threats of slander are ill-advised, especially here in
Shadowdale where I already enjoy the gratitude of the population."
Phalse bowed his head in acknowledgement. "Bard or no," he said,
still smiling that frighteningly large smile, "you are a halfling, and I
have never seen a halfling walk away from a table full of coins."
Olive did not reply immediately. She would like to turn down Phalse's offer,
just to replace that grin with a look of astonishment. People did not endear
themselves to her by suggesting she did not take her art seriously. But the
platinum coins were so beautiful. Not only their color and size and shape and
the ringing sound they made, but the sheer number of them. Enough to wash your
hands in, as her mother would say.
Olive sighed. "You are a good judge of halflings."
"I'm sure you know the saying—a halfling will never sell her own mother
into slavery. Not—"
"—when she can be rented at a greater profit," Olive said sourly,
beating the pseudo-halfling to the punchline. She hated that joke.
Phalse interpreted her knowledge of the saying as agreement. "Do we
have a deal?"
Olive gave herself a moment to brood over the offer. As far as she could
see, it would bring her no harm. Phalse's friends would take care of the
sell-sword long before she caught on to Olive's treachery.
The halfling would miss the warrior. She'd have to get Alias to teach her as
many songs as possible before Phalse's friends caught up with her, but then the
songs would be Olive's. The unpleasant scene tonight, where Alias had swept the
halfling's audience away and then returned it like a plate full of meat cut up
for a child, would never happen again.
She'd miss traveling with this particular set of companions, too. They were
the first adventurers who hadn't forced her into the role of cook. But who
knew? Mavbe Akabar would come out of this unscathed and she would travel with
him to the south.
Olive had no doubt that Phalse's friends would succeed And Dragonbait would
probably lose his life defending Alias, though gods knew why. Olive didn't see
that her decision made too much difference in the long run. She was, at worst,
only hastening Alias's capture.
"I find your tale most interesting. Well worth the price. Leave the
ring. And the coins. The woman who is a bard will stay with the human
female."
*****
Akabar awoke with a stiff back from having spent an uncomfortable night in
an overstuffed armchair. The morning light illuminated dancing dust motes in
Lhaeo's office. The scribe sat at the desk, still scribbling on parchment, just
as he had been when Akabar dropped off last night.
Akabar yawned and stretched. "Noble scribe, I don't suppose the sage is
awake yet?"
"Oh my," Lhaeo said as he looked up at the Turmishman with a
startled expression. "He's been here and gone. He rises early, when he
does go to bed."
"What!" Akabar shouted. "You mean he's left?"
"Oh, yes, definitely. He's gone on an extended tour of the planes. You
just missed him."
"Why didn't you wake me?"
"Well," the scribe replied matter-of-factly, peering over the rim
of his wire-framed lenses, "I didn't have the proper form."
The door nearly snapped off its hinges as Akabar yanked it open and threw it
against the wall. But, like many wizard-built things, its fragile appearance
was deceptive. It had survived many men angrier than the mage and would survive
many more in the future.
Lhaeo made a reproving tch-tch sound as the Turmishman stalked away
from the building without closing the door behind him. With a wave of his quill
pen, he closed the door quietly, and the scribe returned to his work.
Akabar stalked down the hill, cursing vehemently. He reached into the
tongues of Calimshan and Thay to find the right invectives, pronouncing them
all on the head of the Sage of Shadow-dale. The availability, and hence
usefulness, of any sage always seemed to be in inverse proportion to his
learning. Dimswart had not exactly been a genius, but he had been a pleasant
host and a useful resource. Elminster must be the most learned sage in the
Realms, Akabar concluded, owing to the fact that no one could ever talk to him!
As he passed the warning sign at beginning of the path leading to
Elminster's, Akabar heard a voice coming from behind the weaver's shop. Its
tone was low and serious. Akabar would have ignored it, mired as he was in
frustration and anger, but he caught the words, "Alias, the warrior
woman."
He froze in his tracks. He could not have been mistaken. The voice was
unknown to Akabar, who prided himself on his recognition of voices as a way of
remembering customers. The speaker's voice was succinct enough for that phrase
to carry over the high hedge. It was probably only a townsman reporting the
story of how Alias had cleared the kalmari from the gap, but Akabar, his
curiosity aroused, was overcome with the urge to peek through the hedge and see
the speaker.
As Akabar crept up to the hedge, the scent of freshly baked bread wafted
over him, setting his stomach rumbling and reminding him that he hadn't eaten
for over twelve hours. Then he heard the same voice say, "I think ye will
find ye are mistaken," then pause, then say, "I did not mean to
question thy discernment—" then pause again. This led Akabar to the
conclusion that there was a second speaker who spoke too softly to be heard by
any but the first speaker. When the mage finally discovered a break in the
greenery, that was not what he saw.
The first speaker was a tall man, taller than Akabar, and thin, with
expressive hands withered with age. He wore a cloak with the hood pulled up,
and his back was to the hedge, so Akabar would not have been able to identify
him even if he had known him. But the person the hooded one spoke with was
known to Akabar. It was Dragonbait.
The lizard knelt on a bench beside a vat of water he must have commandeered
for a washbasin. He held a fluffy, brown towel up to his chest.
The hooded one stood opposite him on the other side of the vat. He asked
Dragonbait a question, but all Akabar caught were the last words—"remain
here?"
What puzzled Akabar, besides the lizard traveling down the road to wash, was
that the hooded one stood before the lizard, still and attentive as though he
were listening to the creature. Yet Dragonbait remained mute. The scent of
roses from some garden caused the Turmishman's nose to twitch irritably. He
held his fingers up to his nostrils hoping to stifle the sneeze he felt coming
on.
"I can offer ye much," the hooded one said. Then his words grew
more quiet. But the last one was clear to Akabar—home.
Dragonbait whistled, not with his lips as a human would, but from the back
of his throat. It was really only a wheezing cry, but it conveyed the same
sense of awe a human whistle would have.
"Once they're removed, ye'll be completely free," the hooded one
continued, pointing to the towel Dragonbait clutched to his chest.
Dragonbait dropped the towel on the bench.
Akabar gasped, fortunately not loudly enough to give himself away. There on
Dragonbait's chest was a snaking pattern entwining sigils by now quite familiar
to the Turmishman. In the same bright blue colors, the same symbols Alias wore
on her arm were imbedded into the lizard's green scales!
Only the shape of the lizard's tattoo was different. While the sigils on
Alias's arm lay in a straight line, those on Dragonbait's chest were arranged
at the points of a hexagram. At the top-most point, the joining snake pattern
wound about an empty space. Clockwise from that lay the Flame Knives marking;
then the interlocking circles once so aggressively defended by Zrie Prakis; at
the bottom, Cassana's squiggle; then Moander's unholy symbol; and finally the
unknown bull's eye sigil.
Akabar's mind raced. Is this the bond that keeps the lizard so close to
Alias? If she knows of it, why hasn't she told me? Of course she doesn't know
it. The lizard has kept it a secret from her. That's why he's come all the way
down here to wash. No doubt he is afraid of losing her trust if he reveals that
he too is branded. Is he truly just a benign companion helping her evade her
enemies or is he one of the enemies' servants helping to track her?
Akabar caught one last phrase spoken by the hooded one. "Sure ye will
not accompany me?" he asked.
Dragonbait hissed and shook his head.
"Ye've chosen the hardest path. I'd wish ye Tymora's grace, but I don't
believe in it." The hooded one turned to leave.
Hastily, Akabar leaped back to the path and began walking toward the road to
conceal his eavesdropping. But when the Turmishman rounded the hedge, the
hooded one had vanished and Dragonbait's back was turned as he pulled on a
shirt of kelly green cotton.
Confused by the hooded one's disappearance, but anxious to see Dragonbait's
reaction to his own sudden appearance, Akabar called out cheerfully,
"Dragonbait? What are you doing here?" as though he'd just spotted
the lizard.
Dragonbait wheeled about and went into a defensive crouch. Startled, Akabar
fell back a step. Hardly the behavior of an innocent creature, the mage
thought. Aloud, he chided the lizard, "Jumpy this morning, aren't we? I
just got through at the sage's. Are the others at the inn?"
Dragonbait glared at him suspiciously and nodded curtly.
"Well, you had better come back there with me then." The lizard
continued to glare at him.
"Can't have you dawdling about people's backyards," the
TLirmishman joked. He felt as though he were addressing a wall, and a hostile
wall at that. Dragonbait's gaze was like a snake's, unblinking and unwavering.
Finally, the lizard turned and snatched up his towel and cloak from the
bench by the water vat. Akabar could tell something long and stiff was wrapped
in the cloak. Undoubtedly the creature's sword. Dragonbait pushed past the mage
without a sign or sound and headed down the road toward the inn.
As he followed Dragonbait through the town, Akabar marveled at the
creature's rudeness. In Alias's presence, he was always the polite, servile
clown. Perhaps he really is an arrogant servant of some sinister power, Akabar
thought. His conversation with the hooded one must have upset him greatly. He's
dropped his guard and revealed himself.
If he told Alias of Dragonbait's behavior, with no one else to substantiate
his words, would the swordswoman believe him? Probably not. Alias was very
attached to the lizard. She felt safe with him.
Which left Akabar to decide whether or not to tell the swordswoman of the
markings on her scaly follower's chest. Trying to get the creature to remove
his shirt to prove it would no doubt prove painful and perhaps even violent.
And was no guarantee of Alias's reaction. It was possible that she would
perceive the lizard keeping his markings hidden from her as an act of betrayal,
but it was more likely that she would feel even more attached to him, believing
him to be a fellow victim. Were Akabar to try to convince her otherwise, she
would no doubt accuse him of jealousy or paranoia.
No, he would be better off waiting, keeping a close watch on the lizard
until he could discover some incontrovertible proof of the creature's guilt.
But would it be too late by then? he wondered.
As he reached The Old Skull, Akabar remembered he had one other subject
which required some consideration— his meeting with the sage. Alias, intent on
reaching Yulash, had not really shown any interest in the mage's self-appointed
mission to the sage of Shadowdale, but it would not have slipped her mind. She
would ask about it. In the face of his uselessness the evening Dragonbait had
destroyed the kalmari, the Turmishman was loath to confess his failure to gain
an audience with Elminster.
*****
The hooded one flipped down his shadowy cowl and shook out the full, gray
beard that he had kept tucked within it. "Surely our guest hasn't given up
waiting on my pleasure so soon," he joked.
Lhaeo looked up and shrugged. "For a magic-user he seemed a bit
impatient."
"Takes all types," Elminster commented sagely as he threw his
cloak over the chair Akabar had only recently vacated. He sat down and
stretched out his long legs.
"Did you discover what you needed to know?" Lhaeo asked.
"I have all the pieces of the puzzle and I have put them all together.
But the picture makes no sense."
"Oh?" Lhaeo said, a little surprised.
"I may have to make that journey to the other planes after all,"
"Shall I begin packing?" Lhaeo asked.
"Not just yet," the sage replied. "There's a good chance the
puzzle may just throw itself on the fire." But a rare ache crept over his
bones and he knew he was wrong. "In the meantime, maybe ye'd better dig
some of the old Harper scrolls out of the vault."
Lhaeo nodded and slipped out of the office jangling a set of great iron
keys. Elminster retired to his study to research a single puzzle piece.
Back at The Old Skull, oblivious to the sage's concern, the four adventurers
tended to their own business.
Akabar worried about the meaning of the sigil he had been unable to trace
and considered how to trap Dragonbait into betraying himself.
The lizard kept his own council and told no one of his plans.
Olive counted the platinum coins four more times, finally tucking them
neatly into the pockets of her backpack.
Alias slept the morning away, and when she awoke in the early afternoon on
the last day of Mirtul, she felt refreshed and peaceful.
16
Run Aground
Giogioni Wyvernspur, suddenly aware of his duty to posterity, began the
first entry in his journal, despite the inconvenience of the rocking boat. With
a stick of soft lead he scrawled:
The last day of Mirtul has dawned fair and bright, and the Dragonmere's
southern coastline is now in sight. The trip across the lake from Suzail has
been a pain in the britches. The ship, on which that cad Vangerdahast has seen
fit to book passage for me, is no larger than a festhall and a good deal less
clean. A violent storm last night threatened to capsize this vessel, and
consequently dinner was not served. But all that hardship is behind me. We will
dock tonight in Teziir and proceed to Westgate in the morning, traveling along
the coast, with land in sight at all times, thank Tymora.
This business of being a royal envoy might not be so bad, Giogi thought as
he closed his journal. All he had to do was carry a letter from Azoun to a
member of Westgate's ruling council, find out if they knew anything about this
Alias person, and then keep an eye out for her in case she showed up within the
next two months—all at the crown's expense.
As he stood at the upper deck's railing, the Wyvernspur noble could pick out
snatches of the conversation the captain was having with Teziir's harbormaster.
Something about an increase in the docking fee—another ten gold pieces was
owed. A reasonable sum for making it to land, Giogi thought, but the ship's
captain had another opinion.
"Outrageous! I won't suffer such extortion. I'll bring her in without
your help. See if I don't!"
Somewhere astern, on the lower deck, a high-pitched voice asked another
passenger, "Penurious, our captain, or merely recalcitrant?"
Giogi turned toward the sound of the voice. Funny, I didn't notice any
halflings aboard before.
The passenger the halfling had addressed was a lady cloaked from head to
toe. When Giogi saw her face he froze. The halfling was male, completely
unfamiliar, but the woman's face—he couldn't be mistaken. It was her!
"Why, Master Phalse," the lady smiled. 'If I had known you were
traveling on the same vessel, I might have forsaken dinner with the captain for
your company."
"Dinner with the captain, dinner with me, while poor Zrie is left alone
in Westgate. You can be so cruel, Lady Cassana. You know he falls to pieces
without vou.
So, Giogi thought, Alias isn't her real name, after all.
The Lady Cassana laughed with cruel amusement. "He needs the reminder
occasionally. What are you doing here? I didn't notice you board."
"That's because I only just popped in. I thought I might accompany you.
How's your arm?"
The lady frowned. "How did you know about that?"
"My master's been scrying you to be safe. There was a blur as the One
approached your bird form. When she passed by we noted the dagger in your
wing."
Cassana shrugged. "All healed when I polymorphed back to my own
body."
"Well, our condolences on the failure of your mission."
The lady snarled. "The beast sleeps with his damned sword, so I could
only use the subtlest of magics lest I alerted him to my presence and he
dispelled my attacks My creature would not approach him, branded as he is. I
almost had the mage and the thief, but Puppet managed to shake me off in time
to raise an alarm."
"Well, there will be other opportunities," the halfling replied,
shrugging.
"We were lucky she had the brands checked for magic, or we might still
be searching all compass points. But it was a fluke she had it done again near
Zrie's old rock garden, and a fluke that my creature spotted her in the gap.
Don't you think it's time your master got involved in this?"
"There is no need when he has such efficient, clever helpers as
myself."
"Oh? And what have you done lately to earn such praise?"
"Planted a tracking device in the One's, or as you would say, Puppet's,
party. A device strong enough to be detected despite the enchantment of
misdirection about her."
"Planted with the thief, I presume."
Phalse nodded.
"But, how did you find the party?" Cassana asked.
"Upon interrogating Nameless I learned of a peculiar desire he had to
sing in Shadowdale. Like father, like daughter. I kept watch on the town. As
soon as my scrying power became blurred, I knew the One must have arrived.
Sneaking in was a bit perilous—the town is heavily warded against my kind, but
nothing I couldn't handle. Now, aren't you glad I didn't let you kill poor,
foolish Nameless? "
Cassana smiled slyly. "I suppose I am." From her pocket she drew
out a small serpent. The reptile tried unsucessfully to slither from the
woman's grasp.
"You took him with you?" The halfling sounded surprised.
"He proved quite useful in holding Puppet's attention. He really is a
remarkable storyteller." Cassana slipped the snake back into her pocket.
Giogioni withdrew hastily from the railing. It isn't possible, he thought.
She's supposed to be heading to Yulash. Something has gone very wrong. She's
here, discussing the most sinister-sounding things. Using magical attacks against
branded people, threatening to kill someone's father, and turning humans into
snakes. Instead of a sell-sword named Alias, now she's a sorceress called
Cassana. Giogi didn't know what to make of it all, but his duty was clear. The
woman had to be placed under arrest.
The sailors were all too busy dropping lines overboard and calling out
numbers, so the Wyvernspur noble made his way toward the captain. "Excuse
me, sir, but there is a woman aboard your ship who is wanted by the Cormyrian
authorities. A very dangerous woman."
"Ten!" a sailor shouted from the port bow.
The captain seemed not to see Giogi. His eyes were fixed on the port, his
hands clenched about the ship's wheel.
Giogi stepped closer, whispering confidentially. "Why, not sixteen days
ago she tried to assassinate a very important Cormyrian official."
"Eight," shouted another sailor from the starboard bow.
"The fourteenth of Mirtul to be more exact," Giogi said.
"Nine," the first sailor called out.
"We all thought she'd gone north to Yulash, which is over six hundred
miles away, but," Giogi gave a nervous laugh, "I just saw her on the
lower deck."
"Seven," called out the sailor on the starboard bow.
"It doesn't seem possible. I mean, it would take nearly two rides,
twenty days, for her to get back here that quickly, but maybe she never went
there to begin with, don't you see."
"Five." This last came from the starboard bow.
"Five!" the captain shouted. "Nine Hells!" He twisted
the wheel furiously, but it was too late.
Giogi felt the deck rise in a most peculiar fashion. It began sloping rather
steeply down to the stern and remained that way. "I say! Have we hit a
shoal or something?"
The captain glared at him with murder in his eyes. "Strike the
sails!" he shouted.
The ship's first officer approached with his evaluation. "It's no good,
sir. We've grounded too far. Have to wait for a change of wind to shift
us."
The ship listed perilously to starboard, and Giogi was forced to grab the
wheel to keep from slipping on the deck. A peculiar cracking noise came from
the housing beneath.
The first officer looked at the captain with alarm in his eyes.
"Prepare to disembark the passengers, Master Roberts. Start with this
one." The captain jabbed Giogioni Wyvernspur with his index finger.
"That's most thoughtful, Captain," Giogi said. "I say, but I
can wait for the woman and children first. Wyvernspurs know their duty when
they see it."
"Sir," the captain said. "You can disembark now in the
longboat, or you can walk the plank."
Giogioni found himself lowered in the longboat. He'd been too busy fretting
over his baggage as the other passengers were loaded in beside him, so it came
as quite a shock to look up and find himself staring into her eyes,
Giogioni gasped, "You!"
"I beg your pardon," Cassana said. "Have we met?"
Giogi gulped. This close up he realized he'd made a mistake. This was not
the lovely, mad sell-sword Alias. The woman seated opposite him was too old.
Her hair was the wrong shade. Her flesh was soft and unmuscled.
"Excuse me," he mumbled. "I mistook you for someone
else."
"Attractive men need never apologize for mistaking me for someone else.
Provided they never mistake me again. I am Cassana of Westgate." Cassana
squeezed the Wyvernspur noble's knee in a suggestive manner.
Flustered, Giogi tried to explain further. "I meant—that is, you look
just like her, except older. I swear you could be her mother, er, older
sister."
Cassana's eyes narrowed, and Giogi kicked himself mentally for violating a
sacred rule about never telling women how old they really looked.
"This woman I look like," Cassana whispered, "Tell me about
her."
Giogi gulped again. Oh, gods! Suppose she is her mother? "Well, she's
like you. Very pretty. With red hair and green eyes. She's a sell-sword though,
not a lady like you."
Cassana laughed. "So tell me, who are you and how did you come to know
this sell-sword who looks like me?"
All the while they were being rowed to land, Cassana tried to pump
information from Giogioni. He explained he'd met Alias at a wedding, that she
was merely a passing acquaintance, but this did not satisfy the woman with the
strange resemblance to his attacker. Unwilling to reveal the truth, Giogi began
to invent details of an imaginary conversation he held with the sell-sword.
Remembering Alias had rescued Olive Ruskettle, he said they had discussed
music.
He grew increasingly uncomfortable in Cassana's presence. She moved
alarmingly close to him and insisted on arranging his alternate travel plans to
Westgate. She's just the type of woman Aunt Dorath is always warning me about,
Giogi realized. Not that I need any warning—with my sixth sense when it comes
to danger.
He was very tempted to ask what had happened to the halfling he had seen her
with earlier, but he realized just in time that that might give away what he
had overheard.
He found the answer to his question soon enough. As they rowed up to the
dock, the halfling reached a hand down to help Cassana up the ladder lowered to
the longboat.
"There's another boat to Westgate pulling out in an hour. I've arranged
passage," Giogi heard the halfling say.
Fervently Giogi prayed Cassana would forget him in a rush to get to her next
ship, but he saw her whispering something to the halfling. Phalse looked down
at the Wyvernspur noble with curiosity.
If I know anything at all, Giogi thought, I know that going with that woman
and halfling would be a serious mistake. I need a distraction. Something to
take their mind off of me, before I end up in the sorceress's pocket.
Giogi handed up his gear and climbed the ladder. Cassana did not even have a
chance to introduce her companion before Giogi shrieked. "Oooh! Keep it
away!"
"My dear Giogioni, what is wrong?"
Giogi pointed a shaky finger at a pile of crates on the dock. "A snake.
A huge snake." He spread his hands out the tiny distance of two hand spans
to be sure his exaggeration was not mistaken. "It crawled into that pile
of boxes. I don't mean to be such a ninny, but a snake swallowed my Aunt
Dorath's pet land urchin once. It was horrible."
Phalse was no longer paying attention to the young Cormyte. He was too busy
searching through the crates for what he had been led to assume was the snake
Cassana had kept trapped in her pocket. The sorceress, however, instinctively
checked her pocket first, but that moment of inattention was all Giogioni
needed.
Scooping up his baggage, he fled from the dock into the city of Teziir,
desperately searching for a horse, a coach, or any quick means of escape from
this den of foreign villainy.
17
Brunch in Shadowdale and the Trek North
"Well, that's a switch," Alias muttered as she drew back the
curtains to let daylight into her room. Dragonbait lay by the fireside,
snoozing away. She was awake before him. Of course, he'd been up late last
night keeping an eye on Olive, and he had walked, not ridden, from Cormyr.
He must need rest very badly, she thought, more than the rest of us. And
he's done the most to earn it, too. Still, she couldn't help wondering
mischievously what he would think and feel and do if she were gone when he
awoke.
When she'd returned to The Old Skull the night before, he'd been standing
near the door of the inn, obviously torn between keeping an eye on the halfling
and leaving to find the swordswoman. She had offered to stay in the taproom
with Olive so that he could retire, but he had shaken his head in refusal.
Alias, feeling worn from their forced march and with her ankle throbbing from
her trip in the darkness, had accepted his gallantry gratefully and gone to bed
herself. She had no idea what time he'd come up to sleep.
Now she felt just a touch guilty. She crept about quietly as she dressed.
Another pang assaulted her conscience as she sat on the bed, pulling on her
boots. Dragonbait always slept on tile floor. It had never occurred to her to
rent him his own room; she'd always assumed he would want to stay near her. She
might at least have asked for something with an extra bed for him. "I'll
make it all up to you. Somehow," she whispered to the sleeping lizard as
she slipped out of the room and very gently pulled the door closed.
The taproom was empty when Alias came down the stairs, but Jhaele popped her
head out of the kitchen to wish her a good day and ask if she'd slept well.
"Very well, thank you," Alias assured her. 'Do you have any idea
where my friends have gone?"
"Did you try their rooms, lady?" Jhaele asked "I would have
thought they'd all still be sleeping."
"Oh. No, I just assumed they'd be up and about by now."
Jhaele shook her head. "Mistress Ruskettle didn't retire until the very
small hours, and she drank a good deal of bottled sleep, if you catch my
meaning. And your Mister Akash was out all night. Didn't come home until after
dawn. Same with the lizard-creature. He sat by the fire until morning, slipped
upstairs for a minute, then left the inn for about an hour and returned with Master
Akash."
Alias ordered breakfast, then took a seat at a table. She stared around the
room, feeling a little sad. Everything here was so familiar (except of course
the new lord, Mourngrym, and the elusive Elminster), and it hurt that no one
remembered her. Last night, however, she'd come to the conclusion that that was
part of her curse. Besides making her forget things, the azure brands made
other people forget her. Both conditions were bound up in the same spell.
Akabar came down the stairs just as Jhaele was bringing in a tray loaded
with waffles, ham, fruit, and tea. "I'll whip up more of the same,"
the innkeep offered.
Alias nodded and pulled out a chair for her companion.
"I understand your meeting with the wise Elminster kept you out all
night," she said. "How'd it go?"
Akabar smiled weakly. "It was all right, I suppose."
"And?" Alias prompted. "What did he have to say?"
"Say?" Akabar echoed.
Something in his manner made Alias suspicious. "Something bad?"
she whispered after Jhaele had laid out extra tableware for Akabar and left.
Akabar shook his head. "I waited half the night to see him, and I came
away with nothing more than what we learned from Dimswart back in Suzail."
"Did he mention the lay of Zrie Prakis and Cassana?"
Akabar made a noncommittal noise as he poured syrup over some waffles.
"Did he?" Alias asked, taking the syrup from him.
"Did he what?" Akabar grumbled, feigning listlessness.
"Did he tell you about the lay of Zrie Prakis and Cassana?"
"No, he didn't," Akabar answered and promptly stuffed his mouth,
with waffles to give himself time to think. What was he going to do? So far,
all his answers had been the truth. He had waited half the night for Elminster
and longer. He had not learned anything new, and Elminster had not told him
about any lay. He could not keep up the ambiguous and vague answers much
longer, though. He would either have to admit his failure or lie to her.
He had thought that, when the time came, one action or the other would come
easily to him, but they did not. He had been little help protecting Alias,
rather the reverse, needing her to irescue him from the kalmari. Now his role
as information-gatherer had completely collapsed. His pride could not cope with
the admission of his own uselessness.
Yet, surprisingly, the alternative—lying to her—did not come any easier. In
his dealings as a merchant, Akabar could stretch the truth with a skill that
would make Olive Ruskettle's head swim, but that skill did not extend to
deceiving women. He had never been able to lie to his wives either, even though
it might have made some of his nights a little less tumultuous.
"What's the lay of Zrie Prakis and Cassana?" a shrill voice
chirped. Olive climbed into a chair and promptly popped one of Alias's
strawberries into her mouth.
"Apparently," Alias explained, "they were lovers before they
went at each other in the duel that killed Zrie Prakis."
"Ooo, You humans are such fascinating people. Did Cassana throw herself
off a cliff in remorse?" Olive asked, using an extra fork to swipe a large
piece of one of Alias's waffles.
Alias shook her head. "No. She did keep his bones, though. By her
bedside as a keepsake."
"Yuck," the halfling muttered as she chewed.
"Definitely. I'm surprised Elminster didn't mention it. It's supposed
to be a common story up north. There's even supposed to be an opera about
it."
"Perhaps Elminster is not a big opera-lover," Akabar sniffed and stuffed
more waffle into his mouth.
"I don't blame him," the bard said. "I've heard that people
commit murders at operas, and no one notices because everyone on stage is
bellowing at the top of his lungs."
"I don't see how this story about the mages helps us any," Akabar
said.
"It doesn't, really," Alias admitted, "but I just wanted to
show that you're not the only one able to get information. I pick up bits here
and there."
Inwardly injured by the swordswoman's remark and encouraged by the presence
of the halfling, Akabar somehow found the strength to invent a meeting with
Elminster.
"I got nothing from this supposedly renowned sage but the standard
material we already know. He might have looked it all up in the same book
Dimswart used. He had no idea what the last sigil was, either. His reputation
is overrated. It must be based on past victories. I only hope when I'm that
decrepit and befuddled, I'll have a profitable business in the hands of my
daughters and not have to rely on gulling foolish adventurers."
"Elminster was decrepit and befuddled?" Alias asked, remembering
Mourngrym's description of the sage as the wisest in the Realms. Still, perhaps
Mourngrym's standards weren't up to those of Cormyr or the lands farther south.
She had harbored one odd idea, however, so she had to ask, "What did he
look like?"
"He looked like a spider," lied the Turmishman, leaning over the
table and speaking in a low voice. He had to be carried about from room to
room. His hands were shriveled into useless sticks, so that he had to be
dressed and fed by his manservant. I know. I watched him eat. It was most
unpleasant."
Alias pondered the mage's description while she sipped her tea. She had
suspected her goatherd to be Elminster, though he had tried to lead her away from
that idea. Powerful, famous people often traveled around dressed as commoners,
at least in lays and songs. But if the sage was chair-ridden, her goatherd had
to be someone else.
That didn't mean she valued the old man's advice any less, and she certainly
appreciated his finder's stone, kept safely tucked away in her boot top. It
made her feel a lot less nervous, knowing he had been just a wise, old man. Had
Elminster himself taken such an interest in her singing, she'd know she was in
more trouble than she could handle.
Jhaele brought out another breakfast tray and unloaded the contents onto
their table.
"Pass the strawberries," Olive demanded, dumping the contents of
the fruit bowl on top of another grilled cake and handing the empty bowl back
to Akabar, who put it aside without noticing. He was nearly holding his breath,
afraid Alias might make some comment about Elminster that Jhaele would hear and
contradict, belying his story.
"I need to do some shopping," Alias announced, draining her tea
cup. "Would you mind very much taking care of the food provisioning?"
she asked the Turmishman.
"Not at all," Akabar assured her, forcing a smile to his lips.
That's all he felt good for lately, buying the groceries from other
greengrocers like himself.
Alias rose from the table and went over to knock on the kitchen door. Jhaele
handed her another tray.
"I'm taking this up to Dragonbait," she explained to the others.
"Why? Is he sick?" Olive asked.
"No. I just thought he deserved breakfast in bed for a change."
Akabar tried not to look too anxious when he asked, "When are we
leaving here?" The sooner they were gone from Shadowdale, the sooner his
lie about Elminster would be safe from revelation. Also, it would be easier to
keep an eye on the lizard when they were on the road.
"About two hours. There's a way station up the road about ten miles.
I'd like to reach it by nightfall."
"Anything I can do?" Olive asked offhandedly.
"Keep out of trouble," Alias suggested.
"I might manage that," the halfling said with a prim nod.
Dragonbait was still asleep when Alias returned to the room. She set the
tray down by his nose. He inhaled before he opened his eyes.
"Hungry, sleepy-head?"
The lizard sat up and smiled. His cloak fell away as he broke off some waffle
and popped it in his mouth.
The scent of lemon wafted about the room. Aren't we too far north for lemon
trees to bloom? Alias wondered.
She began packing up her clothes. The turquoise wool tunic lay across a
chair. Last night it had been mud-spattered from her fall. Now it was
mysteriously laundered and dried. She gathered it up in her hands and went to
sit beside Dragonbait.
"Look, you've got to stop doing things like this."
Dragonbait tilted his head and made a chirping noise.
"Don't give me that I-don't-understand look," Alias said. "I
don't care if you tease Olive, but I know you understand me. I want you to stop
this servant routine. You're not my servant. You're . . . my traveling
companion. I know I'm lazy about looking after my things sometimes, but you'll
spoil me if you keep this up. I know how useful you are. You don't have to keep
proving it to me. Do you understand?"
Dragonbait met her gaze with his unblinking yellow eyes. He nodded.
"All right, then. Better finish your breakfast. We're leaving in a few
hours. I'm going to the smithy to have the kinks ground out of my blade. You
can bring your sword down too if you want."
Suddenly anxious to leave for the open road, Alias hurried to finish
packing. While the lizard polished off his meal, she wrote out the words to the
Standing Stone song and left them for Jhaele to give to the songhorn player.
No one in town would let them pay for supplies or services. Mourngrym had
passed the word that bills were to be submitted to the tower. Alias was glad
she hadn't assigned the halfling any shopping tasks. Who knew what the bard
would pick up on the town's tab? For herself, Alias picked up a new dagger and
shield from the smithy and had him sharpen her blade.
Dragonbait looked a little anxious about turning his own bizarre weapon over
to the craftsmen, but the man reassured him with the special care he took
handling the sword before he began working on it.
They left town four hours before sunset. A few townsfolk bid them farewell
as they traveled along the road, but Alias caught no glimpse of her goatherd.
*****
The weather held fair and warm, and no extraordinary encounters marred their
travels. A singularly stupid troll attacked Dragonbait on watch their second
night out from Shadowdale, but when the rest of the party woke up the troll was
burning merrily on the fire. The next day, they lost several hours in the Elven
Wood, hiding uncomfortably in a damp cave to avoid a large party of ores.
Their stay in the town of Voonlar was cut short when a sheriff's deputy's
purse was found in Olive's room at the inn. Rather than arrest them, the deputy
accepted an apology accompanied by the return of all his gold, thrice what
could have possibly fit in the leather pouch. They also had to agree to leave town
immediately. Alias was ready to throttle the halfling, but Olive argued her
innocence so vehemently that the swordswoman believed her.
More than the loss of a night in clean sheets troubled Alias. There were
rumors of a war to the east, and she hadn't had any time to confirm them.
They camped outside of town and continued toward Yulash in the morning.
Twice that day the shadow of some great, flying beast crossed the sun, causing
all the horses to panic and rear on their hind legs.
Still, Alias remained unperturbed. She felt that "they," the
people who had branded her, had given up. There were no more disturbing dreams
or giant monsters or assassins in black. The swordswoman was willing to bet
that the kalmari in Shadow Gap had been their last card. I've passed out of
their range, she assured herself. Only Moander is up here, and he's been locked
up beneath Yulash.
By twilight they were in sight of the great mound on which the city of
Yulash stood. The single hill sloped gently, resembling a giant shield lying
face-up on the plain. According to Olive, once upon a time an individual
standing in the highest citadel atop the crown of the hill could see the smoke
rise from the dark furnaces of Zhentil Keep, and the fog roll off the shores of
the Moonsea.
"One of the merchants in Shadowdale told me that the Yulashians could
have seen the glow of fire when dragons destroyed Phlan, except they were being
destroyed by dragons themselves at the time. A horde of them came down on the
Dales two years back," Olive explained. "Destroyed one of
Shadowdale's high-muckety witches."
"Sylune," Alias snapped.
"Yes. That was her name. Anyway, the dragons left Phlan and Yulash in
ruins, killed all the rulers and mages, and scattered the commoners."
"Now Zhentil Keep forces occupy the rubble," Akabar reminded them.
"Its altitude makes it a strategic location."
As the darkness settled, they could see there were fires on Yulash mound,
punctuated by flashes of fireball and other magical flames.
"The war is at Yulash." Alias spat with annoyance.
"Hillsfar forces trying to take it away from the Zhentil Keep army
stationed there," Akabar guessed.
The next day they traveled more cautiously as they passed great, burned
stretches of overgrown fields, untended orchards completely shattered by
lightning, and ridges of ground torn up by the claws of great beasts.
When piles of rusted weapons and rotted carrion began to dot the side of the
roads, they dismounted and walked beside the horses and pony to calm them and
to avoid presenting themselves as targets.
They could have ridden into Yulash before sunset if it had been a more
peaceful season. Instead, they camped a quarter mile away, using an overturned
wagon to shelter them from view of the forces defending and attacking the
town's main citadel. Even if they could get closer without being hit by a stray
arrow or magic spell, they could be caught by an army and executed as spies.
They were close enough to hear metal clashing on metal as some of the
combatants met in swordplay, commands barked out by captains, cheers from men
who'd just managed to kill someone or something, and cries of horror from men
who had seen their last battle.
After dark, a great, glowing whirlwind spun around the top of the mound,
igniting members of the attacking force. As their bodies scattered down the
slope, they looked to Alias, from a distance, like sparkling seeds falling away
from a flaming dandelion.
"Well, it certainly is more amusing to watch than your standard
campfire," Olive commented. "Though it lacks a certain warmth."
They hadn't dared light their own campfire for fear of being discovered by a
foraging patrol, so after a cold dinner, the four adventurers sat huddled
against the overturned wagon as the night air grew more and more chill. Olive
shivered, wrapped beneath her own cloak and two of Akabar's. The mage affected
a pose of calm unconcern, but Alias caught him blowing into his cupped hands,
trying to keep them warm. Dragonbait kept peering around the side of the wagon,
fascinated by Yulash mound. The horses, tethered nearby behind the one
remaining wall of an ancient farmer's cottage, whickered uncomfortably.
Dragonbait echoed the sound, though whether he was trying to comfort them or
agreeing with them Alias could not tell.
In the soft glow of the finder's stone, Alias could not escape the
halfling's accusatory stare or Akabar's expectant one. "When I led us up
here, I had no idea the area would be so unsettled." Each intermittent
flash from the city's ruins drew her attention. I feel like a moth, she
thought, trying to get into a lantern, beating against the glass. Somewhere in
that maze of ruins lies the answer to my curse—I'm sure of it.
"I had assumed the city would be firmly in the hands of one side or the
other. Then we could use the same trick we used in the dragon's lair. Akabar
would scout ahead with his wizard eye trick, Olive would accompany me to help
with locks, traps, and other tricky parts, and Dragonbait would remain behind
with the gear."
Olive muttered something about "thief's tricks," and Dragonbait
scowled, but Alias ignored them both. "However," she continued,
"that was all assuming we only had to elude a sleepy city guard. With two
active forces looking for enemy troops, our chances of sneaking in unnoticed
are . . ." she hesitated, trying not to sound falsely optimistic.
"Slim," Akabar suggested.
"Try nil," Olive retorted. "Humans. Always fighting over who
gets the better view."
"They don't battle over it just because it's the only major terrain
between the forest and the river," Akabar lectured. "Remember, it
sits on the route south from Zhentil Keep. If Hillsfar should take and hold the
city, they would effectively blockade Zhentil Keep's bulk trade."
"And there's probably more gold and treasure left in the wreckage, in
hidden cellars and dungeons, than in the active mines of the dwarves,"
Alias added.
Olive perked up a little, cheered by the thought of treasure. Dragonbait
stood and walked over to the horses to stroke Lightning. All the while the
lizard's eyes remained fixed on the glowing hill.
Akabar followed the lizard.
"Where are you going?" Alias called to him.
"To help Dragonbait with the horses."
"You've been fussing over him ever since we left Shadowdale," the
warrior noted. "Helping him fetch wood, keeping watch with him. He can
take care of himself." She tugged on the mage's robes until he was forced
to sit back down beside her. "Now, what do you think our chances would be
if we contacted one side or the other to make a deal?"
Trying not to appear too distracted with keeping an eye on Dragonbait,
Akabar said, "If you do, contact Hillsfar. Their ruler, I've heard, is a
merchant-mage like myself. His name is Maalthir. If one of these forces is
indeed his, it will include a company of his prize mercenaries, the Red Plumes.
We need only look for their banner."
"Yes, then we'll have found the Red Death," Olive growled.
"That's what Maalthir's mercenaries are called among my people. Under his
orders, they carried out a campaign to purge Hillsfar of thieves. Human thieves
could hide, but all halflings were thieves, as far as Maalthir's Red Death was
concerned. They drove every halfling from the city in the middle of the night,
forced them to leave their valuables behind, didn't even give them a chance to
sell the land or shops they owned.
"As distasteful as Hillsfar's policies might be, you can hardly expect
us to deal with the baby-slaying Keepers. I've heard that they plight their
troth with succubi, eat the brains of elves, and worship gods so black they
make Moander seem nice. Their names are feared as far south as my native land.
And the council who rules them, the Zhentarim, are twice as dark as the
Keepers."
"I didn't suggest we deal with the Keepers," Olive replied.
"I was only reporting on the firsthand news I have about the Hillsfar
government. I have no reason to expect better of the Zhentil Keep soldiery.
They're all human, too, at least mostly, I'm told. You must realize, though,
that all the accusations you've made against Zhentil Keep are the standard lies
told about any successful city by its jealous enemies."
"There are too many stories told of the Zhentarim for them all to be
lies. As a bard you must know stories of their methods—how they secretly
support ores so they will attack any who oppose the Zhentarim's will."
"And as a bard," Olive said, "I have the ability to separate
the grain from the dross."
"Gold," corrected Akabar. "Gold from dross. Grain from
chaff."
Alias sighed and stood up. The mage and the bard could argue until Yulash
was dust. She strode over to watch the battle with Dragonbait. As the finder's
stone illuminated their mounts, she could see the beasts stood alone. She poked
her head around the wall, but the lizard was not there. She went back to the
wagon and peeked around that, but he wasn't there either.
Olive was continuing her testimony on the cruelty of the Hillsfar people,
while Akabar was trying to interrupt her with some point about the evil of the
Zhentarim.
Made impatient with a sudden attack of anxiety, Alias snapped at both of
them. "Listen to yourselves. You're not disagreeing with each other,
you're just arguing for the sake of arguing. Can't you see something's
wrong?"
"What is it?" Akabar asked.
"Dragonbait's gone," she whispered.
"Gone where?" Akabar asked, glancing around their campsite while
cursing himself for not keeping an eye on the potentially treacherous lizard.
"Just gone," Alias said. A particularly bright flash filled the
sky, and thunder rumbled all about them. The swordswoman peered across the
momentarily illuminated open fields, but she could not pick out the lizard's
figure.
"Perhaps you better stay down," Akabar suggested.
"He's disappeared," Alias whispered, still standing.
"He's probably only out looking for firewood or something," Olive
suggested.
"We haven't got a fire," Akabar growled.
"Maybe he decided we should have one," Olive retorted.
If I hadn't been such a fool, Akabar berated himself, arguing with the
halfling and allowing myself to be distracted from watching the lizard, this
wouldn't have happened. Who knows what sort of betrayal I've let us in for now?
"Or he could be out filching us a nice, hot, ten-course meal, with
wine," Olive continued brightly.
Alias scowled. She noticed Akabar frowning as well. She hadn't realized he
cared for Dragonbait as much as she.
Should I tell her about the lizard's brands, Akabar debated. I can't prove
it now, and it still might not make her doubt him. No, better just to watch for
him.
Alias stared at the city. The crackling of the fires and magics burning
there pulled at her like a siren's call. Olive could be right. But suppose he's
scouting out the territory to prove he should not be left behind? It was one
thing to leave him guarding the equipment or even to have him fighting at her
side, but imagining him out there, alone, unable to call for help, not even if
he were injured. . . . Alias moaned softly, feeling suddenly miserable.
"He'll come back," Olive said again. "He always does."
The night grew even colder, and eventually, as the combatants on the hill
wearied and let their fires and magics die out, it grew darker, too. Olive was
a snoring lump in a bundle of furs, Akabar a motionless mannequin in his
colored robes and one blanket. Alias shivered in her only cloak, but she could
not stay wrapped in her blankets. She spent her watch pacing and staring into
the darkness, waiting for Dragonbait to return. She did not bother to wake
Olive, but continued to watch past her turn.
But Dragonbait still did not return.
A few pins of light from watchfires in the city pricked at Alias's eyes.
He's there, was all she could think. He went into the city without me.
Like I planned to do to him, she added. Again she felt the draw of the city,
an ache to learn the mystery within.
Her heart prompted her to look in Yulash, but her head insisted she had no
proof that he was there. He could be anywhere. He might have been captured by
the Keepers or the Red Plumes. That thought made her more anxious. As far as
she knew, both Akabar and Olive had been right in their claims of Hillsfar and
Zhentil Keep atrocities.
Actually, Alias couldn't think of any army that would let a creature as
blatantly non-human as Dragonbait pass unchallenged. They'd try to capture or
kill him immediately, Probably kill, Alias admitted, because he'd put up a
fight.
She was ready to wake the mage and bard and set out immediately when another
thought made her hesitate. If he's wandering out on the plains, lost, but finds
his way back to an empty camp, he'll think we've been captured. Someone has to
stay, she decided. But Akabar looked so concerned by the lizard's
disappearance, Alias knew he would insist on accompanying her, and Olive would
not stand for being left behind, believing there was treasure to be had in the
city.
She hovered uncertainly over the two sleeping forms for several moments,
trying to make up her mind. Going alone would only perpetuate the lizard's
folly, but she could not help herself. She bent down over Akabar's pack and dug
out a stick of charcoal and his map. On the back she wrote: "Looking for
D. Wait here."
She lay the parchment by Akabar's head. Then, after slipping the finder's
stone in her boot, she picked up her shield and sword and walked away. Her
steps drew her toward the great mound city.
*****
Akabar's eyes snapped open the moment Alias opened his pack.
The mage had cast a magic mouth enchantment on his earring to tell him if
Dragonbait returned, and at first he thought that was what had awakened him,
but when the piece of jewelry repeated its magical warning, whispering,
"Someone's in your pack," he realized his mistake.
After the earlier disappearance of his magical tome, back when the halfling
had joined his caravan, the mage had decided that it would not be squandering
his power to use it to protect his property, even from a fellow traveler.
Still, he wondered at Ruskettle's nerve and dishonor.
He lay perfectly still, focusing on his baggage through the slits of his
eyelids, but the figure rooting through his belongings was too big to be
Ruskettle. It couldn't be Dragonbait; his other magic mouth spell would have
warned him.
When the figure straightened, Akabar nearly gasped and sat up in surprise.
It was Alias. She scrawled something hastily on his map and then took a step
toward him.
Akabar closed his eyes. He almost held his breath, but caught himself in
time and began feigning the shallow breathing of a sleeper. Through his
eyelids, he could sense the stone's light on his face and then sense it move
away. He peeked through one eye. Alias took up her sword and shield and left
the camp.
Slowly, Akabar rose and looked out across the plains. He caught a flash of
moonlight glinting off of Alias's polished shoulder-plates. She was headed
toward Yulash.
He spied the map. He picked it up and tilted it until the letters could be
read by Selune's light.
Wait here, indeed! thought the mage, tossing the map onto his sleeping
blanket with a deep frown. She lugs us all the way up here and when things get
really dangerous, when she could use our help, she abandons us to chase after
that lizard—who's probably reporting us to his hidden masters, setting up a
trap for her to walk into.
His first impulse was to chase after the warrior woman and convince her to
return, use force if necessary to keep her from marching into Yulash. He would
tell her it was smarter to wait for daylight. But he knew in his heart that
once the sun had risen, he would only try to convince her that the nightfall
might be a better time after all.
She would never hesitate to go searching for the creature she thinks is a
friend, while I, Akabar Bel Akash, mage of no small water, cower behind an
overturned merchant's wagon. I am more greengrocer than master mage, the
Turmishman thought, ashamed of his fear.
He could wake the halfling, and they could follow Alias together. Olive
would have no trouble making up her mind what to do, Akabar realized. You could
call her anything except late to looting. Still, taking the halfling did not
seem particularly wise. As the old Amnite saying went, when matters are bad,
think how much worse they could get if halflings were involved. Akabar didn't
want to put her in any risk of running into the Red Plumes.
Standing with his face toward the waning moon, Akabar began to intone a spell.
The deep, rich words rolled off his tongue as his right hand sliced through the
air. In it, he held a bit of his own eyelash embedded in a resin of tree gum.
At the end of the evocation, his left hand came down hard on the tree gum. The
sticky pellet flared a bright blue, consumed by mystical energy.
Akabar held his hands up in the moonlight and watched them go transparent,
as though they were sculptures of ice. Then they vanished completely. His
vision blurred for a moment, then the world refocused for him. He could see
normally, save that when he looked down at himself there was nothing to see but
a pair of depressions in the grass.
The parchment map rose from the ground, hovered for a moment, then settled
next to the sleeping halfling. What Alias had written could apply to both of
them.
Then he used his long legs to stride toward Yulash in the wake of the
swordswoman. Nothing but a wave of bent grass blades marked his invisible
passing.
18
Yulash
A fog began to roll in across the plains minutes after Alias left the
campsite. The swordswoman was uncertain whether she should thank Tymora for the
weather or not. On one hand, it would make spotting Dragonbait more difficult,
but on the other hand, it would cover her approach to the mound. The soft glow of
her tattoo was enough illumination to see the ground beneath her feet.
Their camp had only been a quarter of a mile to the base of the hill, but it
was another quarter mile climb up to the wall. Alias avoided the roads into the
city; there were plenty of footpaths up the slope, and she knew they'd be less
patrolled. Twice she thought she heard someone following her and she waited on
the path, hoping maybe it was Dragonbait tracking her scent, but no one
appeared. The third time she backtracked quickly, thinking perhaps she was
being stalked by a sentry, but still she discovered no one.
Halfway up the hill, Alias emerged from the fog. She turned to survey the
plains There was nothing to see though; all below her was whiteness. Yulash was
an island in the clouds. She climbed farther up the slope.
The great walls that once ringed the cities were breached in more than a
dozen places. She avoided the larger, more easily navigated breaks on the
assumption that they would be guarded. She chose a hole that afforded her
shoulder plates enough space to slip through.
The wreckage of the town spread out before her in all directions.
Occasionally a section of wall remained braced by a door or corner, but there
wasn't a rooftop to be seen on any of the old buildings. Ahead and a little to
the east stood the fortifications of the old citadel, rebuilt by the Zhentil
Keep soldiers trying to hold the region. A campfire blazed in that direction,
so Alias moved off to the western section of the city.
A scraping noise came from back by the hole she had used to enter the city.
She whirled around, blade ready, expecting some assassin, wishing it were
Dragonbait, but there was no one there. Just loose rubble, she thought,
disgusted with her nervousness. She continued west.
Rather than walk in the streets, Alias picked her way over the razed walls.
Anything that might have survived the dragon invasions, human armies, and
looters had been carried off long ago. If there was treasure to be found in the
city, it was well-hidden.
There was a jiggling of horse-rigging in the streets, and Alias crouched
behind the wall. A single rider approached. He held his reins in one hand and a
hooded lantern in the other. Enough light leaked from his lantern that Alias
could see he wore a scarlet cloak and a silver helmet with a single plume
jutting from the top, also scarlet.
As she watched the rider pass, something across the street caught Alias's
eye. Reflecting the rider's lantern light, lying in the rubble, was a familiar
symbol—a fanged mouth gaping in the palm of a hand.
Moander, at last, Alias thought with glee. A third stroke of luck. Tymora
must be favoring her. She crept out from behind the wall, ready to dodge back
into the shadows if the horse so much as nickered. The horse and rider
continued down the street, eyes forward, oblivious to her presence.
Alias scurried across the street, but when she reached the broken stone
there was nothing there. Was her mind playing tricks on her? A mossy smell
assailed her nostrils. She peered into the darkness, searching for its source.
The pile of rubble where she stood was part of a ring of collapsed wall.
Within the toppled stone was a broad pit. At first, Alias thought it must just
be the cellar of some collapsed building, but the darkness within the center
was so complete that she realized it must be a very deep hole. She spotted a
narrow staircase winding around the edge of the hole's interior. On the wall by
the first few steps was another hand glowing blue.
The glow of her tattoo was insufficient to illuminate the stairs so Alias
risked pulling out the finder's stone. Its light seemed dimmer here,
illuminating no more than four or five extra steps, but that was enough for
Alias to make out a set of tracks preceding her into the pit, tracks made by
something with three-toed feet, separated by a single groove, made by the heavy
tail of a lizard.
What do you know? Alias thought. The finder's stone did help me find someone
who was lost. She began her descent into the pit. Each step felt as if she were
pushing against water, as if something were resisting her entry. The stairs
were steep as well as narrow, and the rim of the pit soon rose over her head
and swallowed tier.
With total darkness around her, the yellow glow of the stone seemed to grow
brighter, but Alias no longer needed it. An azure aura sprang from beneath her
right sleeve. Alias hesitated and wondered if she were walking into a trap. Of
course, her arm was going to glow as she got nearer Meander's temple, just as
it had glowed in the presence of Cassana's kalmari and the crystal elemental.
She didn't know what she had to worry about. Moander was locked up. According
to the goatherd in Shadowdale, only someone unborn could free the ancient god.
Since she knew she'd been born—she could remember the day quite clearly: the
snoring of her mother, the cooing of the midwife, being sniffed at by the house
cats—she had no fear she might accidentally unleash one of the evil elements
responsible for her mutilation and lost memory.
Alias could now discern pungent, all-too-human smells. The pit was used as a
midden. The stench grew more powerful the deeper she went. The steps grew damp
and slick, and pockets of muck and slime collected in the depressions worn into
the stairs by a millennium of visitors. Bits of green goo dripped from one step
to the next.
A stone bounced down from above, followed by a shower of small rocks. Alias
looked up, expecting to see someone tossing a bucket of something foul over the
rim of the pit, but only the dark sky hung over the darker hole.
A stray soldier idly investigating the city, Alias guessed, and continued
her descent until she came to a wide, stone. work platform ringed with rubble.
The staircase ended. though the pit continued down. The finder's stone was
unable to light the bottom of the stinking darkness. Alias doubted if even the
moon could do so were it to shine directly in. There was no trace of Moander s
sigil.
Alias studied Dragonbait's tracks. The three-toed imprint wandered about the
muck-covered platform, to the begin ning of the blocked stairs, to the edge of
the platform, to the wall of the pit, but there was no trace of them after
that.
He wouldn't have jumped over the edge, Alias puzzled She lifted the finder's
stone and investigated the slime. encrusted walls. There was a faint vertical
shadow from a line of moss buckled against more moss. The line continued above
her head, running horizontally and then back down. It was a door, recently
opened and closed.
Reluctantly, Alias ran her fingers along the slimy moss and lichen, feeling
for a catch to push, pull, or slide. In the center of the door, at waist level,
she discovered a hole Mindful of finger guillotine traps set against intruders,
she poked her smallest finger into the hole.
No blade sliced at her digit, but a stinging charge of energy ran up her
arm. Her runes writhed and danced, but caused her no pain. From behind the
stone wall came the clattering of lock mechanisms tumbling and falling.
When the azure sigils were still again, though still glowing, Alias withdrew
her finger and stepped back. The hidden door swung out silently. A foot thick,
it pivoted on an unseen post.
Beyond the doorway, the smell of fresh waste and muck gave way to the older
decay of ancient paper and bones. Warm, dry air blew from the passage. The
walls were carved with tiny, intricate, flowing designs. They reminded Alias
more of the tree sculptures grown and shaped by elves than of something wrought
of dead stone.
Then she saw the three-toed footprints on the dusty floor. The curiosity
that had beckoned her this far now tried to drive her forward like a fire
forcing wild animals through the woods. She was sure that not only Dragonbait,
but the answers to all her questions lay at the end of the mysterious passage
before her.
She wanted to rush right in, but her adventurer's sense of caution asserted
itself just in time. Stepping back on the platform, Alias grabbed a large,
wedge-shaped rock from the pile of rubble and slipped its smaller edge beneath
the door. She found several others like it and shoved them beneath the door as
well. Then she shifted a pile of rocks to the edge of the door frame.
Satisfied with her precautions, she entered the passage. About six paces
down the corridor, she felt a stone beneath her foot shift nearly an
imperceptible amount. Behind her, the door jerked a hand's span but was held
fast by the rocks. Something mechanical whined a high-pitched plea. The whining
grew louder as though the trap were crying out desperately to fulfill its only
purpose in life. Within a minute, the whine dropped in pitch and then was
silent. The door was still. Smiling to herself and feeling smug, Alias
continued down the corridor.
Her mood was soon quelled by the walls around her. They were carved with
horrible bas reliefs interspersed with lines and lines of engravings of archaic
runes. The carved figures depicted heroes suffering deadly tortures at the
hands of leering humanoids, torn apart by chaotic beasts, and fried, frozen,
dissolved, and poisoned by dragons and beholders and other deadly creatures.
The ugliness of the walls seemed to go on forever and, with each twisting
and widening of the passageway, the scenes grew larger as well as more obscene
and gory.
Alias felt a growing revulsion which turned her stomach sour and tightened
her throat. She kept her eyes forward and tried not to look at the walls
anymore.
The passage widened further one last time before ending abruptly in a wall
twenty feet ahead. This wall was completely different from the disturbingly
carved stone passages Alias had come through. Constructed of blue glazed brick,
it was bound together with a red-tinged mortar. Down the center of the mortar
work were great gouges, as if a giant claw had been scratching at it. At the
base of the Wall lay the crumbled figure of Dragonbait.
The swordswoman rushed forward and knelt at the lizard's head, laying the
finder's stone on the ground.
"Dragonbait' Are you all right?" she asked. She'd whispered the
words, but the corridor caught and amplified them so that her echo boomed back
at her.
As Alias knelt beside him, the lizard turned his head tu look up at her. The
change in him was horrifying. He was completely emaciated. His scaly flesh hung
about his frame as if his muscles had been eaten away by months of starvation.
Wear and exhaustion were etched deep into the lines of his face. His tongue
lolled out the side of his mouth, and he panted heavily in the dusty air. His
eyes, normally a dead, yellow color, now looked even worse—their clear sparkle
had turned to a murky gray.
A deep, violet perfume rose from his body, something Alias had never noticed
before. Forgetting he could not really answer, she asked, "What happened
to you?"
The lizard pointed his finger back down the way they'd both come, and he
tried to push her away from him in that direction, but his shove was far too
feeble to budge her. A low snarl escaped his lipless mouth.
Alias stood up. "All right, I'm going," she agreed, understanding
his signals perfectly. "But not without you. Come on, I'll help you
up."
Dragonbait pulled heavily on her arm and rose to his feet. His legs looked
too spindly to support his weight. He leaned on his sword like an old man with
a cane.
What could have done this to him? Alias wondered. She felt reluctant to
leave without exploring this place, but she was too frightened by the lizard's
condition to delay getting help for him. Maybe, she thought, I can find a
cleric to heal him in one of the army camps.
Then she noticed that many of the backward-curved teeth at the end of his
sword were damaged—chipped off or curled askew. Realizing the sword had caused
the scratches in the brick wall, she joked, "If you wanted a slegehammer
for a weapon, you should have asked back in Shadowdale."
Dragonbait tugged on her arm, anxious to hurry away.
Alias had never seen him frightened before, but she had no wish to meet
whatever had done this to him either. She stooped to retrieve the finder's
stone.
As she stood up with the goatherd's gift, Alias felt a throbbing curiosity
about the blue and red wall. She reached out to stroke the blue-glazed bricks
with her fingertips.
The wall glowed. For a single pulse of a human heart, the bricks shimmered
and then became translucent. From behind the wall, a bright blue light shone,
silhouetting the lines of red mortar and turning the passage where Alias stood
an eerie aqua. Then the bricks returned to normal and the light faded.
Alias stood, staring at the wall in amazement. It was some moments before
she became aware of the writhing sensation on her arm. The sigils were wriggling
and twisting like maggots nesting in her flesh, and the unholy sign of Moander
seemed the most vibrant. The fingers of the hand appeared to clench and flex,
while the mouth in the palm snapped its fanged teeth open and closed.
Fascinated, Alias reached out to stroke the wall again. Dragonbait's hand
snatched at her wrist and pulled her back. Then some pain forced him to release
her and clutch at his chest. He fell forward, his sword clattering to the stone
floor, making a ringing noise down the passageway.
"Dragonbait! What's wrong?" Alias gasped, kneeling again beside
him. Then she saw it—a bright, blue light, pouring out between the weave of the
lizard's shirt, escaping even through the flesh of his hands held over his
chest.
"Gods! "the warrior whispered. "No. It can't be." She
shook the lizard by the shoulders, dropping the finder's stone to the floor.
"What's on your chest?" she demanded.
Dragonbait took a deep breath and held his head up. He untied the fastenings
that held his shirt closed.
Alias gasped. The same sigils. In a different shape, but the same sigils.
The same blue, gemlike, writhing, azure-lit brands. The scales over the pattern
were translucent just as the flesh covering the pattern on Alias's right arm
was.
"Why? Why didn't you tell me? Are you one of their pets, too?" she
growled angrily.
Dragonbait met her angry eyes with his own, but there was neither shame nor
triumph in his look, only sadness. Now he smelled to Alias of roses. It brought
to her mind the morning in Shadow Gap when he'd buried the barbarian's sword.
The sword he'd used to destroy the kalmari.
"Oh, Dragonbait. I'm sorry," she whispered. Of course he wasn't an
enemy or a traitor. He was her friend and probably another victim like her.
That had to be the reason she felt such a kinship with him.
"Why didn't you tell me?" she whispered gently, reaching up with
her right hand to touch the markings that scarred his body. Energy crackled
through her fingertips and over the lizard's chest. Dragonbait drew a deep breath.
The lines smoothed from his face, his shoulders straightened, and his eyes
widened in surprise.
Alias gasped and drew back her hand, uncertain what she had just
experienced. She didn't feel any weaker, so she didn't think Dragonbait had
sucked the energy from her. But she couldn't possibly have healed him. She had
no training as a cleric. Could the sigils know how to help someone else branded
the same way? It didn't seem likely, but Dragonbait's awful condition had been
corrected by the mere touch of her hand.
Dragonbait retied his shirt fastenings and stood up easily. Shouldering his
sword, he offered her his arm. Alias accepted it with a smile and used it to
balance herself as she rose to her feet. The warrior woman shifted her sword to
her left hand as she reached down to scoop up the finder's stone.
Alias gasped. Her fingers reached of their own volition, not for the light,
but for the wall. She broke out in a sweat in her effort to pull her hand away
from the blue bricks. She hadn't actually felt the wall this time: her hand
seemed to pass through it as though it were an illusion. The wall reacted in
the same extraordinary way it had before.
Again, the bricks seemed to go clear and the passageway was bathed in blue
light. The effect lasted a few moments longer this time. The sigils on her arm
grew brighter.
Dragonbait knocked her to the ground, away from the blockade, and whatever
lay on the other side, beckoning her hand to turn traitor to her body.
Dragonbait stood over her, his muscles taut, ready to keep her from reaching
out for the wall again. The smell of violets wafted from his body even more
strongly now, and Alias wondered if that was the scent of his sweat or his
fear.
Out of nowhere came the chant of a magical spell, and a sparkling dart
slammed into Dragonbait's body. The lizard was propelled backward into the
brick wall.
Alias gasped again. The wall remained solid and unaffected by contact with
the lizard's body. She leaped up and spun about, sword raised to defend against
the attacker.
"Akabar! Have you taken leave of your senses?"
The mage stood in the passageway, his invisibility negated by the casting of
the magic missile he'd used on the lizard. He had had a lot of trouble coming
down the staircase in the dark. He had turned the corner into this passage just
in time to watch the lizard send Alias sprawling across the floor. "Are
you blind, woman?" the mage snapped. "He just attacked you."
"You fool! He was trying to help me—"
"No. He's one of them! And I can prove it!" Akabar shouted,
leaping toward the lizard with his dagger drawn.
Dragonbait could have responded by raising his sword and letting the mage
skewer himself, but instead, he held his arms out to grapple with him. Akabar
was no weakling, and the lizard discovered too late that the Turmishman would
not be so easy to shove away. Akabar slashed at the lizard's shirt, ripping the
ties so the garment fell open.
"Stop it!" Alias shouted. She dropped her sword and rushed forward
to pry Akabar loose from the lizard. The two males shifted their weight, and
Alias stumbled. All three fell toward the wall, but while Akabar's and
Dragon-bait's shoulders hit the barrier with a thud, Alias's hand and wrist
plunged right through the brick and mortar. Only the lizard's body kept her
from falling in farther.
The bricks went transparent yet again and the hellish, blue light that
filled the passage from the other side of the wall caused the sigils on her arm
to perform an entirely new trick. They replicated miniature illusory copies of
themselves which slipped from her flesh. The little daggers, rings, fanged
palms, and the rest circled about her arm like angry hornets. Alias tried to
pull her arm from the wall, but it was mired fast, just as her legs had been
trapped by the crystal elemental. "No!" she screamed. "I'm stuck!"
Dragonbait, squished between her and the wall, let his sword drop and tried
pushing her shoulders away.
"No good,'' Alias groaned. "You're pulling my arm from its
socket."
Brought to a more reasonable state of mind by the new crisis, Akabar ceased
struggling with the lizard. "How did you do that?' he asked, amazed at her
ability to pass through the wall.
"It's not me, you stupid Turmite. It's the arm. That's why Dragonbait
pushed me away from the wall. He must have known there was danger."
"He might have planned all this," Akabar insisted. "To help
capture you. He's branded the same as you."
"Tell me something I don't know," Alias snarled. "Like how to
get my arm out of this wall!"
"Try pushing forward a little and then jerking back," the mage
suggested.
Alias pressed forward up to her elbow, covering all the sigils, but she
could not pull back a fraction of an inch. "Great," she growled.
"Now I'm stuck worse." Instinctively she put her foot up to the wall
to use it as leverage to pull herself out, but the foot slipped through the
brickwork as well, all the way to her knee.
"Any more bright ideas, Akash?"
Despite his awkward position, Dragonbait remained pressed against the wall,
rather than risk losing Alias. Pulled closer to him, Alias could smell the
scent of roses again, mixed with the odor of violets. Suddenly, it came to
her—the rose smell always was present when he was sad. He was mourning her
already. "Don't give up on me yet, chum," she whispered to him.
Dragonbait tried to smile, but it was meant for her benefit, not one he
felt. She was in too much danger.
Akabar ran his fingers along the wall. He tapped on the brick and scratched
at the mortar with his dagger. "This is the most unusual brick I've ever
seen," he murmured. "But the grouting is common enough. Mortar mixed
with gorgon blood, or something similar. It's used to block the passage of
beasts that can walk through walls."
"Well, I can't walk through walls. Why isn't it stopping me?"
Alias said through gritted teeth. Dots of perspiration formed at her brow.
"Precisely. It wasn't made to stop people. That's what the brick is
for, I presume."
"The brick's not stopping me either!" Alias shouted. "Akabar,
stop jabbering and do something!"
"All right, already." The mage ran nervous fingers through his
hair. "I'm going to try to dispel the magic they must have cast on the
wall while the mortar hardened. It was undoubtedly cast by a more powerful mage
than I, but if the spell dates back as far as the destruction of the temple, it
may have decayed some over the centuries."
"Cut the lecture. Just do it."
Akabar stepped back and spread his arms out so as to encompass the entire
wall in his field of disenchantment. He began preparing to cast his spell.
Alias shrieked and began squirming furiously. Akabar had never heard Alias
make such a noise before. The sound completely broke his concentration.
Fortunately, he had not yet begun his spell, so it was not ruined and wasted.
"What's wrong?" he shouted crossly.
"There's something," Alias cried, her features distorted with
terror. She gulped air far too quickly, "Something on the other side. It's
got my arm."
What could terrorize a woman who's stood up to dragons, earthly titans, and
man-eating kalmari? Akabar wondered as he peered at the wall. The blue light
had dimmed considerably. All the mage could make out beyond the translucent
bricks was a vast shadow.
As he watched, the warrior woman's body lurched forward, dragged deeper into
the wall by her arm. Now she was embedded to her right shoulder plate.
"Oh, gods," Alias whined. "Gods, gods, gods, gods," she
moaned over and over, as though she were pleading with heaven.
"Hold her tight, Dragonbait," Akabar barked. "I'm going to
try to dispel now."
Akabar resumed his stance and began to intone his spell. The rise and fall
of his voice became an eerie melody superimposed over the warrior's panicked,
repetitious rhythm.
Dragonbait strained between the trapped warrior and the wall. Even if his
restored strength proved sufficient to counter the slow, steady force that
sucked her through the barrier, Alias feared they might only end up tearing her
in half. Equally bad was the possibility she would end up the instrument that
crushed the life from the lizard before he was willing to sacrifice her.
Akabar finished his disenchantment spell by unlacing his fingers with a
flourish to scatter the magical energies across the surface of the wall.
Sun-yellow motes sparkled toward the wall, which was now the dark blue shade of
a sky about to rain.
The motes struck the wall and hissed like sparks falling into water. The
blue light grew even dimmer as the bricks grew opaque. Alias managed to pull
her leg completely free and her arm came out up to her elbow. The half with
sigils still remained buried.
Dragonbait, unprepared for the success of Akabar's spell, was dislodged from
his position between Alias's trapped foot and arm, and he stumbled to the
floor. He scrambled to his feet, grabbing her about the knees, but the entity
on the other side gained the advantage with a sudden tug.
Alias gave one last inhuman scream before her boots slid from the lizard's
grasp and she fell through the wall like sand in an hourglass.
The wall went completely opaque, and the sigils on Dragonbait's chest ceased
radiating light. The lizard and mage were left alone, bathed in the now-feeble,
yellow glow of the finder's stone.
Dragonbait picked up the glowing crystal and struggled to his feet. Tears
streamed down the lizard's cheeks.
Akabar stared at the wall in disbelief. He ran up to it and pounded on it
with his fists. "Give her back!" he screamed. The string of curses he
began issuing rang down the corridors and echoed back, drowning out the ones he
finished with. The wall remained smooth and hard. If Dragonbait's sword had only
managed to scratch its surface, Akabar's bare hands weren't going to bring it
down.
"You!" the mage growled, turning to the lizard. "This is your
fault." He hurled his words like a mad monk throwing shurikens. They spun
with poisonous, deadly precision, unconcerned whether or not they caused harm.
"She came here after you. You should have held on to her. You lost her. We
could have saved her, and you lost her. What kind of accursed beast are you?
Who pulls your strings?"
With each accusation, the mage took a step toward the exhausted, grieving
lizard until he had backed him against the wall and was standing over him nose
to muzzle. Akabar screeched at the top of his lungs, "Answer me or, I
swear, I'll wear your hide as sandals!" He reached down to grab the
creature by the shoulders.
He never got the chance. Dragonbait used the finder's stone to smack the
mage on the side of the head. The Turmishman staggered back and stumbled over
the lizard's sword.
Dragonbait walked up to the mage and bent over him to retrieve his sword.
Standing, he snarled down on him. His unblinking lizard eyes narrowed as the
mage began to intone a short, deadly spell.
The Turmishman's spell and the lizard's leap to attack him were both
interrupted when the ground shifted beneath them. Akabar forgot his spell and
Dragonbait sprawled across the floor. They both looked back at the wall. The
blue glazing from the bricks began to crack and flake away.
The lizard rolled away from the cascading shards of brickwork while the mage
crab-crawled backward, keeping his eyes on the destruction. The glazing
sloughed completely off, the brick beneath crumbled to dust. The red-colored
mortar remained suspended in air for a moment and then crashed to the floor in
a cloud of dust.
In the light of the finder's stone, it looked to Akabar as if a second wall
stood just beyond the first, only this wall was composed of garbage, rotted
plants, and turned earth. And bound in the center of the wall was Alias, her
eyes closed, her body still. Her arms and legs were pinioned beneath coverings
of moss and moist plant roots. Beneath the wet lichen covering her right arm,
the runes pulsed like an evil, blue heart.
Akabar cried out, but Alias did not stir. She was unconscious. Just above
the warrior woman's head, in the garbage wall, a human eye opened. Then, to the
left of Alias's head, a feline eye opened, followed by a third eye above that,
as large, milky, and deep as a dragon's. A fanged mouth opened to the right of
Alias's right hand. A sharp hyena bark filled the room.
Tendrils shot out from the base of the wall-thing, and with these it began
to drag itself forward, a rotting juggernaut. More tendrils oozed from
slime-dripping pores, wet and thick tendrils, ending in mouths filled with
sharp fangs.
The mage scrambled through the spells he had memorized. All he could think
to try was another magic missile. He was struggling to calm himself so that he
could begin chanting when a scaly arm grabbed the collar of his robe and
dragged him down the passage and around the bend.
Akabar jerked away from the lizard's claws and knocked his arm away.
"Was this your plan, beast," he spat, "to sacrifice her to that
thing?"
Dragonbait's face twisted into a deep scowl, and Akabar thought the lizard
was going to hit him again. Instead, he pointed around the corner, back toward
the living wall.
It had become a wave of pungent rot. Fresh green shoots sprouted over it,
and it moved with surprising speed, already having lumbered over the spot where
Akabar had been standing only a moment before. New taproots shot out every
second, and brownish slime oozed from beneath its flowing bottom. Alias
remained asleep, entranced, trapped against its leading edge.
"So, you've saved me," Akabar shrugged. "How do we get Alias
back?"
Dragonbait scowled again and pointed up.
Akabar had no better plan, so he allowed himself to be tugged back through
the passages, looking behind every few yards to see if the wall of slime was
still following them.
It was. The wall lumbered along like a mastodon, its bulk filling the
corridor, oozing into different shapes to fit the narrower corridors. Its
multiple mouths were babbling now, each inhuman throat finding its voice,
wheezing through rotted pipes too long ignored.
The mage and the lizard finally reached the secret door from the stairs into
the garbage midden. The stench of human waste was strong, but fresher and more
alive than the dead-rot that followed them. The door had resumed whining,
trying to overcome the rocks Alias had jammed in its path.
Dragonbait began kicking the stones away.
"No!" Akabar shouted, trying to push him away. "You can't do
that! She'll be trapped in there with that thing!"
The lizard shoved him across the platform toward the stairs and kicked the
last stone from the door's path.
The mossy barrier slammed shut.
"What have you done?" Akabar screamed.
Suddenly, Akabar gasped, breathless. Sharp pains laced through his chest
like needles running beneath his skin. His lungs labored for air.
Dragonbait pointed upward and began climbing the stairs.
"Damn you!" the mage shouted up the steps from the platform.
"I may be a greengrocer, but I know better than to abandon a friend! I'll
die before I abandon her to that thing, you coward."
Directly behind him, the wall with the secret door exploded and the great,
oozing mass surged into the pit. The stone platform began to collapse under its
great weight, but the corruption cascaded downward still babbling from
innumerable mouths. Now, the squealing cries were chanting in chorus.
In voices ranging from frog piping to deep, resonant tongues as ancient as
the great elven forests, the word repeated over and over was
Moander.
The Turmish mage blanched and fled up the stairs.
19
Moander's Resurrection and Mist's Return
Dragonbait was waiting for Akabar halfway up the stairs. The lizard's
breathing was fast, but nowhere near as labored as the mage's. Akabar staggered
up the stairs with his hands clutching his chest. The pain there had changed
from sharp needle pricks to a deep, crushing sensation. His face was drenched
with sweat. His shoulder and back ached.
"Why?" he gasped, his furor burned out by the fire in his lungs,
"why did you let her die?"
Dragonbait made a quick dismissive shake of his head such as an adult might
use to warn an overbearing child. Then, noticing the perspiration dripping down
the Turmishman's anguished face, the lizard reached out to take his shoulder.
Akabar retreated from his grasp. "No," he insisted. "You go
ahead. I can't run. Muscle cramp," he lied. "If it climbs up the
walls, maybe I can slow it, maybe have a chance still to free her. Go!"
The mage collapsed in a heap on the stairs.
Dragonbait slipped past Akabar a few steps lower and knelt to get a better
look at him. He put the finder's stone down beside him and reached out with
both clawed hands. He laid his palms and fingers over the slime-spattered robe
covering Akabar's chest.
The smell of woodsmoke enveloped them. A small aura of light flared around
the reptile's claws. Nowhere but in the blackness of this pit would Akabar have
been able to see the light the lizard generated. A feeling of warmth and relief
spread out from Akabar's torso.
Akabar stood and the pain in his chest, back, and shoulder was gone. He
stared at the lizard in confusion.
"Who in Gehenna are you?
What are you?"
But Dragonbait's attention was fixed on the pit. He stared over the edge of
the staircase into the earth's depths. Akabar tried to adjust his eyes to the
darkness to see what held the lizard's gaze. A bright, blue light shimmered in
the depths. At first, Akabar thought it might be the moon reflected in water,
but the sky above the pit was dark.
"Alias!" he whispered excitedly. 'She might still be alive. Look,
the light's coming closer."
The light was indeed approaching them, the blue light shed by the sigils on
the warrior woman's arm, but it was not Alias propelling herself upward. The
bottom of the pit, a mass of rot and oozing garbage, was rising up the shaft.
Alias was just a tiny human figure pinned to the muck.
Dragonbait pointed up the stairs and nudged Akabar to climb in front of him.
The mage nodded and ascended without further argument or complaint. When he
reached the top, he was only mildly winded. The pain had not reasserted itself
with the exertion of the climb. He turned around to check on the lizard's
progress up the stairs.
Having judged the speed of the monster to be less than their own, Dragonbait
now took his time, turning back often to study it. Is he some sort of tribal
shaman? Akabar wondered. What other secrets has he kept hidden?
Akabar peered back down the pit. Far below, the oozing mass that had
kidnapped Alias was still crawling up the sides of the midden. It rose like
lava in a volcano and had already regained the height of the ruined platform.
The titanic effort of hauling its vast bulk did not seem to tire it. If
anything, it seemed to be moving faster now.
"Don't move, mooncalf," a strange, rough voice ordered. Then it
shouted, "Captain!"
Akabar looked up from the pit. Ten feet away, a single soldier was sitting
on the pile of rubble about the midden. He was wrapped in a faded red robe, and
a red-plumed helmet lay beside him, next to an overful bucket of kitchen waste.
He held a loaded crossbow aimed at Akabar's chest.
Dragonbait's head rose over the rim of the pit. He ducked back quickly, but
it was already too late.
"No good, pigeon," the soldier barked toward the pit. "Bring
your carcass over the side, or we'll push your buddy in."
Akabar watched Dragonbait shove the finder's stone into his shirt and
sheathe his sword across his back, though the soldier did not have his line of
sight and could not have noticed. The lizard scrambled over the edge with both
his hands held out before him. He positioned his body between Akabar and the
crossbow.
The mage had always assumed that in the event of Alias's inability to take
charge, he would be the next leader. Obviously, Dragonbait did not agree. He
took responsibility for their safety and put himself at the greatest risk.
The captain and four more fighters strode through the ruins toward the
midden. Two carried lanterns and handheld crossbows. The rest were armed with
short swords, drawn and ready.
"I got me some looters," their captor announced. "Or maybe
spies," he added. By the brightening of his face, Akabar could see that
this thought had just entered the man's head. The glee it brought him indicated
that there was a bounty paid on spies.
Akabar looked to Dragonbait. Leader or not, he would need an interpreter. He
stepped forward to stand beside the lizard as the captain approached.
Dragonbait stood motionless, but Akabar could sense the lizard's tension. The
fragrance of violets wafted from his body. The mage could smell his own sweat.
Dragonbait glanced meaningfully at the pit and back at Akabar, raising his
scaly brows. If he could stall the soldiers, they would soon be too busy
dealing with an ancient god to bother with two stray adventurers.
"I am no looter, but a mage of no small water," Akabar announced
to the captain. "I have important information for the commander of your
unit."
"No small water," mimicked the crossbowman who'd discovered them.
"Sounds like a southerner," one of the other soldiers said.
"Don't like southerners," the first one said. "They lie and
stink."
The Red Plumes captain held up his hand, silencing everyone. "Who are
you, and what is your information?" he asked Akabar.
Akabar could not keep from glancing at the pit Using the lumbering garbage
pile of a god as a diversion would not work if Moander engulfed them before
engaging the Red Plumes. "Let us go to your camp, where I will tell
you," he said, trying to keep his voice steady.
"You'll tell me here and now," replied the captain, "or your
bodies will be lying at the bottom of the pit."
The bottom of the pit may be here any minute, the mage thought nervously.
Aloud he said, "There is something very dangerous in this pit. A threat to
you and everyone else in this city. It climbs out even as we speak. You must
fetch fire, oil, and powerful mages, quickly. We might still repel it."
The captain chuckled. "Our mages are asleep, southerner, resting after
a powerful contention with the forces of Zhentil Keep. It would not be worth
your life or mine to roust them. Your story sounds to me like a looter's tale,
but it will not help you escape the noose. We have firm laws against looters.
But I'm sure you know that."
"No," Akabar replied. "I do not." He looked around at
the ruined city. "I wasn't even aware there was anything worth looting in
this pile of rubble."
"I'll bet," the captain said, smiling with amusement at Akabar's
cool denial. "However, ignorance of the law is no excuse. The Hillsfar Red
Plumes are here at the request of the Yulash government in Hillsfar. On their
behalf, we are authorized to hang all looters. No exceptions."
"I can understand that," Akabar said. "Please," he
pleaded, "let us move away from the edge of this pit."
The captain surveyed the mage and the lizard. For the first time that evening,
Akabar missed the presence of the glib-tongued Ruskettle. By now, the dratted
halfling could probably have convinced the captain to organize a full alert,
the mage mused, were she here and not snoring away at camp. He wondered if he
would ever have another chance to scold her for her laziness.
Finally, the captain made up his mind. He motioned permission for Dragonbait
and Akabar to move away from the pit. The crossbowmen kept their weapons
leveled on the prisoners. The captain, having apparently sensed and caught
Akabar's and Dragonbait's nervousness, moved away from the pit first, though he
tried to appear calm and unperturbed as he leaned on his weapon. The other two
men rested their swords on their shoulders.
The two adventurers moved cautiously through the rubble, away from the edge
of the pit, until they stood with their backs against a half-toppled wall.
'"Try again, looter," the captain ordered. "I'm sure you can
come up with a better story than a pit fiend."
Why is it one's friends will believe one's lies, but one's enemies are
incapable of recognizing the truth when one speaks it? Akabar pondered. He knew
better than to back-track. "Sir," he said urgently, "as one
civilized man to another, I assure you, there is indeed a horrible creature in
that pit, no mere fiend, but an ancient god."
"I've heard of you 'civilized Southerners'," their discoverer
said, "you're baby-killers, every man-jack of you. Worship gods darker
than those who squat at the Keep."
Either bards are spreading the tales about baby-killers in every society,
Akabar thought, or they're neglecting their duty to disabuse people of these
absurd notions.
The captain, not quite as obtuse and single-minded as his subordinates, gave
an order to a crossbowman. "Soldier, take a look down the pit. The rest of
you, watch this pair. If they so much as sneeze, skewer them."
The crossbowman climbed over the rubble to peer down into the pit.
"Looks fine to me," he insisted, holding the lantern over his head.
"Kinda full. We're going to have to find another dump soon. Hey, there's a
body in there, a wo—"
The crossbowman never had a chance to finish his sentence. A slimy tendril
whipped up over the edge of the pit, wrapped around the man's neck, and yanked
him over the edge. The sickening crack of shattering bones followed.
The monster crested the rim of the pit and then rose above it. It had used
the slimy refuse of the midden to increase its size and its stench was
overpowering. But more hideous were the thousand singing mouths, some pitched
gratingly high, others grindingly low, some smaller than a babe's, a few the
size of a dragon's maw, all lined with gleaming, sharp fangs. In the center of the
mass facing them, clustered around the immobile form of Alias, a set of
mismatched eyes scanned the soldiers.
"Fire!" the captain shouted, flinging his own lantern at the
beast. The glass shattered and the burning oil spread out over the rotting
decay. It smoldered briefly, but the waste that made up the creature's body was
too wet to ignite. Crossbow bolts disappeared into the garbage, but did not
seem to cause much damage, except for puncturing an eye. Three more eyes opened
around the injured eve, staring cross-eyed at the thick, green ichor oozing
from it, then turned their attention to the fighters.
The mound of rot and refuse towered over its attackers. Wet tendrils, as
thick as broomsticks, dripping with mire, lashed out from the body and struck
three of the soldiers, including the captain. They were all dragged screaming
into a different large, open maw, feet first. The Abomination bit each man in
half before swallowing.
Dragonbait clutched at Akabar's robes, pulling him toward the city wall. Akabar
tore loose from the lizard and planted his feet firm. "Look," he
said, unable to tear his gaze from the horror that was Moander, "I'm sorry
about what I said before. You were only doing what you thought best. Now you
have to go get Ruskettle. Go get help—Elminster or Dimswart. The Harpers—anyone
you can find. This is more than we can handle. I have to stay and try to free
Alias."
Dragonbait shook his head.
"It's no use arguing. I'm not leaving. There's no sense in both of us
risking our lives. Someone has to warn the world." Akabar did not bother
to consider that Dragonbait had no voice to raise such an alarm. He shoved the
lizard toward the city wall and moved toward the battle, circling to keep in
sight the "face" of Moander that held Alias.
Dragonbait loped from the pit. He stopped a short distance away and turned
to watch the battle.
The Abomination of Moander, singing its name, tore through the ruins,
overrunning the camp of the Red Plumes. Akabar screwed his eyes shut and
muttered, fast and furious, the opening lines of the spell. When he opened
them, the beast had turned back toward the pit to clean up the stray humans it
had left behind. It was almost on top of him, its fanged mouths smiling and the
eyes that clustered about Alias all fixed on his body. Akabar aimed his spell
square on those eyes.
A pool of light blossomed across the god's "face." The eyes turned
a blind, milky white or shut tightly to shield themselves from the brightness
cast over them. Akabar grabbed a tendril and hauled himself up the hulking
body.
When he reached Alias's side, he drew his dagger. He began hacking furiously
at the roots which bound her to the monster. The blinding light would not last
long, and he did not stand a chance once an eye spotted him.
There was movement along the garbage hulk. Akabar looked down to discover
the source of the disturbance. Dragonbait was using the jagged teeth of his
sword to saw through the thicker tentacles entrapping Alias.
Annoyed but not surprised, Akabar shouted, "You should have followed my
orders." Dragonbait finally got one of Alias's legs free and moved up to
work on the restraints about her arm, but he suspected he was fighting a losing
battle. Tendrils were regrowing already, and Akabar had to slash them back, keeping
him from making any progress toward liberating the swordswoman.
An eye opened near Akabar's hand. He stabbed it and it shut up, tearing
yellow ichor. Below him, a large branch, as thick as a boa constrictor, reached
for Dragonbait. Shouting a warning, the mage launched himself over Alias's body
and kicked the lizard to the ground. The tendril caught the mage's wrist and
snaked up his arm. At its tip was a venomous-looking flower shaped like a
great, yellow hand that groped blindly toward the mage's head.
Dragonbait watched in shocked horror. Akabar shouted, "Run, damn you,
run!" before the foul blossom curled over his face. Akabar was dragged
into the heart of the pulsing mass. Tendrils grew over Alias's body.
Dragonbait fled toward the city wall. The heaving monstrosity shambled after
him, swords and half-eaten bodies stuck out at all angles from the boundaries
of its oozing flesh. There was no sign of the mage. The light Akabar had cast
was fading, and only the hot blue glow from the warrior woman's buried arm
revealed her position.
Diving through a hole in the city wall, the lizard curled himself into a
tight ball and rolled down the slope of the mound with reckless speed. A shower
of brownish vines and tendrils shot out after him but fell short of their mark.
Shouts came from the far side of the wall—more mercenaries alerted to the
Abomination's presence. The whine of missiles, ordinary and magical, reached
Dragonbait's ears.
The lizard stood up and dashed down the mound. At the bottom, he turned to
check on the monster. The city wall, already weakened from vears of abuse,
began to give under the pressure of the god's bulk. Part of its body oozed over
the wall, crushing beneath what it could not push aside.
Dragonbait turned again and ran toward their camp, chased by the shrieks of
the soldiers dying in the city. He did not weep for Akabar; all his tears had
been spent on Alias, and he had no time to make more.
*****
Olive Ruskettle turned in her sleep and moaned softly. A shadow passed
through her usual dreams of wealth and fame and food and wine. Phalse's face
appeared briefly, his head split by that unhalfling-like grin, followed by a
recurring nightmare—her abduction by Mist. Panicked horses neighed over the
rushing sound of the dragon's wings. The dream was so real that Olive's
sleeping form curled into a tight ball and pulled the covers over her head.
Then something poked at her, a swift, sharp shove. Alias, Olive guessed,
demanding that I take my turn at watch.
"Go 'way" Olive grumbled, clutching the covers more tightly about
her. "It's the lizard's turn. Let me have five more minutes. Tops."
"Five more minutes," an agreeable voice rumbled. "Then I will
fry you where you sleep."
Olive's eyes shot open. Very slowly, she turned over to find herself looking
square in the steaming face of the not-so-honorable Mistinarperadnacles.
"Boogers," the halfling whispered. She scanned the campsite for
the others.
There was no sign of them. They were gone—all three of them. Dead already?
Olive puzzled. Without a fight?
The tethers of the horses had been pulled up, but the twisted, half-eaten
form of the purebred chestnut, Lady Killer, lay not far away.
The dragon followed her gaze. "Yes," Mist purred, "I had a
wee bit to nosh before waking you. I get so crabby trying to talk to people on
an empty stomach. The temptation to eat them wears on my nerves, you see."
Steam poured from the creature's nostrils, engulfing the halfling.
Olive coughed back a breath of the noxious vapor.
"Now," the she-dragon demanded, "where is the lawyer?"
"Lawyer?" Olive squeaked, trying to gain her mental footing. How
could the others leave me like this, unguarded, in so much danger? Of all the
inconsiderate behavior!
"The woman who knows the old ways," said the dragon. "The
warrior. I understand she travels with a pet mage and a lizard-creature."
Olive's heart leaped. They were still alive! Somewhere. They can rescue me!
Aloud she said, "Gee, they were here a little while ago. Maybe they—"
Her hand fell on Akabar's parchment map. Squinting in the moonlight, she could
just make out writing on the back, but not what it said. Cautiously, explaining
her every move to Mist in detail to avoid any sudden incinerations, the
halfling drew out and lit a candle from her pack. She read the message to
herself.
"A clue?" Mist asked hopefully.
"Yes," the halfling nodded. "See?" She held the map up
to the dragon's left eye.
"And what does it say?" Mist inquired.
"You don't read Common?" Olive asked meekly, afraid of offending
the vain beast.
"1 prefer the more visual arts," the lumbering creature said with
a defensive snort. "Theater, sculpture, bards."
How about opera? Olive wondered. She held the parchment in front of her and
read aloud: "'Had a vision. Off to Zhentil Keep. Follow soon. Hugs,
Alias?'"
"Are you certain? There don't seem to be that many words to me,"
Mist said, her eyebrows raised in suspicion.
"She uses a lot of abbreviations. Like scribes, you know," the
halfling replied.
"Do your friends usually leave you behind just because you sleep
late?" the dragon asked.
"Well, you see, they knew I was a little reluctant to go to Zhentil
Keep. I would have preferred visiting another city, like Hillsfar. I guess they
didn't feel like waiting fur me to make up my mind to join them or not."
Mist raised up on her rear haunches, stretched, and yawned. Then she settled
back down. "You have no idea the trouble I've gone to to find the two of
you," she said. "Matter of honor and all that."
Olive couldn't have said what came over her, but some demon inside of her,
tired of being pushed around and bullied, prompted her to ask rudely, "You
mean you've brought us the chest of gold you promised us?"
Mist's eyes narrowed into slits. "Before I rush off to deal with the
Zheeks for your friend's hide, I think a little late lunch would be in
order."
The demon within vanished. "Oh," Olive said, "you wouldn't
want to do that. Flying on a full stomach, you'll get cramps. Besides, you'll
need someone to help you negotiate with the Keepers. They're a terribly
bureaucratic bunch. Forms, red tape, memos. They could give you the runaround
for days. I can be terribly useful in cutting through the paperwork, and you
know how entertaining I am. Remember the good times we had together in the
cave—er, lair, I mean, your home."
"I do," the dragon agreed with a smirk. "And I must confess
that the desire to reclaim you, my little, lost trophy, motivated me almost as
much as my desire for revenge." Mist paused a moment before asking,
"You've heard of singing for your supper?"
With a gulp, the bard nodded.
"Well, with me, you must sing or become supper. I might just spare you
... or not."
Ruskettle sighed. Repressing all the smart remarks that came to her head,
she reached for her yarting.
20
Dragonbait's Feint of Honor
The smell of blood caught Dragonbait's attention a hundred yards before he
entered camp. He dropped to all fours and crawled forward cautiously. By the
campsite was a huge dark mound. The massive shape was easily ten times greater
than the upended wagon that had shielded the whole party. As the lizard drew
closer, he heard singing.
The voice was Ruskettle's, but it was unusually uneven. It rang out strong
and sweet for a few lines, then wavered helplessly for a half dozen notes
before regaining its tone. Olive sang the tune Alias had taught her way back in
Cormyr, the song about the fall of Myth Drannor. Here on the battle-strewn
plain, in the dark, with fear so obviously in her heart, the song took on a
poignancy Olive might never have been able to give it before a human audience.
The lizard crept closer still, using the wagon as cover. Once he was
crouched behind the wagonbed, he looked back toward Yulash. The eastern sky was
developing the sickly glow of sunrise through fog, but Dragonbait didn't need
the light to pick out the great hulk of Moander. To the lizard's sight, the
Abomination stood out against the mist-chilled fields, warmed as it was with
the fresh blood of its victims. It was heading south toward the Elven Wood.
Dragonbait turned his attention once more to the matter close at hand. He
peeked around the edge of the wagonbed and instantly recognized the monster
that crouched like a great cat at the bard's feet.
A lair-beast, a very big lair-beast, Dragonbait concluded, ducking back
behind the wagon.
He sniffed at the air and recognized the monster's scent. Alias had gone
into this creature's den and brought out the halfling. Even from the back
tunnel, his sensitive nose had been able to pick out the dragon's scent, and he
had rankled at the swordswoman's order to stay outside while she went in to do
battle.
Mist's great tail wrapped around the camp, trapping the halfling in a ring
of crimson.
Dragonbait sighed inwardly. This was a very inconvenient time to have to
fight a lair-beast, he thought. If he died, there would be no one left to help
Alias, but he needed Olive's help. There simply wasn't time to find new allies.
He climbed to the top of the wagonbed so the halfling would be able to see
him without alerting the dragon.
Olive's voice quivered with exhaustion. It wasn't easy being so frightened.
When she spotted Dragonbait, she almost shouted out the next lyric, but years
of training stepped in and she was able to repress her excitement before she
gave away the lizard's presence.
Her voice grew in strength as she sang the final verse. A plan was beginning
to form in the back of her head. She had seen the lizard in combat, and he
wasn't bad. With her brains and his brawn, she might just have a chance. She
finished the song with a flourish.
The dragon let out a great contented sigh, steam pouring from her nostrils.
"That is a new one. You must have learned it since we last parted, or were
you keeping this little gem hidden from me when you stayed as my guest?"
"A good bard is always picking up new pieces for her repertoire,"
the halfling replied evenly. She stretched and asked, "So, have you
decided to eat me now or wait until you find Alias of Westgate?"
"I am of two minds," Mist answered, standing up to stretch
herself. She turned around like a cat trying to decide the most comfortable
position. Dragonbait dropped behind the wagon not a moment too soon. When the
great wyrm had settled herself back down, in nearly the exact same spot as
before, Dragonbait climbed back up the wagon to watch the proceedings.
"Two minds," Mist repeated. "On one hand, your talent would
be a great loss to the world. On the other hand, artists don't usually become
really famous until after their deaths. I would be doing you a favor by
allowing you to satisfy this peckish feeling in my belly."
"But then I couldn't help you find Alias," the halfling pointed
out calmly.
"No," the dragon admitted, "but then, neither could you
escape to warn the foul-tongued wench. You see my problem." A long,
lolling tongue slid out from between Mist's jaws and licked at her two
protruding upper fangs.
"Yes," Olive admitted, her eyes riveted to the great, forked organ
until it withdrew back into the dragon's mouth. "It sounds as if you've
already made your decision."
"You're right," Mist said as rivers of drool began to slide down
her chin hairs. "I think a light meal is definitely in order before I
resume the hunt."
"Sounds appropriate to me," the halfling agreed, reaching into her
shirt as if to scratch an indelicate itch. "I guess I have no choice,
then."
"Not really."
From his perch atop the wagon, Dragonbait crouched forward, ready to leap on
the dragon and save the strangely acquiescent bard.
Olive withdrew her hand from her shirt and presented a small, stoppered
bottle. "Have you ever heard of peranox?" she asked.
"It's some human poison, isn't it? It's supposed to smell like
cinnamon, I believe."
The halfling nodded and unstoppered the bottle. The scent of cinnamon
immediately drifted to her nostrils. Mist sniffed and no doubt caught a whiff
of it, too.
"Yes, a human poison." Olive nodded as beads of perspiration began
rising on her forehead and cheeks. "And a halfling poison as well. Fast
acting. Deadly. What I have here will kill me. It may kill you, too. Though of
course I don't know the correct dosage for a beast your size."
"Such a desperate action."
"These are desperate times." Olive rose to her feet, using the
tiny vial as a shield. Now, work up to this slowly, Olive-girl—you can't afford
to miss any steps, she warned herself as she prepared to use the same legal
arguments she'd learned from the swordswoman. "You don't think much of me,
do you?" she asked the dragon.
"Beg pardon?" Mist replied in confusion, her eyes never leaving the
bottle in the halfling's hands.
Dragonbait unsheathed his sword, but remained perched on top of the wagon.
The poison stand-off could not last long. Eventually, the dragon would just
decide she wasn't hungry enough to ingest a poison-laden bard and simply
incinerate the halfling. Yet, Dragonbait could sense Olive was preparing some
other cunning plan. It might be worth the risk to let the halfling play her
hand before trying to battle this lair-beast myself, he decided.
"Were it Alias the human you found here with me, what would you have
done? Sat down and demanded four or five songs as you tore apart her favorite
horse?"
"I'm sorry," Mist said. She nodded toward the remains of Lady
Killer. "Was this a friend of yours?"
"It was Alias's horse," Olive snapped. "But that's not my
point, is it? You wouldn't have made her grovel before you."
"No," Mist admitted. She thought carefully for a moment. "I
would have killed her directly, using flame and fangs and claws and every other
weapon at my disposal."
"Ex-actly!" the halfling said. "You wouldn't waste your time
while ..." Olive caught herself. She'd been about to say, "while she
waited frantically for reinforcements to arrive and rescue her," but that
was too close to her own situation. Mist might sit up and look around, ruining
the lizard's surprise. She gulped and then continued, "while the night
passed, demanding more songs like a drunkard at an inn calling for more
mead."
"Well, if you're offended by my sparing your life, I can correct
that." The dragon's smile revealed nothing but sharp teeth, all the way
back down her mouth.
"Offended," Olive mused. "Yes, that's the word. Offended. My
honor, small though it be, has been besmirched. I see no remedy but a Feint of
Honor."
"Feint of—" The dragon reared up, accidentally knocking the wagon
with her shoulder. The upended wagon overturned, sending Dragonbait sprawling
backward. The lizard landed on all fours and pressed himself tightly against
the ground.
Meanwhile, Mist rocked back and forth, issuing a loud braying that Olive
could only assume was laughter. The halfling shifted to the left somewhat to
keep the dragon's attention away from Dragonbait's position.
How did he ever get a stupid name like Dragonbait? the bard wondered as she
caught a glimpse of the lizard stalking forward. I just hope its not prophetic.
When Mist had quieted some and fixed her gaze back on the halfling, Olive asked
testily, "Are you quite through?"
"Dear child," the dragon chuckled, "do you take me for a
fool? Being foiled once this year by a warrior schooled in the old ways is
enough. To be taken in yet again, by a halfling, would be unforgivable."
"There you go insulting me again." Olive thrust out her chest and
brought the bottle close to her, determined to spill it on herself. "I
challenge you, O Mistinarperadnacles, to a Feint of Honor!"
Again the dragon brayed. "You have missed your calling, small one.
Comedy, not music, is your vocation."
"We settle terms next," Olive persevered despite Mist's attitude.
"I suggest three hits, no flames, no claws, little bitesies. Any friends
that happen along are welcome to join in the fray."
Mist rose up on her hind haunches. Steam began to curl out from between her
great fangs. "Little fool. There is one small portion of the Feint of
Honor of which you are no doubt ignorant. It must be issued by a good fighter
and true. You are no fighter, you are not good, and I doubt, little bard, that
you are true. You are beginning to bore me, and so you must die."
Just then, the sun broke through the mists and the dragon became a great,
dark shadow outlined with an aura of light. Olive was certain she had met her
doom. She took a deep breath and closed her eyes tightly. She wondered if her
end would be the agony of fire or, should Mist be willing to risk the effects
of peranox, the pain of razor-sharp teeth.
When several heartbeats had passed without a violent attack on her person,
the halfling, still holding her breath, popped open one eye. She was ready to
close it at a moment's notice should the dragon attack.
But her view of the dragon was blocked by the body of Dragonbait. The lizard
stood before Mist, brandishing his toothed, diamond-headed sword.
Olive could not believe her eyes. He's going to defend me. But Dragonbait
remained motionless before the dragon. What's he doing? Praying? It's too late
for that, she decided, crouching down and edging away from the lizard. Mist
ignored her. The dragon's amber eyes were locked with the lizard's.
Why aren't they attacking? Olive wondered. Neither creature moved. Her
curiosity overwhelmed her good sense, and Olive stood watching the two
combatants.
Banks of steam evaporated off Dragonbait's neck and chest. Olive found
herself suddenly thinking of baking bread. Then she realized it wasn't a stray
thought; she smelled hot rolls, fresh from the oven, begging to be smeared with
butter and jam. The halfling's mouth watered. It was, after all, time for
breakfast.
As the dragon and lizard engaged in their battle of wills and the daylight
grew brighter, Olive became aware of the additional damage Mist had wrought
while the halfling slept. The ground about the campsite and where the horses
had been staked was all torn up, plowed by the dragon's claws. "And I
slept through it all," Olive muttered in a daze.
Then Mist rumbled, "Well challenged, noble warrior. What are your
terms?"
Olive stared flabbergasted at Dragonbait. Mist understands him? After all
the foolishness I went through to try to communicate with him, he talks to a
dragon first. That figures. They're both lizards.
But even more astonishing to Olive was the polite manner in which Mist
accepted the lizard's challenge. She treated him with a courtesy she hadn't
bothered to use even when Alias fought her.
Mist continued to watch the lizard, nodding occasionally as though taking in
some point or other, though the halfling could not hear a sound from
Dragonbait. Is he some sort of telepath? she wondered. No. Then he would have
talked to us in our minds.
Finally, Mist said, "An interesting tale. Yes, agreed. Maximum damage.
If you win, I'll help you take on this abomination you describe. But after the
beast is killed, our deal is ended. If I win, you shall tell me where to find
Alias before I slay you and your ally."
"Brandobis!" cursed the halfling. His ally—that's me. Where does
he get off forfeiting my life? She did not take into consideration that there
was little else Dragonbait could do if he lost the battle.
Her first instinct was to flee. She reached down for her pack, but as she
picked it up, that idea curdled like blood in her mind. The thin platinum coins
in her pack clinked together, reminding Olive of her deal with Phalse. She wore
the tracking ring on a chain around her neck, near the ring that detected magic.
If she abandoned the lizard now, she might not be able to find the warrior
woman, and Phalse's friends would believe she had reneged on her agreement and
deal with her accordingly. But if Dragonbait won, he would take her right to
Alias.
How do I get into these messes? Olive sighed. She wracked her mind for some
means of helping the lizard battle the dragon.
"We start at three," the dragon explained. "One . . ."
Dragonbait went into a crouch. Olive wondered if she could loft the poison
into the beast's mouth.
"Two . . ." Mist said, unfurling her wings. In the sunrise they
were the color of human—and halfling—blood. The dragon flexed her rear legs and
leaped into the air, hovering with a massive beat of mighty wings.
"Three!" Mist roared, as Dragonbait dodged beneath her.
Mist breathed fire—a short, spitting flame that divoted the earth where
Dragonbait had been standing. The lizard was beneath the dragon, but Mist
lashed out with her tail, batting him forward, once again in her sight.
She's playing with him, the halfling realized and began desperately
searching through her pockets for something to help. The poison? No, she might
need that for her own use later. Besides, she'd never get it up that high. The
coins weren't enough to bribe a dragon. Her halfling short sword and daggers
would be useless against that great hulk.
The blow of the dragon's whiplike tail separated Dragon-bait from his
weapon. He dodged another small spit of flame and leaped on the lost sword. As
he did so, the hovering dragon swooped, snagging his shirt. The shirt ties were
already torn off though, and the lizard managed to slip out of the garment. He
fell to the ground with a thud, rolling back toward his weapon.
Mist landed with her paw on top of his leg before he could reach his blade.
She moved her head very close to him and smiled broadly, gloating.
"What's this, little dragon-warrior?" the dragon mocked her prey.
"I think I've seen these markings before on your mistress. Are you a
matched set? A pity to break you up."
The bard gasped. Dragonbait was branded with the same blue sigils as Alias.
Only his were set in a ring.
A ring! Olive thought excitedly. Brands just like Alias! Olive pulled the
chain out from beneath her shirt and slipped on the magical detection ring. She
ran toward the battle, twisting the ring and pointing her finger at Dragonbait.
The azure sigils that marked Dragonbait's chest exploded with a satisfyingly
brilliant light.
Mist pitched backward as the sapphire fireworks exploded in her face.
Reflexively, the dragon raised her front paws to her eyes, tossing her prisoner
through the air. Dragonbait spun about like a trained acrobat, landed on his
feet, and ran toward the dragon's rear haunches.
As Mist pawed at the motes of light dancing before her eyes, she flapped her
wings desperately, churning up clouds of dust. The mighty breeze caused
blankets and cloaks to flutter about like theater spirits and sent equipment
packs rolling over, scattering their contents through the camp. Mist roared,
and steam gushed from her mouth.
Dragonbait swung his sword two-handed, biting deep into the monster's thigh.
Mist gave a shout and pitched forward. Olive sidestepped just in time to avoid
being struck by the dragon's jaw as it hit the ground.
Raising her neck, the dragon fired blindly, torching the overturned wagon.
Her neck snaked, spreading the flames in a wide swath. But Dragonbait had
dodged beneath her head, preparing to attack her opposite flank.
The dragon began batting her wings again, trying to take off. Dragonbait
jabbed his sword into her left wing. The backward curved teeth caught in the
flesh and tore a huge, flapping gash in the membrane.
The red dragon crashed to the ground once again. Olive had been waiting for
this chance, and she ran toward the huge head. Her sight now cleared, Mist
opened her mouth, preparing to bite the brave but foolish halfling into two
tidbits. The bard turned and dodged away from the beast's maw, but not before
she managed to toss in, at point-blank range, the opened bottle of peranox.
The bottle cracked beneath the snapping jaws, sending shards of poisoned
crystal deep into the dragon's mouth. Dragonbait struck Mist again, opening a third
wound along her belly. The dragon spat and flamed, trying to drive the poison
from her mouth.
Mist rolled over in the dust like a flea-bitten dog tormented by
insignificant invaders. She flamed at the sky until nothing but heated air
escaped her innards. Dragonbait made one last gash in her neck, then dashed
away, scooping Olive up in his arm and running from the camp—ten, twenty,
thirty yards before he stopped. Then he turned to watch the dragon as it tossed
and twisted in agony.
After five minutes, the thrashing stopped and the huge, crimson monster lay
still in the dirt. Dragonbait pushed Olive to the ground and pointed as though
he were ordering her to stay. He crept warily back toward the dragon. Unwilling
to miss this historic moment, Olive followed disobediently after him.
They halted a few feet from Mist's head. She was still breathing. Drooling
sweat ran from the corners of Dragon-bait's mouth, and Olive had a stitch in
her side from her short attack-run. Still, there was no doubt they had won. She
wondered if Mist would really obey Dragonbait now or try to deceive him the way
she had Alias.
She turned to the lizard, touching his scaly arm shyly. "Thank you for
saving me," she said.
Dragonbait bowed his head politely.
"You can talk, can't you?" Olive asked.
The lizard felt for his belt pockets, where he had put the talis deck Olive
had given him. But the pouch he reached in was torn along the bottom seam and
now completely empty. Dragonbait shrugged.
"Boogers," Olive said. "You know what happened to Alias, but
you can't tell anyone."
"Nonsense. He's told me already," Mist said, popping one eye open,
but remaining otherwise immobile.
Dragonbait raised his sword, and Olive caught a strong whiff of tar. Mist's
eye closed and she whispered, "Yes, I surrender, dragonling. I apologize
for judging you by your raiment. You win. I will honor our agreement." The
dragon sighed and opened her eyes. "Bard, you don't have any more of that
putrid-tasting potion, do you?"
"Oh," the halfling lied, "about six or seven more jars. Large
jars. Why?"
The dragon closed her eyes. Dragonbait snarled, and the eyes opened again.
"I said I give up. You win. Just keep that peranox away from me. I think
I'm going to be sick."
Ruskettle suddenly realized she was shaking, though whether from aftershock
of the battle or the thought of a violently ill dragon, she did not know.
Slowly, like a drunk recovering from her first hangover, Mist reared up her
head, flexing the damaged leg and torn wing. "That tears it," she
said. "Literally. I won't be able to fly for a year. Sorry, but I can't
very well help you if I'm damaged. What say I just let you go and I trek my way
home?"
Dragonbait snarled again. "Only a suggestion," Mist muttered,
laying her head back down on the ground.
The lizard moved back toward the torn wing, grabbed a handful of it on both
sides of the tear, and pulled it toward him like a seaman about to mend
sailcloth. He ran his fingers along the tear, and the torn webbing began to
mesh. A faint, yellow glow emanated from the wound as it healed. Olive caught
the scent of woodsmoke. Dragonbait restored about half the damage along the
trailing edge of the wing, leaving a few spotty holes.
"Thank you," Mist sighed without lifting her head, obviously
relieved of some pain.
Ruskettle looked at the lizard in confusion. "How did you do
that?" she demanded. "Where is Alias? And who are you, anyway?"
Dragonbait jerked his head from Mist to Olive. Mist appeared to concentrate
on the small lizard for a few moments and then began to "translate"
his silence. As the dragon spoke for the opponent who had defeated her in
combat, Olive's eyes widened and her jaw dropped.
"I don't believe you," she told Mist. "You're making this all
up. It's impossible!"
"No one could make up so improbable a tale," Mist sniffed.
"Not even you, bard."
Olive fixed her attention on Dragonbait. The lizard was already gathering
the party's belongings that were still salvageable from the destruction Mist
had wreaked on them.
Olive planted herself firmly before him and demanded to know. "It's not
true what she said, is it? You can't be what she said. You're a lizard!"
Dragonbait looked down at the halfling without expression, holding her eyes
with his own unblinking ones. Olive grew nervous beneath his gaze because she
realized Mist had told her the truth. He really was one of them. Though he
hadn't seemed like one of them before, there was no other explanation for all
his actions.
"It's true." she squeaked.
Dragonbait nodded.
Boogers! Olive swore silently. How do I get into these messes? More
importantly, how do I get out of this one?
21
Moander's Puppet and Mist's Pursuit
Alias stirred beneath the moss-stained roots, and her mind crawled back from
the lands of darkness. She twisted once, then again, straining against her
bonds.
She recalled the passage through the wall of enchanted masonry. It had felt
like an immersion in a cold mountain lake, chilling her skin and knocking the
wind out of her. When she had finally gasped for air, there was a spongy mat
against her face—a fragrant glove of pungent, vegetable smells which had
reminded Alias of mushrooms in butter sauce gone bad in the summer heat.
And then she knew nothing. It was like the dark emptiness that preceded her
appearance at The Hidden Lady.
When Alias awoke, the exposed portions of her skin were chilled and slightly
wet from the fog. She had no idea how long she had slept, or what had happened
while she did, but her adventures in Cormyr and Shadow Gap, and the
conversations at Shadowdale, all remained crisp and clear in her memory. If
anything, they felt more real than the adventures she'd experienced before she
had received the deadly, cursed tattoo.
Finally, she opened her eyes to glare at the curse scrawled across her arm,
only to find it trapped in a blanket of green fibers. She tried to shake loose,
but her arm was held fast. She tried to move her left arm, but that limb was
also pinned down by the same sort of damp, slimy blanket.
Alias tried kicking. Her legs were trapped, too. She wriggled and thrashed
and bucked, but a wet root, as thick as her arm, held her to the ground.
Whenever she moved, the tendrils moved with her. She sensed one of the bonds
tearing, but new shoots sprouted immediately to replace it.
Frustrated, she looked around. She lay on an odd collection of garbage, bog
peat, sickly green vines, and large moldy roots. At the edge of her vision she
spotted something clean and white jutting out from the greenery. Alias recognized
it as a human bone.
She felt the pile of boggy vegetation shift as though it were moving on a
great wagon. She was lying on a ledge at the leading edge of the pile, about
fifteen feet from the ground, but she could see no horses or oxen ahead.
A pile of dead leaves shifted by the right side of her head. As she watched,
a single, green tendril burst through the rotting vegetation. At the tendril's
tip was a pumpkinlike pod The tendril swiveled toward her, and the pumpkin pod
opened like a flower. At its center was a great, weeping eye, trapped on all
sides by jagged, spined teeth.
The sight touched some memory buried within Alias, a memory she wished had
stayed buried. She screamed.
The pumpkin pod closed up, startled or frightened by her reaction. The
tendril withdrew into the refuse pile.
Alias swallowed with some difficulty, keeping her eyes fixed on the spot
where the tendril had sprouted. When it did not reappear, she began to look
around again, though her eyes kept returning to that site every few seconds to
make sure her ocular companion had not returned.
The mound was passing over terrain that resembled the plains about Yulash.
The sun was on her left and there was a thick, dark line of green across the
horizon straight ahead.
If that's the rising sun, we must be heading south out of Yulash, toward the
Elven Wood, she thought. Unless I've slept for days again—then we could be
anywhere.
The sound of something moving through the garbage made her realize she and
the wretched tendrils were not alone. Three figures appeared at the corner of
the mound-men, moving in a matching stride like soldiers. A vine trailed behind
each man, attached somewhere to his back.
The man in the center cast a long shadow on her and blocked out the sun, so
she could only make out his silhouette at first. The sun shone through the
light robes he wore—revealing spindly legs, but a powerful torso. He wore some
sort of helmet. She could not make out his features, but by his bearing she
knew he was Akabar.
The men who flanked the mage were dressed in moldy, torn battle gear. They
moved stiffly as they picked their way through the garbage.
"Akabar?" she said softly, but the figure did not respond.
"Akabar? What's going on? Cut me out of this stuff."
"I'm afraid I must inform you," the lean figure began in the roundabout
speech of the South, "that I am not your Akabar." He broke rank from
the two soldiers and knelt beside her head.
He was Akabar. He had Akabar's face, marked with the three blue
scholar-circles on his forehead, and Akabar's square-shovel beard, and the same
sapphire earring which marked him as a married man. His dark eyes, though, were
completely fogged over in gray and patches of listless white swirled through
them. The thing Alias had mistaken for a helmet was a cap of vines that pressed
suckers against the mage's forehead and into his ears. Dried blood flaked
around the suckers.
Her breath came in short gasps as a scream tried to claw its way up her
throat. She found the strength to ask, "Who are you?"
"I am Moander," said the thing that was Akabar, "the most
important being in your world."
In a smooth, gentle motion he lowered his body into a cross-legged sitting
position and waited for his prisoner to stop squirming. Having exhausted
herself in a futile effort to pull away from the mound of garbage, Alias
finally lay still. She turned her head away from Akabar's body and kept her
eyes squeezed tight, "Oh, gods," she moaned.
"Just a god, singular," Moander replied. "The only one that
matters. Hold on, you have something stuck to your chin. Let me get it."
Akabar used the sleeve of his robe to dab at a fleck of garbage near Alias's
mouth. He used too much pressure and pushed her head backward into the spongy
bed of compost. It was as though he were unaware of his own strength.
"There. Much better. Now we can talk."
"You're not Akabar," Alias whispered, still trying to convince
herself, but not wanting to believe it.
"Not really, no, but I'm all the Akabar you're going to get for a
while. Might as well make the best of him. By rights, he should have died of
fear, being the first human in this millennium to behold my godliness. How he
survived I'll never know. But that kind of luck shouldn't be tampered with, so
I left his body in better shape than the others. Look."
Alias felt shambling footsteps through the boggy ground and looked past
Akabar's body at his companions. One's neck was ripped open, and his face was
pale and ghostly without its lifeblood. The other had no face at all, only a
slab of pummeled, bloody meat. Both had tendrils rigged around their bodies,
moving them like puppets.
Alias felt her stomach heave and twist, but it was overridden by a chill,
clammy terror. Her body trembled and she began to hyperventilate.
"There, there," Moander said, using Akabar's hand to smooth her
hair. "I just brought them as an example of what I could have done to your
friend. I'll send them away now."
Moander gave no verbal command and made no physical gesture, but the
shambling corpses retreated around the side of the hill of garbage. Alias
stared at the passing plains. After a few moments, she grew calmer. "Who
are you really?" she asked.
"As I said before, I am Moander. Though that is a lot like calling a
newborn prince the king."
Alias swung her head and stared at the stranger in Akabar's body. He
imitated the mage almost perfectly, his pose, his gestures, the tone and
cadence of his voice. But the smile was wrong. It was an exaggerated, forced
smile—as if someone had pinned the corners of his mouth.
"Are you ... I mean, is he . . ."
"Dead? Not really. He's gone, for all intents and purposes, but his
soul and mind are still around, locked away in some corner. Rather like a man
poisoned by a Jit snake, who lies in fever dreams, not waking, for weeks. You
still have Jit snakes around here?" He paused, tilting his head as if
listening to an unheard speaker. "No, I guess you don't anymore."
He rested his milky gray eyes on Alias and sat quietly, as if waiting for
her to ask him another question.
Alias only stared at the passing scenery, so Moander continued. "In
this case, if I were to let the mage go, he would awaken. But he cannot break
my control, and I will control him until he is no longer useful. And this one
is so incredibly useful. I needed his mouth and mind to talk to you. Of course,
I could have linked up with you, but you are far too valuable to risk that.
Besides, he is so very amusing."
Moander giggled. "I can't begin to tell you all I'm finding in his
mind. It's like being in a great mansion, with new surprises behind every door.
Here are memories of his wives, and here is you calling him a greengrocer, and
here is a good piece of history of the South. Gods below, so much has happened.
I've been out of touch for too long!"
"Out of touch?" Alias taunted. "I thought gods were
omniscient."
"Well, normally that would be true. Gods stretch through a number of
different planes, with different levels of power in each. This part of
me—" Akabar's hand motioned to the pile of garbage which towered over
them— "you might call the Minion or Abomination of Moander. More than a
thousand years ago, back when Myth Drannor was a major power, the cursed elves
banned my spirit from this world by imprisoning this part of me in my own
temple."
A weakness crept over Alias's spirit. This vast garbage heap was her enemy,
and not only did it hold her prisoner, but it waved her friend before her eyes
like a puppet.
"Soon, when this part of me arrives at the new temple my worshipers
have prepared, and I gather even more worshipers to my fold, I will grow strong
enough in this world to command the powers that gods are endowed with. Had I
been in full control of my powers when my spirit was finally able to return to
the Abomination, I would have left a pit where Yulash stood and ascended into
the heavens to mete out punishment to those who banished me."
"But in the meantime, you're pretty weak. Relatively, I mean."
Moander cocked Akabar's head like a hanged man. "Relatively. But I have
plenty of stored life-fluid in this form. More than enough to reach my
worshipers, pop the heads off a few sacrifices, and make demands on the
populace. I'm conserving my strength by traveling this slowly so that I can
have enough energy to indulge a whim."
Alias stared at the approaching forest, wondering if the sludge mountain
that was Moander would break up when it hit the trees or flow around them.
Moander gestured with Akabar's hands toward the trees which held Alias's
attention. "My first stop is Myth Drannor According to your friend's mind,
all the elves have deserted their capital. I've got to make sure. If it's true,
at least I can dance on the rubble. From there we'll continue south until we
reach Sembia. I love the way your friend thinks in terms of maps and trade
routes. He is so useful."
"And once we've reached Sembia?"
"Ah, curiosity, my servant. A good sign. We'll cut southwest through
Sembia toward The Neck, between the Sea of Fallen Stars and the Lake of
Dragons, and just hop in the water. Scum, like cream, floats. We shall sail
triumphantly to our new home.
"Which is?" Alias asked. She already had a strong suspicion, but
she had to know for sure.
"Westgate, of course. Where we built you."
*****
The trio of non-humans climbed higher into the sky, keeping well above the
range of the catapults of any surviving Keepers or Red Plumes.
"Why so high?" Olive bellowed in Mist's ear.
The dragon let out a puffing grumble, "What?"
"I said, what are we flying so high for?" The halfling grasped the
ropes which Dragonbait had fashioned into an impromptu saddle.
The dragon rumbled between deep puffs of air. "Can either" (long
breath) "fly or talk." (Long breath.) "Try singing" (long
breath) "while you're running hard." (Long breath.) "Hang
on."
The dragon ceased flapping, locked her wings in a gliding position, and
began to circle the city, her wings catching the thermals rising from the
mound. Olive looked back at the dragon's great batlike membranes. One wing
still showed a pink line from the recently healed tear.
Dragonbait, who sat where the dragon's wings joined her body, had done the
healing. According to Mist, the warrior lizard communicated with his scent
glands, so he could not "speak" as they soared through the air. The
wind would carry away the perfume of his words. But he made his desires known
quite effectively by prodding the great wyrm with his sword.
"You were saying," Mist prompted the bard, now that she was able
to breathe normally, her labors eased by the helpful warm air.
"Can't you fly any lower?" Olive asked.
"Do you want to catch a ballista-bolt in the crotch?"
When Olive did not answer immediately, Mist said, "Thought not. Trust
me. I know what I'm doing. Besides the danger below, this is the best place to
gain altitude. And I need altitude to soar after your lizard's Abomination.
Flying, especially with passengers, isn't easy."
"Looks like they've made a ruin of it," the halfling commented on
the city below.
"Human wars tend to do that," Mist replied curtly. "When I
lived in this area, I heard of Yulash's destruction five, no, six times. Some
group or another is always on a crusade or war of liberation. Merciless
killing, cloaked by the niceties of civil tongues. They are a race of lawyers,
these humans. I wonder how they survive."
"My people wonder the same thing."
An idea rose to the surface of the halfling's brain. "Say, O mighty
Mist. I was wondering . . ." Olive trailed off, leaving the question hang
for a moment. Based on what she knew about human and draconian nature, the
halfling calculated some odds before continuing.
The dragon banked and, catching another updraft, began to rise again.
"Yesssss?" she prompted.
"Once you've fulfilled your bargain with Dragonbait and freed Alias,
you're going to attack her."
"Is that a question or a statement?" Mist's voice was low and
guttural.
Olive glanced over her shoulder at Dragonbait, but the lizard was twenty
feet away and couldn't possibly hear their conversation. His attention was
focused on the ground below. "Well," Olive noted, "you haven't
been very, uh, successful the last two times out of the paddock."
"If memory serves, you aided in my defeat both those times."
"My point exactly," Olive said. "And next time you'll have
both Dragonbait and Alias to deal with. Now, if, my services were suddenly
available on your side of the dispute . . ." Again she let her voice trail
off.
For several moments, the only sound was the rush of the wind. Finally, Mist
said, "Why the shift in loyalties?"
The halfling considered how much she wanted the dragon to know. The game
I've been playing for Phalse has become too dangerous, Olive thought. I'd have
no trouble fooling Alias. Dragonbait, however, is not so easily deceived.
To Mist Olive simply said, "Let's just say I do not trust our
companion. He has misrepresented himself and that makes me uncomfortable. I'm
not sure I want to continue traveling with him much longer."
"But you still want to rescue the woman."
The dragon was no dotard, Olive realized. "Yes," she admitted.
"I want to rescue Alias. You might wish to reconsider which warrior has
done the most to earn your vengeance. If you decide on the lizard rather than
the woman, you will find yourself with an ally."
"I see."
"Besides," the halfling added, "Alias has a lot of enemies.
She is bound to get her comeuppance sooner or later."
The dragon banked again, then spoke. "I'll take your suggestion under
advisement. Speaking of His Righteousness, turn around and see what he
wants."
The bard twisted in her makeshift saddle. Dragonbait was banging on the side
of Mist's neck with the flat of his blade. Having caught the bard's attention,
he pointed southward.
"I think he wants you to get on with the hunt. He's pointing
south."
"Everyone thinks they're an expert."
"I imagine he thinks he's the boss," Olive replied slyly.
Mist's neck stiffened some, and she remained silent. She banked again and
began to glide away from Yulash.
"Can you see the monster's trail from this height?" the halfling
asked.
"Bard, I can see field mice from this height."
"Um, I guess I meant, could I have a look?"
Mist turned her head ever so slightly so Olive could peer down at the
ground. Yulash looked as though it would fit in the palm of her hand. Four
roads stretched away from it, east, west, northeast, and northwest, but far
wider than the roads was a path of crushed vegetation and broken copses of
trees heading south by southeast.
"Just how wide is that trail?" Olive asked, unable to judge size
from such a distance.
"About fifty feet. Though it seems to be growing the farther south we
go," Mist mused.
"This Abomination must be huge," the halfling cautioned.
"Think you can handle it?"
"Not handle a shambling mound with a gland problem?" Mist sniffed.
"So far you've only seen me in action in Feints of Honor. Unfettered by
conventions, I am a force to be reckoned with."
"You fight dirty," Olive translated.
"That walking garbage heap will want a bath when I'm through with
it," Mist bragged.
The bard smiled. She turned to look at Dragonbait. He kept his eyes fixed on
the plains.
"Does he have a name? Besides Dragonbait, I mean."
"Indeed," the dragon answered. "But it doesn't translate
well. I much prefer Dragonbait. It's so appropriate."
Without the thermals rising from Yulash, Mist was forced to pump her wings
to preserve her altitude. The conversation with the halfling ended as Mist
conserved her breath for the exertion of flying.
Far in the distance, on the southern horizon, a line of green marked the
Abomination's destination—the Elven Wood.
22
Moander's Revelation and the Rescue Attempt
"You really don't know, do you?" Moander asked with Akabar's
tongue. Carefully it rearranged the merchant-mage's face. Placing a hand
against his cheek, it dropped his jaw, mimicking a look of extreme shock.
"I don't know what?" Alias asked, but even as she spoke, some
notion stirred deep within her consciousness like a serpent that had slumbered
heavily and was only now rising, rising quickly to strike at unwary prey—her.
"You carry my sign," Moander said in Akabar's cheeriest voice.
"And you have done me a great service, so I should return the favor. It
will help pass the time, and, I think, upset you."
"First, understand this," Moander said, using the formal words of
a southern scholar. It pointed one of Akabar's fingers at her face. "You
are a made thing, no different than a clay pot or a forged sword or some
creeping bit of gunk in an alchemist's lab. Is that clear?"
"I don't belie—" Alias began, but the serpent notion sank its
fangs deep into her heart. Beneath the mossy blankets her branded sword arm
responded with a sympathetic ache.
"Yes, you do believe me" Moander insisted. "Now that I have
told you, you cannot resist the truth. Golem. Homonculous. Simulacrum. Clone.
Automaton. All these things come close to describing what you are. But not
completely. You are a new thing, for the moment unique. A fake human, but to
all appearances the real thing. You are an abomination cloaked in the manner
and dress of the everyday."
As a mage and scholar, Akabar would no doubt have recognized the words
Moander used to describe her, but to Alias most of them were gibberish. She had
a notion they involved arcane rituals of the type that made her not only
non-born, but inhuman as well.
"Now, know this," it demanded. "Your spirit is enslaved in
the prison of that body, and that body is a puppet. A puppet made of meat, you
might say, in much the same way as is the body I use to speak with you."
To dramatize its point, Moander lifted Akabar's elbow into the air, leaving his
forearm and hand to droop, and slouching his other shoulder downward so he
resembled a marionette supported only by a single invisible thread.
Alias's mouth opened and closed, but she could think of no retort. Moander
continued its lecture without acknowledging her distress.
"Now, golems and automatons follow a set pattern, invested into their
make-up at their creation. These patterns are usually very rigid, no more
complicated than 'guard this room,' or 'kill the first man to enter.' Useless
rot, entirely too limited. No creativity or resourcefulness or initiative.
"But you," his tone lowered with pride, "you were built
differently. It took many hands to create you. My followers allied with mages,
thieves and assassins, a daemon of great power, and . . . well, the other
hardly matters. With your deceptive appearance you can allay suspicion and
travel at will until you have fulfilled your patterns—traveled all the paths
set before you."
"Paths?" said Alias. Her chest felt tight, as though she were
being crushed by the mad god's words. Each claim it made struck a resonant
chord inside her, leaving her unable to deny what the god said. She choked back
her screams, determined not to show this monster her helpless rage.
"Yes, paths or patterns, whose eventual outcome will be the accomplishment
of some goal set by each of your makers. Rather than simply issue you some
rigid order, we set you on a course whereupon you would achieve these goals
without knowing what they were, or even, once they were achieved, that you had
done so. You could commit theft, espionage, sabotage, murder, and never know
why or for whom, not always remembering, other times believing it to have been
your own idea."
They've made me a damned thing, Alias thought, like the bowl that carries
poison or the sword that deals a death blow. She pressed her nails into her
palms and once again began breathing too fast.
"The goal set for you by my last few followers was to seek my prison
and release my Abomination form so that my spirit could return to this world It
was my life energy, summoned and collected by my followers, that brought you to
life, you see, so that you, the non-born child, could free me."
"I'm not a child," Alias snapped.
"But, of course vou are. It was the first day of Mirtul when my
followers summoned my life energy and you began breathing. Only a month and a
few days. So you see, vou are but a child. Yet even so, you are my greatest
servant, mv liberator, an honor many before you have died for.
"At first, when the lizard arrived, I nearly perished with despair.
(Well, not really, just a figure of speech.) When I saw his markings and sensed
his determination to pass through the wall, I thought he was you. I sucked his
life energy nearly dry trying to pull him through the wall. But I suppose being
hatched counted as being born to the cursed elves who imprisoned me. He could
not pass through the wall, and hence he could not help me pass through it. I
thought all my plans had failed utterly."
Akabar tilted his head, an action Alias suspected was Meander's way of
sifting through the mage's mind. The gray swirls in his eyes thickened and
circled more quickly.
"Of course. That's what the saurial was doing there. Omniscient gods,
indeed. Your magical friend has figured it out for me. He really is so
amazingly useful. The last step in your manufacture was never completed. It
required the blood sacrifice of a pure soul to secure the shackles on your
spirit. Those bumblers down in Westgate chose the saurial, got careless and let
it escape, and it took you with it. You've been wandering around ever since, a
great spell primed to explode, requiring only the last enabling component—the
death of the saurial. Those incompetent idiots! I can tell mankind needs me
desperately."
"Saurial?" Alias asked. She was not certain who Moander meant, but
she had an uncomfortable suspicion.
"The lizard your mage friend thinks of as Dragonbait. The creature was
marked, just like you were. That explains what it was doing trying to pass
through the elven wall that imprisoned my body. The saurial was following your
patterns. And you've been able to draw on its independence, because the two of
you are linked until its death. But don't worry, we'll take care of that
shortly."
Another wave of anger swept over Alias, anger now mixed with anguish. Then
I'll be damned for sure. Something created by the evil sacrifice of my friend.
Of my friends, she amended, realizing that not only Dragonbait's life was
forfeit. Akabar was almost as good as dead. I'm not even human, she thought. I
had no right to their aid and friendship, and now I've doomed them.
"Oh, Akabar," she whispered to his body, hoping some part of his
mind was aware of what she said. "I'm so sorry. I should never have let
you get into this mess."
But if the mage could hear her, he gave no indication. Moander's control
over him was complete, and at the moment Moander wasn't even paying attention
to her. The god was using Akabar's form to stare at the line of trees that they
were fast approaching. Already the mound of refuse, now quite dusty and grass
covered from its passage through the plains, was pitching and weaving from
running over small trees and bushes near the edge of the prairie. As it
engulfed and absorbed this green matter, the Abomination grew into a small
hill, already as high as the trees on the fringes of the Elven Wood.
Apparently satisfied that the Abomination could control the forest, Moander
used Akabar to return his attention to his prisoner. "The most amazing
thing is that, despite your premature debut into society, most of your patterns
still held. You attacked a man who sounded like the king of Cormyr, no doubt a
goal of the Fire Knives. And then you came all the way north, just to free
me." Akabar's finger stroked her cheek. "When you are returned and
fully tamed, you will be my perfect servant."
Alias kicked and struggled futilely in her bindings. She knew she could not
escape, but like a bird beating against the bars of a cage, instinct made her
frantic. What Moander suggested was worse than slavery. The god and its
followers and allies would turn her into an unthinking mechanism, with only the
illusion of life and the sketchy memories of some woman. Where had they gotten
the history she thought had been hers? Fairy tales? Or was there an original
Alias who lived her life before, then died to become her?
Alias stared at the vine-draped form of Akabar, and oddly enough, the
crudeness of the god's method of control soothed her anguish and helped her
regain her composure. Moander could never have created me, she thought. Neither
could the blundering Fire Knives, not even with the help of the mages who
created the kalmari and the crystal elemental. They're all quite powerful, but
despite all their claims, none of them could have made my mind or my spirit or
my personality. She shoved back the horrible weight of evidence. The
Abomination is lying, she decided. After all, isn't that what abominations do
best?
When she had ceased struggling again, Moander continued. "Telling you
all this has been most amusing. The news makes you unhappy, doesn't it? Of
course, the others will want to purge your memory of everything I've said.
After all, the best assassin is one who does not know she is a weapon, since
she, or you, could then withstand all manner of telepathic prying. You do not
register as a constructed creature, and after the sacrifice of the saurial, the
runes on your limb will be hidden from view so that no one, not even you, will
ever suspect your . . . eh? What's that?"
They reached the tree line, and Meander's now fungous form began uprooting
the nearest trees, plowing them under and adding their mass to its own. But
what drew the attention of the god was the huge shadow that blocked the
high-noon sun. Akabar's head jerked upward just as a bolt of fire shot from the
heart of the darkness. The flame tore a huge gouge in the mound's side,
instantly igniting the fresh timber Moander had recently accumulated.
Akabar screamed and pitched forward into muck next to Alias. His cry was joined
by a chorus of hundreds of fanged mouths which suddenly opened in the mucky
hillside, all piping the same horrendous scream. Alias gagged on the smell of
the smoke from burning offal.
The shadow dove below the tree line for a moment and then circled back. Now
able to watch it without the sun in her eyes, Alias could tell that the shadow
was a dragon—one of the great red wyrms reputed to haunt the north country. As
it closed in for its second attack, the swordswoman spotted two riders mounted
atop the beast, one on its head, the other a greenish lump between its wings.
It can't be. Can it? Alias wondered, not daring to believe her eyes. But
they saw true. Her friends rode atop the red dragon, and the red dragon looked
strangely familiar.
"Here comes the rescue party!" shouted the high, childlike voice
of Olive Ruskettle, as Mist dropped down to strafe the Abomination yet again.
Akabar stood up again and focused on the dragon. His eyes glowed a burning
coal white, though his face wore a calm, deadened expression. From the mage's
mouth came a low-pitched muttering interspersed with the sharp gutturals and
clicks of magic words summoning power to the speaker. Alias tried to kick at
Akabar's form, hoping to knock him from the mound or at least spoil his spell,
but the Abomination had not been so wounded that it loosened its tight hold on
her. Her struggles were useless.
The mage's body wheeled about, keeping the dragon in view just as she began
making her second pass. A blinding flash of energy sprang from Akabar's
fingertip and caught the wyrm in the belly. The dragon jerked her head back and
bellowed, almost knocking Ruskettle from her head.
At the same time, great vines shot up from the surface of the Abomination,
with great force as if fired from concealed ballistae. At the ends of the vines
rode the decaying forms of the Red Plume mercenaries whom Moander had consumed.
Some still wielded their weapons, while others tried to grapple the dragon's
with their bare hands.
Most of the arching vines fell short of their mark, and the sickening thuds
of dead flesh hitting hard ground sounded through the forest. Two vines
succeeded in entangling the dragon, one in the middle of the neck, the other
near the base of the right wing.
Akabar muttered another spell, and a trio of magic missiles sizzled through
the sky with unerring precision, striking the purplish plates over the beast's
heart.
The former Red Plumes closed on the dragon's passengers as the tendrils they
had ridden upward spun about the beast like spider's silk entrapping a fly.
Dragonbait skewered the man approaching him.
The god-possessed corpse thrust itself farther unto the lizard's sword and
grabbed at Dragonbait's shoulders, attempting to knock him off balance.
Dragonbait lashed out with a powerful kick, removing his sword, and sending the
corpse spiraling down to the ground. The lizard chopped loose the vine
entangling the dragon's wing.
The dead man that had arrived on the vine about Mist's neck crawled toward
the halfling. The vine began dragging the dragon closer to the mound of refuse.
Mist bucked, almost dislodging her passengers, but did not succeed at
tearing the binding about her throat. With her wings she began sweeping the air
before her in great gusts. The loose matter atop Moander spun away in a
whirlwind of stinking rot, and the puppet Akabar was driven to his knees, the
spell in his throat spoiled by the assault.
More tendrils trailed up the single, thick root that bound the dragon like a
hangman's noose.
Moander turned Akahar's body around to face Alias. "Say good-bye to
this puppet, servant," Akabar's voice instructed. "1 can afford to
lose this tool, but not you."
The mossy ground began to rise around Alias, as the supporting roots beneath
her withdrew. She struggled as she sank into the heart of Moander. She screamed
when the leaves and rotting fungus began covering her, but another porous,
spongy mat of moss covered her mouth. She gasped for air and pungently scented
vapors flowed into her lungs. Within moments she was asleep.
Dragonbait, alerted by the warrior woman's shout, and seeing that she would
soon be beyond reach, leaped from the dragon's back.
Fifty feet separated the dragon from the oozing god, and a number of fanged
mouths at the end of tendrils had finished their snaking climb up the tether
about the great wyrm's neck. Olive was trying to fend off these horrid little
maws and dodge past the rotting soldier's corpse that blocked her attempts to
cut the tether.
A fall from fifty feet to hard ground would have snapped even Dragonbait's
legs, but where he landed on Moander, over the spot where Alias had
disappeared, all was soft muck. Akabar turned to face him, but hesitated for a
moment. Tendrils were already beginning to twist upward to ensnare the
lizard-creature.
Akabar spat out the guttural words of another spell. Unaccountably the spell
dissolved, but Moander did not waste energy registering its confusion on
Akabar's face. The tendrils wrapping around the lizard hesitated, unsure about
attacking the creature with the same markings as their valued prisoner. Without
Moander's command, they were unable to come to any conclusion, and Moander's
attention was elsewhere.
Meanwhile, the bard was losing her battle at the dragon's head. The mouths
had succeeded in taking several little bites out of her, she could not get past
the corpse of the Red Plume mercenary, and Moander continued drawing in the
great flying wyrm with a slow, inexhaustible force. Already the distance
between dragon and god had been halved, and white flecks of spittle dotted the
dragon's lower whiskers.
Olive was reminded of halfling children fishing for bats with light, durable
twine and live moths as bait. For some fool reason, this halfling is on the
bat's side, she thought, even though the bat is losing.
Mist twisted her head so that her chin rested along the thickening vine.
Opportunistic tendrils immediately laced themselves into the dragon's whiskers,
then began trying to crawl into the wyrm's mouth to suffocate her.
Dragonbait faced the possessed Akabar. A sea of tendrils ebbed and flowed
around the lizard, still waiting for Moander to direct them, but Meander's mind
was fully occupied with controlling Akabar and dealing with the dragon.
Rivulets of sweat poured from the mage's face, and his robes were drenched
and rotting from his contact with Meander's innards. His head tilted to the
right as Moander sorted through his thoughts for a way the mage might deal with
the lizard. But there was only one weapon left in Akabar's repertoire.
The mage's hand drew out his curved dagger. "Kill me, or die
yourself," Moander challenged with Akabar's voice, now a gasping
death-rattle. "You lose in either case, don't you, pure one?"
Dragonbait crouched, then leaped, using his overlong sword as a vaulting
pole. As he sailed over the mage's head, Akabar's dagger caught in the side of
his leg and remained there, twisting out of its wielder's hand.
Wounded, the lizard made a sloppy landing. The scaly flesh around his eyes
crinkled in pain, but he spun his oddly shaped, toothed sword over his head and
sliced at Akabar from behind.
The outer diamond tip of his sword struck at the back of the mage's neck
right where the sucker-tendrils clustered in a main bundle before they trailed
back in a thick vine to Meander's heart. Most of the cluster was severed neatly
without a scratch on the mage's scalp. Dragonbait put his foot against Akabar's
back to keep him in place and yanked the remaining vine-bundle from Akabar's
head.
Just then, Mist breathed a mighty exhalation of flame and brimstone that
caused her belly to flex deeply inward. The fire traveled down the side of the
tether about her neck and turned the side of the god into a jungle inferno. The
wet vegetable flesh alighted again, and the outer layers of the snare vine were
reduced to ash.
Akabar's and Meander's mouths screamed, but their voices were no longer in
hellish synchrony. They were separate entities. Akabar fell to his knees,
gasping, his hands clutching the wounds made from the sucker that had been
ripped away. The tendrils surrounding him and Dragonbait wavered and then
closed in.
The lizard grabbed the mage by the arm and yanked him to his feet. He lopped
off a few more tendrils on the living mound, tugged the mage with him, and
jumped.
Warrior and Turmishman tumbled down the slope, resisting the impulse to stop
their fall by grabbing hold of the overhanging vines and tree stumps that stood
out from Meander's lower flanks. They fell in a heap at the base of the
monster.
Moander burned and crackled. Plumes of acrid smoke billowed up from his
body. Moander tired of this battle—it was dangerously exhausting his life
energies. The Abomination desired a retreat, but if he loosed the dragon, the
beast might yet find the strength to breathe again and destroy the god's
earthly form. The tendril snaring the dragon was almost burned through. Moander
had to damage the wyrm first, and damage her badly.
The god played out an additional length of the tether vine. Mist felt the
line slacken and, believing in her exhaustion that the line had finally broken,
pulled back with a frantic beat of her wings. She succeeded in snapping the
line even more taut. Moander gave one last great pull, and the weakened vine
snapped apart.
Mist, with the halfling clutching for dear life to her ears, pitched over
backward and crashed among the trees.
The huge god-hill, burning and mostly blind, shifted one way then another
before plunging deeper into the forest. Smaller trees were plowed underneath,
but now Moander flowed between the larger trees, unable to snap them.
Dragonbait pulled Akabar from the Abomination's path. The mage oozed blood
in scarlet ponds from half-a-dozen shallow head wounds. He moaned softly and
began to cry.
Dragonbait pulled the mage's curved dagger from his scaly calf and examined
the gash. His hands glowed softly in the dim woods, and the cut grew less deep
but did not close completely. His healing ability exhausted, Dragonbait tore
his ragged new shirt in two to use as bandages.
Akabar sat in a shocked silence as the lizard bound his head wounds. He did
not respond to the warrior's touch or his tug on his robes or his prodding. He
would not move. Dragonbait slung his sword over his shoulders, hefted the
Turmishman in both his arms as if he were a child, and began moving in the
direction of the dragon's crash. The time had come to regroup his forces, such
as they were.
23
Akabar's Recovery, Moander's Offer, and the Second Rescue Attempt
When Akabar awoke it was dark, and the light of a nearby fire played across
the ground. The firelight glittered on the scales of an immense dragon. The
bulk of the beast lay in shadow, but Akabar could see Dragonbait napping,
curled up on the great beast's snout. The rune-marked lizard had a green bandage
tied about one of his legs. Between the mage and the fire loomed a huge shadow.
The towering form knelt before him, holding out a huge silver flask.
"Drink this," Olive said, pushing the flask to his lips.
The draught tasted horrible, but Akabar let it slide down his throat. His
mouth felt like he had been eating dirt, and his flesh crawled with a cold,
clammy feeling, as if he had been immersed in water too long. He looked down
and saw he was naked, save for a couple of halfling cloaks knotted around him
for warmth.
"My . . . clothes?" the mage puzzled. His voice was reedy, as
though he'd been singing or shouting for hours.
Olive motioned to the fire, "I'm afraid what was left wasn't worth
keeping. Dragonbait thought you were dead, so we didn't bring any of your spare
clothing." Her eyes brightened. "I emptied your pockets, though, and
I brought your spell books." She pointed to a backpack near his feet.
"What happened—oh, gods," the mage moaned as his memory came
rushing back. There'd been a fight in Yulash, then something hulking and
oppressive had sat in his mind like a spider in a web. He wondered if this was
how Alias felt after being forced to try to kill a priest and then the
Wyvernspur noble.
"Take it easy," Olive said sharply. She was an impatient
ministering angel. She put both her hands on his shoulders to hold him down,
though the mage had made no effort to rise. "The short version is, after
your little adventure in Yulash, Dragonbait came back to camp to get my help.
When you three had gone. I was left alone to deal with Mist, who chose that
moment to drop in. You remember Mist from Cormyr? Right. Anyway, I subdued her
by the old codes, and the three of us went after you and Its Ooziness."
Olive paused for breath and to let what she had said sink into the Turmish
mage's fevered brain. Then she started again, "Unfortunately, Its Ooziness
mopped up the floor with us. Misty got slammed around pretty bad, but with me
at the helm the old girl managed to damage the Abomination. It ran away from
us, not the other way around. Though we did get knocked out of the sky.
However, the luck of the halflings was with me, and I managed to land on a Red
Plume mercenary's corpse. You sliced up Dragonbait a little before he could
rescue you." She paused and then concluded reluctantly, "We didn't
get Alias."
"Alias," muttered Akabar, trying to rise against the pressure of
the halfling's hands. "She's still prisoner!"
"Reign in your horses," the halfling ordered. "You've been
out for about eight hours. Another few won't make that much difference in
catching up to that slithering compost heap, but it will make us all stronger.
Dragonbait needs his beauty sleep so he can finish healing you and Misty. She
snapped some wing bones when she fell, and she needs to restoke her furnaces
before going into battle again. You need to study your spells. Drink
more."
Akabar took another swig of the drink Olive offered and made a face.
"Is this a healing draught?"
Olive shook the flask and giggled. "Some call it that. It's spiked
honey mead. Last of my stock, too."
Akabar felt his empty stomach rise, then settle. So much for the halfling's
skill as a nurse. "You say Dragonbait healed us. He did that before, when
we were running from the Abomination in Yulash."
Olive nodded. "Yes. Turns out the little sneak's a paladin among his
own people. He's been keeping it secret, but healing us when we weren't
looking. Seems I can't trust anyone these days."
"A paladin?" Akabar murmured. "How do you know?"'
"He told me," Olive said. She dropped her voice to a whisper
before going on. "Not only did he keep his profession secret all this
time, but he can communicate. He doesn't use real words like you or me. He puts
out scents, like a perfume shop. We can't understand him because our little
noses aren't refined enough, but Mist can. He talks to her and she translates,
and then he confirms what she's said by nodding his head. So you see, he does understand
everything we've been saying."
Akabar shook his head to clear it. The halfling sounded angry, but the mage
could not understand what had upset her. "So?" he asked.
"So!" Olive exclaimed, then dropped her voice to a whisper.
"We have a lizard paladin who's too haughty to try communicating with us
until an evil dragon comes along. This paladin has been traveling with us and
spying on us for two rides. Doesn't that make you the least bit angry?"
"Saurial," Akabar mumbled suddenly, letting the word linger in his
memory. A dark shadow hovered there, the residue of the Abomination's visit to
his mind. "Moander said Dragonbait was a saurial."
''Moander—that's the creeping crud?" Olive asked.
Akabar hesitated like a swimmer hovering at the edge of cold water. He
wanted to forget the evil that had been inside him and used him so vilely. But
he needed the information Moander had inadvertently left in his mind. He
plunged in.
"Moander is a god. Or a piece of god. An old piece, kept in storage
beneath Yulash, until Alias let him out. He's taking her to Westgate, via Myth
Drannor."
Akabar's body began to shake violently.
"What is it?" Olive demanded. "What's wrong?"
"Gods, it was like . . . like having some disease that rots everything
but your mind and leaves your body shambling around. I was conscious, but I had
no control. I couldn't speak. I couldn't see. I could hear things in my head,
Moander's thoughts, and Alias speaking, but I was tied and gagged in the
darkness. And .. . and . . ." He looked up at the halfling. "I
stabbed Dragonbait, didn't I? You said I did. I remember. I was trying to kill
him."
"Apparently, he doesn't hold it against you. He carried you back here
and used the shirt off his back to bandage you."
Akabar felt along the bandage on his head, glancing at the lizard lying on
the dragon's snout.
"I wounded the dragon, too, didn't I?" he whispered.
"Less said about that the better," Olive suggested. "It took
all my eloquence to convince Mist you were included in the bargain for our protection
until Alias was freed. She only relented because we need all the firepower we
can muster.
"So Its Ooziness is a god, eh? Another thing our lizard friend
neglected to mention."
"Saurial," Akabar corrected again. "Why are you suddenly so
annoyed with him? He's saved our lives."
"No. He's saved your life. I can take care of myself." Olive did
not bother to mention that she'd be digesting in Mist's stomach now if not for
the lizard. "I don't need a sneaky, spying, goody-two-shoes wheedling his
way into my trust."
"What makes you so sure he's a spy?"
"Use your brain, greengrocer" Olive snorted. "What else would
a paladin be doing traveling with us? You're a merchant, and I'm halfling scum.
And Alias—think! She tried to murder a priest and someone she thought was the
king of Cormyr and then she let loose an evil god. Dragonbait sneaked off just
when we were in the most trouble, and now he's dragging us along on a suicide
mission. He says it's to rescue Alias, but suppose he's really just interested in
killing Moander? His type doesn't really care about our problems."
"I suppose," Akabar replied. His eyes were looking a little
glazed, and Olive could see that he wasn't really concentrating on her words.
"Akash, what is wrong with you? You aren't listening to me at
all."
Akabar shook his head and spat. "Some mage I turn out to be. I can't
get us the information we need, I don't even notice that a member of our party
can heal, and I'm at my fighting best when I'm controlled by an insane
abomination. You shouldn't have bothered to rescue me."
"Don't be stupid," Olive chided. "You have your health, your
mind, and your money—all the blessings, as we half-lings say. You can't blame
yourself for what happened. It's not as though you were trained to fight old
gods."
"Or anything else, for that matter," Akabar added. "You and
Alias are right, I'm a greengrocer. This has been my first real adventure not
tied to the logical, reasonable flow of trade and money and safe, secure
routes, and I've botched everything. I thought that with all my learning I
could take on the world, but I've failed. I'm useless."
"Look, Akash, adventuring isn't as logical as columns in an account
ledger. You can't learn about it from books. You have to experience it to know
what to do. You'll get the hang of it eventually. And you haven't been
completely useless. If it weren't for you, Dimswart would not have known to
send Alias after me, and she never would have met Mist, and then we'd be
fighting this Moander alone."
"That is a rather tenuous recommendation of my talents."
"Well, then, consider the fact that you saved us all from being
poisoned."
"What?"
Olive grinned slyly. "If I had to do the cooking, we all would have
died from indigestion."
Akabar did not respond to her little joke, so the halfling rambled on.
"Look, what I'm trying to say is that eventually you'll learn to think
like an adventurer. Then you'll really be a force to be reckoned with. Who
knows, you may even teach us a thing or two. Reason may make all the difference
between our success or failure, and nobody else in this group has as much of it
as you do."
Akabar remained silent, and Olive worried that the mead might have been too
strong for him, "Anyway," she said with a shrug, "I sort of like
having you around. I sort of like you."
A tiny smile played across the Turmishman's lips. He sighed deeply. "I
sort of like you, too," he replied. "Do you have any more of that
mead?"
While Akabar took a long pull on the flask, Olive asked, "So, what
about him?" Ruskettle jerked her head in the direction of the sleeping
reptiles. "Dragonbait the Cereal."
"Saurial," Akabar corrected, yet understanding how Olive felt.
Guilty, no doubt. It was one thing for Alias and himself to recognize the
halfling's pettiness, selfishness, and thievery, and overlook it in the
interest of party unity. But it was quite another thing to have one's actions
silently watched and, no doubt, judged by the likes of a paladin. Akabar
himself wondered with acute embarrassment what the lizard thought of him and his
constant failures.
"Saurial," Olive said, finally getting the pronunciation correct.
"He's kept a couple of major secrets from us. He could be hiding a lot
more."
Akabar caught the blue glimmer of the runes shining on Dragonbait's chest.
Unbeknownst to Olive, she was late trying to raise Akabar's suspicions against
the lizard. Since yesterday, the mage reflected, I've battled him twice, lost
both times, and then discovered that he was trying to save my miserable hide.
Something he's rather in the habit of doing. And though the halfling was right
when she pointed out it was highly unusual for a paladin to travel with an
adventuring group with their . . . character, the Turmishman found it
impossible to believe that the saurial meant them any harm.
"After he helps us get Alias back," Olive said, ignoring Akabar's
pensive look, "I think we should find a way to ditch him. Alias won't like
it, but it'll be for her own good."
"No," the mage said. "If he keeps his own counsel, that's his
business. If my account balances, then so does his."
In Olive's eyes Akabar saw the look of a merchant who had decided it would
be in her best interest not to drive too hard a bargain. She shrugged.
"You're probably right. There's nothing to worry about. You rest. We'll be
moving out in the morning, and this time we'll squash Its Ooziness. I'll be
tending the fire, not that difficult a job considering all the deadfall Big Mo
left in its wake. Been a dry summer, too—wood catches easy."
"Ruskettle?"
"Yes, Akash?"
"Would you please hand me my books? I think I'd better start studying.
Like you said, we'll need all the power we can get. Even mine."
*****
Alias woke in a dim chamber deep beneath Moander's surface. All around her,
patches of slime gave off a sickly green light. The glow from her sigils was
brighter and purer, and to study her prison she held her arm out as a lantern,
for she was no longer bound by mossy shackles.
The chamber was round and lined mostly with moss, except where moisture ran
down its surface, nourishing the patches of luminous slime. She dug into the
side of the wall with her fingers, but beneath the spongy moss she discovered
an impenetrable mesh of thick roots and tree branches. She tried pulling the
moss away in other spots, but found no weaknesses in her cage. The air was
close and heavy with the smell of rotting leaves but quite breathable.
She still wore her armor and her leather breeches, but her cloak had begun
to disintegrate so badly that it could no longer be tied on. She had lost her
sword somewhere in Yulash, and her shield and daggers were missing, probably
stripped from her person by the tendrils while she slept— knocked unconscious
by Meander's sponge mosses.
Trapped like an alchemist's mouse, she thought. Then she decided, no, more like
a broken machine crated in a cushioned box for the journey back home. She
remembered all that Moander had threatened would be done to her in Westgate.
Her memories would be wiped out again, her spirit smothered somehow. She
shuddered.
Then she snarled in defiance. But what could one do to a god? Spit in its
eye before it crushed you?
The wall across from her rippled. Chunks of moss dropped away, and a huge
hand, palm upward, thrust into the chamber. It was woven, like wicker, of tree
limbs. In the center of the palm a ball of light glowed with a swirl of gray
and white. Alias thought it was some sort of eye, and she wanted to back away
and hide from it.
Then the ball spoke. Two voices blended, one the highest alto, the other the
lowest bass, with no middle range between the two. The essence of Meander's
voice.
Alias remembered the swirling gray and white that had covered Akabar's eyes
when the god had possessed him. She wondered if this ball was the true face of
Moander.
"Hungry?" asked the voice. "Eat."
The wall moss peeled in another spot, and a pair of tendrils thrust in her
shield covered with half a dozen high-summer apples and a dead, uncooked
yearling boar.
Taking a deep breath to steady her nerves, Alias walked over to the shield.
The hole it had been pushed through was already rewoven shut. Her stomach
rumbled, but she waited until the tendrils retracted through the wall before
she reached for the apples. She backed away from the boar. It looked like it
had been throttled to death.
She strolled back over to the palm and crunched into an apple. Without
really expecting an answer, she asked the glowing ball, "How long have I
been asleep?"
"A day," the ball replied, pulsing in rhythm with its words.
"Going slow. Woods thicker than once were."
"That's a problem? Some god you are!" she mocked it.
"Only so much life energy. Must husband carefully Could fly or
teleport, but would hurt. Find more power Myth Drannor. Move slow till
then."
"You're not as fluent," Alias noted aloud, "without Akabar.
Where is he?"
"Dead. See?"
A hole opened by her shield, and a pile of bones was thrust into the
chamber. Alias dropped her apple. The bones sank into the floor again.
"And the others?" the swordswoman whispered.
"All dead."
"Oh, gods." Alias dropped to her knees.
"Just one. Me," Meander's light reminded her. "Have
offer."
Alias hugged her arms about her shoulders.
"If you slay other masters," the voice said, "their sigils
will erode and you will work for me alone."
"Then I'll have to kill you all," Alias growled defiantly.
"Without me, no purpose, no life. Besides, cannot slay me. Have tried
and failed. Think, I will help."
"Go to hell."
"Abode not hell—Abyss. Prefer it here."
Alias laughed at the creature's transparent bid for power. "Why should
I help you get a monopoly on my . . . services?"
"You are now puppet of many. Can be servant of one. Serve me, greater
rewards—wealth, freedom."
Alias held her hands over her ears to block out the Abomination's voice. The
tips of her fingers touched the eagle-shaped barrette in her hair. Though
muck-encrusted, the silver pin unsnapped without crumbling.
"Think. More freedom yours than others enjoy. Be my high priestess. Be
my—" The voice stopped, and the chamber swayed, and the walls vibrated.
"Will return," the voice promised. Again the chamber swayed.
"Think about offer."
The woven wood palm began to retract into the wall.
Something's attacking it, Alias realized. For a brief moment, she considered
Meander's claim that without her "masters" she could not exist. It
didn't matter, she decided. Despite the Abomination's promise, she knew she
would never be free while it lived, and her freedom was all she wanted. Better
to be dead than its servant, and this could be my only chance to escape, she
thought.
It was an outside chance, but having been held helpless and frustrated all
through the last battle, she could not let the opportunity to injure the
Abomination slip by. She plunged the pin of the barrette into the sphere.
The ball was as hot as a bonfire and singed Alias's fingers. She yanked her
hand back, but Meander's "hand" lay still on the floor.
A high-pitched wail filled the chamber, followed by a deep rumbling. The
swaying motion of the room turned to a severe rocking, like a ship in a storm.
Alias, her shield, the apples, and the dead boar were tumbled from one side to
the other. The swordswoman curled into a ball and wedged herself in tightly
between the floor and the hand.
Spit in the god's eye, she thought, sucking on her fingers, for all the good
it will do you. The sickly glow of the slime grew dimmer until it was finally
extinguished. She was left alone in the glittering sapphire light of her cursed
brands.
*****
"I think it knows we're here," Akabar declared.
The lizard, seated in front of the mage on the back of the great wyrm,
growled in agreement. Pressed close beside him, Akabar caught a whiff of
fresh-baked bread. Now that Dragonbait's means of communication had been rubbed
in his face, so to speak, the mage realized that he could catch the saurial's
more excited outbursts. The lizard had to, in effect, shout with his scent
glands for a human to notice the smells. Akabar was beginning to piece together
some sort of pattern between scents and sense. He berated himself for not
having figured it out before—but then he hadn't figured out anything else
correctly either, so far.
Dragonbait had awakened them all before dawn. Previously clownish and
servile, the saurial had been transformed by the crisis into a sergeant major.
First he healed all the wounds about Akabar's head. The mage noticed the
woodsmoke scent that had surrounded them the last time Dragonbait had cured
him.
"That's the smell of your healing prayers, isn't it?" the
Turmishman had asked.
The lizard had nodded and given him a friendly squeeze on the shoulder. With
a stern look he prompted Akabar to study his spells by jabbing his fingers at
the mage's tomes. He patted and pushed Olive into packing their meager gear,
while he used his skill to reknit the cluster of bones that held Mist's wing
splayed out in flight. Lastly, he'd closed the gash Akabar's dagger had put in
his own leg.
Akabar watched guiltily as the saurial performed this last task—guilty both
for having caused the damage, and for taking his concentration from his
assigned task to watch it repaired. Dragonbait worked in the glow of the
finder's stone Alias had dropped. It was hard to see the glow of his hands as
he healed his flesh, but now that Akabar knew what to expect, he would never
miss it again.
Now, as they rode the dragon toward battle, Dragonbait held the finder's
stone in his lap, although the sun had already risen. He still wore a kilt of
sorts about his loins and one of Alias's cloaks wrapped around to keep out the
wind, but he no longer bothered with a shirt. He left the runes on his chest
exposed for the world to see.
Akabar wore one of the lizard's shirts and the makeshift kilt the halfling
had fastened together out of her own cloaks. Olive wore a bright yellow cloak
and looked, seated on the dragon's head like a flashy helmet.
When Olive had shouted a warning and they'd first beheld the Abomination,
the monster-god was deep in the heart of the Elven Wood and still moving,
albeit slowly. It had grown considerably though. The midden mound that had
exploded out of its Yulash prison now stood seventy or more feet in height—a
hill towering over all but the most ancient gnarled oaks and duskwoods.
Its composition had changed as well. Human rot no longer figured prominently
in its make-up. Instead, huge trees and crushed shrubbery were rolled into the
hill. It still had an oozy, wet appearance, but now the ooze came from extruded
sap and damp underbrush.
The mound seemed to become aware of them as soon as they spotted it, for it
began to speed up.
Mist circled from a safe distance. The forward edge of the moving hill was a
sharp angle, literally plowing its way through the forest.
As they flew toward the front of the Abomination, a volley of black-barked
trees shot out from the hill, trailing long streamers of vines. The god was
trying the same tricks as before, only now he was using fifty-foot duskwoods
instead of zombie soldiers to weight his snare vines.
The larger size of the missiles and the redundancy of the attack made it
easy for Mist to dodge the assault. The catapulted trees fell in the tangle of
woods, smashing down other trees and carving huge divots where they landed.
"Any sign of Alias?" Akabar shouted to Dragonbait.
The saurial shook his head. Just as Akabar suspected. If Alias was in the
mess, she was probably well hidden beneath the surface, something they had
discussed before they left camp, with Mist translating.
The dragon continued to circle Moander without attacking. The mound fired
another volley of tree missiles. Once again, Mist dodged them with ease, until
a particularly large one passed in front of her face. She pulled up suddenly,
as if alarmed; and plummeted toward the ground. Moander lost sight of her
behind the tree line.
Moander chuckled with the arrogance of a god. It might have considered
telling Alias of the failure of her friends if only it had not bragged of
killing them earlier. It trained some of its eyes in the direction the dragon
had gone down, while it continued its crawling march south. Myth Drannor, and
the powers held within, awaited it.
Dragonbait exchanged positions with the halfling and sat on Mist's head. He
kept the party waiting in the clearing where Mist had landed for a quarter of
an hour. The lizard could sense the distance between them and the evil god.
When he gave the signal, Mist rose and, skimming low over the trees, circled
away until she had reached the tree break Moander had left behind. Along this
trail she made her attack run, moving in on the god's rear.
"They're going to have to call this 'Moander's Road,'" Olive
shouted to the mage as she took in the devastation.
Akabar nodded wordlessly, awed by She destruction around them. Moander
apparently no longer needed to absorb more bulk; it just plowed up the great
trees, pushing them aside and leaving them to die on the forest floor, half
buried by the great mounds of dirt it also overturned.
The dragon flew on unfazed by the rape of the Elven Wood. She kept her eyes
forward, ignoring the great trench beneath her and the shattered trees at her
flanks.
The mage closed his eyes, trying to shut out the sound of the heavy wings
beating, the rush of air on his face, and the rise and fall of the dragon's
back as she flew. He concentrated on his magic.
Olive nudged him and pointed. Akabar opened his eyes. Mist was less than
twenty yards from Moander. No duskwood bombards fired from the hill. The god
was oblivious to the dragon's proximity. Akabar allowed himself a brief smile
when he spied the mass of duskwood trees and deadwood woven into the
Abomination's mass, the perfect materials for their plans. His spell was
prepared; he awaited only Dragonbait's signal.
The lizard waved, and Mist rose above the hill, spouting a long, heavy
stream of fire as she did so. Like an assassin's knife, flames ripped into the
greenery where the creature's spine would be if it had one. Moander screamed
just as Akabar triggered his pyrotechnic spell. The red streams of the dragon's
breath exploded in a further cavalcade of twisting yellows, spiraling oranges,
and lancing azure blues. In the process of transforming the dragon's fiery
breath to explosive fireworks, Akabar's spell snuffed the upper flames issuing
from her maw, but the fireworks pierced deeper into the heart of the hill.
New shoots cropped up immediately to cover the scarred area, but Mist was
not through. As soon as she crested the top of the hill, she twisted and spun
about, her passengers tied and braced. As she dropped along the back of the
hill she breathed again, sending more flames into the open wound she had
carved.
Though his stomach had risen to his throat when he'd momentarily hung upside
down, the mage did not lose his focus. Another pyrotechnic spell speared the
god.
Moander burned. The hill, now composed more of harvested wood than refuse
and slime, blazed. Even better, Ruskettle and Akabar could spot great flames
shooting up through the coarse outer mesh of trees and brush, flames that
originated nearer the heart of the monster.
In her plant prison, Alias felt the air grow stuffy. The wails began to weep
thick, yellowish tears through the moss. She rose to her feet, but was knocked
back to the ground by a sudden sideways jerk of her enclosure. It seemed as if
Moander had decided to move her prison.
Moander halted and flattened out in an effort to draw more material into its
mass, perhaps in an effort to smother the flames. But as the halfling had noted
to Akabar the evening before, the forest was quite dry. Whatever the god drew
into itself just fed the fires more. And the duskwoods were renowned for their
fine burning resins.
Next the Abomination tried to contain the fire by creating a firebreak in
its body, splitting itself in two and leaving half of its mass behind. The
pyrotechnics had done their job, though. The fire was everywhere; there was no
escape from it. Flames curled out of the heart of the moving half of the hill
and, like a fire that's just been stirred, the blaze leaped higher and burned
hotter.
Mist had retreated, circling high overhead to evade any return attacks, but
when none seemed forthcoming, she swooped back to administer the final blow.
Akabar felt the dragon's chest swell with a mighty intake of air.
Before Mist had a chance to exhale, though, the top of Moander popped off
like a cork in a bottle. Startled, Mist pulled up sharply, wary of some new
type of attack. A pod twice the size of the dragon, but less than a tenth the
size of the god before they'd attacked it, shot out from the hill. Egg-shaped,
the missile tumbled end over end as it rose into the air. At the zenith of its
flight it righted itself and then swept southeastward in a blur of movement.
"Gold lions will get you good lunch that our woman is in that
thing," Olive shouted.
Akabar nodded. "Along with whatever passes for the consciousness of
Moander."
Dragonbait gave the dragon a sharp prod, and Mist took off after the pod.
Behind them on the ground below, the burning pile of trees that had once
been the Abomination of Moander spewed out a black column of smoke high enough
to be spotted in Shadowdale, Hillsfar, and Yulash.
Mist began to strain, flapping her wings faster to keep pace with the escape
pod. Akabar concentrated, then barked the harsh syllables of another spell and
pressed his hands against the back of the dragon. Summoned energies flowed from
his hands into the great wyrm.
Mist lunged forward at twice the speed. Her wings beat the air as gracefully
and as quickly as a bird's. The ground blurred in their vision, and they began
closing the distance between them and the pod.
"What did you do?" Olive gasped, her words torn from her mouth by
the wind.
"Haste," Akabar explained. "Dangerous for humans—ages them a
year. Can't hurt this creature, though. She sleeps longer than that after a
meal."
*****
Moander spoke again to Alias, but now with just a bass voice, rumbling
against a garbling background chatter that was almost unintelligible.
"Flying," he said after a garble. "Life energies low. Must
gate." Another long garble, then the bass voice surfaced. "Prepare
for transport. Damaged goods."
The last phrase struck Alias as something that Akabar might say, and she
fancied that some part of the mage's mind must have entered into Moander's
being and not just the other way around. Perhaps it was the mage's spirit
warning her to keep herself safe. The further deterioration of Meander's
communication skills gave her a burst of hope. Things apparently weren't going
well for the god. Maybe an army had attacked it, or a horde of powerful
adventurers.
The circular shell of her prison wall began to shrink. Mouths surfaced all
over the walls. Alias feared that Moander had decided to eat her rather than
see her rescued, but the walls began to spit out streams of thick, moist silken
strands. She was being cocooned.
Instinctively, she tried to beat back the rising mass, afraid it would
suffocate her. Would her "masters" find a way to make her breathe
again, she wondered. She was soon overwhelmed by the fiber. Covered from head
to toe, she could still breathe through the wrapping, but the air was stuffy,
and she felt as though she'd been buried alive.
The egg-shaped pod flattened till it looked more like a giant pumpkin seed.
It tore through the sky. Along its trailing edge, half a hundred eyes opened at
once to watch the advancing dragon. Moander had husbanded its energies
carefully. But either the god had miscalculated or dragons had become faster
during its imprisonment. Moander weighed its options. Its last desperate bid
for escape was to use magic—the most costly method of travel.
They were still far from the ruins of Myth Drannor, but Moander could sense
the siren song of the old city's dormant power, still humming away deep beneath
toppled buildings and battle-scarred halls. With its godly abilities, Moander
reached out and began syphoning off the magical energies of the dead elven
kingdom.
The god channeled this energy directly into its spell. At the forward point
of the pumpkin seed a blur of purple appeared, then stretched about the seed
like a thin mist.
Mist, the dragon, was close enough for her passengers to make out the
crawling glow that began to envelop the pod carrying Alias. Akabar was trying
to figure out what it could be. A protection device, perhaps? Or-
He never finished his thought, for once the glow completely covered the pod,
it began to shrink. Like a street magician's trick, there was nothing left in
the purple cloak Moander had wrapped itself in, nothing to keep the cloak from
collapsing in on itself.
A Turmish curse escaped Akabar's lips before he explained, "That's a
gate between worlds."
Olive looked around in a wild-eyed panic.
"We've got to pull up," the mage insisted. "If we pass
through that cloud, we could end up anywhere."
Both halfling and mage began to thump the sides of the dragon, trying to get
her attention. When she turned back to look at them, they mimed pulling back on
imaginary reins to symbolize their need to halt.
Mist turned her head forward again. Dragonbait kept his head turned to watch
Akabar and Olive signaling him to stop the dragon. Dragonbait shook his
reptilian head. He leaned over Mist's forehead and made some motion Akabar and
Olive could not see. When he sat back again, Dragonbait held the finder's stone
over his head.
Mist sped toward the purple cloud that dotted the sky low over the Elven
Wood and dove in. Like the god preceding them, they were obscured from view.
The shouts of the mage and the bard died away. The cloud dissipated slowly, as
though reluctant to give up its form.
24
Battle over Westgate
This is like riding up into a maelstrom, Olive thought as they plunged into
the purplish fog that had swallowed Moander, though she could not honestly say
she had ever done so. The purple fog became a long, gray tube—the oozing wake
of the god's passage from the forest north of Myth Drannor to wherever it was
heading.
Floating castles and statues danced along the edges of the tube. Ruskettle
noticed that Alias's finder's stone, which Dragonbait now held high over his
head, shone a beam before them that stretched all the way down the tube to
illuminate the retreating rear of the mad god.
Moander disappeared in another purple fog. They plunged after it, were
buffeted by a second stomach-churning whirlwind, and suddenly burst into bright
sunshine in a clear blue sky.
Below them to the left was a bustling, walled city of some size—a sea port.
The green-blue water told Olive that she was looking at the Inner Sea. The
shape of the harbor and the seven peculiar hills outside of the city walls
identified their destination as Westgate.
*****
Giogioni Wyvernspur let out a deep sigh of relief as he topped the last rise
on the road from Reddansyr and surveyed the city of Westgate and the land
surrounding it. Since his narrow escape in Teziir from the sorceress who so
resembled the sell-sword Alias, Giogi had been moving overland, first by
carriage, then on horseback.
From his vantage point, the Cormyrian noble took in the plain, which ran
along the sea coast. Covered with the same rich, slick grass as the hills
bordering it, the greenery of the plain ran right to the stock and caravan
yards scattered around the city wall. A ring of seven mounds lay south of the
city just east of the road on which he traveled. All seven hillocks were
crowned with old ruins—stone circles of druids and temples of more sinister
cults.
"Now this," he informed the horse he now rode, Daisyeye II, ''has
been a much more pleasant experience than my last trip on horseback. That
ended, you see, with the death of your namesake, the first Daisyeye, followed
by a singularly unpleasant interview with a dragon—an incident that will stick
in my mind as long as, if not longer than, the nasty affair of losing Aunt
Dorath's pet land urchin."
Giogi sighed again. He had been expecting to be waylaid by any of the
hundred thousand brigands, bandits, dark powers, and orc bands that were said
to lie in wait just beyond the borders of the civilized world. Yet, despite all
the expected awfulness, his trip overland had been relatively peaceful.
About time I had some good luck, he thought, pulling off his wide-brimmed
hat and letting the wind rustle through his hair.
At that moment the crash of a powerful lightning strike echoed all around
him. Daisyeye II reared on her hindquarters. Directly overhead a great rend
appeared in the sky. Through this a huge rock jettisoned into the world.
Giogi reigned Daisyeye in tightly to avoid being spilled onto the road. He
might have been better off patting the beast and whispering soothing words, but
his eyes were glued on the rocketing projectile. It looked like a rotting
basket, with masses of greenery hanging from all sides. Along its trailing edge
it spurt out jets of blue flame.
With a piercing howl the gash in the sky began to close. Then a red dragon
burst through the hole overhead, pursuing the "basket." The dragon's
appearance was Giogioni's first indication of just how big the lump of decay
really was.
The head of the dragon chasing the basket shone with a yellow light. Giogi
squinted. The yellow light seemed to be coming from a figure riding between the
dragon's ears. Then the Cormyrian noble noticed the dragon's color.
"No. it can't be," he whispered to himself. But his heart sank
with the certainty that it was indeed Mist.
If Giogi had remained on the hilltop observing the dragon, he might have
noticed the other figures on her back; he might even have heard the eerie chant
that rose from one of the mounds just south of him, but Daisyeye II decided
she'd had enough. She plunged uncontrollably down the hill into the high grass,
taking the young Wvvernspur with her.
*****
Akabar kept his eyes glued to Moander. Blue flames spurted from the god, but
the mage recognized that the flames did not originate from the damaging fires
they had set within the monster. They were some means of propulsion. Somehow
the monster's temporary occupation of his mind had left the mage with more than
just the memory of the words he'd been forced to say to Alias or the evil deeds
he'd been maneuvered into performing. He understood the means of the
Abomination's flight, and while he admired its cleverness, he shivered with
horror at the reminder of what the god had done to him.
Moander's vast godly knowledge, however, was not going to aid in its escape.
The dragon, under the effects of Akabar's spell of haste, was still gaining.
The god arced downward toward the seven mounds outside the city walls. Then it
halted, hovering over one of the hills. Great red stone plinths shaped like
fangs curved inward about the crown of the hill. In their center burned a
bonfire. Olive spotted tiny figures moving about the hilltop. From this
distance the figures looked no bigger than ants.
Moander let a drop of slime fall away from its body. The slime oozed like a
water drop slipping along a strand of spider silk, then it hung ten or so feet
before splattering on the ground. The ant-sized figures were on it in a second.
"It's delivered Alias to its followers," Akabar shouted.
The halfling nodded. "We have to land and rescue her."
The mage shook his head in disagreement. "We have to finish our battle
with the god first," he said.
"Are you crazy? We could be killed. I want off this ride, now,"
Olive insisted.
Akabar's eyes glittered with vengeance, and the halfling realized she wasn't
going to get anywhere trying to convince him to help her down. Fortunately for
her, it wasn't up to him. "Dragonbait!" she hollered, "Alias is
down there! We have to land and help her!"
But Olive was not to discover whether the lizard paladin was more concerned
with the warrior woman or destroying Moander. Moander took the decision out of
his hands. Once it had unloaded its passenger, the god launched itself toward
them.
Mist banked sharply, and the mass of fungus, slime, and forest rocketed past
them. The sudden movement caused the halfling to lose her grip on the safety
rope. She would have fallen to her death if Akabar had not seized the hem of
her skirt and pulled her back. Olive suddenly was not feeling hungry—the human
equivalent of feeling frightened out of her mind. Mist completed her banking
maneuver by turning about to face Meander's return charge.
This time, however, dodging the god was not so easy. As it streaked toward
them Moander increased in size. In its approaching side a great maw opened,
lined with duskwood tree trunks sharpened to fanglike points.
The Jawed God it was sometimes called, Akabar remembered. But how did it
grow without absorbing more mass? he puzzled. It was now four times Mist's
size, and the open cavity could swallow the dragon whole.
Mist struggled to gain altitude. She managed to rise above the gaping mouth,
but a tree-weighted vine shot out at her, entangling her neck and her wings.
The dragon beat her wings furiously, but she was held fast. More red vines,
pulsing like blood veins, snaked up the snarevine.
Cursing, Olive drew her dagger, preparing to cut any plants that came her
way. She turned, thinking to offer Akabar her sword, but to her surprise he
began chanting another spell. She thought he had exhausted the last of his
magic on the enchantment to haste the dragon. Apparently he was getting better
at the game. He looks worn, though, Olive thought, noticing the lines in his
face, deeper and more plentiful than when they'd first met in Cormyr. He was
beginning to look like a real wizard, she decided.
With furrowed brows, the Turmish mage completed the last sharp syllables and
tossed a handful of iron powder over the dragon's scales. The metal filings
sparkled in the air, causing Mist's whole body to glow.
The struggling dragon's scales shifted beneath them. The halfling grabbed at
the safety ropes, but they snapped away, as did the majority of the vines
tethering Mist to Meander's form. Olive gripped at a scale, but it was
difficult to grasp as it grew in size. Akabar, she realized, had enlarged the
dragon with his magic.
"Should even the odds," the Turmishman said.
Mist, using her back claws, slashed open Meander's side. A foul vapor burst
from the god's wound, and it screamed. The air smelled like a swamp.
Mist jerked her head up, breaking the last cord holding her near the god.
The suddenness of her movement sent Dragonbait bouncing high into the air. With
a gasp Olive tugged on Akabar's kilt and pointed at the lizard.
Akabar was already aware of the saurial's plight. He stood up nimbly on
Mist's shifting back and stretched out his arms. In each hand he held a single
feather. He incanted fast and furious and then fell from the dragon's back.
Reflexively Olive grabbed at the mage's ankles. She'd forgotten she was no
longer anchored. The pair of them, mage and bard, plummeted toward the ground.
As Akabar pulled out of his dive and began to fly upward, he became aware of
the halfling's weight. Would he be able to carry her and Dragonbait? he
wondered.
The saurial had begun arcing downward. He'd lost his grip on the finder's
stone, but still clutched at his sword. Akabar flew upward to intercept him.
Drat the halfling, the mage thought as he struggled to reach the saurial. He
would not be able to cross the horizontal distance between himself and
Dragonbait before the lizard fell past him. If Olive had not tagged a ride, he
could have done so with ease. As it was, he was forced to angle down, arms
forward like a diver.
Dragonbait fell with his arms spread open, presenting the most resistance to
the air. Akabar did not think the saurial was the least panicked, but he was
willing to bet the air around Dragonbait smelled of woodsmoke.
Behind the mage, Olive swore loudly and profusely. She had no idea how to
present the smallest profile when flying, so she slowed the mage's movements
even further with the resistance of her body in the wind. Akabar offered his
own prayer that he would reach the saurial in time.
The flying mage's path intersected the free-falling lizard's about thirty
yards from the ground. By then Dragonbait was plummeting like a comet, and
Akabar's tackle hit him with so much force that something gave in the mage's
shoulder and the saurial's ribs. The trio of wizard, halfling, and lizard was
too heavy to remain in flight long. From their mid-air impact, they lofted in a
very low arc, before they began to sink earthward.
They landed in a dell between hills. The ground was soft, but littered with
boulders. The threesome rolled and slid, lost their grip on one another, and
fell apart. Akabar kept flying after he lost the added weight. He pulled up and
landed smoothly on a large rock. He touched his shoulder gingerly; the flesh dimpled
inward and his wrist and arm buzzed with a thousand tiny needle-pricks. A
dislocated shoulder, he realized, almost intrigued with the injury.
The halfling, with the luck endemic to her race, had skidded to a stop in a
particularly soft, boggy area. She rose to her feet completely uninjured but
quite slimy, smeared with mud and grass stains. Dragonbait needed to lean on
his sword to rise to his feet.
Akabar turned his attention to the battle between the now-gigantic Mist and
the monstrously swelled Moander. The Jawed God had increased its size once
again and regained its hold on the red dragon. The two behemoths tumbled in
midair, though why they did not crash was yet another mystery puzzling Akabar.
Mist's wings were too entangled to fly, and the blue flames that had propelled
the god through the sky were no longer apparent.
The air shimmered around them like heat rising from the desert sands.
Beneath the tattered shards of the god's body, which Mist had ripped away with
her claws, lay only great vacuities. The smell of fetid swamp Akabar had
noticed aboard the dragon reached his nose even on the ground.
Along Meander's side, a second huge, duskwood-fanged mouth split open. So
wide did the jaws part that the god resembled a giant clam.
Confronted with this new set of jaws, Mist began thrashing like a wild
beast. She was a great wyrm, one of the most powerful of her race, and much
enhanced by the Turmish mage's magic, yet, while her opponent seemed to be made
of nothing but that great maw, she was still flesh and blood. Then she
remembered she was also fire.
Mist breathed a long stream of flame from her bloody mouth and nostrils. The
fire plunged deep into the god's mouth. With a sudden horrifying insight,
Akabar understood the significance of the swampy smell, Meander's great but
empty size, and its ability to hover. The mage squeezed his eyes shut and
turned his head away from the battle.
A small star exploded in the sky over Westgate. The shell that was Moander
the Darkbringer and the curved figure of the dragon were black pieces of ash
against the blaze that consumed them. Mist's fire-resistant scales ignited, her
flesh became translucent, and her skeleton visible to any eyes unfortunate
enough to witness her demise.
A booming sound rolled across the plains. The three adventurers were knocked
from their feet bv the force of the blast. Ruskettle lay toppled in the mud
with her fingers pressed into her ears. The mage fell from his rock.
When Akabar looked up again, the star had faded, leaving behind the falling,
burning shards of the god Moander. The long, blackened body that had once been
Mistinarperadnacles Hai Draco spiraled to the earth. From the small valley, the
mage could not see where the dead beast landed, but he felt the ground shake
from the impact.
Akabar felt very tired. He prayed he had been right in his assumption that
the package Moander had dropped off on the hilltop had been Alias. A further
fear crept over him and tightened his gut. If Moander were indeed a god, they
had destroyed only its earthly incarnation—somewhere beyond the borders of
reality, it still lived. Should the Darkbringer find a way to return to the
Realms, the mage knew that he would be at the top of the god's list of enemies.
"So be it," the Turmishman muttered. The beast had invaded his
mind and made him a puppet. Now it was no more, destroyed by his hand, for
without his spells Mist would not have lasted ten minutes against the Jawed
God.
A feeling of intense satisfaction washed over Akabar. The feeling blended
with the knowledge that he had rescued Dragonbait and Olive from death by
flying them to safety. For the first time he was sure that he was more than a
greengrocer merchant who dabbled in spell-casting. He was truly a mage of the
first water.
Smoke rose in the sky from the direction of Westgate, and Akabar realized
that the dragon must have hit the city. He felt a twinge of sadness for the
beast. Evil though Mist had been, her evil had been no worse than that of a
selfish, monomaniacal old woman. Like a villain in a street pantomime, she was
all sneers and threats—her wickedness paled before the reality of the
Darkbringer. She died honoring her agreement with the saurial paladin—battling
and destroying a greater evil than herself.
Ruskettle should write a song, making Mist a hero, Akabar thought with a
grin. The old wyrm would've hated that.
"You waiting for the moon to come up, Akash?" Olive snapped.
"We have a swordswoman to rescue, in case you'd forgotten."
Akabar shook his head, clearing it of his self-congratulations and
melancholy meanderings. Dragonbait, his hip bloody from their rough landing,
and clutching his ribs where Akabar had intercepted him, stood beside him. The
lizard was reaching for the mage's shoulder to heal it first. Akabar moved away
from him, cradling his bad arm with his good. He clenched his teeth against the
pain.
"No!" the Turmishman insisted. "I can walk at least. You
should take care of yourself first,"
Dragonbait paused in protest, but he was not about to argue with the mage's
new determination. He used the last of his healing power on his injured side,
then the three of them set out to find Alias.
25
Alias's Escape
While Alias's companions chased Moander over the Elven Wood, through the
magical gate, and above the countryside surrounding Westgate, the swordswoman
lay still in her dark cocoon. The cushioning about her did little to reassure
her. Blood rushed in her ears as her prison rocked and swayed, spun, and
finally turned over and over.
Alias's nostrils flared. The mossy smell of her prison blended with the
scent of swamp gas. She gagged and coughed, but was unable to avoid breathing
the noxious vapor. She began to feel weak. Perhaps Moander did not realize the
gas would damage her. Perhaps it would kill her by accident and the other
"masters" would not be able to resurrect her.
That idea brought a peculiar comfort to the warrior woman. Her isolation had
accomplished what Moander's words had failed to do. Alias despaired. She'd
caused the death of her friends. Her only real friends, as far as she knew,
since her relationship with the Swanmays and the Black Hawks had been nothing
but imaginary stories given her by her makers. She wasn't even human, had never
had a mother, was non-born. And soon she would be nothing but a trinket for evil
forces to fight and intrigue over. She would become their unknowing puppet,
forced into actions she had not chosen—a mockery of life, like a skeleton or
golem. Better to die, she decided without feeling, her heart numb.
She wondered, though, whether there would be an afterlife for the likes of
her. In the dark cocoon, she whispered, "Do I even have a soul?" She
sighed. "What difference does it make?"
What difference does it make? she wondered. I'm alive. I enjoy being alive.
She relished the satisfaction she'd felt when she'd defeated an enemy in
combat, the contentment that settled about her when she sang, the camaraderie
she'd shared with Dragonbait and the others. She'd made her own friends, real
friends. She'd proven herself an adventuress, even if she was only a month old.
And somehow, she had found the will to deny her would-be masters.
"Even if it isn't a natural one, I have a life of my own," she
announced to the darkness—and to herself.
Heartened by her declaration, a new determination to live sprang up in
Alias, coupled with an assurance that she would somehow defeat everyone who had
branded her and reassert her free will.
"Moander!" she shouted uncertainly, not knowing if the god could
hear her. "Moander!" she hollered louder. "You're killing me! I
can't breathe! You have to let me out of here!"
Her prison made one more gut-wrenching turn. Her ears popped. Then the foul
air in her lungs was driven out by a sudden impact against the bottom of her
cocoon.
Her bindings were torn. She blinked in the sunlight. The air was fresh and
warm. Half a dozen hands reached down to pull her from the moist, silky mass
that entangled her. Despite her wooziness, Alias spotted the tattoos inscribed
in all their palms: mouths full of jagged teeth.
Dizzy from her travel, her muscles atrophied from her imprisonment, and
still weak from the effects of the gas, Alias could not resist as the people
pulled her to her feet, no doubt prepared to transfer her to another prison,
more conventional perhaps, yet equally inescapable.
Alias looked around. She stood by a bonfire in the center of a circle of
giant, inwardly curved fangs carved of red stone. Around her were two dozen men
and women, their faces hidden in the cowls of their robes. Their leader wore a
mask of white with a single eye painted in the forehead and surrounded by
teeth. A priest of Moander.
Alias gulped in deep breaths of air to fight her nausea and dizziness,
though she did not know why she bothered. Even if she managed to escape from
Meander's minions, she would still be a puppet. One of the minions snapped a
band of metal around her sword arm. The band was attached to a long chain of
cold iron.
Her legs gave way beneath her, and she sank to her knees on the dusty
hilltop. They would drag her off to her other masters, and she hadn't the
strength or the will to resist.
But instead, everyone ignored her. Their attention was fixed on the sky.
Mutters passed through the crowd, then
cheers.
Alias looked up with everyone else. At first, she did not understand what
she saw. Moander, the oozing god, bobbed in the sky, a great, swollen balloon
with jaws. Trapped in its tendrils was a red dragon. The beast flapped its
wings vainly, but could not resist being drawn into the god's maw. The pair of
monsters twisted and turned in the sky above a great walled city. The sea lay
beyond them. "Westgate," Alias whispered.
Suddenly, Alias knew that the red dragon was Mist. The Abomination had not
killed her. As a matter of fact, she looked bigger than ever beside Moander.
Alias's captors began chanting a prayer for their god's victory, though some
less pious or more excitable, continued cheering as though they were watching
two warriors wrestle in an arena.
Alias felt like cheering as well, though not exactly for the dragon. If Mist
were still alive, the warrior woman realized, then so might Dragonbait, Akabar,
and Olive be. Moander's failure to mention the dragon's survival gave Alias
reason to suspect he had lied about her friends.
Fury and hope surged within her and gave her strength. She assessed the
lanky man holding her chain. He was armed with a cudgel dotted with crude
shards of crystal. She was weaponless. But they made me a weapon, she thought.
She drew her feet up beneath her knees, remaining crouched near the ground, her
eyes fixed on her guard, waiting for an opportunity to attack.
The man's body shielded her vision from the brilliant explosion that threw
the landscape into highlights of white contrasted against shadows of the
deepest black. Alias stood up, but was immediately knocked to the ground by a
powerful, booming wind. All her captors fell as well, thrown like rag dolls by
the wind that ripped over the top of the hill.
A sudden pain shot up Alias's sword arm, as though the cold iron that bound
it had suddenly turned red hot. She ignored the ache and the burning star in
the .sky. Taking advantage of her guard's fall, she pulled the iron chain from
his numb fingers. The man lay staring sightlessly at her, blinded by the death
of his deity. Rising to her feet, she gave him a kick, knocking him out. Then
she stole the sharded cudgel from his other hand.
Moander's minions went to pieces. Some stared blindly at the sky like
statues, while many flung themselves on the ground and wept. Alias shot a
glance skyward in time to see the last bits of Moander drift down over the
city. A fell grin crept over her face. She spat good riddance to the god.
She slipped toward the far side of the hillock, but the priest in the white
mask rushed forward to intercept her. He caught a cudgel in the face. Blood
spattered from beneath the mask. The priest dropped to the ground.
Alias slid down the hill on the wet, slippery grass. At the bottom, she
circled the mound and began to make for the road that led to the city gates.
No pursuit seemed imminent from Moander's worshipers, but Alias was sure
that her respite was only temporary. If they did not hold her responsible for
the destruction of their master's earthly form, they would still consider her
part of their property. And without the power of their god behind them, they
would fight for any scrap left to them.
Tired of carrying the weight of the chain, Alias held her arm forward to
inspect the lock on the band. Perhaps she could smash or pick it open somehow.
She smiled with glee as she spotted the cause of the earlier pain on her arm.
Moander's sigil was gone.
Just as Moander claimed, death destroyed the bond each master had on her.
For Moander, that meant his material body in the Realms.
Death had cut the connection. But could she defeat the other four? Should
she? She remembered Meander's threat that without the purpose of her masters
she would not live. If she eliminated the rest, could she function without someone
pulling her strings? She didn't feel lessened any by Moander's death. Her heart
felt lighter, but she most certainly was not lost without his godly guidance.
A man's voice interrupted her thoughts. The sound came from the plain
stretched out before her.
"Now, Daisyeye," the man's voice said, "you've been a very
naughty girl, though I was afraid, too, the first time I met a dragon."
A wizard addressing his familiar, perhaps, Alias guessed. Cautiously, he
crept closer.
"But, you have nothing to worry about, even if that dragon was Mist.
The nasty old beast is dead."
With a start, Alias recognized the gold, green, and black markings stitched
onto the back of the man's cloak. The coat-of-arms of the Wyvernspurs. And the
voice was familiar, though its tone was somewhat braver than it had been the
last time she'd heard it. This was too great a coincidence. Yet, she could not
be mistaken. It was the same voice that had desperately tried to excuse its
faux pas of imitating Azoun IV. His name came easily to her memory, as though
it were engraved there by the voice of that nagging woman who'd begged him to
do the impersonation.
"Giogi?" Alias remembered, whispering the name aloud.
Giogi Wyvernspur leaped three feet, spinning around as he did so. A silver flask
flew from his hand, and amber liquid arched through the air.
"You!" he gasped. "The madwoman! I mean, the bard's
friend!" He dived behind his horse. "What are you doing here?"
"Just dropped in to borrow your horse," Alias replied with a grin.
She advanced carefully, looking to each side to make sure the young noble was
alone.
"My . . .'' the young man's throat went dry, "horse?"
Alias nodded and swung the chain manacled to her arm. "Do you have a
problem with that?"
"No! I mean, no problem. You probably have a good reason that I don't
need to know. Honest!"
"Don't fret," said Alias. "I'm not dangerous, just in a hurry
to get into the city." She patted the skittish Daisyeye's front haunch and
slipped her foot into the stirrup. "Just out of curiosity, what brings you
to Westgate?"
"Diplomatic mission," the Cormyrian noble lied. "Nothing
important. Just trade agreements. That sort of thing."
The warrior woman swung herself into the saddle. "You want your
gear?" she asked.
"No!" Giogi answered. "I mean, no thanks. If you're heading
to Westgate, maybe you could ... uh ... drop off my things. At The Jolly
Warrior. Just let me get. . ." He summoned all his courage to approach,
then fumbled in a saddlebag. Pulling out a large, official-looking document bearing
the purple dragon of Cormyr, he stepped back. "There," he said.
"All yours."
Alias looked down at him. He wasn't really dressed for hiking. "You
know," she said with a smile, trying to show no ill will, "two can
ride as well on a horse as one."
Giogi gulped. "No. I mean ... that is, you said you were in a hurry,
and I need the exercise, anyway."
"As you wish." She couldn't blame him. "I'll drop your gear
at The Jolly Warrior. I'll even make sure I don't stay there. Oh, and Giogi,
thanks. I'll make it up to you when I get the chance." With that, she
wheeled the horse around and set it trotting toward the road.
Giogi frowned after her. He'd come here at Azoun's request for the express
purpose of finding her, but he'd panicked when actually confronted with her
presence. Now I'll probably never see her again, he thought. Or poor Daisyeye.
He sighed and cursed his bad luck. Giogi began walking, head down, kicking
stones, and talking to himself.
"Yes, I'll let you ride with me, provided you behave. If you don't, I
shall be very cross. That's what I should have said."
He kicked a particularly large rock, which glittered as it danced away.
Curious, he chased after it. When it had stopped rolling, he lifted the great
yellow gem out of the high grass and marveled at it. Maybe his luck was
changing, he thought.
26
Reunion at The Rising Raven
Alias reached Westgate well ahead of her friends and, of course, Giogi, only
to find the city sealed. Persons without residence or official business within
were turned away from the gates by squads of guards, backed by crossbowmen on
the walls. She did manage to convince a guard to take Daiseyeye to The Jolly
Warrior and board her for, as she explained it, "a warrior who will arrive
from Cormyr on official business." She trusted the purple-sealed document
would get the young Wyvernspur past the guards.
As she stood by the gate, Alias could see smoke rising from the northwestern
section of the city. Other travelers told her that a dragon had crashed within
the city, smashing into a portion of the city wall, damaging some buildings in
the slums just outside the city and several of the Dhostar warehouses within.
The Dhostars, one of the powerful merchant families that ruled the city,
convinced the others to slam a seal down on the city's gates until the matter
was cleaned up.
Alias considered circling around to survey the damage from the outside, but
she was feeling worn from fighting and riding and dragging around the chain
attached to her arm. Besides, the inns outside the city wall would soon be
filling up with other travelers banned from the city. She decided she'd better
get a place to stay.
She remembered an old inn near the south gate: The Rising Raven. Perhaps she
could hock her eagle barrette as an artifact in order to pay for a room and a
bath. Used in battle against a god, she thought, holding the slightly melted
piece of silver up to the sun.
Her cheer faded some since she had no one with whom she could share her
joke. Even if Moander had lied and her friends were still alive, they were
still up north, hundreds of miles away—she would not see them for a long time,
if ever again. Already she missed them and felt lonely.
She was rounding the merchant yards of the Guldar family, when a familiar
but very hoarse voice bellowed her name. She turned and peered down the road
behind her. Three mud-spattered, bedraggled figures were waving their arms to
attract her attention.
"Akabar!" she shouted. The weariness dropped from her and she ran
to them, hugging first the mage, then the lizard, and finally even the
halfling. Olive bridled some, drawing back, more concerned with brushing
hardened mud from the front of her outfit.
"You're alive!" Alias blurted, beaming at them Olive looked as
though she'd been swimming in a swamp, Akabar was dressed in a ragged kilt, and
Dragonbait leaned heavily on his sword.
"You noticed," Olive grumbled. "We just chased you from one
side of the Realms to the other. Now we can't even get in the gates. Damned
forces of law and order."
"It's all right," Alias assured her. "I know a place outside
the city walls. They . . ." She almost said, "They know me
there," but she realized that they, like Jhaele of Shadowdale, would
remember nothing about her. "They have good food," she finished.
"I don't care about eating," Olive retorted. "I just want to
get clean. I feel like I've been swimming in a sewer."
Alias looked up at Akabar, wanting to apologize again for all the horror
he'd gone through because of her.
As if reading her thoughts, the mage said, "We can talk when we get
where we're going."
The swordswoman nodded. "Here, Dragonbait, give your sword a break and
lean on me for a while," she insisted, slipping herself beneath one of the
lizard's scaly arms and taking his sword in her other hand.
Akabar expected the proud saurial to refuse her help, but he accepted
Alias's close proximity and fussing like a cheerful child. Is it only the
identical markings that bond them together? Akabar wondered. Or something more?
Alias did not recognize the innkeeper from her previously
"remembered" stays at The Rising Raven. The inn was packed with
traders and adventurers. Even if it hadn't been so crowded, the innkeeper
needed only one look at the ragtag crew before he began shaking his head vigorously,
denying the existence of any vacancies.
Olive was the one who came to the rescue. Following the man across the
tavern room, she whispered something to him that Alias and Akabar could not
catch. Then she slipped him a coin. The innkeeper's hospitality brightened. He
led them from the inn, past the stable, to a warehouse with a small apartment
within. The quarters were cramped but clean, and the innkeeper promised to send
them hot water as soon as possible. Then he left them.
Dragonbait began to lay a fire in the stove, and Olive sat down in a corner,
resting her head on her knees, exhausted. Alias examined Akabar's shoulder and
grimaced.
"You've dislocated it, all right. How'd you do it?"
"Ran into an old friend," Akabar joked and tried to shrug. He
winced at the pain.
"I wonder what Olive said to the innkeep when she bribed him,"
Alias said softly.
"I wonder," Akabar replied in an equally soft voice, "where
she got the platinum coin she bribed him with."
Olive moved over to the whisperers. "You want to wear that to bed
tonight?" she asked Alias, nodding to the shackle about her arm. "Or
do you want me to pick the lock?"
While Olive was working on the iron bracelet, two footboys arrived at their
doorstep, one bearing a large copper tub, the other an ornate screen. They set
these down, scurried out, and then returned with a pair of buckets and an
oversized kettle. After setting the kettle on the stove and the buckets on the
floor, they pointed out the location of the well, should the adventurers desire
more water.
Olive declared the honor of the first bath and began setting up the screen
to block the tub from view. "I'm sure I won't be able to reach into that
well," she said to Alias. "Would you mind?"
"As soon as you get me out of this chain," the swordswoman
insisted.
"Oh, bother," the halfling grumbled. She banged the manacle once
with the end of the chain, and it sprang open.
"You have a really light touch," Alias teased. She grabbed the two
pails and set out for the water. Akabar followed.
"You won't be much good for hauling with a bad arm," the
swordswoman said as she poured water from the well bucket into one of the pails
she had brought.
"I am good for other things," said Akabar, unsmiling. "I am a
spell-caster as well as a merchant."
"We'll have to get a healer for that shoulder," she continued, not
understanding that she'd offended him.
"We've developed our own methods in your absence," Akabar added,
leaving Alias completely confused. His coolness hurt her. She realized that
even though she'd come to terms with not being human, accepted it, and was now
prepared to go on living, Akabar might not feel the same way about her. And if
her friends didn't accept her, who would?
An awkward silence fell between them.
Finally, Akabar overcame his pride—his usefulness was no longer at issue,
and they had more important things to discuss. "Alias, what Moander said,
what it made me tell you, what it made me do, the way it used me—I think I
understand how you must feel."
Alias finished filling the second pail and set it down beside the first. She
shook her auburn hair and stared at the ground. "It told me you were all
dead," she said, swallowing back the memory of the grief and horror that
had accompanied that moment. "It was lying then. It could have been lying
before."
Akabar was silent.
"What is it?" Alias asked. "Tell me," she demanded.
"I was in its mind, as well," the mage explained. "As far as
it knew, it was telling the truth."
"I see." She looked down into the well. Her reflection in the
water mocked her. Golem, homonculus, made-thing, that's how the mage saw her
now.
"It changes nothing, though," the Turmishman said. "You are
my friend, and I mean to help you, no matter how many gates we must pass
through."
Alias stretched out a hand and laid it on his good right shoulder, prepared
to tell him he must leave, that she would not have him facing any more danger
on her behalf, for the very same reason: he was her friend.
Before she could open her mouth, though, Olive, wrapped in a towel, called
out from the doorway, "Are you getting water or what out there? I'm
getting chilled, and the kettle's already boiling."
Alias grabbed both bucket straps and duck-walked the full buckets back to
their apartment. Akabar followed, cradling his bad arm and quietly cursing the
small, dirty halfling. She had been a nuisance since the day they'd met.
Once the bard was settled in her bath, soaking, and half-humming,
half-singing some obscene ditty to herself in the tub, Alias turned her
attention to Dragonbait's wounds.
The sigil of Moander had faded from the lizard's tattoo just as it had from
hers. Her glee at discovering this was soon squelched by the sight of his
wounds. There was a bloody half-healed gash on his hip, and he flinched when
she touched an ugly greenish bruise on his side, indicating a possible broken
rib. She offered him some warm compresses for the pain.
"We're going to have to get a cleric," she said again. "I
wonder if one will be available after the dragon's crash. Every time I turn
around, Mist's victims seem to be sucking up all the available healers. This'll
be the last time, though. How did you ever come to team up with her?"
Akabar sat down beside Dragonbait and gave him a gentle nudge with his good
arm. "Do you want to tell her, or should I?" Dragonbait made an
amused snorting sound.
"Listen closely. Mist followed us from Cormyr. She ambushed Ruskettle
while we were in Yulash, but Dragonbait subdued the dragon and convinced her to
work alongside them to rescue us. They rescued me first only because Moander
thought me more expendable. The god opened some type of magical gate from the
Elven Wood to here, and we followed the creature through it with the help of
your finder's stone. I think we lost that, didn't we?"
Dragonbait nodded and looked down at the ground, apparently ashamed at
having mislaid Alias's property.
"Then Mist shook us loose; whether intentionally or not I could not
tell. She died fighting the old god."
Alias held up a hand. "You said Dragonbait subdued Mist and convinced
her to help. You mean Olive . . ."
"Not the halfling. Dragonbait. He can talk, but not in ways that we can
understand. He uses—"
"Smells," Alias guessed, remembering the heavy odor of violets she
had detected in Meander's temple in Yulash.
Akabar nodded. "Mist understood him. And he has no trouble
understanding us. You know from Moander, of course, that his people are called
saurials."
"Yes," Alias said, remembering. "It also said something about
him being a pure soul—he was intended as a sacrifice to enslave me
somehow."
"He's more than that," Akabar explained. "He's a paladin in
his own world, much like the ones you have up north. He can heal in the same
fashion. So you see, we need only wait a few days and he can make both of us
good as new."
Alias looked into the lizard's yellow eyes. "You healed me when I came
out of Mist's cave with my chain mail fused?"
Dragonbait nodded without expression.
"And when I hurt my arm smashing the crystal elemental with your
sword?"
Again the saurial nodded.
"You sneaky devil," Alias said with a grin.
My feelings precisely, Olive thought behind the screen, but she did not give
away her eavesdropping.
Alias, however, meant the words as a compliment. Dragonbait hung his head,
though, ashamed of his deception.
"You had no idea, did you?" Akabar asked.
"No."
"You don't seem very surprised."
Alias shrugged. "I have evil assassins, evil mages, evil gods, and evil
who-knows-what-all chasing me. Why shouldn't I have a guardian paladin?"
Then it occurred to her why not. So far, Meander's words were a secret
between her and Akabar. She did not think Dragonbait knew. Akabar would not
give her away, but it would not be right to keep Dragonbait with her, risking
his life for her. She was just a thing. She was fully intent on sending her
companions away, out of danger, and now she had the means of driving the
faithful lizard from her side.
The idea of losing Dragonbait's tender concern left an ache in her heart,
and the thought of losing his protection left her more than a little afraid.
Don't be stupid, she tried to convince herself. You've taken care of yourself
all of your life. You can do it.
Then she remembered that that just wasn't true. She'd only been born last
month, and all that time she'd had the lizard as a nanny. How could he not
know? But if he knew, why did he stay? No doubt he'd been fooled like Akabar
into having pity for her.
I'll have to leave them, and I'll have to leave without telling them, she
thought. She ran her hand down the smooth, pebbly scales of Dragonbait's arm.
Aloud, she said, "I just want you to know how much I appreciate you.
Everything you've done." She could not resist—she hugged the lizard again
and then turned and hugged Akabar. "Both of you."
"Well," Olive said, stepping out from behind the screen.
"Nice to know you're safe and appreciated, isn't it?" The bard was
dressed in a pink robe, with scarlet pants beneath. Her yarting was strung
across her back, and a pouch hung on her belt. The expression on her face was a
mixture of jealousy and disapproval.
"I appreciate your friendship, too, Olive," Alias assured her as
she walked toward the screen. She knelt before the halfling and reached out to
hug her as well.
The bard stepped backward, almost toppling the iron tools stacked by the
stove. "Please, don't," she snarled, holding up a hand. "You're
filthy dirty, and this is my last clean outfit. And halflings don't hug.
Hugging is a problem when you're the size of most human children. So no
hugs."
"I'm sorry, Olive," Alias whispered.
Ruskettle glared at her for a moment, then announced, "I'm going to try
to get into town. Get some gear for us, see what rumors I can pick up about
Meander's people and all your other 'pals' down here."
Akabar broke in, "I've been to Westgate before. I think I might have
better luck getting past the gate guards."
"You're decked out in borrowed halfling gear," countered
Ruskettle. "They won't take you seriously. I'll get something suitable for
you to wear. And, no," she waved aside Alias and Dragonbait, "I work
better alone. Especially considering you two are probably wanted by someone or
something in Westgate." She strode to the door and then turned back,
looking at Akabar.
"One more thing. If I can get a healer to come out here, I will.
There's no sense in you living with the pain until he gets enough beauty sleep
to fix you up."
She left the room, slamming the door behind her.
"Was it something I said?" Alias asked Akabar. "What's gotten
into her?"
Akabar remembered how annoyed Ruskettle had been by the saurial's deception.
Apparently, it would take the halfling longer to overcome her anxiety.
Dragonbait hissed at the closed door, and the scent of freshly baked bread
wafted from his body.
*****
Ruskettle strode east from The Rising Raven, her short legs still
complaining about the earlier long walk to the city. If the dragon had crashed
to the north and west, then the guards would be at their weakest at the south
and east. The river gate would be her best bet.
The halfling's ears burned, and she was positive that her
"friends" were talking about her in the warmth of their warehouse
apartment. She had been the one to provide their shelter, yet everyone still
fawned over Alias, fought for Alias, and chased through the nine hells for
Alias, while she, Olive, had been abandoned with a dragon. And for what? It
wasn't like they got any money for what they did.
And to top it off, Alias was so bloody perfect. Like a doll. You wound her
up and she rescued people or slew monsters or sang perfectly beautiful songs.
And her luck was incredible. Not even a halfling had that kind of luck. She'd
been kidnapped by a god— a god, for god's sake!—and she'd escaped, and Akabar
and Dragonbait and the dragon had slain the god for her.
The lizard-paladin was another problem completely. The halfling's thoughts
wandered back a number of years to an ugly incident in the Living City. She'd
been at a bar when some holy fighter, a human paladin, rose unsteadily to his
feet, pointed a worn knuckle at her, and shouted, "Thief!" No one
doubted him; no one believed her. The fact that she had another's purse in her
hands did not help her situation, but she had managed to escape. Since then, she
walked carefully around such beings, beings who could look into a person's soul
and tell if he was good or evil. That scared Ruskettle. It wasn't fair. And now
it turned out that one of these snooty law-and-order types was a member of
their party. She felt the saurial's eyes on her all the time, judging her and
weighing her worth.
Olive ground her teeth. Now she was going shopping for the warrior-woman,
her pet paladin, and the mage. Even Akabar had a tendency to treat her like a
child or a thief. He was the hero of Alias's rescue, his spells made the
difference, while it had been the lizard's skill in battle that had recruited
Mist in the first place. But she, Olive, had been useless. And Akabar would
have left her on Mist's back, left her to die, when he flew off to rescue the
paladin.
Part of her mind refused this interpretation, knowing full well that
everyone had good reasons for doing what they did. But the small part of her
mind was easily ignored. What difference does it make? she thought. Sooner or
later, Phalse's friends were going to show up and take Alias away.
"I could use a drink," she muttered. "Better yet, several
drinks."
She was just passing the Vhammos yards, its paddocks jammed with horses and
caravan oxen, when suddenly someone addressed her. "Hello, Lady
Olive."
Ruskettle was startled. Perched on a fence post was a short, familiar
figure. He was dressed in sunburst yellow taffeta, fashioned into the costume
of a Vilhon Reach merchant. His smile stretched nearly ear to ear in an inhuman
mockery of the humanoid form.
"Phalse!" Olive wondered if the pseudo-halfling could read minds.
"A Fortune. Well met."
"A fortune and well met to you, dear lady. You've surprised me. I did
not know you were bound for Westgate. May I accompany you into the city?"
Ruskettle nodded, and Phalse hopped down from his perch. He paced the
halfling as she walked. "The river gate?" he asked.
"However did you know?" Olive grinned pleasantly.
"Thinking like a halfling, my lady," he answered. "I must
repeat, I am astonished to see you here so soon. Were you involved with the sky
display earlier?" He waved an arm toward the seven mounds south of the
city.
Olive's eyes narrowed. "Maybe," she replied coyly, but she
wondered how he could possibly know that.
"Maybe—that's a straight answer from a halfling. I take it the human
woman is with vou?"
Ruskettle shrugged her shoulders. "Maybe" She had the
uncomfortable feeling that her time with Alias was going to end much sooner
than she'd expected.
Phalse smiled. "I see. Will 'maybe' be the answer to my inquiries about
your other traveling companions, the mage and the lizard?"
"Maybe." She wondered what the pseudo-halfling's interest was in
Akabar and Dragonbait.
"I think you and I should have a drink," he said. "Several
drinks."
The small couple approached the gates, where a squad of soldiers was posted,
checking credentials. Phalse took Ruskettle's arm gently, and they strolled
through gates, into the city, completely unchallenged.
"I'm impressed," the bard said, jerking her head back at the gate
guard. "What's your secret?"
Phalse winked one of his peculiar blue eyes. "Clean living. Let's find
a nice, quiet bar with private booths and low ceilings. I have a deal that I am
certain will interest you."
"As long as you're buying, I'm all ears." Olive moved a little
closer to Phalse, and he tightened his grip on her arms.
*****
"Well?" Alias said, pursing her lips.
"Gone," Akabar replied. He'd been peering at the swords-woman's
arm and the saurial's chest with a tiny magnifying glass. "The surrounding
pattern hasn't just covered up its sigil, the sigil has disappeared
completely."
"Do you think the sigil might return if Moander gets another body in
the Realms?"
"I'm afraid that's a possibility," the mage sighed.
They were all cleaned up now, wrapped in towels and blankets while their
clothes dried in the late afternoon sunshine. Dragonbait had played nurse,
helping Akabar with his bath, a service that had made the Turmishman mildly
uncomfortable, but which he had accepted gratefully since his only alternative
was Alias's help. In the meantime, Alias had fashioned him a cushioned sling to
cradle his arm until Dragonbait could repair it properly.
Akabar leaned back on the room's lower bunk. "So where does this
development lead us?"
"Into more hot water. We're just outside the city where Cassana and the
Fire Knives are supposed to reside. I have a hunch that our mystery bull's eye
sigil owner resides here as well. And now that we've exploded a very large calling
card over their city, odds are they know we're in the area."
"Maybe they'll reconsider their actions and leave us alone. We
destroyed one of their partners already—the god."
Alias shook her head. "No. They'll just become more ruthless, Akabar, I
want you to go home to Turmish—take Olive and Dragonbait with you. Being near
me is too dangerous."
Akabar asked, "What good do you think you can accomplish alone?"
"Find these people," said Alias, "Talk to them. They need
Dragonbait to put their plans into motion, so they won't be able to control me
as long as he's safely hidden somewhere."
"They could always just brand another victim to sacrifice."
Alias shook her head again. "I don't think that would work. Remember,
Moander said I drew my independence from Dragonbait, that we're linked until
his death. They won't kill me; they've even taken precautions to see that I'm
not injured. But all the rest of you are targets."
Akabar harumphed. "They haven't shown a tendency to talk before. Bully,
threaten, and battle, yes, but never talk. They won't negotiate with you. As
far as they're concerned, you're no better than a horse, to be owned and ridden
and slain as need be. If they already have you in their sights, it will be that
much easier for them to accomplish their ends. All they'll have to do is search
out Dragonbait. Running and hiding won't do us any good."
"Maybe not, but if you stay here you're at risk. Please, Akabar,"
Alias pleaded. "I don't want to see you killed."
"There are worse fates. You and I both know that."
Dragonbait knocked on the side of the bed, summoning their attention. Using
a charred stick, he drew on the flagstones the four sigils he and Alias both
wore and also the unholy symbol of Moander.
"Yes?" Alias prompted.
Dragonbait pointed to Alias and himself and then scuffed out the flaming
dagger—the mark of the Fire Knives.
"Yes, we beat the assassins," Alias agreed. "They weren't
very tough, were they?"
He pointed to Alias and himself and Akabar and then scuffed out the sigil that
might or might not still belong to Zrie Prakis, the sigil of interlocking
circles. Then he pointed again to himself and Alias, drew an inverted tear drop
with a mouth and scuffed it out along with the insect-squiggle of Cassana's
mark.
"We beat the crystal elemental and the kalmari. The kalmari belonged to
Cassana?" the mage asked.
Alias nodded. "She told me in a dream. You dreamed the same thing,
didn't you?" she asked the saurial.
Dragonbait nodded. He pointed to Akabar and rubbed out the unholy symbol of
Moander like he was squishing a bug. Alias noted that the paladin gave all the
credit for the god's death to the mage. Then he pointed at the three of them
and splashed water from the kettle onto the flagstone.
Akabar laughed. "He's right, you know. Between the four of us we've
defeated everything your would-be masters have thrown at us. If we remain
together, we can defeat the lot of them."
"Only if you continue to cooperate," a sharp female voice said
from the doorway, "and if we do not. But your little demonstration this
afternoon persuaded us to unite."
Alias, Akabar, and Dragonbait leaped to their feet, their eyes fixed on four
people who had entered their cottage apartment. Three men, dressed in black
leather, and the woman from Alias's dream in Shadow Gap.
"Cassana," Alias breathed.
The woman lowered her hood. Her chin was sharper, her features older, her
hair longer and better tended, but her features were Alias's. She might have
been her mother. "Yes, Cassana. I've come to take you home, Puppet."
Favoring his good leg, Dragonbait sprang for the upper bunk bed for his
sword, and Akabar began chanting a spell. Alias grabbed a poker from the stove
tools.
Cassana laughed.
Akabar's spell was disrupted as the floorboards beneath him erupted and
skeletal hands grabbed him from the hole and pulled him through the floor. He
disappeared with a scream.
A trio of daggers arched from the black-clad assassins, embedding themselves
unerringly in Dragonbait's hide. The weapons could not have caused much
damage—they were small and had struck only his shoulder, his arm, and his
tail—yet the saurial dropped like a sack of laundry. Poison blades! the swordswoman
realized.
With a cry of anguish, Alias charged the Fire Knives. She cracked one
assassin in the head with the handle of the poker, then rammed the tip into the
throat of a second. Snatching the sword from the scabbard of the third one, she
turned it on him instantly. He fell over the bodies of his brothers, staining
them with his blood.
Only Cassana stood between Alias and the doorway. She muttered no spell, nor
did she look alarmed. Alias hesitated uncertainly. Cassana applauded the
swordswoman's performance briefly.
"Very good. Puppet. Welcome home," the sorceress said, slipping a
slender, blue wand from her sleeve into her hand. "Now sleep."
Alias lunged at her foe. Cassana, the puppeteer, waved the wand, and Alias
collapsed at her feet.
27
Alias's Masters
When Alias awoke, her head felt as though molten lead had been poured behind
her eyes and her mouth was as dry as the sands of Anauroch. She blinked in the
dim candlelight that illuminated her room, a room in an inn like a hundred
others at this end of the Sea of Fallen Stars.
A moment of panic seized her. Was she being forced by the gods to relive all
her mistakes as some sort of punishment? No. This was not The Hidden Lady, nor
any other place she'd ever been.
She found herself placed on a bed with her arms folded like the dead. She
was not alone. Dragonbait had been unceremoniously dumped at the foot of the
bed and was sprawled out on his stomach. Akabar had been propped up in an
overstuffed chair across from the bed, his hands manacled by thick bands of
cold iron to contain his magical ability. She and the mage were still wrapped
in blankets, but Dragonbait was naked, like an animal.
Alias slid to the floor and knelt beside the saurial. He was still
breathing. She sighed with relief, and tears welled in her eyes. The poison on
the assassins' blades hadn't been deadly. Horrid red and violet bruises
speckled the green scales along his legs and torso. Why had they been so
vicious with him? she cried inwardly. She tugged the coverlet off the bed and
draped it over him, then shook his shoulder gently. He did not stir.
They'd been much kinder to Akabar. His shoulder had been snapped back into
place, though it still looked bruised and tender. A soft touch brought him
fully awake. He took in her concerned features, Dragonbait's body, the room
around him, all with a quick glance.
"What happened?"
"We lost," she replied. "They swept us up like dirt in no
time at all."
The mage frowned. He tried to stand up, but something had drained away all his
energy. He flopped back into the chair, clanking his chains. Pain radiated from
his shoulder. He sucked in air, trying not to cry out.
"It looks like we'll be with you through the bitter end whether you
want us or not."
The despair in his voice twisted Alias's heart. Stubbornly she tried to
renew his hope. "We're not all captured yet," she pointed out, pacing
the room. "Olive is still at large. We've gotten out of worse."
Alias tried the door. The knob did not turn, and an experimental slam with
her shoulder indicated that it was barred on the far side, as well as locked.
The window was not constructed to be opened and, being made of crown glass set
in a lead frame, could not be smashed out. The circles of glass would have let
in light, but it was dark outside. The prisoners had no clues as to their
whereabouts.
Alias bit her lip and stood in the center of the room, wracking her brain
for some way out. There was no chimney, the walls were brick, the floor and
ceiling solid oak.
Akabar rose shakily from the chair and staggered over to Dragonbait. He
tried to wake him first with gentle shakes and then, in frustration, with more
violent ones. Akabar looked at Alias and shook his head.
"Okay, masters," Alias said. "It's your move."
Her words received an immediate reaction. A portion of the wall near the
door became misty, then translucent, and finally transparent. Alias reached out
and touched it. It was firm and cool, like glass in the autumn. Taking a
gamble, she slammed into the clearing wall with her shoulder, hoping to break
through. The wall may have looked like glass, but it still felt like bricks.
Alias rubbed her aching shoulder.
Cruel laughter came from beyond the wall, and Alias caught sight of Cassana
seated on a raised throne on the other side of the transparent barrier. It
distressed Alias that the witch's features were so similar to her own. Will I
look like that, sound like that, be like that, in a few years' time? the
swordswoman wondered. She tore her thoughts away and concentrated on the two
other figures beyond the wall.
A male halfling in a flashy yellow taffeta costume sat at Cassana's feet,
playing with a wicked-looking knife. There was something bizarre about his
eyes—they had no whites around the irises, yet the pupils looked white. The
halfling smiled far too broadly, reminding Alias of the kalmari.
A skeletal figure in a brown cloak stood beside the throne, leaning on a
twisted staff. His face was hidden beneath the hood of his cloak.
"Hello, Puppet," Cassana greeted her. She was dressed in a rich,
flowing gown, worn off one shoulder. The white cloth glittered in the
candlelight like woven diamonds. A band of matching material circled her brow,
holding her auburn hair in place. She turned the slim, blue wand over and over
in her hands.
Alias's spine stiffened at the sorceress's address. The voice was so
familiar, but not because it was her own. Alias recognized the harsh, bitter
tones. She had listened to the voice before, and she had hated it then as she
did now.
An old, lost memory surfaced. She was rising out of a pool of silver
streaked with crimson. Cassana stood over her with that wand, laughing in low,
rich tones—the laughter of a vain woman, delighted to see herself replicated.
Alias bared her teeth in a tight smile. "Hello, Cassana. Or should I
call you Mother?"
Akabar now stood beside the swordswoman, his jaw slack, amazed at the
resemblance Alias bore to the sorceress.
Cassana gave a guttural laugh and shattered her illusion of being an older
Alias. Such a laugh could never come from Alias. It was a cruel, heartless
laugh, and Alias was neither of those things.
Akabar pointed at the tall form beside the throne. "That's the one who
grabbed me."
Cassana motioned lazily, and the skeletal figure reached up with age-rotted
hands and flipped back the hood of its cloak. Beneath lay a skull covered with
translucent, jaundiced flesh stretched like a drum head. Its features consisted
of a rictus-grin, a deteriorating nose, and ebony eye sockets in which sharp
points of light danced.
"Yesss," the undead creature hissed. "I reached up and snared
you tight, stopping your blood and freezing your muscles." The creature
flexed a skeletal hand, each finger bone sharp as a knife. "Yet you live,
petty wizard. But only because the Lady Cassana craves unblemished fruit on
occasion." The undead creature laughed, too—a hoarse. wheezing laugh
disturbingly familiar to Akabar. Try as he could, however, the Turmishman could
not place it.
Alias did, though. She remembered the laugh in concert with Cassana's. for
this thing had also been present when Alias had been "born." It had
laughed at the swordswoman's nakedness and helplessness—the same laugh that had
emanated from the maw of the crystal elemental summoned by the undead thing.
"Zrie Prakis," Alias whispered.
"Yes. I believe introductions are called for," Cassana said, her
tone as proper as a society matron's. "1 am Cassana. This male child is
called Phalse." The halfling looked up, and his too-wide smile grew even
wider. "And this, as you have guessed, is Zrie Prakis, formerly a mage,
now a lich. You've already heard, so I understand, of the grand passion he and
I shared that nearly ended in a fiery blaze. But I never let go of things that
are mine." She grasped the blue wand tightly to emphasize her point.
"Gentlemen," she addressed Phalse and Zrie Prakis, "you
already know our dear Puppet and the thing on the floor. The handsome
mage," and with that description her eyes seized on the Turmishman like
the talons of a hawk about a hare, "is Akabar Bel Akash, powerful in both
magic and cooking. Your peppered lamb is notorious even here, Akabar."
Akabar furrowed his brow in puzzlement.
For a third time Cassana laughed. "Come now, mageling, she mocked.
"Surely you did not expect us all to be as out-of-date and foolish as the
moldy old god you so amusingly destroyed? We have followed your journey, at
first in bits and pieces, but more steadily since Shadowdale.
"We decided to let you continue on to Yulash and free Moander. Once the
Abomination was loosed, it was only a matter of time before the old fool met
its fate—humankind has grown much in power since that garbage pile last reigned
here. The sooner we got it out of the way, the better. And with its demise we
need no longer worry about the bizarre schemes its followers had for you,
Puppet."
Alias wondered if Cassana had any inkling that Moander had planned the same
double-cross for her.
"Once Moander dropped you off in our back yard, it was child's play to
track you down and pick you up."
"You can track me," Alias said in a flat, emotionless tone.
"Well, to be honest, no. We were too clever by half. You see, your very
being is impregnated with a powerful spell of misdirection. You cannot be
detected by scrying, nor can anyone who travels with you. Since we did not
expect you to slip from our grasp, we never thought the misdirection spell
would pose any problem for us. A serious miscalculation on our part. One of
many, I'm afraid. But you can't create art without a few mistakes. The best we
can do is correct them in the future.
"Fortunately for us you were intelligent enough to wonder about your
brands. Whenever magic is detected on your arm it acts as a beacon to locate
you. We relied on our black-leathered allies to capture you in Suzail. Their
failure was almost our undoing. But by some stroke of luck you stumbled upon an
old haunt of Zrie's and revealed yourself to us again by displaying the magic
content of your brand. But, alas, you were also more than a match for the
heavyhanded methods of my love here."
At this, Zrie Prakis bowed deeply, and Alias could hear the skin stretching
and popping over his bones.
"And then, even more luckily, my kalmari spotted you coming through
Shadow Gap. It could be no coincidence that you continually alerted us of your
whereabouts. I knew you wished to come home to us, Puppet. So we made it easier
to keep an eye on you. We contacted one of your followers and planted a
tracking device on her. And, as I said before, once you came to Westgate,
finding you and defeating you was easy. A halfling's trick."
Alias felt as though the chilling fist of a frost giant had closed about her
heart. "No," she whispered.
Phalse motioned to a hidden figure, who edged cautiously into view. She was
decked out with the finest robes, glittering imitations of those worn by
Cassana. She looked like a little princess, a child-bride from the east. She
smiled sheepishly at Akabar and Alias.
Olive Ruskettle.
"Hullo, everyone," Olive said, nervous sweat beading beneath her
headband. "If I'd known you were in trouble—"
"Hush, child," Cassana interrupted. "You jumped at the
opportunity to help us, as any good halfling would." Cassana smiled at the
prisoners. "Gold coins weigh more than friendships. Now, mageling, I'll
give you the same chance that we gave the child here. You've been misled by the
false charm of this puppet. Forsake the slave and join its masters. I'm sure we
can find a use for you." Prakis put a possessive skeletal hand on
Cassana's bare shoulder, and the sorceress squeezed it affectionately to underscore
her point.
The fury building in Akabar's gut spilled out. "I'd rather roast in the
lowest hell—"
Cassana, with an angry frown, muttered something and motioned with her wand.
Alias backhanded Akabar in the jaw. Backhanded him hard with all her warrior's
strength.
The mage toppled backward, staring at the swords-woman. Her legs were rigid;
her fists clenched and unclenched in sharp, fast spasms. The remaining runes on
her arm writhed and glowed. Cassana's insect-squiggle shone the brightest of
all.
"Alias?" Akabar gasped as he rose to his feet.
"One chance is all you get," Cassana said, "for now. Hit him
until he is unconscious, Puppet." She motioned with the wand again.
Alias spun in place like a sentry and caught Akabar in the belly with her
foot. The air rushed from his lungs, and he collapsed. He tried to rise again,
but the woman warrior brought both fists down on the back of his neck, knocking
him from his knees so he sprawled out on the floor. The mage rolled on his
back, trying to ward off the rain of blows and kicks with his chains.
He froze when he caught sight of Alias's face. Her eyes burned with a wild
anger, and tears ran freely down her cheeks.
Gods! Akabar thought; Cassana is doing to her what Moander did to me. She
has no control of her actions, and she is even more aware of the evil she does
than I was. Pity for the swordswoman overwhelmed him, and he dropped his guard
completely.
A kick to his jaw plunged him into a spiraling blackness.
Cassana laughed as her puppet stood poised over the helpless body of the
Turmishman. "Look, Zrie," the sorceress said, "she's crying. I
bet I know who taught her that trick." With a second wave of the wand, the
sorceress returned Alias to unconsciousness. The swordswoman collapsed on top
of Akabar.
With a lazy wave of her free hand, Cassana signaled the lich. Zrie Prakis
let his spell elapse, and the transparent wall turned back into stone and
mortar.
Cassana applauded her little play. Olive sat in shock. Every hair on the
back of her neck, no, every hair on her body, had stiffened as she watched the
beating. The sorceress slid out of her throne and, beckoning the lich, headed
down the hallway. Phalse and Ruskettle fell in behind them, but dropped back to
confer in private.
"Did she have to . . ." Olive let the question dangle.
"She's a human," Phalse replied. "Humans tend to be cruel, as
we both know." He paused for several paces, then added, "You know she
did that for your benefit, as well as his."
"Oh?" The bard was certain that beating up mages had never been on
her list of entertaining events.
"Sure. She wanted to point out how lucky you are to be joining our
little family. Eventually, the mage will get the same message."
"And if he doesn't?"
"Sorceress Cassana is loath to use magic to get her way with a
man," Phalse explained. "But she will use it rather than damage this
Akash fellow beyond repair. I think she likes him."
Olive shuddered inwardly at the thought of what Cassana might have done to
Akabar if she hated him.
"She could have made the One kill Akash," Phalse pointed out, as
if reading the halfling's mind. "But she didn't."
Olive felt the return of the nervous sweat beneath her headband. She forced
the idea of money, lots of it, to the forward part of her mind. "You all
have different names for ... for her.''
"The One? Yes, I suppose we do. Another mistake to be corrected.
Cassana calls her Puppet. Moander's priest called her The Servant. The Fire
Knives called her Weapon. The lich calls her Little One, as if he were her
grandfather or something."
"Who called her Alias?"
"Not important," Phalse replied sharply. "Come, there's much
to done."
They were in a simple, two-story merchant's house just inside the city wall.
The cellar led to underground passages that delved under the wall and surfaced
in an abandoned ruin beyond. Upstairs and down were long hallways with rooms
jutting off them. The prisoners were being held in one of the upstairs rooms.
Nearing the top of the steps leading down to the first floor, Phalse and
Olive heard Cassana's voice below. She spoke in Thieves' Cant, which Olive had
no trouble translating.
"Grandfather, has the task been carried out?"
"All are cared for, milady," replied a thick, guttural voice.
"And you will take their place?"
"Aye."
"Morning, then, we'll complete the pact."
The sound of Cassana's gown swished off in one direction, while the cat-foot
patter of the one called "Grandfather' faded away in another. Olive
wondered where Prakis had got to. The undead magic-user could move more
silently than the most graceful halfling.
Phalse flashed Olive an impish grin. "You understand the Argot?"
He took the halfling's shrug as an admission of ignorance and explained,
"He was the leader of the Fire Knives, reporting the death of Moander's
surviving followers—all the ones that did not hurl themselves from tall places
at the death of their god. The Fire Knives will take the place of Moander's
minions at dawn when we seal the pact."
"When you make that final correction to the human woman," Olive
said.
"And when you receive final payment," Phalse added.
Yes, the halfling thought to herself. Try to keep your mind on the money,
Olive-girl.
*****
In Olive Ruskettle's estimation, the midnight dinner she was presently
sitting through was one of the most frightening events in her life. For sheer
terror, Olive thought, it rated somewhat above being discovered and accused by
that pig paladin in the Living City, but just below being swept off a wagontop
by Mist's dewclaw.
The dining room, a solemn, musty hall, was dominated by a huge oak table.
The windows were covered with heavy, black velvet drapes. Hundreds of candles
burned in candelabras, but the room was still dim.
Cassana, draped in scarlet satin that seemed to flame with brilliance,
dominated one end of the table. Rubies dripped from the sorceress's throat,
ears, and fingers. Prakis sat unmoving at the far end of the long table. He was
dressed in yellow robes of equal finery. Before him had been placed the mounted
bones of a goose, a haunting joke about his undead status.
Olive was seated midway down the table at Phalse's side. The halfling bard
kept a firm grip on her mind, trying to channel her thoughts away from abstract
ideas like cruelty, sadism, and perversion, and tried to focus on real objects,
like the food laid out before her.
In the food department Phalse put even the most gluttonous of Ruskettle's
race to shame. He wolfed down vast quantities of dark-roasted venison ringed
with stuffed mushrooms and the pickled vegetables carved into the shapes of
skulls. He also downed mug after mug of mead, motioning for refills by swaying
his goblet. Table was waited by silent men and women in dark tabards. Fire
Knives, was Olive's guess. Apprentice murderers.
Though Olive was quite hungry and the repast was delicious, the food sat
like a brick in her stomach. As out of place as the bard had felt among her
former companions-Alias with her perfect voice, Akabar with his learning,
Dragonbait with his virtue—here she knew she was the proverbial fifth wheel.
There's something else at this table, the bard thought, something that
outranks me. Power. That's why they've seated me beside Phalse instead of
opposite him. Olive imagined she could see the power rippling between her three
hosts—Cassana, the lich, and Phalse. The Fire Knives are servants, Olive
realized, nothing more. Phalse has his aura of charisma, an almost tangible
swirl of attraction. Prakis exudes all the authority of dry, dusty, ancient
tomes, and Cassana sits like a spider in the center of her web, aware of every
movement within her realm—Mistress of Life and Death. If these three ever get
into a disagreement, the bard decided, I don't want to be around to get caught
in the middle. I don't even want to be close enough to watch.
"So, what do you think of our little group, small bard?" the
sorceress asked.
Olive almost choked on her meat, unable to resist the idea that her new
allies could read her mind. "Well," she held up a finger as she
chewed and swallowed and gulped mead down to give herself time to phrase a
suitable reply. "To tell the truth, I was unaware of how successful your
alliance already was when Phalse offered me the chance to join. I understand
you were subduing my . . . traveling companions even as I was speaking with him."
She chose her words carefully, picking her way through the conversation as
delicately as she would pick the lock of a cleric's trunk.
"Yes, we broke into two groups," Cassana explained. "One to
check out The Rising Raven, the other to follow the lure of your ring. Prakis
or I would likely have relied on clumsy, human means to keep track of Puppet,
but Phalse, smart, wise Phalse knew that a halfling would easily topple to the
lure of power and gold. And how better to reward your faithful service."
Olive's mouth was dry, and she took another gulp of mead before she nodded.
"And so we have another member of our band," concluded the
sorceress. "A good thing, too, because our numbers are rapidly dwindling.
Moander is dead, the crafter useless to us, the Fire Knives thinned in rank. We
could use young blood." She emphasized the last word just a little too
much, leaving Olive with memories of the legends of vampires.
The silence hanging over the table was oppressive. Struggling to lift it,
the bard began to ask, "Crafter? Who's—" but before she could finish
Phalse gave her thigh a sharp squeeze. Olive almost jumped from her chair. She
turned to glare at him for an explanation, but he was busy draining his goblet.
Holding out his glass for a refill, he bestowed her with a wink from one of his
peculiarly blue eyes.
"I'm sorry," Cassana prompted. "You were saying?"
"Nothing. I was too wrapped up in your tale."
"Of course," Cassana replied. She began nodding and murmuring to
herself, and Olive wondered if Cassana had channeled too much of her power into
keeping up her good looks and let her mind go a little mushy. The sorceress's
head snapped up and she announced, "Now, the three of us will be very busy
for the next few hours, preparing for the ceremony to be held at dawn. But you,
Olive, were up very early this morning, before dawn. And since then you've been
a very, very busy little girl. You must be exhausted. Take a nap, and Phalse
will send for you."
Whether it was the suggestion, the food, or the long hours and miles between
Yulash and Westgate, Olive suddenly felt very weary. She swayed in her chair,
trying to shake the cobwebs from her brain. Phalse put a hand out to steady
her, his grip like iron.
"Now that you mention it," the bard said, not bothering to stifle
a yawn, "I'm dead on my feet."
"Good. Prakis my pet, why don't you take the small bard up to Phalse's
room for her nap?"
"I would prefer—" Phalse began to protest, but Cassana cut him off
with a motion of her hand.
"You and I have some private matters to discuss," the sorceress
insisted.
"Just how private do you intend to get?" Phalse bantered.
The lich rose silently and stood behind the halfling's chair as she tumbled
from it. She staggered from sudden exhaustion, then began weaving her way to
the staircase.
Cassana laughed behind her, calling out, "Sleep tight, little
one." When the lich had maneuvered the bard up the first flight of stairs,
the sorceress turned her cold, hard eyes on Phalse. "Well?"
"She's scared witless, but that's understandable," Phalse replied
in the halfling's defense. "But it's a rather delicious sort of terror,
don't you think?"
"She seems a bit unstable. She'll sleep through the ceremony. When she
wakes, her former allies will be dead or under our control. The choice will be
easier for her once her options have been limited. I would prefer it, though,
if you would use her and get rid of her tonight," said Cassana.
Phalse flashed his inhuman smile. "I'll slay her myself if you
similarly dispose of your lovers, including the Turmite."
Cassana pouted "You'd deprive me of my pets?"
"You'd deprive me of mine."
The two glared at one another, locked in a contest of wills. Then slowly,
both began to laugh.
*****
When the halfling collapsed on the second landing, Prakis bundled the
childlike bard in his yellow cape and cradled her in his arms, carrying her to
Phalse's opulent bedroom. He lay the halfling woman on the satin coverlet and
leaned in close to her face, muttering a few words. Then he touched her on the
forehead and shoulders.
Olive sat bolt upright, her eyelids flying open like pigeons startled by a
temple bell. "What!" she gasped, then cringed away immediately from
the mockery of humankind hovering over her.
"Hush," the death's head rattled. "I've cast a spell on you
to counteract the magical suggestion Cassana the Cruel used to make you
sleep," Prakis explained. His voice sounded windier than before, as though
suddenly it was a greater effort for him to speak. "How do you feel?"
"I feel... I feel like I've slept for a week. Did I miss the
ceremony?"
"No, only a few minutes have passed since you left the table. But my
counteractive spell will give you energy now for hours. I woke you to make you
an offer. Have you killed?" the lich asked. The red points of light in his
eye sockets were suddenly still like a magical light.
"Killed? Of course. Easy as falling off a log."
"Can you do it again?"
"Uh . . . sure. Who do you want killed?"
"Cassana." The red pinpoints in the skull's eye sockets danced
again.
"Wait a minute. I thought you and she were . . ." The halfling
groped for polite words. "Close, I guess."
"1 am Cassana's tool, her pet, much like you are—or will be—Phalse's
pet, if he gets his way. The wand that controls the Little One also controls
me. The farther I am from the wand, the more dead I become. Cassana keeps the
wand on her person at all times, and when she travels too far away, I die
entirely, only to come back as a shambling form when she returns. She is literally
the sun my world revolves around."
"But your symbol is on Al—the Little One."
"My power over death was needed to bring the Little One to life, so I
was allowed a small measure of control over her, but Cassana is the ultimate
puppet master, pulling both our strings."
Up close to Prakis, Olive could see the deep blue stitchery of long-dead
blood vessels and smell the fetid stink of the corpse's breath. He did not need
to breathe, save to work his speech organs, which gave his voice an odd,
mechanical quality.
"But why do you need me?" Olive asked. "Couldn't you just
strangle her or something and take the wand?"
"No. That would not work. Cassana the Cruel is very clever. She has
bound up her life energies into the wand so that, as long as she holds it,
nothing the Little One or I do can harm her. She knows my hate; she knows the
wand is all that stands between her and death by my hands. She loves knowing
this—it thrills her."
"So you want me to steal the wand?"
"Yes. Then I will kill her"
"Um, just out of curiosity, how?"
"With this'" the lich thrust forward his staff of dark wood.
"I am still permitted to wield this. It is a staff of power. Do you know
what it can do?"
Olive nodded, remembering the lay written in honor of Sylune. The river
witch had used the same kind of staff to blow herself and a marauding dragon to
kingdom come. The halfling didn't want to be anywhere near Prakis and Cassana
when they finally ended their "lover's quarrel."
"No offense, Prakis, old bones, but what's in this for me?"
"Your freedom and your life."
"Oh?"
"Phalse considers you his property now. Surely you must realize that, as
charming as he appears, he is no halfling."
"What is he?"
"I don't know. Not even Cassana knows, and that is not a good sign.
Furthermore, Cassana does not like you. She never could stand any competition,
no matter how small. And she is superstitious about halfling luck. She really
sent Phalse after you to make sure you did not interfere with our capture of
the prisoners. When Phalse's back is turned, she will slay you, gut you, and
use your body as a vessel for her kalmari. Once you've helped me take care of
Cassana, I will rid you of Phalse's company."
Olive gulped. "These are good reasons, but, um ... I don't suppose you
might offer me any other incentives?" She was terrified of angering the
lich, but how much could it hurt to ask? she wondered.
Prakis laughed, genuinely amused. "I can see why Phalse kept you. You
have a greed for life that must astound even him."
"Well, life is short, as you discovered, and it makes sense to get all
you can out of it. The best things in life aren't free, you know."
"I did know that once. Cassana has amassed a great deal of wealth
hidden in the cellars beneath this house. Besides selling and leasing her
monsters, she skimmed a good deal off the top from the funds the Fire Knives
poured into the project of making the Little One. Whatever you can carry away
on a pony is yours, unless—perhaps you could remain here with me and the Little
One, a member of our family."
The thought of living in the same house with a zombie Alias revolted Olive,
but quite a bit of gold could be loaded onto a pony.
"You have a deal, but first, as a gesture of trust—tell me, who is the
crafter?"
Zrie Prakis's red eyes stabbed at the halfling for several moments. He must
have decided the knowledge could do him no harm, because he told her. "He
is—he has no true name. He gave the Little One a mind, a life, the name Alias.
But he feels he's been damned for it."
"But he's still alive?"
The lich nodded with a crack of his neck bones. "Cassana the Cruel
hates to cast aside her pets. He is prisoner in the cellars. But he is quite
mad."
Olive decided to agree with the lich for now. Glibly she asked, "When
do we start this revolution?"
"Use the time when we're at the ceremony to lace the house with traps.
Lay in wait and ambush. Now, mime your sleep while I prepare the prisoners. And
do not give yourself away, or I will be forced to slay you myself." The
skin over his forehead wrinkled the slightest bit as he made an attempt to
threateningly raise eyebrows he did not possess.
Then he drifted from the room, silent except for the creaking of his bones.
Olive leaned back in the bed and closed her eves, and the energy the lich
had channeled into her did indeed keep her from falling asleep. Unfortunately,
it also made her restless. Her mind kept flipping through her quickly
diminishing options.
She turned on her side, away from the door, and thought harder. Though she'd
been wishing for Phalse's friends to show up and take Alias, she'd felt a pang
of disappointment when she'd learned they'd already captured the swords-woman.
Her second meeting with Phalse had not left the bard with as charming an
impression of the pseudo-halfling as their first had. Strangers always looked
friendlier sitting behind a stack of coins, Olive realized. His offer of great
power had sounded amusing accompanied by fine Luiren ale, but Olive had never
really been interested in power.
Especially not if it meant watching people getting beaten to a pulp.
While she'd been drinking with Phalse, Olive had formed some half-baked
scheme of joining the alliance in order to discover by her own means—stealth
and cunning—the identitles and intentions of Alias's foes. In her mind, she
would then have reported back to Alias, revealing how she had succeeded where
the book-laden mage would not and the scaly paladin could not. That would have
impressed them.
But the plan had backfired drastically, and now she was trapped, a little
spider in a larger spider's web. She could think of only three options: Escape
somehow and flee, living in fear of retribution; find a wav to free the others
and fight; or join the alliance for real, submitting herself to whatever Phalse
and Cassana had in store for her.
She did not consider the lich's plan. It was entirely too dangerous. Cassana
would fry me like a banana, Olive realized, if I came within twelve inches of
her wand.
Olive didn't much care for the idea of sticking around. Besides disliking
her role of low woman on the totem pole, an alliance with these people was very
risky business. Their partners had a habit of dying off.
Olive granted that she was greedy and ambitious, but these people were cruel
and hateful and perverse—no act of hers could ever bring her to their level of
perdition.
Still, despite herself, and despite Prakis's warnings, she felt drawn to
Phalse. He had treated her with courtesy and rewarded her with more cash than
anyone else had in a long time. He understood her halfling heart.
The door creaked open behind her and then closed. Someone tiptoed over to
the bed. The bard snapped her eyes shut, and began breathing shallowly with a
melodic semi-snore.
A small hand touched her knee, and Olive shifted slightly to cover her
startled movement. Small fingers danced up her thigh and then cupped her
breasts. After a moment or two they withdrew. It wasn't until the door opened
and closed again that Olive realized she'd been holding her breath.
She sat bolt upright after Phalse's retreat, gritting her teeth against a
scream. She scratched one option from her list. She couldn't stay here. She
would escape—with or without the others.
28
The Crafter
Olive crept about the room, slipping some of the more pawnable and valuable
items into her backpack and her pockets: ivory combs, a silver mirror, crystal
perfume vials, a gold wine goblet. After scavenging for half an hour she
noticed sounds of greater activity in the hallway.
Olive crept over to the door and pressed her ear against it. She could hear
men in the hallway, panting as if from strenuous labor, accompanied by a
dragging sound. Olive peeked out the keyhole. Two Fire Knives were hauling
something behind them. Olive caught sight of a scaly, green arm— Dragonbait. A
thumping noise came from the staircase— they were being none too gentle with
the saurial.
Two more assassins flicked by the keyhole, carrying Akabar by the arms and
legs. Cassana's new toy, he was given preferential treatment. He was not
thumped down the steps. Olive heard Phalse say, "Leave him in the cell
next to the crafter's."
Last of all, Zrie Prakis floated by with Alias cradled in his arms. He
paused by Olive's door, blocking her view. Olive heard a bolt sliding across
tlie door.
She waited until all noise in the hall had ceased and no sounds came from
the stairway. Then she tried the door.
Prakis had unlocked it for her. The bard poked her head out of the doorway.
The house was silent. After closing and bolting the door to Phalse's room
behind her, she crept down the hallway and tiptoed down the stairs. She dashed
through the entry hall. The front door beckoned her. She twisted the knob, but
it was locked.
Olive reached into her hair and drew out a pick, but before she began
working on the bolt, she noticed a blue line drawn across the threshold, with
three interlocking circles sketched above it. A magical ward—one of Prakis's.
Was it the type that warned the designer something had crossed over it, or the
kind that disintegrated into dust whatever crossed over it? There was no way
for Olive to tell.
"Boogers," Olive muttered. "What's the matter? Don't you
trust me, Prakis, old bones?"
Dodging into the dining room, the halfling slipped behind the heavy
curtains. The lock on the large windows was easily unfastened, but another blue
mark was scrawled along the window sills. Grinding her teeth in annoyance,
Olive dashed back into the entry hall and up the steps. There was a window in
the upstairs hallway, but it, too, was warded.
Zrie Prakis had made sure she would stick to her side of the bargain. He'd
unlocked her cell door, but he was not going to let her escape from the prison.
As she saw it, she had one chance. Unlocking the door to Phalse's room and
slipping back inside, she examined the window within. Unguarded. The wards must
have been a last-minute thought on the lich's part, and he had neglected to
come back to Phalse's room to set one there.
Olive climbed out onto the window sill. The roof sloped away gently. She
would have an easy time slipping down to the gutter—a perfect halfling's
footpath—and walking along that until she found a rain spout to slide down. But
what then? she wondered as she sat with her feet dangling over the roof tiles.
She'd have to find another adventuring group to travel with, one that could
help protect her from Phalse and family should they decide she was worth
chasing.
Finding a new party wouldn't be easy. Alias and Dragon-bait were perhaps the
finest sword wielders she'd ever seen, and Akabar had helped destroy a god, and
the three of them had been defeated. Of course, she hadn't been there to help
them out, she consoled herself. She wondered idly if her presence would really
have made a difference. According to Prakis, Cassana had been concerned that it
might have. Is it possible, Olive wondered, that Cassana put me to sleep
because she was afraid I might interfere somehow in this ceremony to remove
Alias's will?
Although Phalse had not told her, Olive knew the ceremony would involve the
sacrifice of Dragonbait. Alias had said something about it to Akabar the day
before, back at The Rising Raven. The loss of the paladin would not have made
too much difference to the halfling before yesterday. Yet Olive had to admit,
he hadn't done her any harm so far, and his death would seal the fates of Alias
and Akabar.
Akabar would remain in Cassana's clutches, not something Olive would wish on
anyone, certainly not on Akabar, whom she liked a little.
Alias was another matter. Olive found it difficult to like someone so
perfect, but she felt more guilt about abandoning the swordswoman. For one
thing, Olive realized, I owe her for rescuing me from the dragon and saving my
life. She let me join her party, and she shared her songs with me. She stole my
audience once, but she'll never do that again. After the ceremony she'll
probably never sing songs again. Without a will she'll be a zombie, and zombies
don't sing. All those lovely melodies and haunting lyrics would be lost to the
world. That would be a crime, Olive sighed.
Not that people like Cassana, who liked kidnapping, torture, and murder,
would care about such a loss to the musical world. Of course, I'd be just as
responsible if I didn't do anything to stop the witch and her merry band, Olive
acknowledged.
Jump, Olive-girl, the halfling told herself, before you wind up doing
something you may regret later. The halfling could not get out of her head the
image of Akabar being beaten and the sound of Dragonbait's head hitting each
step as the Fire Knives dragged him downstairs.
But the thought of Alias never singing again was even worse.
Olive swung her feet back into the building, jumped to the floor, and left
the room. The upper hallway was still empty, but she heard men's voices coming
from somewhere below. Pausing to listen, she noticed great drops of red dotting
the steps below her. Blood. Akabar's or Dragonbait's? she wondered. She
followed the red spatters down the stairs.
The voices were coming from the kitchen. The trail of blood went through the
entry hall in the opposite direction. Olive tracked it to an alcove that
featured a particularly obscene statue of an overly endowed succubus.
The trail ended in a pool of blood at the base of the statue, as if the
prisoner had been left there for a moment. Olive made a "tch" sound.
Why didn't they tell the world there was a secret passage here somewhere? she
scoffed.
Footsteps and voices approached from the dining room. Olive ducked behind
the statue of the succubus.
"—unfair. That's all I'm saying," the first protested.
"Unfair doesn't mean a thing to Her Ladyship," the second voice
argued. "We don't have the seniority, we don't have the clout. The rest
get to play clerics and gods in a few hours. We don't rate. So what?" Here
the speaker's words became incoherent as his mouth was occupied with chewing
and swallowing, "—prefer raiding Her Ladyship's larder to standing outside
in the cold and damp. What?"
"Something by the dungeon door. Watch."
Olive's intestines cramped uncomfortably. Of all the stupid things—I've
chosen the exact spot they're heading for!
A soft footstep then a second crept closer to the alcove. If the situation
hadn't been so serious, Olive would have giggled at the picture of a burly
human trying to creep like a halfling across the floor. She didn't even need to
guess how close he was, she could feel the floorboards shift slightly under his
weight. Pressing her back against the wall, she thrust against the statue's
pedestal with her feet.
The top-heavy statue rocked, then toppled from its pedestal. The crash of
stone against stone blended with the sickening thunk of flesh and bone being
crushed by a great weight, as the succubus claimed the life of the first Fire
Knife. The stonework ran with fresh blood.
The other Fire Knife, a grossly overweight human with a stubby short sword
in one hand and half of a melon in the other, had been standing ten feet away
when his partner had met his demise. His eyes were wide with shock, but he
approached the pedestal. Olive slipped out of the alcove to face her attacker.
"Murr," muttered the Fire Knife. Whether this was the name of some
god or his late companion, Olive did not know. "Ya just a girl. C'mon,
kid, I'll make it fast. We'll just lock ya up until . . ."
The halfling didn't wait to find out how long she'd be locked up. She
dropped to one knee, grabbed a piece of the broken statue, and threw it.
Clunked square in the forehead with a succubus breast, the assassin rocked back
on his heels. Olive grabbed the sword from his dead partner's hand and charged.
The Fire Knife dropped the melon and swung his blade downward. Olive dove to
the right, and the steel blade sparked off the stonework, sending a ringing
peal of doom through the hall and up the stairs. The assassin whirled and
slashed in a cross-cut. Olive dipped her head slightly, and the blade swiped
over her. The man's reflexes were trained in battling opponents his own size.
Olive slipped inside his guard and thrust his partner's short sword upward
in the all-too-ample space between his leather jerkin and his belt. The blade
sank deep into the flesh. Blood welled from the wound. The Fire Knife stepped
backward, but Olive moved with him like a bulldog, wriggling and twisting the
sword.
The assassin grabbed at her hair with his left hand, but before he could
take advantage of his grip, he gurgled and collapsed on top of his enemy. It
was several moments before Olive could get any air into her lungs and wriggle
out from beneath her vanquished foe.
Blood stained the entire length of her gown.
"Like falling off a log," she muttered to herself. "Nothing
to it. Done it lots of times." She tried to pant more quietly, listening
for others. If anyone else was still in the house, they would have heard the
fight.
There was no other sound but her labored breathing.
She returned to the pedestal and began exploring its carved edges for a
catch to open the secret door. Badly rattled, her fingers ran over the surface
for almost three minutes before she managed to press just the right bit of
fluting. The wall in the back of the alcove slid open, revealing a spiral
stairway leading down.
Stealing a torch from a wall sconce and the obese assassin's short sword,
the bard pattered down the steps. The air grew chill and damp as she descended.
At the bottom, a passage was cut deeply into the bedrock. The passage was
lighted by a magical glow issuing from statues of demons mounted on the
walls—magical light that did not flicker, but shone in steady red beams from
the red glass eyes and in white fans from the tops of their heads. Along the
right side of the passage were three archways blocked by cage bars. The passage
continued on, lit by a pearl-like string of red and white lights.
Beyond the first archway lay an empty cell, clean but for a dark red smear
streaking the back wall. The second cell caged a mass of rotting cloaks and
blankets. Akabar hung in the third cell, the chains of his manacles attached to
a hook in the ceiling. The Turmishman's toes dangled three inches from the
floor. The assassins had left him in the cold and damp with nothing but a sheet
wrapped around his waist. His face was puffy and discolored. Blood trickled
from his mouth and welled in the troughs of four-fingered scratches across his
right cheek and chest. Ruskettle could not remember Cassana's nails being
particularly long. Then she recalled the sharpened finger bones of Zrie Prakis,
and shuddered.
"Akabar," she hissed, wondering if there were any other Fire
Knives left behind to guard the prisoners. She searched the bars for a door or
a lock, but they ran from ceiling to floor without a break.
"Akabar!" she said louder.
In the cell next door the mound of furs and cloaks stirred. Olive started
and watched the pile closely. A man's head poked out. His hair and beard were
shaggy and black, with splotches of gray and white. His eyes were blue and
rheumy. His face was lined with cracks of old age and cold. Cocking his head he
chirped, "Hullo."
Olive cast a glance back at Akabar, but the mage had not moved. "Uh,
greetings. You must be the crafter. Are we alone here?" she whispered.
"No," the crafter said, shaking loose the furs and cloaks. He rose
slowly to his feet, and his legs wobbled as if he'd been bedridden for a long
time. He wore a tattered tabard that must have once been purple and green, but
was now faded to gray and yellow. "There's a new prisoner next door,"
he replied, pointing toward Akabar's cell.
"I mean, are there any guards?"
"Let me check. GUARDS!"
Olive toppled backward in shock. Scrambling to her feet, she sought
desperately for a bolt hole. She could run farther down the corridor or back up
it. The crafter's cry echoed back to her from both directions, but the sound of
human feet did not follow it.
"Sorry. No guards. I think they're away. That way." The graying
crafter pointed farther down the passage.
Prakis warned you the fellow was mad, Olive-girl, she berated herself.
Obviously, he wasn't joking.
"Where are the locks?" she demanded.
The crafter's eyes became sharp points. "There are no locks here."
"How did they put you in there?" "Through the bars."
Olive cursed. She didn't have time to play riddles with crazy people.
"Must you be so cryptic?"
"As long as I'm here, yes. Otherwise, I'd shed light on the subject for
you."
Olive considered continuing down the passage to search for Cassana's hoard
and then leave when she'd found enough treasure to keep her in flight for a
year. But the hoard might be similarly barred, and who knew how many Fire
Knives were stationed to guard the end of the tunnel?
The light from her torch, dropped when the madman had bellowed, fizzled out
and died. Only the magic light of the demon statues illuminated the corridor
now. Light. Shed some light on the subject, she thought. What was the subject?
The bars. Of course!
It took the halfling several tries to climb up the smooth walls. Reaching
behind the head of one of the demon figures, she found a glass sphere, cold as
ice, but with a magical light that shone with more brilliance than any candle
or torch. Olive withdrew it gently and jumped down.
She held the light in front of Akabar's cell. "Nothing's
happening," she growled, putting the sphere down to retrieve her sword.
"Why should anything happen?" the madman shrugged. "You're
just standing there."
"So I am," Olive nodded. She stepped forward—and passed right
through the bars.
"Hey, that's great. Thanks," she called back to the crafter. She
set the sword on the floor and checked on the mage's condition. He was still
breathing, but she would never be able to lift him off the hook. She might have
tried climbing up the mage's body and picking the locks on his manacles, but
the wrist bindings had been welded, not snapped on.
"Need some help?" a voice beside her asked. Olive whirled around
and would have skewered the speaker if he had not so agilely sidestepped her
attack.
The halfling gasped. The crafter stood next to her in Akabar's cell. She had
set the glowing sphere down in such a position that it had shed light on the
bars of his prison as well. He held the globe now in one hand.
"Keep back," Olive ordered, brandishing her sword.
The crafter's lips curled up in a wry smile. His eyes were now clear and
piercing. He stood straighter and looked stronger. "If I keep back, how
are we going to get your friend down?" His voice was now firm and
reasonable.
Olive wrinkled her brow in puzzlement. "You're not mad."
The crafter harumphed. "So I have always maintained."
"I mean ... well, you're different than you were a moment ago."
"The cell I was in works a spell of enfeeblement on its
occupants."
"Oh." Suddenly remembering that the crafter was still one of
Alias's would-be masters, Olive took another step backward and held out her
sword. "Why should you want to help?"
"Look, are you going to stand there all day demonstrating your
incompetence with a short sword, or climb up on my shoulders and unhook this
unfortunate southerner?"
The halfling frowned at the insult, but the crafter had a point. She sighed and
set her sword down behind her, then approached him cautiously.
The crafter stooped, set the sphere of light on the ground, and made a
foothold for her with his hands. Olive put her hand on his shoulder and stepped
up. He was a big man, as tall as Akabar, and even broader at the chest. She
climbed nimbly to his shoulders, and he stood up smoothly.
"When I lift him, you detach the chain," he said.
Once Akabar had been released, Olive scrambled down the crafter's back.
Cradling the mage in his arms, he carried him from the cell and set him on the
ground outside. Olive followed with her sword and the sphere of light.
The man frowned at the mage's wounds. "Can you heal?" he asked
Olive.
"What do I look like? A paladin?"
"Upstairs there's a bureau in the dining room. It's trapped, but
there's a small button along the base that deactivates it. Unless Cassana has
changed, there will be a number of potions there. Fetch them and some clothing
for this one and come right back. Oh—and leave the sword."
Olive obeyed without question, suddenly relieved to not be making all the
decisions. She was back within fifteen minutes, laden with the potions,
Akabar's spellbooks— which had also been in the cabinet—one of Zrie Prakis's
robes, two kitchen knives, and a sack of food.
The crafter was seated by Akabar's side, using the sword to scrape away his
ratty beard. His face was deeply careworn, like a general who'd been at war too
long or a king's wisest but least heeded adviser.
He rummaged through the tablecloth that served as a sack, pulled out two
potions, and mixed them together to form a gummy poultice, which he smeared
over the cuts on Akabar's chest and face. Akabar moaned, but the wounds began
to close. The crafter slipped the rest of the potions into his tabard pockets.
"His wounds will take about an hour to heal," the crafter said. He
turned a stern eye on Olive. "Now, who is he, and who are you, and how did
you come to be in this foul place?"
"He's Akabar Bel Akash, a mage. I'm Olive Ruskettle the Bard. I'm
trying to rescue Alias the Swordswoman from Cassana, who is trying to enslave
her—"
"I know all about Cassana's business with Alias," the crafter
interrupted. "Who are you really?"
"I told you. This is Akabar Bel—"
"I mean you, halfling. You cannot be a bard."
"I beg vour pardon?"
"I said, vou cannot be a bard. You might use it as a cover for your
other activities, but you cannot be one. There are no halfling bards."
"Well, vou are very much mistaken," Olive huffed. "I am a
halfling, and I am a bard. I sing, play the yarting and the tantan, compose
music and poetry, and weave tales."
"That makes you a troubadour or a minstrel. Your skill may be such that
you can impress and entertain people, but to be a bard you must be trained.
Without training, the power of the calling will never be yours. And I know,
better than any three of my colleagues and better than any sage, that no
halfling has ever been trained."
"And how would you know?"
"Because I am a bard. The Nameless Bard."
"The Nameless Bard? Just what's that supposed to mean?"
"It means they took away my name. In much the same way that barbarian
kings wipe out the wives and children of their enemies, they banned my songs
and erased my name from history—and from my own mind."
"You mean Cassana?"
The Nameless Bard laughed. "Hardly. It would take a power far greater
than hers to overcome even a single melody of mine."
A flash of inspiration struck Olive. "You wrote the songs Alias sings.
You're her Harper friend."
The Nameless Bard turned a piercing look on the halfling. Olive grew
uncomfortable beneath his gaze and turned away. "Didn't mean to pry,"
she mumbled.
"I remember a bard, a true bard, named Ruskettle. Olav Ruskettle. Had a
bad gambling habit. Would have staked his own mother on the roll of a die. I
suppose by the time you ran into him, he had nothing left but his name."
Olive glared at the Nameless Bard. "He was situated very comfortably as
a tavernkeeper in Procampur. He couldn't gamble away the tavern—his wife held
the title."
"So he offered you his name."
Olive shrugged. "He couldn't play anymore—lost his right hand. His
voice was beginning to fade."
"So you accepted. Loaded dice?"
"No!"
"Very well. You won the name fair and square. But all the rights,
privileges, and immunities thereunto appertaining, you never earned."
"Just because humans don't recognize a halfling's talents doesn't mean
they don't exist."
"Did you even try applying to a barding college?"
The halfling was silent for a moment. "No," she admitted.
"Why not? No, don't answer me. I'm really not interested in your
excuses. Answer to yourself. Now, tell me, would-be bard, how did you come to
be a companion to the swordswoman, Alias?"
Olive bridled some at the title, but she needed the Nameless Bard's help to
free Alias. She began with Mist's abduction of her from the caravan in Cormyr,
then explained how Dimswart had come to hire Alias. She described their battle
with the crystal elemental, the disastrous brawl at the wedding, all that
Dimswart had discovered about the sigils, and the destruction of the kalmari.
She began slowly and nervously, like a schoolchild asked to recite, but she was
not naturally a taciturn person, and her tale flowed smooth and clear by the
time she described the events in Shadowdale.
To her own astonishment, she told the truth about her dealings with Phalse.
She knew the story would not make much sense if she left out crucial elements.
She related all Akabar had told her about the events in Yulash, how Dragonbait
had subdued Mist, the battle with Moander, and finally how all of them came to
be captured by Alias's enemies, the others by force, she by stupidity.
Olive had never had such a polite and riveted audience in her life. He
interrupted her tale only once, when she was describing how Cassana had made
Alias batter Akabar.
"You say she wept?" the true bard asked.
"Of course she wept," Olive said. "Akabar is her friend, and
the witch was using her to pulp his flesh. I could see the streaks her tears
left on her cheeks and the dark spots where they landed on the floor. Cassana
thought it was pretty funny and made a stupid joke about it. She said, 'Look
Zrie, she's crying. I'll bet I know who taught her that trick.' Then she used
her wand to knock Alias out."
The true bard's lower lip quivered for a moment. He clamped it shut.
"Finish. Quickly. Your friend is coming around."
Olive told how Cassana had put her to sleep, and the deal Zrie had offered
her. "He unbolted the door for me. There were only two guards upstairs. I
killed them and came down here looking for Akabar."
Akabar awoke slowly. Though weak, he was still strong enough to grab
Ruskettle by the throat and throttle her. The Nameless Bard pulled the mage's
hands away with his own sure grip.
"You've signed her death warrant, you greedy, little bitch!"
Akabar shouted.
"I think there has been a misunderstanding," the Nameless Bard
said calmly. "Your friend was using a ruse to win your enemy's
trust."
Akabar's eyes squinted with disbelief, but he could not fight the strength
of the true bard's hands.
Olive felt a rush of gratitude toward the bard. She had told him the whole
truth, that her reasons for accepting Phalse's offer had been as much for greed
as for a desire to play at espionage, but he had given her the benefit of the
doubt.
"Look, Akash. I came down here to get your help to rescue Alias."
That much was half true. "If you'd rather go back to your cell and wait
for Cassana . . ."
Akabar spat on the halfling's gown.
"He's very emotional," she explained to the crafter.
"Look at me, Akabar Bel Akash," the Nameless Bard said. The power
of his voice drew Akabar's eyes unwillingly from Olive.
"Do you want to rescue Alias?"
Akabar took a deep breath, almost a sob. "Yes."
"So does this creature. So do I. Contain your anger. It is a waste of
your energies. You should know that."
Akabar took another deep, slow breath. He relaxed his muscles. The true bard
released his wrists.
"Who are you?" Akabar asked.
"The Nameless Bard."
"Nameless? No one is nameless."
"They took his name away," Olive explained.
"Who?" Akabar asked.
The Nameless Bard sighed. "Eat," he said, motioning toward the
food that Olive had taken from Cassana's larder. "You'll need your
strength very soon. I will tell you my story while you dine."
Akabar noticed his books in Olive's bundle and motioned for them. Olive slid
them to his side. She remembered how he had asked for them after being freed
from Moander and took this as a sign that he was prepared to carry on—and put
the past behind him—at least for now.
"You have no doubt heard of the Harpers," the Nameless Bard began.
"They were established in the north long before you were born. Their
members are primarily bards and rangers, though not limited to such. All are
good and true men and women devoted to preserving the balance of life, opposing
all that threatens the peace of the Realms, protecting the weak and innocent.
You might recognize them by their small silver pin of a harp and a moon.
"One of their number was a bard, a master of his craft, with a voice
and a memory like polished ice. A creator of songs that could move people to
action, or calm them to slumber. None heard his music but that they were
impressed. The bard himself was often astonished by his own skill and wished
for all his works to be preserved for eternity.
"Yet songs are so easily changed, their lyrics tampered with, their
melodies maligned. The bard's own colleagues had done this to his works,
substituting a phrase to suit a particular audience, quickening the tempo to
end an evening's entertainment sooner. Or simply forgetting a line. And though
such things are only natural, the bard was obsessed with preserving his works
as he'd intended them to be sung."
"Prickly sort, wasn't he?" Olive asked with a tiny grin.
The corner of the true bard's mouth turned up in a half-smile. "We all
have our faults.
"Rejecting human singers as the preservers of his art, he turned to
mechanical means. Paper and stone would not suffice—the written word could not
convey the meaning as well as spoken words, and written notes describe only the
melody, not the spirit of the music. And paper and stone can be destroyed. Even
magical attempts to reproduce his music dissatisfied him. They could not
demonstrate the full interaction of the bard with his audience.
"Finally, he determined a mixture of these methods that would fulfill
his requirements. A human shell, unwilling, even unable, to stray from the
original rendition, a repository for his tales and music that could render them
unto generations."
"Alias," Akabar said.
"Alias?" Olive chirped.
"Alias," the true bard said. "The price to make such a
creature, however, was very great, involving dealing with powerful mages and
extra-planar powers. The price was also horrible. It would cost the life of a
noble innocent, both pure and true, by brutal means.
"The master bard, with his apprentices, men and women of lesser power
but great talent, tried to create this shell on their own. The attempt failed,
costing one assistant his life and another her voice, so that she was silent
for the rest of her shortened, painful days.
"Many men and women of the Realms might have shrugged off such a
tragedy. But the Harpers considered themselves better men and women and were
horrified by what the bard had done. They summoned him to judgement.
They stripped him of his name, stole it from his memory. His name being a
given thing, this was easy to do. But knowledge discovered is like an efreet
let out of a bottle: it cannot be forced back in. The struggle to discover it
makes it part of the discoverer's soul. They could not destroy the knowledge in
him. They feared he would try again, or pass the knowledge to another. So they
could not let him go free, yet they would not slay him, for he was one of their
own, and they did not want his blood on their hands.
"They decided he would have to be imprisoned, but no ordinary prison
would do. They could not risk his ever passing on the method he had developed.
So they shackled and exiled him beyond the bounds of the Realms, in the lands
where reason fails and the gods roll like storm fronts across the sky. All his
songs, his words, and his ideas were expunged in a sweeping attempt to cover up
what he had achieved. Those who knew his songs were told to sing them no more,
and such was the respect and fear of the Harpers in those days that many
complied.
"So that which the master bard feared most came to pass: the songs he
sought to preserve were dead things, unremembered in the Realms. The Harpers
had been thorough, indeed. The newer members know nothing of the story. Only
the old remember the tale."
"So how did you escape?" Akahar asked.
"Some vestige of the tale survived. A scrap of a letter I'd written to
an apprentice fell into Cassana's hands— something about how my human shell
could be made indistinguishable from the real thing. Cassana went to great
lengths to track me down. She put a bounty out on an old Harper and tortured
him for the information on my whereabouts. I hear he did not submit until she
began torturing other creatures as well.
"I knew none of this when her allies completed a bridge to my place of
exile. If I had not been half mad with loneliness and grief for the death of my
songs, I might have seen through Cassana's unholy alliance immediately. But
Cassana used her sweetest manner, and Phalse played on my desire for retribution.
Zrie cloaked himself in the illusion of a living mage. I was not told of the
F'ire Knives or Moander or Phalse's master.
"I gave up all my secrets, and they helped me build Alias. Later, I
learned that the money for the project came from the Fire Knives, and that
Moander provided the life energy needed to start Alias breathing. Cassana
provided the body, Zrie the power to keep death from her, and Phalse's master
the power to bind a soul in her."
"Dragonbait's soul," Akabar breathed.
"The saurial, yes."
"And you taught her to sing," Olive said.
"Oh, more than that. I spun her entire history, her thoughts, her
feelings, her beliefs. A full personality that could interact with others. She
was to be my redemption, my justification, of all I had done. I wanted to be
sure that no one could see the beauty of my achievement without forgiving the
evil means I used to accomplish it.
"But my allies had their own purposes, something I should have realized
when each gave her a different name. I named her Alias because I could not give
her my own. All I wanted was for her to live in peace and sing my songs.
"Then they branded her and the saurial, which Phalse's master had
provided as sacrifice to give her a soul, and I understood they intended her to
be a slave.
"I argued with Cassana, and for the first time she showed me her true
nature. She'd left the empty space in the brand to represent me—another of her
cruel jokes. I walked out on her and came down here, for this is where Alias
and Dragonbait were being kept. I tried to convince myself to destroy Alias
rather than bring her into this world bonded to so much evil."
The former Harper looked in the cell where Akabar had hung as though he
still saw someone there. Tears welled in his eyes. "I am too reasonable a
man to believe in miracles, but I suppose they must occur in spite of what I
believe. When we'd left her in the cell that evening she was breathing but
unconscious. Our calculations said she would not awaken until the saurial was
slain. He was very near death already. He had killed many Fire Knives in one
attempt to escape, and they beat him every chance they got. They'd left him
hanging by the same hook you occupied, mage.
"When I returned here that night, the lizard was lying on the straw,
wrapped in Alias's cloak. She had taken him down and was tending his wounds,
singing him a lullaby, like a child with a doll.
"I sneaked upstairs to fetch the sword I had bought for Alias and some
healing potions for the saurial. I also sought his sword, which Cassana had
given to me because I was the only one who could pick it up without pain. I
wasn't certain I could trust Alias with the swords. She was like a very little
child. So I gave her the potions and told her what to do with them. When the
saurial regained consciousness, I told him I would free him if he would help
Alias escape—that he must take her as far from Westgate as possible. He readily
agreed.
"I had to remain behind to cover their escape. An hour before dawn,
when we were all preparing to leave for the sacrifice of the saurial, Cassana
realized what I had done. She would have destroyed me that moment, but Phalse
ordered that I be spared. He thought I might know where they had gone, and he
interrogated me in his own fashion. I thought I was safe because I had given
the lizard no specific instructions, but I planted in Alias a great nostalgia
for Shadowdale. I wanted her to sing there. Phalse learned this, and that is
how he knew where to wait for you."
"That's where you met him," Akahar accused Olive.
The halfling shrugged. "You knew Alias wasn't human, but you never told
me." She turned back to the true bard. "Phalse let you live
then?"
"That was Cassana's decision. She changed her mind about destroying me.
She left me in this chamber, where my thoughts would wander and my strength
fade so I would grow more pliable. She wanted my help on other projects and . .
. my company."
"Piggish, isn't she?" Olive said. "Just think, Akash, you
could have been co-concubine with an ex-Harper."
Akabar fixed the halfling with a cold stare.
"Well," Olive Ruskettle said with a grin, "she may be a
witch, but I can't knock her taste in men—living ones that is. Shouldn't we be
leaving soon if we're going to stop this saurial sacrifice?"
"We wait only until moonset," the true bard explained, "To
avoid the patrols of Fire Knives."
"You've been babbling away in that cell for a month now. How do you
know when moonset is?" Olive asked.
The crafter picked up a drumstick and took a bite of the meat, chewed, and
swallowed before he smiled sweetly at her. "You forget, Mistress
Ruskettle, a bard never loses count of the measure."
29
The Sacrifice
When Dragonbait woke, he was tethered face up on a cold, stone slab with his
tail flattened uncomfortably beneath him. He flexed his claws, trying to cut at
the bindings that pulled his limbs toward the four corners of the stone, but
little metallic twanging noises told him the bindings were not hemp or leather,
but thin, steel wires. A dull ache warned him that the wire was slicing through
his scales whenever he moved.
He opened his eyes and, through the great fangs carved of stone that ringed
the hillock, saw that the sky was beginning to redden. Just beside the stone
slab, in the center of the tanged maw, was a large fire circle filled with
day-old ash. He had seen it from the air yesterday—the mound outside Westgate
where the worshipers of Moander had waited to receive Alias from their god. The
ancient and worn stone they had tied him to was lined with blood-gutters,
leaving him no doubt as to the stone's purpose.
Concentrating, he summoned his shen. Mist had come as close as she could
when she described him to the others as a paladin. From what he had gathered in
his short time on this world, he and his brothers had much in common with that
breed of fighter, and they had many of the same gods-given powers. But shen was
not quite the same as a Realms paladin's ability to detect evil. With it,
Dragonbait could determine all the myriad types of evil that preyed on the
soul, the absence of evil, and the grace that nourished the soul. He was also
able to judge the strength of a spirit.
The human mage's spirit had begun as an orb of dull yellow—weak, but without
malice or arrogance; a little greed, but not much. The change in him had been
astounding. His battle with Moander had strengthened his spirit a hundredfold.
His soul grew cleaner, though grace was something he had yet to reach for.
The halfling had changed little—a wavering spirit, colored with avarice and
ambition, heightened by pinpricks of petty, but deeper, nastiness. Her music
helped keep these things at bay, but recently not even that had halted a
growing smear of jealousy.
He would not ordinarily have searched two such as these, but the human
swordswoman had decided to travel with them, and he took his oath to protect
her very seriously. Her spirit was often so weak it frightened him. He was
afraid her spirit would falter, not only because he was duty bound to her, but
because her soul was touched with a midsummer sky blue of grace. He wanted to
preserve that.
Now, though, he admitted to himself that he had failed. The hill around him
ebbed and pulsed with an evil light. Soon, he would be killed, the
swordswoman's spirit would be quenched, and she would be turned to evil.
Evil climbed the hill in many bodies. Weak arid strong spirits mingled. A
double file of cloaked and hooded men and women entered the circle of stone
fangs. They split their ranks upon stepping into the circle and surrounded him.
Their dress marked them as followers of Moander and their leader bore the
faceless mask common to evil masters, even in the saurial's world.
But the worshipers handled their long robes clumsily and their voices
faltered as they sang, occasionally missing notes or forgetting the cadence,
only to pick it up again several beats later. Could they be imposters?
Dragonbait wondered They all had the feel of the assassins Cassana worked with—
The Fire Knives.
When the pseudo-worshipers of Moander, numbering two dozen, had formed a
circle about the perimeter of the hilltop, four figures in gaudy array stepped
into their midst.
First came the small, grinning form of Phalse. He was all in blue—a
sickening blue of decaying meat. His blue-on-blue-on-blue eyes shone with
anticipation. Dragonbait hissed, and Phalse smirked. Phalse had found the
saurial roaming the plane of Tarterus stalking demons. The pseudo-halfling had
captured the paladin and brought him to this plane so he could be slain to
enslave another.
Zrie Prakis entered second, decked in red robes the color of blood, trimmed
with dirty, bone-white edgings. He bore his staff of power like a ceremonial
weapon, ready to strike down any who failed to obey him. His movements were
filled with energy, though his atrophied muscles stretched and popped over his
bones.
The lich's liveliness was due to the proximity of his mistress, Cassana, who
strode in behind him. She was dressed in a strapless gown of shimmering green,
slit up the side. In her hands she turned the small, slender wand she used to
control her pets. She had a wicked, cruel smile.
Last of all, Alias entered the circle, moving more like the undead that
Prakis was than a living being. The puppet's body was under control of her
mistress. She was garbed in leathers split up the sides, the bare flesh
cross-tied with thongs which looped about silver button-hooks. Long, shiny
black boots with incredibly high heels covered her feet and calves. She wore an
ornate girdle at her waist, with the skull of some creature etched in silver at
the front. She had been given a chain shirt split open at the middle, baring
the flesh between tier breasts and offering any sword an easy target. Shoulder
plates of lacquered black, a red velvet cape, and a collar of black and silver
completed the showy, but impractical, ensemble.
In her hands she gripped Dragonbait's diamond-headed sword so tightly her
knuckles were white. Her face was drawn into a tight mask, the lines and vessels
of her neck standing out. Along her sword arm, the runes glowed with a hellish
light, creating a false blue dawn around her.
Dragonbait pulled at his metallic bonds, trying not to give his captors the
pleasure of seeing him thrash. The wires were too well mounted to give way,
though, and his wrists grew wet with blood.
Zrie Prakis stood at one end of the stone, near Dragon-bait's head, and
Phalse stood at the lizard's feet. Cassana took one side, and Alias, fighting
the pull of the runes, lurched to a position directly across from her. The
saurial understood all that was to happen. They would use Hill Cleaver, his own
sword, to slay him. If only he'd been able to reach the blade back at The
Rising Raven, he could have negated all of Cassana's magic and turned the tide
of the battle. Now the blade would shatter upon tasting his innocent blood and
two good things would be destroyed in a single blow. Three, counting Alias. If
all of this was not evil enough, Cassana was forcing Alias to perform the deed.
It was completely unnecessary to the ritual. The witch did it only to bring
pain and grief to her puppet.
Dragonbait looked deep into Cassana's eyes. She would permit no flower to
grow without her permission, and before Alias could bloom, the sorceress would
encase her in amber. A perverse curiosity prompted him to use his
shen sight
on her before he died, just to know what such evil looked like. The heat of her
soul caused him to flinch. Within was a black wall riddled with flaming red
cracks. Hatred burned deep in her and crackled between her, Zrie Prakis, and
Phalse. The lich, like a void, sucked up emotions, and beside Cassana he was a
vortex of hatred and fear. Phalse glowed like a city put to the torch by
invaders. His maliciousness ran the gamut of yellow greed, red hatred, and a
sickly green jealousy.
Cassana grinned, as if she guessed what the saurial was doing. She looked at
the sky behind Alias. The sun had almost cleared the horizon. The tops of the
sharp, tooth-shaped plinths looked as if they had bitten into something bloody.
The sorceress motioned to Phalse, who turned his back on Dragonbait. The
small servant motioned with his hands in an arcane fashion that seemed to deny
the existence of bones in his arms. They swayed back and forth like snakes.
Beyond him, a pinprick of light appeared, then grew. It began as a sphere of
multicolored magical force, then flattened, turning into a swirling pattern of
silver and red.
Dragonbait had seen this gate before. It was the passage to the Citadel of
White Exile, where he and Alias had been branded. Now, that passage had to be
opened again to draw power from the domain of Phalse's master. With it, they
would seal control over Alias at the moment of Dragonbait's death.
Dragonbait finally looked up at Alias; he did not want to grieve her, but he
could not help himself. Their eyes locked like pieces in a magical puzzle. Her
eyes were red-rimmed from exhaustion and evaporated tears. He used his
shen sight.
If he was going to die, he wanted to do so with his eyes fixed on the brilliant
blue of her soul.
Her spirit's glow was as slender as the flame from a single candle. It
flickered like a living sapphire. Yet on all sides rose a tide of darkness,
crackling with energy, forcing itself upward to smother the flame. The flame
blazed for a moment, but the forces surrounding it rose as well.
The chanting increased as Phalse worked his spells to control the spinning
disk that reached between the planes. The first tendrils of dawn caught Alias's
hair from behind and set it on fire, a glory of bright red against the newborn
sky. "Prepare to sacrifice the innocent'" the sorceress bellowed.
"Raise the blade!"
Alias hesitated and Dragonbait saw the candle's flame burn hotter. Cassana
made a pass with her wand, and the sapphire flame dimmed as if a smoked glass
chimney had been dropped over it. Alias raised her hands, clasping Hill
Cleaver's hilt, the blade pointed down at the saurial's chest. His own sigils
were now answering the dark siren call of their masters, and Dragonbait thought
his hearts would burst from the strain.
Through eye contact, he tried to plead with the swordswoman to fight, to strengthen
her will. He wished desperately to add his own inner strength to hers and fight
off the darkness. However, while his skill allowed him to see her spirit, he
could not encourage it. Silently he cursed his inability to communicate with
her.
Blue sparks arced between the sigils on his chest, and the runes on Alias's
arm responded in kind. The Abomination had told her that she drew strength from
him, but Dragonbait had not discovered how. Maybe, the saurial suddenly
realized, he had denied the evil brands for too long. Perhaps they could yet be
turned to good.
Deliberately, he channeled his will through the runes, trying to force the
light to arc higher. The sparks showered upward like water in a fountain, their
display mirrored on Alias's arm. Finally, sparks touched and interwove,
bridging the gap between sacrificer and sacrifice.
Cassana's voice sounded far off as she shouted, "Seal the pact!"
The darkness in Alias rose like bile, and the candle flame of her spirit
faltered. Then, feeding at last on the saurial's own, her flame strengthened
and grew in intensity.
Dragonbait shuddered. He felt as if he had just rolled a massive stone up to
and over the crest of a hill. Every muscle in his body spasmed. Now that the
stone had been given one last push, however, it rolled of its own accord.
Alias's flame grew hotter and brighter with each passing second. The well of
darkness began to harden and then crumble like drying mud. New surges of the
surrounding mass of evil rose, but they were repelled by the increasing blue
fire.
Alias hovered over Dragonbait, her muscles locked, her face almost serene.
Phalse and the Fire Knives impersonating Moander worshipers held their breath,
as would have Prakis, had he any breath to hold.
Cassana screwed her comely face into a twisted mask of rage—rage mixed with
a hint of fear that the made-creature should reveal a newfound strength.
Clenching her wand in her fist, she brought her hand up in a sweeping gesture,
yanking hard on the strings of her rebellious puppet in an attempt to force her
will on Alias.
Like an old leather thong stretched to breaking, something within Alias
snapped. She drove the blade down hard, but she leaped forward as she did so,
plunging Hill Cleaver not into Dragonbait, but straight through Cassana. The
diamond-headed tip protruded out of the witch's back, but there was no blood on
it.
The sorceress staggered backward, a look of shock on her face. Both Phalse
and Prakis stepped toward her, but she waved them off. Still clutching her wand
in one hand, she reached up to draw the blade from her body. Blue sparks danced
from Hill Cleaver where she grasped it. Sorcery kept her alive despite her
fatal wound, yet nothing could negate the power of the saurial's sword to
defend itself from the touch of evil. Cassana screamed and ripped the blade
from her. Very slowly, blood began to well up from the gash in her chest.
Her face contorted with pain, Cassana whirled the blade at Alias's throat.
The swordswoman fell backward, dodging the weapon, as Prakis and Phalse lunged
at her. She rolled from the lich's chilling touch. Phalse came at her with a
dagger as she rose to her feet. The pseudo-halfling caught one of Alias's boots
in the face and the Fire Knives at the edges of the circle began to converge,
prepared to bring Alias down by force of numbers.
There was a shattering explosion to Dragonbait's right, behind the kneeling
form of Cassana. A pillar of fire shot up from the base of one of the
sharp-toothed plinths, catching two Fire Knives. The great tower of stone
rocked, then toppled sideways.
A second and a third explosion followed, as screaming fanfares of fireworks
and smoke struck two more of the stone fangs, blinding anyone looking at them.
Dragonbait at once recognized the handiwork of Akabar Bel Akash, as the
southerner proved he was indeed a mage of no small water.
Then the saurial felt small hands creep across his body. He turned his head,
intent on biting them if he could. He caught himself when he spotted Olive
Ruskettle moving alongside him. The halfling carried a glass vial, from which
she poured a thick, greenish mixture on his metal tethers. The wires smoked and
gave off a deadly, acrid stench, but weakened immediately, as if suddenly
rusted through.
Dragonbait yanked at his bonds, snapping them in half as the halfling moved
to free his legs. Still caught up in the mild trance of his
shen sight,
the saurial could not help but notice that the halfling was purged of much of
her bitterness and her vacillating spirit burned with a strength of purpose.
A Fire Knife charged at Olive with a blade tipped with the-yellow ichor that
had felled Dragonbait in Westgate. The halfling dodged, and Dragonbait swung
his free foot with claws extended. His sharp, natural weapons sank deep into
the assassin's belly, and she fell backward, spurting a fountain of blood.
Dragonbait searched the circle for Alias. She was surrounded by Fire Knives,
but she had acquired one of their swords and two of the assassins already lay
at her feet. He looked in the other direction for Cassana, but she had
disappeared. The saurial slid off the sacrificial stone and moved to regain
Hill Cleaver.
Cold, bony fingers closed around Dragonbait's throat from behind, and an icy
chill flowed into his veins and crept through his body. Prakis laughed hoarsely
as his paralyzing touch began draining the saurial paladin's strength. On a
human, the lich's grip might have been impossible to break, but taking a
saurial from behind was not so easy. Dragonbait threaded his tail between
himself and the lich and used it as a lever to pry Prakis away from him. The
lich staggered back a few paces, then lowered his staff's tip at the saurial
and muttered something.
Prakis burst into a pillar of fire.
That was hardly the reaction Dragonbait had expected. He whirled around to
see who might have aided him. Standing atop the stone was a graying,
clean-shaven man in ragged garb. He pulled a small vial from his cloak and
flung it at Phalse, who was trying to take Alias from behind. Phalse saw the
missile and dodged. A Fire Knife behind him was not so lucky and became a human
pyre.
Dragonbait recognized the man. He had been the one who had demanded the
saurial protect Alias in exchange for his freedom. Dragonbait had seen him only
once since then, in Alias's dream in Shadow Gap—Nameless. Now he fought openly
on their side. The saurial took the briefest moment to study Nameless with his
shen
sight, but all he detected was a gray mountain against a gray sky. Neither
evil, nor good, but very, very proud.
Prakis laughed with the horrible mechanical vocal sounds of the undead and
walked out of the pyre that Nameless's potion had lighted around him. The
lich's clothes were ash, and his remaining skin a blackened ruin, crumbling
from the bones. Yet the pinpricks of light still danced in his eyes, and he
still carried his staff.
Alias had felled two more assassins, but they had tightened their ring
around her. She was closed in on all sides. One blade was deflected by the
tightly knit chain shirt, but another came perilously close to her head,
clipping some of her hair.
A bolt of lightning struck at Alias's feet, knocking her to the ground.
Action froze on the battlefield. Blackened Prakis grinned through fire-stained
teeth, swaying his staff of power back and forth, aiming it at Dragonbait, then
Ruskettle, then Nameless, making it quite clear that any sudden moves would
result in instant destruction. The remaining assassins stood guard around the
fallen swordswoman.
A red light shot up from one of the remaining stone plinths. Cassana stood
atop the pillar, one hand clutching her wand, the other gripping shut the skin
of her chest, as a modest woman would hold closed the front of a torn gown.
Dragonbait twitched, debating whether he could lunge for Hill Cleaver and put
an end to the mages' threats before they fried him to a cinder.
"Let this be ended," the sorceress shouted from her perch.
"Nameless, your little play is over. Phalse, take a sword and slay the
saurial and Nameless. I will keep Puppet occupied." She raised the wand
over her head. Dragonbait could feel a sympathetic ache as Cassana used the
blue wand to rack Alias's body with pain.
A shadow rose behind Cassana, snatching the wand and kicking the sorceress
off the stone. Cassana screamed a curse as she fell and landed hard on her
side. Zrie Prakis whirled with his staff, trying to set his sights on his
mistress's attacker. Akabar's flying form appeared for a moment above the stone
pillar, the wand grasped tightly in his hand, then he dodged back and forth in
an erratic pattern. Long lances of energy spat from the tip of Prakis's staff,
exploding just behind the mage in huge fireballs, but Akabar stayed just ahead
of their swelling blossoms of flame.
Dragonbait finally managed to grab his sword, but with Akabar in flight he
couldn't risk using Hill Cleaver to dispel magic in the area. Instead, he used
the sword to bite deeply into the lich, pulling ribs from the burned chest.
Prakis's fighting ability was still unaffected, though. He backhanded
Dragonbait with a swipe of his wickedly sharpened finger bones.
"Akabar!" Nameless shouted. "Throw the wand into the
disk!"
Dragonbait whirled about anxiously. It made the best tactical sense to
remove the wand from their enemies' reach, but would it ultimately prove their
undoing? What effect would it have on Alias?
Akabar swooped low to evade the lancing bolts of the staff of power. One
caught him in the leg, and he almost lost concentration and flight. He reached
his goal, however, pulling up at the last moment and flinging the wand into the
silver and red disk.
Three screams went up at once. Phalse shouted and barreled toward the disk.
Olive stood blocking his path, but he leaped over her and tumbled into the
vertical pool. He was swallowed without a ripple.
Zrie Prakis screamed and in screaming fell apart. With the wand thrust into
another plane of being, he could not tap the energy bound up in it that kept
him from death. He crumbled to dust. But in the moment before his spirit fled
from the bones that Cassana had "cherished," the lich cried out,
"Die, Cassana!" His hideous laughter was carried away on the breeze.
His staff of power fell to the ground. Dragonbait felt a sharp pain in his
chest, just as he had when Moander had died. Without checking, he knew that a
sigil had disappeared. He glanced at Alias, who was wielding a sword two-handed,
but if she felt Zrie Prakis's mark burn away from her arm, she did not let it
disrupt her combat.
Lastly, Cassana shrieked, for much of her own magic was locked up in that
wand. She, too, began to decay—her shoulders stooped, her skin became more torn
and ragged, so that she looked dressed in the tatters of her own dead flesh.
The sorceress's chest wound began spurting blood.
Akabar swooped down and plucked the staff of power from the battlefield.
Some of the Fire Knives, uncertain whether or not the mage could wield it,
began to move toward the perimeter of the circle. Dragonbait stood guarding the
rear, as Olive and Alias backed toward him. The saurial paladin now bid Hill
Cleaver to swallow any magic cast.
And not a moment too soon. The hag form of Cassana pointed toward the
saurial paladin and muttered. A bolt of zigzag lightning shot from her finger,
only to dissipate into a harmless shower of sparks.
"Kill them!" the sorceress shrieked to the remaining assassins, as
she struggled to her feet.
The Fire Knives regrouped and began driving the party back. Akabar could
only use the staff of power to strike their foes. Alias had lost her weapon,
and Olive stumbled as she moved. In the chaos and frenzy of the sword fight, no
more of the assassins had chosen to poison their blades. That was fortunate for
the adventurers; Alias was bleeding from half a dozen cuts, and Olive was
clutching at a jagged wound running down her side. Dragonbait risked taking his
attention from parrying a sword thrust long enough to look for Nameless. The
graying man dove into the silver pool. Like Phalse, he disappeared without a
trace.
The saurial felled an assassin closing on their left flank and chirped to
gain the swordswoman's attention. When Alias met his eyes, he jerked his head
toward the silver pool She jerked her head back indicating he must go first. He
growled. If he went first, Cassana could again use her magic to attack them,
but he couldn't explain this to Alias. He jerked his head indicating again that
she must go before him, but she shook her head seconds before she launched a
kick at an assassin's chin with her boot.
Minutes ago, she had no will power of her own, he thought with grim
amusement. Why does she pick now to be so stubborn? He caught her attention
with another chirp before he spun Hill Cleaver about and tossed it to her.
Alias caught the weapon, reclasped her hands about the grip, and spun to
decapitate an assassin who had lunged forward when her attention was focused on
the saurial. Dragonbait snatched up the halfling and loped to the planar disk.
The silver pool had already shrunk to half its original size. The swirls had
become solid rings and the portal now-resembled the bull's eye sigil of
Phalse's master.
Dragonbait plunged in, taking Olive with him. Alias and Akabar blocked the
portal. The Turmish mage brought the end of the staff up hard, cracking the jaw
of an assassin.
Then two withered hands, strong as steel, closed around the staff. The aged
face of Cassana, drooling and twisted beyond the limits of humanity, confronted
the mage. "You use it as a club," she lisped. "Now feel its full
force."
Alias slew another assassin with Hill Cleaver, but there were more than a
dozen left, and the effects of her wounds were taking their toll on her
reaction time. "Into the portal'" she ordered the mage.
"But the witch," Akabar protested, as Cassana began to intone
words of power.
"In!" the swordswoman cried.
Alias put her foot on Akabar's stomach and shoved the mage through the disk.
Akabar would not loosen his hold on the staff, and Cassana was dragged toward
the bull's eye. Akabar was lost to sight beyond the silvery glow of the portal,
but the haggish sorceress managed to plant her feet firmly on the ground and
hold her position. With the tendons of her arms popping from the strain,
Cassana began to pull the staff back from the portal.
Alias stepped halfway into the portal, straddling it with one foot on each
side of the planar gate. She brought Hill Cleaver down on the half of the staff
of power that jutted out from the disc hovering over the Hill of Fangs.
The blade cut through the ancient wood like an axe, and a multicolored
fireball blossomed out from the broken staff. Alias felt heat wash over her
body as the force of the explosion pushed her through the gateway, into the
lands that lay beyond. The shock wave caught the last pieces of Cassana's body
and the fire-ravaged forms of the remaining assassins, carrying them from the
top of the Hill of Fangs. The last curved and pointed stones toppled from their
moorings, and, for the second day in a row, a new star burned over Westgate.
30
The Citadel of White Exile
"Alias, are you all right?'" Olive asked, bending over the
swordswoman.
"I feel like I've been taken apart and put back together, with lots of
pieces missing," Alias moaned.
"That's a pretty sick joke," Olive chided. "Apt, but
sick."
"What do you expect?" A throbbing pain had filled her head, ner
flesh stung from half a dozen cuts, and she felt badly sunburned. She opened
her eyes, then shut them instantly, growling, "Well, that was a
mistake."
A bright white light seared her eyeballs, leaving blue dots dancing before
her mind even after she'd squeezed her eyes shut and covered them with her
hands. This was not the icy white of sun on snow or the ivory white of silk,
but the hot burning white of coals in the center of a forge.
Shielding her eyes, she ventured another look. The sky above was convoluted
whirls of white-whites and off-whites—hot matter and even hotter matter
swirling and twisting in a vain attempt to combine.
"This is where the gods roll across the sky like storm fronts,"
she muttered.
"What?" Olive asked.
"Nothing. Just a line from an old tale."
"Right," the haifling said, realizing just who must have told her
the tale. "You going to lay there all day?" she asked.
Alias sighed and sat up. Beneath her were gray flagstones shimmering in the
light of the white-on-white sky overhead.
Olive knelt beside her. The halfling's glittering white dress, a copy of the
one Cassana had worn to last evening' midnight dinner, was covered in mud and
blood.
To Alias's right, Akabar and Dragonbait were kneeling over a fifth
figure—the stranger who'd helped them fight the battle on the Hill of Fangs.
Alias felt a momentary twinge of jealousy that they were looking after the
stranger before they did so for her.
Don't be a fool, she told herself. For someone who's just fought two dozen
assassins, a witch, and a lich, and who's broken a staff of power, you're in
pretty good shape. You got off easier than Sylune did in Shadowdale. A pang of
grief went through her, though, as she remembered how the river witch had met
her end.
Is there a difference, she wondered, between the sadness that real people
feel and the sadness I was made to feel? What reason would any of my makers
have to make me grieve for someone like Sylune? None, she decided. I can think
for myself, and I can feel for myself. The "masters' don't have anything
to do with it.
Remembering the recent deaths of all but one of the masters, she looked down
to examine her sword arm. The limb still ached from the disappearance of the
top three sigils— Cassana's, Zrie Prakis's, and the Fire Knives'. All remaining
members of the assassins must have been wiped out by the explosion of Zrie's
staff of power. The arm that the sigils occupied had been overgrown with the
waving serpent pattern, but only the concentric rings of Phalse's master
remained. And the blank space that's left, Alias thought, remembering with a
shudder Olive's prediction that something might now grow there.
Alias tried to stand and stumbled to one knee. She was tired and battered.
She leaned on Dragonbait's sword, stood up, and looked around. They were atop a
very tall tower that thrust into the shining white sky. The crenelations of the
wall about them were curved and pointed like the stones about the Hill of Fangs
had been.
She looked down from the tower. It rose from a plain of shining, gray stone
that spread out in all directions as far as the eye could see. In a circle
about the tower's foundation, the stone was solid and unmoving, but just
beyond, the ground was cracked and shifting like a mud or lava flow.
"You know, Olive, I don't think we're in the Realms anymore."
She limped over to Akabar and Dragonbait. The stranger's faded garb was a
shredded mass of tatters, and his arms and legs were lacerated by a hundred
bites the size of large coins. Larger gashes lay across his forehead, chest,
and torso, and blood ran freely from his wounds. Olive came up beside Alias and
whistled in a low tone.
Dragonbait had the man's head cradled in his claws, and small, bright arcs
of yellow bridged the space between his hands and the man's face, visible even
in the bright light of the white sky. The smell of woodsmoke filled the air.
Before their eyes, the flow of blood ceased, and the wounds on the man's face
began to heal. The stranger's grimace faded and his expression grew' peaceful,
the deeper wrinkles smoothed from his weather-worn face.
Akabar moved swiftly and surely, tending to the damage that remained when
Dragonbait's healing powers were exhausted. The mage smeared a viscous, green
paste over the wounds not yet closed and bound them with strips of his borrowed
robe.
Alias knelt beside the mage and the saurial. "Who is he?" she
asked.
Dragonbait turned a curious stare on her, and Akabar said, "You don't
recognize him? Are you sure?"
Alias studied the face. He was familiar. Beneath the gray hair and the
wrinkled flesh was a man who must once have been very handsome, with a
well-formed figure. "Nameless!" Alias whispered.
She turned to explain to the others. "He was in my dream in Shadow Gap,
only much, much younger. Unless this is his grandfather or someone."
"You don't remember him from anywhere else?" Akabar prompted.
Alias screwed up her face trying to think, but she couldn't recall him. He
wasn't in her pseudo-memory and there was no other time that she could have
known him.
"Of course she can't remember him," Olive said with a sniff.
"She was just a baby then."
"What are you talking about?" Alias asked.
"You were just born—so to speak. He set you loose with Dragonbait to
look after you. You might say he's your father." Olive reached down to
touch her on her right wrist where the tattoo wound about the empty space.
"He's the Nameless Bard. Ring a bell?"
"The Nameless Bard," Alias echoed as she leaned back and thought
deeply. She knew that story, but hadn't associated it with Nameless from her
dream. She rocked back and forth as she recalled the tale in full and began to
really understand for the first time what she was meant to be and what she had
actually turned out to be.
Nameless opened his eyes, and, though his sight was mostly shielded from the
bright sky by the four adventurers surrounding him, he raised his hands to
shield his eyes. He scowled deeply and muttered, "Home again, home again,
jiggidy-jig."
Akabar and Olive exchanged glances. The halfling shrugged. Alias moved
closer to the old man.
When Nameless caught sight of the swordswoman, he tried to sit up, but his
remaining wounds caused him too much pain to do so. Dragonbail moved to support
his back, but Nameless waved him away. With some effort, he pulled himself to a
seated position, facing Alias.
He gazed at her bloodied, disheveled form and sighed. "You are
everything I intended—and more."
"You're the Nameless Bard," Alias replied, her tone even and
emotionless.
"Yes. Do you remember my tale? I did not put it in you, as I did the
other tales, but told it to you the hour you first woke, while we waited for
the potions to heal Dragonbait so you could run away with him."
Alias shook her head. "I don't remember hearing it. I only remember
it."
"What do you remember?" Nameless prompted her.
"It's the tale of a man with overweening vanity who betrayed his
scruples trying to complete a task he knew very well had the potential for
tremendous abuse."
Olive gasped and Akabar bit on his lower lip.
The color drained from Nameless's face.
"Am I wrong?" Alias asked.
A long moment passed. The cloudless sky flashed and crashed as a lightning
storm erupted overhead. The energy discharges cast sharp shadows of the party
on the tower roof's gray flagstones.
"How can you say that?" Nameless whispered.
"Sounds to me like she put her own interpretation on the story,"
Olive said smugly. "What do want to bet she tinkers with your songs,
too?"
In a defeated tone, the true bard said, "I've failed."
Akabar grinned, "True. You tried to make a thing, and instead you
created a daughter. In Turmish, we'd say you were blessed by the gods."
Alias smiled at the mage gratefully.
"Might even outdo her old man as a bard," Olive predicted.
Nameless looked up in surprise at the halfling. Obviously it had never
occurred to him that his creation might improve on his work. He was too proud
and too vain. "I gave you everything I could," he said.
"A false history, your songs, and no true name," Alias said
"I gave you a past so you would not feel alone and removed from those
you would live among, and my songs were all I had left. I set you free at the
price of my own freedom. When Cassana dragged me from my cell to distract you
in a dream, I tried to warn you. She controlled most of my words and actions,
but I did tell you how to defeat her kalmari."
"Yes. You did those things," Alias admitted flatly.
The true bard looked anguished. "But you still hate me."
"I didn't say that," Alias replied. A grin broke through her grim
expression. "Don't human children often disagree with their parents
without hating them?"
"Do vou think of me as your father .then?"
The swordswoman shrugged. "I don't know. You hardly gave me anything in
the way of a family in my memories. I'm not very practiced at feeling filial
affection. Do you think of me as a daughter?"
Nameless looked down at the flagstones for a moment before meeting her eyes
again."To be honest, no. At least. not until now."
"That's all right." She leaned forward and brushed her lips
against his wrinkled cheek. "I found myself two good friends, and you gave
me a brother."
"A brother—" Nameless did not understand at first. "Oh, yes.
Vou share the saurial's soul."
Dragonbait shook his head.
"You do. Phalse divided vour soul," Nameless told the paladin.
"You have half a soul each."
Dragonbait's eves squinted with displeasure. He extended two claws, pointed at
Alias and retracted one, pointed at himself and retracted the second.
"He should know," Olive said. "He's the expert on
souls."
The lizard nodded.
"You can't split a soul and get two souls," Nameless argued.
"Why not?" the halfling demanded. 'They're infinite things. If you
break them up, you still have two infinite things."
Akabar stared in amazement at the short bard.
"What?" Olive asked, uncomfortable in his case. "Am I wrong?'
"No," the Turmish mage replied. "I'm simply surprised at the
firmness of your theological argument."
"Halflings go to church, too, you know . . . sometimes."
Alias yawned. The exertions of the past month, the first month of her life,
were beginning to catch up with her. "This is all very interesting,"
she lied, "but what I'd really like to do is catch Phalse and his master
and take care of this last blasted sigil."
"But don't you see what this means?" Nameless said. "You
really could be human."
"So?"
"So?" the true bard exclaimed. "Doesn't that matter to
you?"
Alias shrugged again. "Dragonbait says I have a soul, and that means
I'm not a thing. I've already decided that the rest doesn't matter much. Most
adventurers aren't particularly fussy about whether you're human or halfling,
mage or fighter, and all the rest, just so you pull your own weight and remain
loyal to your party. Isn't that what you taught me?"
Nameless nodded, a little astounded that she had come to all these
conclusions on her own without guidance. Perhaps, as Akabar had said, his
endeavor had been blessed by the gods—better gods than Moander.
"So," Alias said, trying to steer the conversation to more
practical matters, "this is the Citadel of White Exile. It used to be your
home. Do you have anv idea where Phalse could be?"
"I abandoned the citadel to Phalse. Before I left, Phalse's master
built a bridge from here to his own realm, which Phalse uses to report to him.
It's in the courtyard below. Unless the little monster hides in one of the
tower rooms, there is no place else for him to go."
"Why not? Where does that plain lead?" Alias asked, pointing
across the monotonous expanse of gray below them.
"This place was built to be completely secure. Heft a rock into the
sky."
Dragonbait broke off a piece of flagstone and did as the bard had
instructed. The stone went up smoothly about fifty feet before it exploded in a
rainbow of fireworks against the background of the white sky.
Nameless explained, "Above us is the Plane of Life, called the Positive
Material Plane by sages. Any unprotected thing that enters explodes as every
bit of matter within it achieves its full potential and becomes a star. There
is no escape that way."
He motioned toward the gray expanse beyond. "We sit on the border
between the Plane of Life and the Plane of Gems, which sages call the
Para-elemental Plane of Minerals. Wordy lot, sages. Out on the Plane of Gems,
all unprotected living things are relentlessly turned into crystals of stunning
beauty and complete lifelessness. Phalse, as far as I know, has no protection
against either of these effects. The only way to this place are the two bridges
built by Phalse's master, one to his domain and one to the Hill of Fangs.
"You must be very cautious looking for Phalse. When I arrived, I was
attacked by one of his master's guard beasts-all mouths and teeth. And Phalse
still has Cassana's wand, which still has power over you."
Alias nodded. "What about Phalse's master?"
"None of us has ever seen him. Cassana sent someone through the portal
to his domain to find out about him. Her agent was returned in pieces. The
saurial can lead you to the other portal. Phalse brought him out of it. Your .
. . shell and his body were branded in the courtyard, then brought up here and
taken to the Hill of Fangs, and from there into Westgate."
"Will you be all right here alone?" Alias asked.
"Yes. The energy-wrought sky has certain healing properties. I will
wait here until I feel strong enough to walk. Then I will follow you."
"Perhaps, Alias, you should remain here, too," Akabar suggested,
"so that Phalse cannot use the wand on you."
"Look, Akash, whose battle is this, anyway? Phalse might try to use the
wand, but I've already beaten its power once. I'm not about to cringe from it
now." Then, in a more gentle tone, she asked Nameless, "Are you sure
you wouldn't prefer that we waited for you to heal?"
Nameless shook his head. "You don't want to give Phalse a chance to
call in reinforcements from the lower planes. If you defeat Phalse, you can
force him to call his master from his domain through the portal and deal with
him." He looked up at the saurial. "You remember the way?"
The lizard nodded.
Alias frowned a little, still dissatisfied with leaving Nameless alone.
Akabar thought to himself, she must care about him more than she knows.
"All right, Dragonbait. Which way?"
The saurial led them to a gap in the crenelations. A single set of stairs,
steep, narrow, and without a railing, wound along the outside of the tower. Alias's
frown grew deeper when she saw they would have to go down in single file.
"I'm going to go first until we reach a door," Alias said.
"May I borrow your sword just a little while longer, Dragon-bait?"
The saurial cocked his head in the manner that Alias usually assumed meant
he hadn't understood the question. Now she was beginning to believe it simply
meant he didn't want to answer the question. The fragrance of violets filled
the air. She held the strange weapon out, thinking he might be uncomfortable
allowing someone else to wield it.
"If you'd rather have it back, I'll understand," she said, but the
lizard shook his head and pushed her hand away gently, indicating she should
keep the blade.
When this is over, we're going to learn to talk together, she promised
herself. She started down the stairs, Dragonbait behind her, followed by
Akabar. Olive brought up the rear. The halfling sighed at the steepness of the
stairs, though their narrowness did not disturb her in the least. She trotted
down them casually. Akahar, however, pressed himself against the wall of the
tower and kept his eves on his feet.
Nameless waited until Olive's head disappeared below the level of the wall,
then counted to twenty before limping to the staircase, gripping his wounded side.
Half concealed by a large, fanged crenelation, he watched them descend. When
they'd entered the first door, the true bard started down the stairs himself.
He reached the first door and passed by it, continuing farther down the
staircase. His only hope lay in the possibility that the tower had not given up
all its secrets to its new owner.
On the ground far below, outside the tower's protective shell, a cloaked
figure lowered the hand that had been shielding his eyes from the sky's light.
Carefully, he removed the eye-cusps that gave him the sight of an eagle and
replaced them in the small egg that was their home. He sighed, and his breath
circled like fog through the transparent envelope that surrounded him. Then he
took up his staff and made his way over the broken terrain of gemstones to the
Citadel of White Exile.
When the companions had passed through the door, and Dragonbait had pushed
past Alias to scout ahead, he had left Hill Cleaver still in her grasp. Without
a weapon, the swordswoman was only a human of soft flesh and toolusing hands,
while the saurial felt quite confident with his claws and powerful jaws.
The passages were lighted by the stones of the wall, which shone from
within—a benefit of the citadel's position. Akabar was reminded of the light
that had come from behind the elven wall that had imprisoned the Abomination of
Moander, but these walls glowed with a rosy light that gave them all a ruddy
hue.
Thev passed through one chamber, then another. Both had held some furniture,
but recently had been stripped bare. The dust on the floor was disturbed as
though several heavy objects had been dragged across it. The small prints of
the pseudo-halfling crossed the rooms, as well as a set of large, heavier
boots, nearly giant size.
They came to a pair of doors made of crystal that, like the the walls,
glowed from within. The doors opened at a touch.
A large hall lay beyond. Dragonbait froze upon entering the room. It was not
arranged the way it had been more than a month ago when he'd been dragged
through it. There had been a long feasting table, and the walls had been
covered with banners of some of the Realms' older nations. The table and
banners were gone, replaced by twelve biers. Each funeral stand was occupied by
a body.
Alias's first guess was that the citadel's new inhabitants had turned this
room into a morgue, or maybe even a meat locker.
Dragonbait, already standing in the center of the room, spun about in
obvious confusion. A brimstone stench emanated from his body.
"Brandobas's Beard!" Olive exclaimed, already near enough to see
what useful things might be left on the corpses. "They're you!"
Uneasily, Alias walked closer to the bodies. They were all as similar as a
batch of bowls a potter might throw in a day. Each face had the same features,
some were thinner some wider, but they all had her features. Each face was
framed with hair some shade of red, from reddish black to strawberry blonde.
Their skin tones covered the spectrum from the pale flesh of the north to the
swarthy complexions of the south.
Their dress was more varied. A body in the heavy armor of Mulhorand lay
beside one in wolfhide robes and the headpiece of the far north. The sultry
slitted dress of a Waterdeep courtesan—something perhaps from Cassana's
closet—adorned a body one bier over from another dressed in the conservative
robes of a Moonshae druid. A weapon lay beside each, a mace or sword or sickle
or dagger. One figure, wrapped in black, was equipped with eastern weapons
whose uses were unfamiliar to Alias.
Yet thev were all her. Earlier models? Alias wondered.
Then she shook her head grimly. No, later improvements. How foolish to think
that they would stop at just one. A few minutes ago, when she'd thought herself
unique, she'd been certain she could prove her worth, justify her own
existence. But what if she was just one of a pack, a herd of Aliases to be
unleashed on the unsuspecting worlds?
She forced herself to stand closer to one of the bodies— one dressed as a
cleric of Tymora in robes of white trimmed with blue, with her holy symbol—a
silver disk—hanging on a chain about her neck. Alias fought back the queasiness
in her stomach and touched the body, grabbing the right wrist and turning it to
reveal the underside of the arm.
The pattern of serpents and waves was there, as motionless as a tattoo
placed on a piece of dead flesh. The only sigil in the pattern was the bull's
eve of Phalse's master. There was no blank spot at the wrist for Nameless. The
flesh was clammy, like clay.
Akabar came up behind her and put a hand on her shoulder. "Dead?"
he asked.
"Dead," she echoed, "or at least not alive. Or less alive
than me." She shook with anger. "This is all I was to them. A thing
to be copied over and over."
"Easy now," Akabar said, squeezing her shoulder gently.
"They're no more like you than a painting of you would be. If you want, we
can destroy them."
"No!" Alias snapped. "Whatever they are, I will not see them
destroyed. They're no more . . . evil than I am. I'm going to kill the last
master and lay them to rest that way."
Akabar stood silent for a moment, then nodded. "As you wish."
Alias could tell he was trying to determine if her reaction was a natural
one or another pattern, like her obsession to reach Yulash had been.
Olive shook her head, disapproving of Akabar's tone. Just like a mage.
Thinking too much with the head, not enough with the heart. Wonder how he'd
feel if we offered to burn up his brothers?
Dragonbait snapped out of his
shen state. He could not understand
what his senses were telling him about the women laid out before him. Each body
possessed a living soul, but the saurial could not sense a trace of a spirit in
any of them. Is that all that separates them from death—or birth? he wondered.
"Is the courtyard over there, Dragonbait?" Alias asked, pointing
to a second pair of crystal doors at the far end of the hall.
The saurial nodded.
Alias approached these doors and inspected them. They glowed in the same
fashion, but there was something different about them. They made her uneasy.
Then she realized why.
They drew her. As with the elven wall in Yulash, she could not resist moving
toward them. She wanted to open them. What she sought lay beyond them in the
courtyard.
She glanced at the others. Akabar pulled a small bundle from his belt,
fishing out spell components. Dragonbait took a two-handed sword from one of
the biers. Olive placed an ear against one of the doors. She pulled back,
rubbing her ear. "No noise, but it's very warm."
Alias took a deep breath as she reached for the door. She wanted to be
prepared to slam it shut in an instant or dodge aside if some horrible beast
came lunging out.
The door pushed open at a touch, revealing a large, open courtyard. To the
right and left, passages wove farther into the mazework of the tower. Directly
across from them, a balcony opened onto the splendor of the shimmering Plane of
Life. In the center of the court was a large pool filled with swirling patterns
of silver and red, like the portal on the Hill of Fangs. This pool was set into
the floor, though, and ringed with bluish stones.
A small form, dressed in shades of red and brown was seated on the stones.
He smiled a smile wider than any human or halfling could manage, and his
blue-on-blue-on-blue eyes glinted wickedly. In his hands he passed back and
forth Cassana's slender, blue wand.
"Welcome home, One," Phalse said. "I take it you have met Two
through Thirteen."
31
Phalse
Alias strode into the court, casting a glance to the right, to the left,
overhead. No assassins were hidden behind the crystal doors, no cage hung
suspended above. Olive moved to the right, Dragonbait to the left. Akabar held
back, slightly behind Alias, ready to cast in a moment.
Phalse remained seated on the portal stones, swinging his short legs back
and forth, playing with the wand like a child with a stick.
"Where is your master?" Alias demanded.
"Where is yours?" Phaise asked with a giggle.
From the rear, Akabar began to cast a spell.
Phalse pointed a finger at one of the blue stones near the pool. The stone
rose, hovered for a moment, then flew, as if propelled by an invisible sling,
across the room. Alias ducked instinctively and raised Dragonbait's sword to
deflect the stone, but she was not its target. It circled around the saurial's
blade and streaked past the swords-woman. Alias heard the brutal impact of
stone cracking bone. She half-turned. Akabar was kneeling on the floor,
clutching his forehead. Blood oozed between his fingers.
'None of that, now." Phalse waggled a finger at the mage reproachfully.
"Not fair at all to attack a poor, defenseless halfling."
"Zero for three," Olive said. "You're none of those
things."
"Something wrong, One?" Phalse addressed Alias, ignoring Olive
completely. "I thought you didn't like others doing your talking for
you."
"My name is Alias," the woman warrior retorted, striding toward
the little creature.
"You are One," Phalse said. "Two, Three, and Four are behind
the door. As well as Five through Thirteen. While I worked with the other
members of the now-defunct alliance, I was very careful to always refer to you
as the One, instead of just One. I couldn't let them suspect that I only
thought of you as the beginning of something far grander. Why make just one
weapon when you can make several? Especially if you have as many enemies as I
have."
Alias took a step forward, and Phalse waved Cassana's wand.
Alias stopped in mid-stride, as though she had walked into an invisible
spider web. Unlike Cassana's taut bonds, these were gummy. Phalse could wield
the wand differently than the witch had.
"Problems, One?" Phalse mocked her. "Cassana's toy still has
effects you haven't learned yet. She built for variability, you know. When you
were within her area of command, the wand made you her puppet, much like that
poor, undead fool, Prakis."
Olive and Dragonbait began to close on the small form, but Alias growled at
them through clenched teeth, "Back away. He's mine!"
Phalse laughed. "No, One, you have that backward. You are mine. If I
want you, that is. I think I prefer Two. She'll be much more tractable."
The shorter strands of Alias's hair were rising like serpents as she fought
the controlling force of the wand. Dragonbait remained in position, respecting
Alias's desire to resist the wand without help.
Olive was not so amenable to the idea. She drew out her daggers, but she
remained even with the saurial.
Alias felt as though she were pressing hard against a membrane, like the
skin of some gelatinous monster. She strained and the muscles in her legs
bunched, but she did not move.
"Now Prakis, he wanted you" Phalse said. "He really loved
Cassana—devils knew why. She put him through hell. When you came along, though,
I think he realized he could have his cake and eat it, too. You had all of
Cassana's charm, not to mention her once-youthful looks, and after the
sacrifice was made, you'd be pliable, too. Not one of Cassana's
characteristics."
Alias looked like a medusa, with the longer strands of her hair standing out
from her head. The strain of fighting the grip of the web was evident in her
face. Her forehead beaded with perspiration, her teeth clenched together, and
her eyes squinted—fixated on the pseudo-halfling's form.
Dragonbait gritted his teeth as he felt the familiar tug within his chest,
the call of Alias's sigils to his own. No stranger to discipline, he remained
in place.
He turned to look at the mage. He was still clutching his head, but the
bleeding had stopped. Akabar staggered to his feet. The saurial sensed
nervousness in the halfling and wondered if it would overwhelm her caution and
she would attack. Or bolt.
A movement along the wall behind and above the halfling caught Dragonbait's
eye. Two banners hanging along the sides of the courtyard parted ever so
slightly. Another player had arrived on the scene. Slipping into his
shen
state, the lizard caught the familiar feel of the intruder. He turned his
attention back on Alias's struggle.
"It's amazing, though, that all of them failed. Moander got you to free
it, but it was so enfeebled that a laughably small group brought it down. The
Fire Knives played their hand so badly that you only succeeded in throttling
some Wyvernspur fop. Zrie was never going to get you to love him. Only Cassana
was perverse enough to feel anything for him. And Cassana only used you to
taunt and bash her lovers. She had no concept of the forces she was unleashing
by trying to get you to kill your little lizard brother."
Phalse turned the wand over in his hands, batting his blue eyes. "They
all thought so small. Once they left me this citadel, I quickly duplicated
their work on a much larger scale. I needed their expertise to make you, One.
Creation is so very difficult. But duplication, that's another matter entirely.
It was child's play smuggling out the equipment used to create you, coaxing
Cassana out of a piece of her flesh, syphoning off a portion of the life
energies Moander contributed. That's why I chose this particular form.
Halflings make such good thieves."
Alias watched his eyes. Blue within blue eyes. Bull's eyes. "The last
sigil is yours," she said. "You have no hidden master, do you?"
Phalse broke into one of his widened grins, the corners of his mouth almost
touching in the back. "Very good, One. I led Cassana to believe that I was
just a servant. The ploy had its inconveniences, but it was much safer letting
her believe someone even more powerful backed me. I couldn't risk letting
Moander know we were partners. The old god and I are . . . rivals. As to the
sigil on your arm, don't think of it as the last sigil. As far as you should be
concerned, it's the only sigil—the only one that matters" Phalse stood up,
moved to the side of the circle, and waved the wand.
Alias felt her muscles bunch up against their will, trying to march her
straight ahead—into the pool of silver and red.
"Now, I have a small job for you. Pass through this portal and take
care of it. I wouldn't be stubborn about it, if I were you."
"Why not?" Alias growled, fighting the pull toward the bridge into
Phalse's domain. Along her arm, the single mark of the last master shone like a
beacon.
"Because then I shall be forced to sacrifice you and the saurial and
use Two in your stead. Two will be much more accommodating, anyway."
"I'll bet you made that same assumption about me," Alias said.
"You can't be sure, though, which is why you're trying to persuade me
instead of just forcing me."
"Oh, I'm sure. I've determined why you are flawed, and I know how to
prevent it in other models. You see, when we made you, we hadn't taken into
account the strength of the saurial's will. We needed a soul and a spirit for
you. The soul was easy to divide, but a spirit is supposed to have limits. We
assumed you would not come to life until we slayed the saurial so his spirit
could transfer into you, enthralled by our will, of course. Somehow, the
saurial found a way to create a spirit for you, broke off a shard, so to speak,
from his own spirit. You were able to draw on his stronger spirit whenever you
needed to. When I kill the two of you, I will take care that only enough spirit
flows into Two through Thirteen to animate them, without making them unruly."
"I still think you're bluffing;" Alias said. "I won't obey
your commands willingly."
"Oh, but you can't refuse, One. It's not just the wand that controls
you. You want to jump into the portal. You were made to jump into the portal.
Don't you sense how right it would feel?"
Alias gasped. The portal was what had called her into the room. Its siren
call was as subtle as Yulash had been, yet much stronger, like the compunction
to kill Winefiddle and Giogi. The patterns compelled her to find what lay
beyond.
"You see," Phalse explained, "through this portal lies a
second portal which leads to the Abyss. As you may know, my former partner,
Moander, resides there in its true form. Once vou step into a plane where it
exists, its sigil will return to your arm. Because you bear its mark and are
known to its minions as its servant, you will pass through to its domain
unharmed. Once there you will kill it. You will not be able to stop yourself.
You will rid the world of a great evil. a noble purpose. Just right for you."
"How would you know what's right for me, you monster?' A raging fire
ignited in her, hot enough to burn away the power that held her. "I will
not be controlled! I am my own master."
The wand exploded in Phalse's hand, and the cloud of shattered blue crystals
mixed with the blood spurting from his wrist. The last master screamed, opening
his mouth wide like tlie kalmari. Alias felt the invisible web dissolve: she
was free. She crossed the last few feet separating her from her foe, swung with
Dragonbait's sword, and severed Phalse's head neatly from his body.
The head flew two feet away, toppling in a bloodless arch while the body
collapsed like an empty skin. Alias circled warily. She wondered if it was only
a coincidence that Phalse's smile resembled the kalmari's, but no smoking
monster rose from the two halves.
Olive shivered, suddenly exhausted.
"Finally," Akabar said. "It's over."
Dragonbait shook his head.
"No," Alias said in a quiet, angry voice. "It's not.
Look." She held up her arm. It still bore Phaise's sigil.
Laughter rose from the floor, Phalse's laughter, loud and strong, issued
from the severed head.
"Foolish, foolish, One. You shouldn't make me angry." Phalse's
face leered at her from the disembodied head, and as it spoke it began to
change. The head expanded, puffing up like a balloon and rising several feet
off the ground, the laughter growing deeper and more malicious. Phalse's two
blue eyes merged into a single orb above his over-large mouth. Thick worms
snaked from his hair, and each worm ended with a fanged mouth shaped like a
lamprey's. Phalse had become a huge beholder, only with jaws instead of eyes.
This was the creature that had attacked Nameless, Alias realized, recalling
the multiple bites in the bard's body. It was Phalse all along.
The body's empty skin also began to inflate, turning into the naked form of
a large, sexless humanoid. The skin darkened to a shiny, reflective black. The
creature had only a sharp stump where the right hand had been blown off by the
exploding wand, but the left appendage sported a set of pincers.
Olive lunged at the beastly head with her daggers. A worm-appendage snaked
around her slender waist, lifted her from the ground, and sent her skittering
across the floor like a ball. She hit the far wall with a bone-wrenching crack
and did not get up again.
Akabar made a movement toward the halfling, but he was blocked by the
headless, shining black body It caught the mage firmly in its viselike pincers
and squeezed. Akabar screamed.
Dragonbait had started toward the beholder, but now spun about to rescue
Akabar. Using the sword he had borrowed from one of the Aliases, he hacked at
the beast. Chips of dark crystal flew from the monstrous torso, and it stopped
squeezing Akabar and began using him as a shield. The beholder used the pointy
stump of its right arm to spear at the saurial, driving him back.
"One," the head announced with its largest mouth, the rest of them
hissing as it spoke, "enter the portal now or die."
"Make me."
The beholder launched itself at her.
Alias put a foot on the well's rim and brought Dragonbait's sword up with a
sweeping cut, shearing off the mouth-tipped worms along one side. The head
turned and charged her again.
Alias dodged to the right, twisting and turning as she did so. Moander had
taught her that the best way to fight tendrils was to avoid them. She shifted
the sword to her right hand and drew a dagger from her left boot.
Phalse began his third charge at Alias's head. At the last moment he swooped
down and slammed into her knees The swordswoman crashed to the floor, losing
her grip on Dragonbait's sword and her dagger. Three of the lamprey jaws
clamped tightly on her thigh, while the oozing stumps of two others wrapped
around her leg. The beast began drawing her into its huge, central maw.
Alias grabbed at the stonework surrounding the portal and kicked at the
beholder with her free leg.
*****
Far above the fray, the figure behind the banner shook his head and reached
for the crossbow he'd retrieved from the citadel's depths. The tower's new
owner had not found the cache of magical items, scavenged during his exile.
Nameless drew a single quarrel from a slim case of dark wood. The bolt shone
in the dimness of the secret passage, illuminating his careworn face. With his
foot in the crossbow's stirrup, he wound back the weapon's spring until the
crosswire clicked into position. He loaded the shining bolt into the groove,
tight against the wire. Sighting along the top of the weapon, Nameless chose
the blue-in-blue-in-blue major eye as his target.
He hesitated as Alias pulled against the strength of Phalse's mouth-stalks.
Had he believed the gods still favored him, he would have prayed.
A hand jostled his shoulder, and Nameless accidentally set off the trigger.
The bolt sizzled as it left the crossbow but it flew wide of its mark, smashing
deep into the far wall, unnoticed by the combatants below.
Nameless turned in rage, expecting some dire beast. Instead, his blue eyes
met those of an old man dressed in dirty brown robes, and sporting a voluminous
beard which spilled out over his cloak.
"Elminster," Nameless growled.
"She must finish this battle alone, Nameless."
"So Phalse can kill her and do your dirty work for you?"
"So she can prove to herself, and to thee. that she is her own
master."
"She could die!"
A smile played across Elminster's lips. "I thought she was thy immortal
vessel, who could not be killed. Ye made her a powerful fighter. Will ye follow
her around until the end of thy days, rescuing her from every danger? What good
is she to ye as an eternal monument if she cannot defend herself from the
forces of the world?"
"But she's human. I ..."
"Care for her?"
"Of course."
"That's a first," Elminster said. "Now show it. Let her go
free."
*****
The deadly tug of war between Alias and Phalse continued. Alias felt as if
the monster was tearing her arms from her sockets. Her fingers were white from
gripping the rock, and her hold was slipping. The time had come to risk a
new-strategy. She pushed hard against the wall, toward the mouth-beholder.
Phalse tumbled backward with Alias on top of him. She kicked at the head,
but it was not like kicking a balloon, as she had expected. The head was as
hard as armor, and a numbing shock rang up Alias's leg, but Phalse's grip on
her slackened. She took advantage of the moment to draw her other boot dagger.
She slashed off the stalks that bit into her, leaving long trails of misty
blood in the air. She fell to the ground as Phalse floated back a few yards and
hovered.
Alias rose without taking her eyes from the head, brandishing her bloody
dagger. Dragonbait's sword lay on her right. She spoke, trying to cover her
movement as she edged slowly toward it.
"You're awfully quiet now, Phalse. Run out of threats and taunts?"
She noticed that her kick had dimpled its side.
"I'm listening—to the portal. Can't you hear it calling to you? Don't
you feel drawn into it?"
"You wish, Phalse," Alias said with a laugh. "You don't think
my sisters out there can do it, so you want me to believe I'm expendable. None
of them ever received the mark of Moander, did they? They can't get to Moander
the way I can, can they?"
"Not as easily as you, One, but they will try. I will send them, one at
a time, until one of them succeeds. You could spare them all of that pain and
agony. How can you resist the challenge?"
"Forget it, Phalse. You're not going to talk me into it."
Phalse's words, though, managed to split her attention between the beholder
and the portal, so she didn't notice Phalse's ebony body behind her until it
was too late. It struck her with a hard, powerful swing of its handless arm.
Alias fell to the ground like a sack, only a few feet from Dragonbait's
sword. The giant torso loomed over her with Akabar dangling from its claw like
a rag doll. Dragonbait lay motionless on the floor. Olive was still out cold.
Phalse's head laughed as it drifted until it fitted itself securely in the
depression between the ebony form's shoulders. "This torso was also a
prototype of sorts, both part and not part of me, useful as a carrier and
warrior. But not as good as you."
The united Phalse, body and head, bent over her, the sucker mouths opening
and closing in anticipation. Alias reached for Dragonbait's sword, grasped its
hilt in both hands, and swung it low, near the floor. The sword passed cleanly
through one of Phalse's ankles and chopped into the other. The body toppled
over, and Alias rolled away as Phalse separated himself from the fallen ebony
torso.
"You spoil all my fun," said the huge, bloated head. 'Now we must
end this." He charged at her.
Alias faked a stumble to one knee, and the head swooped lower, still moving
quickly. Alias leaped to her feet, stabbing with Dragonbait's sword as if it
were a dagger—right into the central blue eye.
Phalse hissed from all his remaining mouths, and Alias thought she had
beaten him, when suddenly several more mouth-stalks sprang from the head and
engulfed her. The large, lower mouth tried to bite her. She placed her free arm
in the space between the skewered eye and the mouth, try ing to remove
Dragonbait's sword, but the blade was stuck. She succeeded only in keeping the
awful main maw from snapping at her flesh.
*****
Dragonbait recovered his senses as Alias was grappling with Phalse's head.
This was her battle; she had asked him not to interfere.
The saurial staggered from the courtyard and into the former feast hall to
stand between the rows of bodies. He agreed with Alias that her copies should
not he destroyed.
The saurial thought back to the evening when he and Alias had been branded,
when his soul had been stretched and torn until Alias had suddenly become
possessed of life and a soul, and, unexpectedly, a spirit.
Just how did I do it? he asked himself. Was it my prayers, my stubborn
defiance of the evil around me, my acceptance that death was near?
*****
The forest of mouths encircled Alias, blocking her vision, and she and
Phalse spun about dizzily. Alias became suddenly aware that they stood on the
balcony.
Catching her foot against the wall, Alias twisted at the waist, slinging the
head about by Dragonbait's sword. She let go of the sword's hilt.
The torque created by her spin was enough to rip the mouths from her body.
Phalse's head went spinning from the tower with the sword still embedded in it,
Thirty feet from the balcony, Phalse and Dragonbait's sword achieved maximum
potential and burst into a ball of white light as bright as the recent
detonations near Westgate.
Alias shielded her eyes from the explosion with her arms and backed away
from the balcony. She felt a familiar burning pain on her arm. A welcome pain.
Phalse's sigil flared and vanished from her arm.
*****
A sharp pain on Dragonbait's chest broke his concentration. The air filled
with the scent of violets as the saurial realized the source of the pain.
Phalse was dead.
Suddenly, the twelve figures before him faded to shimmering, glassy outlines
and then vanished completely.
A last trick of Phalse's? the saurial wondered. He hadn't had time to learn
if he'd succeeded. Now he might never know.
*****
Alias swaved unsteadily and put her hand against a wall. Dragonbait stood in
the doorway between the feast hall and the courtyard. He looked disturbed but
uninjured.
Then Alias saw two figures bent over the bodies of her companions and she
leaped toward them. One of them turned toward her, and she paused.
It was Nameless, and he and his companion were smearing healing ointment
over Akabar's body. The other man moved toward Olive and told Alias,
"She's alive, too."
There was something familiar about the figure and voice, but Alias was too
weak to place it. She sank to her knees, chiding Nameless, "About time you
showed up." Then she allowed herself the luxury of collapsing.
32
The Tale Told
Elminster and Nameless smeared Alias with foul-smelling ointments and bound
her wounds. When she came to, Dragonbait was using his power to heal Akabar,
who had been the most grievously hurt. Olive had a nasty gash on her forehead,
but the old man who worked beside Nameless assured the halfling that if she
would only keep her mouth shut, her headache would go away.
Alias felt no pain, courtesy of the ointments, but she was bone-weary.
Akabar, who sat beside her, gave her a nudge and pointed to the old man.
"That one was talking to Dragonbait in Shadowdale," the mage told
her.
Elminster crouched beside Akabar. "I understand ye wanted to see me on
a matter of grave importance."
Akabar flushed with sudden understanding. "Elminster?"
"Really?" Alias said. "And I thought you were just a goatherd
who knew more than was good for me." She realized now that Akabar had
never actually spoken with Elminster.
"He's nothing at all like you described him, Akabar," she teased.
"For one thing, he talks funny."
"Have you ever considered keeping an appointment calendar?" Akabar
asked the old sage angrily.
"Yes," Elminster replied. "They make excellent tinder."
"You knew all about Nameless," Alias accused him. "You knew
what I was, didn't you?"
"I knew about Nameless," Elminster confessed sadly. "But I
was not sure about thee. Ye seemed too human to be the made thing he had
envisioned. In disbelief, I put off coming here to ascertain if the bard was
still safe in his prison. As they say, the wise aren't always."
"Aren't always what?" Olive chirped.
"Wise," supplied Alias.
Elminster nodded. "Got off my hindquarters fast enough when Moander was
unleashed, though. Took me two days to trek out here. I watched thy arrival on
the roof. New portal—must remember it."
"But you tried to get me to give up the songs, and I refused. You let
me go. You knew it was wrong to try to squelch Nameless's songs."
"Let's say I was uncertain. I was prepared to sacrifice them to a
greater good. Thy vehemence made me rethink the greater good. It was hard to
argue with a soul so pure."
Alias looked shyly at Dragonbait. If they'd given me a piece of someone
else's soul, she wondered, would I have succeeded in freeing myself?
"What will happen to Nameless?" she asked. "It's a little
late to keep him locked up to protect his secret. And you most certainly aren't
going to lock me up"
Elminster looked startled momentarily. "No," he agreed. 'That
would be unjustifiable. What he did may have been wrong, hut what we did may
not have been right. The time has come, I think, to review the matter."
"A second trial?" asked Nameless
'Perhaps," said Elminster. "If so, I will speak in thy
defense."
"As will I," Alias said.
Nameless smiled at her. "You really refused to give up my songs?"
"It was wrong to abandon them, and I knew it."
Something tickled the base of her wrist, and Alias held her arm up. In the
once-empty space a blue rose blossomed, shimmering among the stiller pattern of
waves and serpents.
Dragonbait clutched at his chest and looked down. The snaking pattern on his
green scales was replaced by a wreath of blue ivy.
"A sign of the gods' favor?'' Nameless asked the sage.
"It would appear so" Elminster agreed. He turned to Alias. "I
have closed the portal leading to Phalse's domain, so ye will be safe
here."
Alias could see that there was only water where the portal had been. The
sight of her reflection brought to mind the copies of her Phalse had created.
Struggling to her feet, she limped to the feast hall door.
"They're gone!" she cried. "What happened to them?"
Dragonbait shrugged his shoulders. The smell of brimstone rose from his
body.
"You hoped to lay them to rest by destroying Phalse," Akabar
reminded her. "It appears your wish was granted."
"Maybe they were never really there," Olive conjectured.
"Maybe they were just an illusion Phalse conjured up to use against you.
They must have vanished when you killed him."
"Perhaps," Alias whispered sadly. She could not believe either
explanation.
Elminster, detecting the scent of lemon and ham from the saurial's body,
cocked an eyebrow but said nothing.
"I think it's time to check the larder and see what goodies Phalse left
behind," Olive suggested.
"In the cellars of this place," Nameless said to Dragonbait,
"you will find a sword. I would be honored if you would accept it in place
of the one you lost."
Dragonbait nodded graciously.
Nameless knelt by the injured haifling, who still cradled her head in her
hands. "There's something I'd like you to have, too, Mistress
Ruskettle."
The halfling's eyes shone as she held her hand out. In it Nameless placed a
small, silver harp and crescent moon pin, the symbol of a Harper. She smiled up
at Nameless. "Really? For me?'' She pinnned the gift to her tattered gown.
"Thank you"
"That's going to raise some hackles," said Elminster quietly.
"Let it," Nameless said.
Elminster smiled at Akabar. "I have a gift for ye, Akabar Bel Akash, a
piece of advice perhaps more valuable than any magic item. It takes less time
to solve thy own riddles than to wait in Lhaeo's office."
Akabar grinned and nodded.
Nameless looked uncertainly at Alias. "I have no more gifts to give
you, yet I would ask for something from you."
Uncertainty gripped the swordswoman, a fear that Nameless would ask for
something she could not give him, or something she would not wish to.
"What is it?" she asked.
"I know of your birth," her 'father' said, "and Mistress
Ruskettle has told me something of your travels. But I wish to hear you tell
your tale."
Alias laughed with relief. Moving to the edge of the pool, she sat down and
beckoned her audience to draw close. Olive perked up attentively, eager to hear
the tale that would bring her fame throughout the Realms when she began telling
it herself.
"I woke in Suzail, in the land of Cormyr, to the sound of two dogs
barking. . . ."
As the three men and the saurial listened to Alias's beautiful voice, Olive
leaned back and promptly fell asleep.
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
KATE NOVAK grew up in Pittsburgh, where she received a B.S. in Chemistry
from the University of Pittsburgh. After getting married, she gave up laboratories;
her husband Jeff keeps her from starving while she pursues her writing career.
Her works published by TSR include pick-a-path, adventure gamebooks and game
modules. She is a Girl Scout leader and a fussy cat owner.
JEFF GRUBB, also a Pittsburgh native, was a civil engineer before being
kidnapped by Wisconsin leprechauns and put to work designing games and fantasy
worlds for TSR, Inc. His writing credits include
Manual of the Planes,
an AD&D® Hardbound supplement, and the FORGOTTEN REALMS™ Boxed Set. He is
currently serving as authoritative source, guardian spirit, and traffic cop for
the ever-growing Forgotten Realms. His wife Kate keeps him sane in all this.
Azure Bonds
By Kate Novak and Jeff Grubb
1
The Hidden Lady
She woke to the noise of dogs—two distinct barkings beneath her open inn
window. A high-pitched yip confronted a deep, throaty growl. Alias lay on the
tan-stained cotton sheets and pictured a long-haired puppy cast out from its
wealthy owner's household, fending off some huge boxer or Vassan wolfhound.
As with men and other savage races, the show of force was as important to
the dogs as force itself. The yipping canine was overmatched, yet its barking
went on for what seemed to Alias an eternity. Finally, the dog with the deeper
growl reached the end of its patience and snarled savagely. The sound of
toppling trash brought Alias fully awake.
She opened her eyes, listening for a dying squeal from the smaller dog, but
surprisingly the next thing she heard was a series of deep yelps from the large
dog. The sound faded away as the large dog fled from the window.
Alias threw off the light blanket and swung her feet to the floor. She rose
and immediately regretted it. Her head felt as though molten lead had been
poured behind her eyes, and her mouth was as dry as the sands of Anauroch.
She blinked in the reddish light. Is it dawn or twilight? she wondered.
Pressing the heels of her palms into her eyes, she yawned. Through the open window,
the sea breezes from the Lake of Dragons wafted into the room, along with the
far-off cries of fishermen returning with their catch.
Twilight, then, she decided. She shook her head, trying to clear the
cobwebs. Must have slept through the day, she thought. When did I get here? For
that matter, where's here? And what was I doing before I came here?
Alias snorted derisively. What she'd been doing was obvious. This wasn't the
first time she'd awakened in a strange place after a drunken celebration.
Nonetheless, her surroundings seemed familiar. The inn was built in the same
fashion as a hundred others at this end of the Sea of Fallen Stars, and her
room held the typical trappings: a bed cobbled together of a mixed pile of
wood, topped with a straw tick and sheets that hadn't been aggressively washed
in months; a small second-hand dressing table; a single straight-backed chair
draped with her armor and clothing; a small rag rug at the foot of the bed; a
brass oil lamp chained to the table; a chamber pot; and a single door. The
window, inset with colorless circles of crown glass that let in the light of
the setting sun, opened inward on side hinges that creaked lightly in the
breeze.
Alias got out of bed and padded barefoot to the chair. She furrowed her
brows, trying to remember the last few days. There was a sailing trip.
Something went wrong and I had to get out of a seaport quickly, she thought.
Random images of lizard men, shadowy swordsmen, and magic-users blurred in
her memory. She shrugged. It couldn't have been too important. I wouldn't get
drunk if there was trouble, she assured herself.
She reached for her tunic and suddenly realized that this
was
important, that she was in trouble. Serious trouble.
Along the inside of her sword arm, from wrist to elbow, writhed an elaborate
tattoo unlike any she had ever seen before. A pattern coiled about five large,
distinct symbols was set deep into her flesh, all done in shades of blue.
She held up her arm in the light of the dying sun. The symbols caught the
rays and glowed as if they were stained glass lit from behind. She flexed her
arm and twisted it back and forth. It wasn't really a tattoo at all, she
realized, noting how her skin rippled across the surface of the massive
inscriptions, as though they were buried beneath the surface of her flesh.
Engrossed by the symbols, Alias unconsciously sat on the edge of the bed in
the fading light. Afraid the symbols might have some hypnotic quality, she
studied them with her fingernails pressed into her palms so the pain would
distract her from whatever power they might try to exert over her.
The first symbol, at the bend of her arm, was a dagger surrounded by blue
fire. The tip of the dagger rested on the second symbol, a trio of interlocking
circles. Beneath this was a dot and a squiggle which reminded Alias of an
insect's leg. The leg danced above the fourth symbol—an azure hand with a
fanged mouth in the center of its palm. The last symbol consisted of three
concentric circles, each a more intense blue, so that the centermost circle was
the white-blue of a lightning strike and almost unbearable to look at. At the
base of her wrist the pattern wound about an empty space, as if a sixth symbol
was yet to be added.
Alias cursed, rattling off the names of as many gods as she could
immediately think of. When neither Tymora nor Waukeen nor any of the others
manifested themselves, she sighed and reached for her gear. She considered
bolting out of the room, sword in hand, prepared to smite anyone she could hold
responsible. She also considered dropping to her knees and praying for a divine
revelation of what she had done to deserve this. Neither action was likely to
do her any good, so she settled for getting dressed.
Alias tugged her tunic over her head and stepped into her leather leggings.
She frowned at the clothing. Why are these so stiff? I bought them over a year
ago. They should be broken in by now. Unless they're replacements, she mused.
There was no mistaking the newness of this set of clothing-it even smelled new.
But I don't remember buying any new clothes recently. Is this a spare set I
shoved into the bottom of my pack and forgot? she wondered. She looked around
for her pack, but it wasn't among her belongings. It might have been stolen,
she realized, but then it was equally likely she lost it or even hocked it.
She slipped her shirt of light chain over her head but decided against
attaching the breast, shoulder, arm, and knee plates. She felt a rocking
sensation in the pit of her stomach. I know there was a sea trip. Did I get
this. . . tattoo before I sailed or after I arrived?
She pulled on her hard-soled boots. The soft leather uppers reached nearly
to her knees. She checked for her daggers. Each boot pocket held a slender,
balanced wedge of silvered steel. All that remained on the chair was her plate
mail and her cloak. Her fire-scorched longsword and the eagle-shaped barrette
she used to keep her hair in place lay on the dresser. Worse than her missing
pack, there was no money among her belongings, but she was still too concerned
about the tattoo to worry about money.
This memory loss and tattoo may be nothing, she tried to tell herself as she
reached for the barrette. Holding the silver clasp in her teeth she wound up
her long reddish hair and bound it to the back of her head with the barrette.
She remembered Ikanamon the Gray Mage telling her about the time he got so
drunk and obnoxious that his fellow party members had a vulgar scene involving
centaurs tattooed on his backside. Maybe this is just a prank, too, she
reassured herself. A clerical cure will get rid of it for me.
The small hairs on the back of her neck rose, and Alias realized that she
was being watched. Turning slowly toward the window, she locked gazes with a
reptilian creature peering in at her from the alley.
Looking like a cross between a lizard and a troglodyte, the beast's head
just reached above the level of the windowsill. His snout was thinner and more
refined than the lizard men Alias had fought before, and he had a huge fin
which began just between his eyes and continued over the top of his skull. He
had no lips, only sharp, disjointed teeth, and his eyes were the yellow of dead
things. In his claws he held the smaller of the two dogs Alias had heard
earlier. The puppy, unharmed, had short, white hair, not long as Alias had
imagined. Both creatures watched her with an intense curiosity, the lizard
still as stone, the puppy wagging its tail, with its pink tongue lolling
stupidly out of one side of its mouth.
Alias reacted instantly with the practiced grace of an experienced
adventuress. She drew one of the daggers from her boot and, with a flick of her
tattooed wrist, shot it at her observer. The creature pitched backward without
a sound, but the dog fell into the room with a frightened yip. The dagger sank
half an inch into the oak window frame.
Grasping her flame-seared sword, Alias flung herself across the room in one
fluid motion When she reached the window, however, the creature was gone and
the alleyway empty. The short-haired dog yipped at her feet, rising on its hind
legs and placing its front paws halfway up her boots
"I don't suppose you know anything about this?" she asked the dog.
The puppy merely wagged its tail and whimpered.
Alias picked up the small creature, petted it briery, then dropped it
outside the window. The beast barked at her a few times, then began sniffing
the rubbish.
*****
"The lady has risen from the dead!" shouted the barkeep in a merry
voice as Alias entered the common room. She did not know this particular
barkeep, but knew others just like him who ran inns from the Living City to
Water-deep. He was a loud, boisterous man, full of
"hail-fellow-well-met" attitudes, favoring adventurers in his trade
because the additional gold they usually carried made up for the damage their
barroom arguments caused.
A few heads turned to look at her, but there were no familiar faces among
them. Alias had decided to wear her armor plate after all. She looked more
suited for battle than for a few drinks, but many of the merchants,
mercenaries, and townsfolk were similarly armed and armored, so she fit in.
Like most of those in the room, Alias wore her weapon at her side. Like all of
those doing so, she had the blade's grip tied to its sheath by white cord,
fashioned in "peace knot."
She took a table near an interior wall, away from any windows, where she
could keep an eye on both doors to the common area, and the barkeep as well. He
was a portly, balding man, obviously guilty of sampling his own stock.
He took her attention as a request for service, and after a few obligatory
passes with a rag over the bar, he filled a large mug from the tap and brought
it over to her table. Foam ran down the mug's sides, and beads of water
condensed where the rivulets did not run.
"Hair o' the dog what bit you?" offered the barkeep.
"On the house?" asked Alias.
"On the bill," the barkeep replied. "I like to keep things on
a cash-and-carry basis. Don't worry, you're still covered."
For the moment Alias was more interested in the blank spaces in her memory
than in who was covering her tab. "I was here last night?" she asked.
"Yes, lady."
"Doing?" Alias raised an eyebrow.
"Why, sleeping it off. And it must have been a Hades raising drunk
indeed, for it is the seventh day o' Mirtul." When Alias stared at him
blankly, lie explained, 'You been here since the evening o' the fourth, done
nothing but sleep the whole while."
"Did I come alone?"
"Yes. Well, maybe not. May I?" He pointed to the empty seat at the
table. Alias nodded, and he lowered his ponderous weight into the chair, which
groaned under the load.
"One o' my regulars, Mitcher Trollslayer," he continued,
"stumbled over you that evening after the last call. You wuz laid out on
my front stoop like a sacrifice to Bane."
The barkeep drew the circle of Tvinora on his chest to ward off any trouble
uttering the evil name might bring. "Anyway, there you wuz with this sack
o' money alongside. I put you up. using the money in the sack to cover your
tab. Here it is, too, with only the cost o the room deducted." From his
apron pocket he fished out a small satin sack "Doesn't count the beer, o
course."
Aliais shook the contents from the sack. A small, greenish gem, a couple of
Lantan trade bars, some Waterdeep coinage, and a scattering of Cormyrian coins.
She shoved a silver falcon at the barkeep. "I don't remember coming here.
Someone must have left me. Did you see anyone?"
"I figgered you must have been carousing with a bunch o' mates who,
when the effects caught up with you, left you on mv doorstep with enough cash
to guarantee your comfort. No one told us about you until Mitcher found vou on
his way out. You wuz alone."
Aiias looked at the mug as the foam on top diminished to reveal a watery
amber liquid. It smelled worse than the rubbish outside. "Why wouldn't my
'mates' bring me inside?" she asked.
The barkeep shrugged. The mates-leaving-the-lady-on-the-doorstep theory was
apparently his favorite, and it was obvious that he had been telling and
retelling it over the past few evenings. He was reluctant to change what seemed
to him a concise and well-rounded tale.
"No one has asked after me?" Alias pressed.
"Not a one, lady. Perhaps they forgot about you."
"Perhaps. No lizards?"
The barkeep sniffed. "We keep the premises clean. We wuz waiting for
you to wake before cleaning your room."
Alias raised a hand. "No lizard-creatures, then? Something that looks
like a lizard-creature?"
The barkeep shrugged again. "Perhaps the last brew you had haunted you
some. You recall what you wuz drinking?"
"I recall precious little, I fear. I don't even know what town I'm
in."
"No mere town, but the gem of Cormyr, the finest city o' the Forest Country.
You are in Suzail, lady, home o' His Most Serene and Wise Majesty, Azoun
IV."
Alias had a mental map in her head of the region. Cormyr was a growing
nation, sitting astride the trade routes from the Sword Coast to the Inner Sea.
The name of its ruler struck a responsive chord. Is he a friend? An enemy? Why
can't I remember things?
"Last question, wise barkeep," she said, holding up another silver
orb, "and I will let you go." She turned the hand holding the coin to
reveal the inside of her arm and its bright tattoo. "Did I have this when
I arrived?"
"Aye, lady," said the barkeep. "It wuz there when we found
you. Mitcher said the Witches of Rashemen wear such tattoos, but a Turmishman
said he wuz full of bee droppings. There wuz some mutterings, but I put my foot
down and, as you see, the sky hasn't fallen on my inn. I considered you a good
omen, at that."
"Why?"
"The name of this house. The Hidden Lady."
Alias nodded. Taking this as a dismissal, the barkeep scurried back to his
bar, rattling the orbs in his hand as he went.
Alias reviewed what the barkeep had told her. It makes sense, she thought.
Adventurers have been known to dump off drunken companions, leaving a tattoo as
a reminder. But why these symbols? They mean nothing to me.
Alias gulped a mouthful of ale, then fought the urge to spit it across the
table. The brew tasted like fermented swill. She forced herself to swallow it,
wondering if the wretched taste of the beer had been why her unknown
benefactors had left her outside and not entered the establishment,
"I hate mysteries," she muttered with annoyance. She toyed with
the idea of pitching the nearly full mug at the barkeep, accusing him of
poisoning the clientele. When in doubt, she thought, start a brawl.
She pushed the beer away, her attention diverted. The barkeep was talking to
a tall man wearing robes of crimson highlighted with thin white stripes and an
ivory white cloak with red trim. The barkeep motioned a pudgy hand toward
Alias's table, and the man turned to look at her.
His skin was dusky and his hair a curly brown mane banded with gold cords,
hung to his shoulders. He had a moustache, and his beard was cut straight
across at the bottom like a coal shovel. His eyes were blue. On his forehead
were tattooed three blue dots, and a sapphire was embedded in his left earlobe.
Alias recognized him as a southerner and knew the dots marked him as a Turmish
scholar of religion, reading, and magic. The earring meant he was married. But
she did not recognize the man himself.
Nevertheless, he made his way from the bar to her table. Alias rose as he
approached—not from politeness, but to give herself the chance to size him up.
He stood several inches taller than Alias—and she was taller than most women
and many other men. Beneath his soft, flowing robes, the man had a reasonably
sturdy frame. However his muscles did not appear to be trained for battle or
hardship, as were her own. He might be a mage, she decided, or a merchant.
"I hope you are well, lady?" His voice had the cultured tone of
someone tutored in the local tongue by a scholar.
Alias scowled at his features. "Do I know you, Turmite?"
His expression turned stormy. "No. If you did, you would know our
people prefer to be called Turmishmen or Turms.''
Alias sat down and motioned him into the seat opposite her. She liked his
control in the face of her insult. "You care for my drink? I've lost the
desire."
Nodding, the Turmishman took a long pull on the mug. If it was fermented
pig-swill, as Alias suspected, then such drinks were common in the south, she
decided, because the stranger seemed to savor his swallow.
"I take it you are the Turmishman who declared I was not a witch?"
The man nodded and wiped a bit of foam from his moustache. "Your
friendly innkeep was too afraid to take you in, and the lout who found you was
ready to have you burned. Or at least relieve you of your purse."
"But you knew I was not a witch? '
"I know that the Witches of Rashemen, if they ever leave their frozen
climes, know better than to decorate their bodies with tattoos proclaiming
their origins."
Alias nodded. ''I'm not of that sisterhood." At least as far as I know,
she thought inwardly, since I can't swear to what I've been doing for the past
week or so.
She hesitated, then asked, "Did you see who brought me here?"
The Turmishman shook his head. "I was at this very table when the
northerner left and then came right back in, babbling about a dead witch on the
front steps. Everyone here investigated, and I convinced them your glyphs were
harmless, though I have no idea what they are. I must confess, to being most
curious about them. May I see them again?"
Alias frowned but held out her arm, palm upward, revealing the symbols. In
the dim common room they seemed even brighter than before, glowing from within.
The Turmishman looked at them and shook his head, still mystified. "I
have never seen the likes of these before. Where are you from?"
"I . . . get around." After another pause she added, "I was
born in Westgate, but I ran off and never returned."
"I've seen naught like this in Westgate, and I have traveled the Inner
Sea from there to Thay. I must confess, though, I am by no means a sage. May I
cast a spell on them?"
Alias involuntarily jerked her arm back. "You a mage?"
The Turmishman grinned, displaying a line of bright white teeth. "Of no
small water. I am Akabar Bel Akash of House Akash, mage and merchant. Do not
fear. I have no wish to entrap you by magics. I only wish to know if the
marking's origin is in magic."
Alias glared across the table at the Turmishman. He was a merchant-mage. One
of those greengrocers who dabbled with the art, but probably wasn't skilled
enough to cut it as just a sorcerer. Still, he ought to be capable of detecting
magic, and he looked sincere. She needed to know more about the tattoo, and
here was this Turmishman offering his services for free She held out her arm.
"I am Alias. Magic does not frighten me, am be quick about it."
Akabar Bel Akash leaned over the symbols and began mumbling words quickly
and quietly. If the runes on her arm were magical, Alias knew, they would
radiate a dim glow.
The merchant-mage chanted, and Alias felt the muscles of her arm writhe
beneath her skin as though they were snakes. The symbols danced along her arm
as if mocking the Turmishman.
Suddenly, strands of hellish blue light, intense as lightning flashes, shot
from the symbols on her arm, illuminating the whole room. The beacons of color
crackled along the beams overhead and were reflected off all the bottles and
armor in the tavern, turning the surprised faces of every patron in the room to
a deathly blue.
Akabar Bel Akash had not been expecting so violent a reaction to his magical
inquiry. He toppled backward in surprise, chair and all. His flailing arm
caught the half-drained mug of beer and sent it flying across the commons room.
The droplets of spilled ale took on the appearance of a cluster of blue
fireflies.
Alias caught sight of the barkeep frozen in the blue light. An instant
later, the portly man regained his senses and dove like a sounding whale behind
the bar. His patrons were a tougher lot; many of them were desperately working
loose the peace knots of their weapons.
Grabbing her cloak from the back of her chair, Alias twisted it tight around
her arm to muffle the light. The blue glow leaked out of the cloak's edges, and
she held the arm close to her body. In an overloud voice she announced,
"No problem, no problem! My friend here was just showing me a new magical
trick that he hasn't quite learned yet."
Alias quickly circled around the table. She leaned over the tall mage's
sprawled form and, to demonstrate that there was nothing wrong, helped pull him
to his feet. Already most of the patrons had returned to their drinks, but
there was a good deal of scowling and muttering.
Grasping the collar of his white-striped crimson vestments, Alias held
Akabar's face close to her own and whispered in the tight voice she reserved to
threaten people. "Never, ever, do that again," then added with a
hiss, "I should have known better than to trust a greengrocer. I'm going
to a real spell-caster to get rid of this tattoo right now Don't be here when I
come back, Turmite."
With that, she spun and, clutching her cloak-wrapped arm to her belly,
strode out of the inn. She caught sight of the barkeep's head surfacing from
behind the bar just as she pushed the door open.
Cursing, Alias stormed three blocks before she dared to duck into an
alleyway and unwrap the cloak. The symbols on her arm had returned to their
normal appearance, if one could consider a tattoo that looked like pieces of
translucent glass set beneath the skin normal.
Alias cursed again, this time without venom or passion, and headed toward
the Promenade, Suzail's main street, looking for a temple thai might still have
clerics awake at this hour.
2
Winefiddle and the Assassins
The first two temples she tried, the Shrine of Lliira and the Silent Room,
the Temple of Deneir, were locked. Both were posted with identical signs
stating they were closed until dawn services.
She passed by the Towers of Good Fortune—the huge temple to Tymora—because
it looked too expensive, and the Shrine to Tyr, because it looked too prim and
stuffy.
Upon reaching the Shrine of Oghma, Alias glared at the note tacked to the
door. She ripped the paper from the tiny nails and let it flutter down the
stairs. Pounding on the door with the side of her fist, her assault was
answered by a sleepy caretaker who cracked the temple door open all of two
inches and peered out at her suspiciously.
"I need a curse removed! Immediately!" she gasped with her best
maiden-in-distress voice. The caretaker's look softened, but he shook his head,
explaining that the holy mother was out of town arranging a wedding and that
they had only acolytes within, new officiates who lacked the power to deal with
such things.
"Try Tyr Grimjaws, Miss," he suggested.
Alias backtracked to the Shrine of Tyr the Just only to find her entry
barred by two heavily armed guards. "Unless it's life or death," one
informed her, "you'll have to wait." Apparently the church of Tyr had
hired an adventuring party to deal with a dragon terrorizing the Storm Horn
Mountains. The party's dealings with the monster had been anything but
successful. The priests of Tyr were all occupied with healing the survivors and
resurrecting the bodies of their comrades who had not been incinerated.
Alias was feeling desperate by the time she screwed up her courage to enter
the Towers of Good Fortune, the Temple of Tymora. At least there was no sign on
its front gates. She jerked on the bellpull incessantly until a priest
appeared, yawning but not cross. A corpulent, pasty-faced man, he waddled
forward to unbar the gates.
"I must speak with your superior immediately," Alias demanded.
"This is an emergency."
The priest bowed as much as his bulk would allow and stood up again,
grinning. "Curate Winefiddle at your service. An improbable name for a
priest, I know, but we must play the cards we're dealt, right? I'm afraid,
lady, that I'm all there is. His worship and the others are helping the minions
of Tyr with healing and resurrecting the would-be dragon slayers. Unless, by my
superiors, you meant to have a word with Lady Luck herself. It's possible, but
very costly, in more ways than one. I wouldn't recommend it."
Alias shook her head. Before the curate could babble anymore, she burst out,
"I need a curse removed."
"Now, that does sound serious. Come in." Winefiddle ushered her
past the silver-plated altar to Tymora, Lady Luck, and into a private study for
an audience. An oil lamp lit the musty chamber. Dark oak cabinets lined the
walls. A single, high window framed the night sky. The curate offered her a seat
and plopped down into a chair beside her.
"Now, tell me about this curse," he prompted her.
Alias explained how she'd awakened after her unusually long sleep and
discovered the tattoo on her arm. At a loss for any other theory, she told him
the barkeep's story that she was a drunk left on the doorstep of The Hidden
Lady. Then, she related what had happened when the Turmish merchant-mage had
cast a spell to detect magic on the tattoo. "I don't remember getting
it—the tattoo," she concluded. "I would never have agreed to it, not
even drunk. This has to be some sort of stupid prank pulled on me while I was
unconscious, but I have no idea who would have done it."
Alias did not bother to mention her hazy memory of the past few weeks—it was
too embarrassing—and she omitted the incident with the lizard as
inconsequential.
Curate Winefiddle nodded reassuringly, as if Alias had brought him nothing
more troublesome than a kitten with earmites. "No problem," he
declared. "There remains only the question of how you would like to
arrange payment?"
Alias knew from experience that her coins were an insufficient
"offering." She pulled out the only real valuable in her money
sack—the small, greenish gem.
Winefiddle accepted the terms with a smile and a nod. "No. Don't put it
there," he admonished her before she set it down on the desk. "Very
unlucky. Drop it in the poor box as you leave."
Alias nodded. Winefiddle began removing a number of tattered scrolls from a
cabinet. "The one advantage to serving an adventurer's goddess," he
yawned as he spoke, "is a steady stream of worshippers in need of your
special services, worshippers willing to pay in magical items."
The cleric stifled another yawn, and Alias gave him a blank look she
bestowed on fools she needed to tolerate. As far as she was concerned, clerics
were merely puttering quasi-mages who couldn't cast spells without worrying
about converts, theology, relics, and other nonsense. If they weren't so useful
when sickness, famine, and war struck, they would probably have died out
altogether, Alias decided, taking their gods with them. Perhaps the gods knew
that, and that's why they put up with the fools.
Winefiddle pulled bundles of scrolls from the cabinet with all the grace of
a fishmonger hoisting salmon. He hummed as he checked their tags. Alias sat
there as quietly and patiently as possible, wishing she had stopped at another
inn for a pouch of decent rum. Finally, the priest pulled two from the lot that
seemed to please him.
Despite Alias's warning of what had happened in The Hidden Lady, Winefiddle
wanted to begin with a standard magical detection. He waved aside her
objections, insisting, "I need to see this extreme reaction myself.
Nothing to be afraid of since we know what to expect this time, right?"
Alias submitted with a grudging sigh. The cleric passed his silver disk of
Tymora over her outstretched arm. The words he muttered were different from the
Turmish mage's, but the effect was the same. Alias shuddered as the symbols
writhed beneath her skin, and she squinted in anticipation of the bright,
sapphire radiance which soon lit every corner of the musty study.
Winefiddle's eyebrows disappeared into his low hairline, amazed at the
brilliance of the glow. Alias clenched her muscles involuntarily, and the rays
swayed about the room like signal beacons, bouncing off the darkened window and
the priest's silver holy symbol.
The glow peaked and began to ebb slowly Winefiddle cleared his throat
nervously a few times before he reached for the larger of the two scrolls on
the desk. In the blue light he looked less pasty and more powerful, but Alias
was beginning to wonder if he knew what he was doing.
"You really think that piece of paper's going to be strong
enough?" she asked doubtfully. Maybe I should put this off until morning,
she thought. The Shrine of Oghma or the Temple of Deneir might have more competent
help.
"This scroll was written by the hand of the Arch-cleric Mzentul
himself, it should remove these horrors without delay." He stroked his
chin thoughtfully and added, "It being such an old and irreplaceable
scroll, perhaps you wouldn't mind, should you come into further funds . ."
Alias gave an impatient nod, and Winefiddle undid the scroll's leather
binding. With one hand on her arm and the other holding the scroll, he began to
read.
"Dominus, Deliverus," he intoned. A cold shudder ran down Alias's
spine, a feeling quickly overwhelmed by a burning sensation on her forearm. The
pain was familiar, but she could not remember why. Is this how the magics felt
that put the damned thing here?
The fire on her arm intensified, and she clamped her jaw shut to avoid
crying out. She couldn't have been in more pain if molten metal had been poured
over her sword arm.
"Ketris, Ogos, Diam—" Winefiddle continued, breathing heavily, his
teeth clenched. Alias wondered if he could feel the heat of her arm beneath his
hand.
Light beams arced from Alias's arm like water from a fountain, but instead
of spilling to the floor, they wrapped around her until she was surrounded by
blue light.
Suddenly, she wrenched her arm away from the cleric's grasp and reached down
to her boot for her throwing dagger. As if she was in some horrible nightmare
her arm moved of its own accord, like a viper she could not control.
The priest had ignored the swordswoman's arm jerking from his grasp. It
wasn't really necessary that he hold onto it, and he could not afford to lose
his concentration and break off his incantation. "Mistra, Hodah, Mzentil,
Coy!" he finished triumphantly.
Winefiddle looked up at his client. She was still bathed in a blue light
from the symbols, and her face was a mask of rage. A low, feral snarl issued
from her lips. He caught the flash of silver as Alias thrust the knife toward
him. With an unexpected dexterity, he shifted sideways.
The weapon sliced through his robes and bit into his flesh, but it was
stopped by his lowest rib.
Alias looked down in horror at her hand—it moved with its own volition.
Blood from the dagger bubbled and burned as it dripped over the glowing tattoo.
Suddenly, the scroll Winefiddle had been reading burst into flame, its magic
used. The curate threw the burning page in Alias's face.
The swordswoman swatted the fiery parchment away, and the priest circled
around her. Just as he reached the door, Alias felt an electric pulse run down
her right arm. She tried to grab the wrist with her left hand, but she was too
late. The arm hurled the dagger at the priest. The weapon whirred past his ear
and buried itself in the doorjamb. Yanking the door open so hard that it banged
against the wall behind it, the priest fled from the study.
Alias raced after him, no longer in control of any part of her body. She
tried to pull the silvered steel weapon from the wood as she passed by, but the
blade had buried itself too deep; she abandoned it so as not to lose sight of
her prey.
Alias found Winefiddle climbing the steps to the silver altar. She leaped
after him and grabbed at the back of the chain around his neck, the chain that
held his holy symbol—the silver disk of Tymora. She yanked on it hard, trying
to throttle him with it.
Winefiddle lost his balance and tumbled backward down the steps into his
assailant, knocking her over as well. The priest's fall was broken by Alias's
body, but the swordswoman was not so lucky. The crack her head made on the
marble stone echoed through the temple, and the priest's great bulk on top of
her forced all the air from her lungs.
When Alias opened her eyes again, she was still lying on the floor. The
light on her arm had faded to a very dim glow. Her head was throbbing with
unbearable agony. Gods' she thought, as panic gripped her heart. I killed a
priest! These hell-spawned markings made me kill a priest; No one will ever
believe it wasn't my fault.
She tried to sit up, knowing she had to flee, but the pain in her head made
it impossible. Then she heard chanting.
Winefiddle knelt beside her—not dead after all. In the dimness of the temple
lamps Alias could see his hands were glowing very slightly. He held them over
the wound in his side and then over her forehead. The throbbing subsided.
"How are you feeling?" the curate asked.
"All right, I guess," she muttered, sitting up slowly. She was
unable to meet the priest's eyes. "I might have killed you," she
whispered.
"Not very likely," Winefiddle replied lightly. "We are in
Tymora's temple, and Her luck was with me, not you."
His nonchalance startled Alias. She had to make him understand, even if it
didn't matter to him. "It wasn't me, though," she explained. "My
arm ... it took me over somehow."
"Yes. The symbols must have instructions to destroy anyone who would
try to remove them, discouraging you from seeking out help. I thought you
looked possessed—but it couldn't have been a real possession."
"Why not?"
"An alarm would have gone off if any possessed person approached the
altar. You didn't set it off. I don't think you're cursed exactly either, or
the scroll I used would have worked. The symbols on your arm are magical, but
they aren't just magical. There's some mechanistic component to them that
protects them from being exorcised."
"But I have to get them off," Alias insisted. "I can't run
around with markings that make me try to kill priests. Who knows what else they
might make me do?"
"Indeed," Winefiddle agreed, "but removing them might prove
to be complicated and costly. If it can be done, it would require the power of
many clerics and mages, as well as a surgeon. And you would have no guarantee
that the markings would let you live through the procedure. It might be easier
and safer for you to cut off the arm and retire."
"No!"
"But these markings are very dangerous. You could learn to fight
left-handed," Winefiddle suggested.
"I can already do that," Alias declared. "That's not the
point. I'm not going to let these things, or whoever put them on me, ruin my
life. Besides, suppose they had roots or something that went into my
body."
"Well, then, I would advise you to learn all you can about the
markings. None of them are familiar to me. Perhaps if you can discover their
origins, you can discover who put them on you and get them to remove them for
you."
Alias looked down at the blue glyphs. None of them were familiar to her
either. Even the Turmishman, Akabar Bel Akash, had found them unusual.
"That'll take a sage's service, and sages aren't cheap."
"True," Winefiddle agreed. "However, I happen to know of a
very good one who might be willing to exchange his services for yours. His name
is Dimswart. He lives about half a day's ride outside of Suzail."
"What kind of services might he be looking for?" Alias asked
suspiciously.
"Better to let him explain that," Winefiddle said evasively.
Five minutes later Alias left the temple, a letter of introduction in her
pocket, along with the small greenish gem originally intended for Tymora's poor
box. She had made a motion toward the box with her hand as she passed it, but
the gem remained firmly in her grip. As she had pointed out, sages weren't
cheap. Her services might not be sufficient to barter with this Dimswart, she
told herself.
As she walked away from the temple, an uneasy suspicion occurred to her that
perhaps it wasn't her own frugalness that prompted her to hold onto the gem,
but some desire of the sigils not to reward the priest who had tried to help
her remove them.
The cobblestone Promenade of Suzail appeared deserted, but as soon as Alias
left the temple court a tall figure in rustling crimson-and-white robes stepped
from the shadows. He hesitated, uncertain whether he should follow the
adventuress or try to discover her business with Tymora. He made for the temple
doors.
Then three more figures, dressed in dark leathers, emerged from a dark
alley. Ignoring the first figure they trailed after Alias. One last figure
followed these three—a figure holding a massive tail over his shoulder.
*****
Alias was in no hurry to return to The Hidden Lady. Three days of sleep had
left her quite awake. She wandered down to Suzail's docks. The last of the
schooners had shut down for the evening, and only a few firepots from the
warehouses lit the water. The sea air rolled into the city, smelling
considerably fresher than three-days worth of unlaundered linens.
She ran through a mental list of individuals who might be responsible for
having her marked with the symbols and drew a blank. Any enemies she'd made
were either ignorant of her name or dead. No friends who were still drawing
breath would do something like this. That left someone new—a stranger who had
picked her off the street as a suitable vessel for trying out a new piece of
magic.
Alias came to the end of the wooden plank sidewalk. The beach spread out in
a thin white line to her right. The night sky had grown overcast. Like my life,
she thought. She began walking along the shoreline on the sand.
Even if a complete stranger had done this to her, she was still left
wondering where and when it had happened. Now that she thought about it, her
memory was missing more than just a few weeks. More time than an alcoholic
binge could really account for, she decided.
She could recall long-ago adventures quite clearly—like stealing one of the
Eyes of Bane from an evil temple in Baldur's Gate with the Adventurers of the
Black Hawk, or her earliest sojourns with the Company of the Swanmays.
Her mind went all fuzzy, trying to remember recent events like the sea trip.
And there was a sea trip, she insisted to herself, worried that she
would forget that as well by the next morning. Was the lizard-creature on the
same ship? I think so. Maybe it's the pet of the magician behind this mess.
Alias walked a quarter-mile along the beach before she drew her traitorous
arm from beneath her cloak. The pain had dimmed, but the symbols still glowed
faintly, like lichen. Cursing did no good, but she cursed anyway. If they can
make me attack a priest, what else can they make me do?
If she attacked someone else, she could end up with a bad reputation. No one
would hire her as a guard, and there weren't many adventuring companies who'd
have anything to do with her. It was one thing to kill people in self-defense or
in combat under command of king or church, but if she were to slay some
innocent, unarmed person . . .
Alias was lost in her thoughts, absentmindedly digging a half-covered shell
from the sand with the side of her boot, so she failed to notice the trio stalking
her. The rushing sound of the surf covered the noise of their approach. One
hung back and began chanting a spell, while the other two rushed the
swordswoman.
The spell-caster's incantation, a high-pitched female voice, inadvertently
warned Alias of danger. The swordswoman whirled around and discovered the pair
of armed men advancing on her. They carried clubs, but light from the
cloud-wrapped moon did not reflect off their black leather armor—armor that was
the trademark of a particularly dangerous underworld class.
Assassins! Alias grabbed at the hilt of her sword and nearly jerked herself
off her feet before remembering the blade was still tied to its scabbard. The
awkward movement pulled her forward so, by dumb luck, she rolled within the
swing of the first assailant and away from the second. With one hand she tried
to foil the knot at her sword.
Then the spell-caster's magic let loose—a pair of missiles of hissing
energy, leaving a wake of glittering dust in their path. The bolts dove at
Alias like hunting falcons and caught her in the left shoulder. The arm below
that shoulder went dead from the shock, and the force knocked the swordswoman
backward on the sand. Ignore the pain, just get the knot, she ordered herself.
Fortunately, the first assailant was an amateur. He rushed forward while his
wiser companion circled. Alias brought her leg up hard and connected. The fool
dropped his club, clutching himself in pain.
Get the knot, get the knot, her mind chanted as the fingers of her right
hand tore frantically at the binding on her sword. Don't think about the
spell-caster: Work the knot!
Alias attempted to rise, and the second assailant swung at her from behind,
catching her left shoulder again. She rolled with the blow and came up at last
with sword in hand. The first assassin had recovered, so that Alias stood on
the beach facing both armed assailants, shifting her eyes from one to the
other. Worse than that, she could hear the rising chant in the distance of
another spell.
The chant died with a sudden muffled scream, and the two assassins
half-turned in surprise. Alias lunged, catching the first in the belly. She
lost her grip on her sword's hilt as the assassin crumbled to the sand.
The remaining black figure thrust his club like a sword, seeking to catch
Alias between the ribs. Alias dodged backward, so the force of his lunge
knocked the assassin off balance. She reached to the top of her boot with her
good hand and flung a dagger underhand. Her aim was true, and the second
assailant fell, hands clawing at the protruding hilt, staining the sand with
his blood.
Alias breathed deeply and recovered her weapons. Both men were dead She
rubbed her sore shoulder, feeling the tingling of life returning to it. Then
she remembered the spell-caster Has she fled, or is she waiting in the shadows?
Alias moved cautiously in the direction the magic missiles had come from.
The spell-caster lay face down in the sand about twenty yards away, a nasty
gash across her back. Bending over her body was the lizard-creature. It's just
as ugly in the moonlight as it had been in the dusk, Alias thought. In one paw
the creature held an odd-looking blade that had too much steel and not enough
grip. The tip of the blade was an oversized diamond shape edged with curved teeth
that curled backward. The teeth were bathed in the mage's blood.
Alias raised her own sword into a guard position. The lizard looked up and
hissed. Is that a hostile sign? she wondered. She tightened her grip on her own
blade. The beast rose from the mage's body. Swordswoman and lizard stood
motionless, each waiting for the other to move first.
Finally, the lizard-creature gave a muted snarl as it twisted its odd-shaped
blade in its hands, spinning the weapon like a baton once, twice, thrice . . .
And drove it, point first, into the ground at Alias's feet The creature
dropped to one knee beside the grounded blade, head down, offering its bare
neck to Alias's weapon.
Alias raised her sword over the creature. I failed to kill the thing this
afternoon, she realized, and I'll never have a better chance to deal with it.
Putting it out of my misery would be the simplest, most logical thing to do.
Four dead bodies on a beach attract no more attention than three.
The lizard remained in its kneeling position, not reaching for its blade.
The creature seemed to be holding us breath.
Alias hesitated, You'd think I was a follower of Bhaal, God of Murder. First
I try to kill a priest, and now I'm ready to slay a foe who's surrendered. For
that matter I don't know that it's a foe, The creature took out the magic-user
for me. It's offering me its services like a knight.
Alias tapped the lizard-creature on the shoulder with the flat of the blade.
"Okay, you can live." Her voice sounded overloud and pompous.
"But one false move and you're dragon bait. Read me? Dra-gon bait."
The creature nodded and pointed to its chest with a long, clawed finger.
Alias rubbed her temples with annoyance. "No, you're not named
Dragonbait. If you give me any trouble, you'll become dragon bait."
The creature repeated the gesture toward itself.
Alias sighed. "Dragonbait it is, then." She pointed toward
herself. "Alias," she said. "Now let's search these bodies and
get out of here before the watch arrives."
Dragonbait nodded and, using an overlong thumb-claw, started cutting the
strings of the magician's purse.
3
Dragonbait and Dimswart
Dragonbait was like no other creature Alias had ever seen before in all her
travels through the Realms. He wasn't a real lizard, at least not of the
species she'd helped drive back from the city of Daggerford. As she noted when
she'd seen the creature at sunset, his snout was thinner at the tip and more
rounded than a lizard-creature's, and he sported a head fin like a troglodyte.
Given time for more leisurely study, she could see many other differences.
For one thing, the sharp teeth at the front of his mouth gave way to the
peglike molars of a salad eater, and though he walked on his hind legs, his
posture was hardly erect. The creature tilted forward some at the hips,
balanced by a tail as long again as his torso. With such an odd posture, his
head only reached to her shoulder, about five feet high. Finally, the scales
that pebbled his hide were so small and smooth he looked as though he were
covered in expensive beadwork, like a noblewoman's evening gown.
At any rate, for something more lizardish than human, he was pretty
intelligent. At least, that is, the lizard made an excellent servant. Upon
their return to The Hidden Lady, he busied himself helping her off with her
boots, straightening her room, and fetching food for a late night snack.
"I see you found your lizard," the innkeeper commented cheerily to
Alias, upon discovering the five-foot lizard with a cold meat pie and pudding
in his paws.
Except for a few catlike hisses, snarls, and mewling sounds, Dragonbait
remained mute. If the creature had his own language he did not bother to use
it. Alias found she could get him to fetch and carry things on command, but he
responded to questions with the blank look of a beast.
She needed to know when she'd first met him, what he knew of her memory
loss, and especially what he knew of the tattoo. In frustration and desperation
she began shouting questions. Her anger only invoked in the lizard a tilted
head and a puzzled expression.
Alias lay back on the bed, defeated. Dragonbait made a sympathetic mewling. Struck
with an inspiration, Alias shouted down to the innkeep for an inkpot, quill,
and parchment. When the items were brought up, she set them on the table and
sat Dragonbait down before them.
The lizard sniffed at the inkpot, and his nostrils flared and closed up in
annoyance. He used the quill point to pick clean the spaces between his teeth.
Alias flopped back on her bed, laughing. Lady Luck was playing some cruel
joke on her. Here was a creature who might be a key to the fog surrounding her
life, and he could explain nothing to her. She leaned back against the
headboard and closed her eyes. Dragonbait curled up on the rag rug on the floor
at the foot of the bed and wrapped his arms around the curious sword he
carried.
Alias feigned sleep for a while, just to be sure her new companion had no
plans to give her a second smile, across the throat with his sword. She wasn't
really expecting any trouble, but trust was for corpses. She studied the lizard
through half-closed eyelids. Asleep, he looked even more innocuous. Like a
child, he kept his powerful lower legs pulled up to his stomach. With yellowish
claws retracted into his clover-shaped feet, and with his long, muscled tail
tucked up between his legs, the tip lying across his eyes, and with his snout resting
on the hilt of his sword, Dragonbait reminded Alias of a furless cat curled
about its master's shoe.
The sword was as curious as its owner. It looked top-heavy and badly
balanced. Forging that diamond-shaped tip, and the jagged teeth curling from it,
could not have been easy, and wielding it seemed impossible. Alias wondered how
anyone could keep hold of that tiny, one-handed grip. Had she not seen its
handiwork on the beach, she would have believed the blade to be ceremonial
gear.
Dragonbait had no other belongings, unless she counted the tattered,
ill-fitting clothes he wore, no doubt out of modesty, since they certainly
couldn't be keeping the creature warm. A torn jerkin covered his chest, and a
splotch of ragged cloth knotted at the side hung down from his hips.
What makes me think he's not a she? Granted, there's nothing feminine about
his torso, but lizards don't have breasts or need wide hips for birthing, now
do they? Alias shook her head. No. He's a male. Some sixth sense made her sure
of it.
She looked again at the rags he wore. Aren't lizards supposed to hate the
cold? I'll have to find him a cloak, something with a deep hood to hide that
snout.
Watching the lizard sleeping at her feet, making plans for his comfort, she
could no longer feel threatened by him. But she still could not sleep. Slipping
quietly out of the bed, she padded over to the small dressing table where
Dragonbait had carefully laid out the booty from their would-be ambushers.
Dragonbait gave a snarl in his sleep as she raised the flame on the oil lamp,
then he turned over, still resting on his sword.
Some watchdog, Alias thought. She turned back to the scattered assassin
equipment and sat down at the table to examine it. The daggers—three from the
mage, one from each club-wielding assassin—were quite ordinary. The pair of
small vials stoppered with wax were much more interesting. Carefully Alias
cracked the top of one, and a rich cinnamon smell wafted up. She quicklv
restoppered the bottle.
Peranox. A deadly contact poison from the South. Nasty stuff even in the
hands of competent assassins, Alias thought. Disaster for first-time bunglers.
If the pair had used poisoned daggers instead of clubs, I would be lying dead
on the beach instead of them.
Why did they choose clubs to attack? she wondered. Did they want to make my
death look like an amateur job? She shook out the sack Dragonbait had cut from
the mage. The standard assortment of magical spell-trappings skittered across
the wooden desktop—moldy spiderwebs, bits of eyelashes trapped in amber, and
dead insects. The only difference, she thought, between a magic-user's pockets
and those of a small boy's is that there is less week-old candy in the mage's
pockets. After brushing away the debris, Alias found a few coins and a gold
ring set with a blue stone.
Something remained stuck in the sack. She shook the bag harder. A talis card
fell out onto the desktop, face-down, it bore an insignia of a laughing sun on
its back.
Alias pocketed the coins and ring for later inspection and flipped the card
over. She drew a sharp breath that caused Dragonbait to start in his sleep.
The card was the Primary of Flames, here represented by a dagger trapped in
entwining tire. The card's pattern was twin to She uppermost symbol of Alias's tattoo.
Alias felt a twinge from her arm as she compared the two.
She picked up the card and squinted at it. It was home made. Though the
laughing sun was made by an embossing stamp, the rest of the workmanship was
pretty shabby. Were the other symbols on my arm from other parts of the deck
this card came from? she pondered.
At least that explained the assassins' actions. Alias recalled how clumsily
they'd wielded the clubs, as though they were swords. They were unused to the
more primitive weapon but were forced to wield it so as not to harm her
accidentally with an edged weapon. They wanted to capture me alive, she
concluded. That's why they passed on the poison, too. They must have been
keeping the peranox in reserve for anyone who got in their way.
Like a five foot lizard maybe?
She rose from her seat and, stepping over the soundly snoozing Dragonbait,
closed and secured the windows. Windows were open when I woke up this
morn—evening. They could have got me then but didn't. Maybe they didn't know
where I was until they spotted me on the street Someone must have left me here
to keep me safe. But who?
She fished the ring from her pocket, twisted it, and said quietly, "I
wish you'd tell me what in Tartarus is going on," but no djinn issued from
the ring to enlighten her, nor did Dragonbait break his rhythmic breathing, sit
up, and explain all the mysteries troubling her. Frowning, she tucked the ring
back into her pocket.
She lay down on her bed and stared at the ceiling, fingers laced behind her
head.
*****
She was not aware she had fallen asleep until a bell from some temple
signaled noon. She opened her eyes to see Dragonbait standing at her bedside
with breakfast on a pewter tray—bread and slices of spring fruit with cream.
Alias planned her next move while they shared the meal.
"I could rent a horse and ride out to the sage's home in half a day.
Save a lot of time," she said to Dragonbait. Even if he didn't understand
her, it helped her put her thoughts in order to say them aloud. "But if I
purchase a horse and ride it out through the town gate, I might as well hire a
loudmouthed herald to announce my departure. Besides, we have to conserve our
meager funds. Sages aren't cheap. And I don't even know if you can ride."
Dragonbait watched her while she spoke exactly as if he understood her.
"And I don't want to leave you behind, do I?"
The lizard stretched his neck forward and tilted his head as though he were
confused.
The swordswoman sniffed and laughed. Dragonbait returned to licking the
cream out of his bowl.
No, I definitely want to keep him around, she thought. He feels familiar—as
though I've traveled with him before. Maybe he was on the sea trip with me. If
I lose track of him, he might fade from my memory, too. Besides, I owe him for
saving my life last night. Taking him into my service is the least I can do.
After sending the barkeep's daughter out for a cloak to hide her companion's
"lizardness," Alias pulled on her boots and rearmored herself. When
his cloak arrived, Dragonbait sniffed at it and growled, but when it became
clear Alias was not going to let the creature out of the inn in daylight he
relented and, seeming every inch the paladin forced to drink with thieves, he
slipped on the garment.
The idea of a lizard with vanity amused Alias. She wondered if he was some
magical creature, bred to act as combination jester/servant/bodyguard, like
something out of a childhood tale. With a shudder, she was reminded of the
story of the golem supposedly responsible for the spreading Anauroch desert, a
creature ordered to shovel sand into the region and then forgotten by the
wizard who gave the order. Why is it I can recall stupid old stories when last
ride, last month, much of last year is a blank? Angrily, she shoved the
legendary images into the back of her mind.
Their walk out of Suzail was pleasant and uneventful. Alias deliberately set
out in the wrong direction and doubled back twice in case anyone had followed
her from the inn Dragonbait proved to be as tireless a hiker as she, and they
reached their destination just before dusk.
Dimswart Manor was a sizable farm, an estate just large enough to be
considered a suitable "summer home" by a Waterdeep noble. A red-tiled
roof set with three chimneys crowned the solid stonework walls of the main
house. Alias scowled, knowing that a sage who lived so well would not sell his
services cheap.
Despite the gathering gloom, there was a great amount of activity around the
house as she approached, as if the grounds were the site of some tremendous siege.
Gardeners were trimming hedges and lawns and reorganizing flowerbeds. At the
rear of the house, canvasmen were laying out the poles of a huge tent. Dwarvish
stoneworkers were arguing heatedly with elvish landscapers over the correct
placement of their creations of rock and wood, while a tired-looking gnome
tried to mediate between them.
In the midst of the chaos stood a tall, straight-shouldered woman with a
sunburst of red hair. She hustled about from worker to worker, consulting with
each from rolls of plans tucked under her arms. As Alias approached the house,
she could hear the woman shouting for some elves to start hanging lanterns in
the newly replanted trees.
Alias pounded on the front door with the hilt of her dagger. She had to
knock twice before a parlor maid, loaded down with tapestries, opened the door.
"Sorry, but the mis tress isn't hiring any more entertainment
people."
Alias shoved her boot in the door before the girl could close it. "I've
come to see the sage—on personal business."
"The master's very busy. Perhaps you could come—"
Alias stepped into the hall and gripped the girl's shoulder. She smacked
Winefiddle's letter of introduction down on top of the pile of tapestries the
servant was carrying. "Give him this. It's from the Temple of Tymora.
Urgent."
"Yes, ma'am," the maid nodded, showing a little more courtesy.
"Would you take a seat and wait right here, please? I'll send someone to
stable your pet."
Alias squeezed the girl's shoulder firmly, and hissed with annoyance,
"He's not my pet." Then she sat down on a bench against the wall.
Dragonbait sat beside her.
The servant blanched, nodded, and hurried away.
While she waited, Alias scowled at the opulence of her surroundings: an
estate full of servants; new, gold-threaded tapestries hung in the hall,
undoubtedly replacing the older, less stylish ones carried off by the parlor
maid; landscaping that required the services of four separate races; a wedding
tent big enough to billet an army, and likely enough food and drink to feed
them as well.
No wonder sages aren't cheap. Dimswart should be delighted to see me. How
else is he going to help defray all these costs? Whatever happened to ancient,
cranky, unmarried sages who preferred pursuing knowledge over wordly goods?
To keep from fidgeting, she studied Dragonbait. He waited more patiently
than she did. The lizard sat with his tail over his shoulder, flicking the tip
back and forth in front of his face, following it with his eyes.
What is he? she wondered with aggravation. Maybe the sage can shed some
light on his origins. Not likely, though. If I've never seen anything like him
in all my travels, what chance is there that he's in any of the sage's books?
Despite the obvious chaos of the household, a butler finally arrived to escort
her to the sage's study.
If Alias had met Dimswart before her visit to Suzail, she might have
ungenerously described his build as chunky. But compared to the innkeep of The
Hidden Lady and Winefiddle, the sage appeared broad-shouldered but lean. He rose
from his seat by the fire and clasped her extended hand in both his meaty paws.
"Well met, well met," he said, smiling like a halfling with an
extra king in the deck. "Sit down here by the fire, and tell me what a
humble book-banger can do for a warrioress."
Warrioress? Now there's a title you don't hear every day, Alias thought. It marked
Dimswart as a very old-fashioned sort of sage. "It's a little
complicated," Alias began.
"We should start with the essentials," Dimswart cut in. "If
you will indulge me, I'd like to exercise my skill. Leah, our maid, told me I
was to expect a sorceress and her familiar. But this creature—" he nodded
toward Dragonbait— "is too large to be a familiar, and few sorcerers carry
quite so much steel about their person."
"All I said to your maid," Alias interjected, "was that
Dragonbait wasn't a pet."
"Quite," Dimswart agreed, motioning for her to have a seat
opposite him. "We are very reclusive out here in the country, though, and
Leah, never having seen such a creature, leaped to the conclusion that if it
wasn't a pet, it must be a familiar, so you must be a sorceress. You are not.
You're a hired sword. From your lack of old scars, I'd say you were either a
very new one or a very good one, and you have strange tastes in traveling
companions."
Dragonbait cleared his nostrils in a noticeable hwumpf, as he stood
by the fire, watching the sage.
Dimswart continued. "You're a native of ... let's see, brown hair with
a tinge of red, hazel eyes, strong cheeks, good carriage . . . Westgate, I'd
say, though from your fair complexion I'd guess it's been a while since you've
lived there."
Alias tried to interrupt, but the smiling sage pressed on.
"Furthermore, you're not some hot-blooded youth looking for information
to lead you to riches beyond belief; you have a problem, personal and
immediate. A serious problem, otherwise you would never have come to consult
with an over-priced, over-educated land-grubber."
Alias spied Winefiddle's letter of introduction lying on the table beside
the sage with its seal still intact. "What method do you use, wire under
the wax, or do you just hold the letter up to a strong light?"
"You wound my fragile ego, lady. I swear to you I have not yet opened
the good curate's letter. I prefer to start afresh. That way nothing can
prejudice my reasoning."
Alias shrugged, willing to take the sage at his word—for now, at least.
Dimswart resumed. "You sit at ease, but you keep your right arm beneath
a cloak. Hmmmm."
Alias waited for him to give up guessing and let her explain, but after a
theatrical beat the man snapped his fingers, saying quickly, "You have a
tattoo, or a series of tattoos, that resists all normal magical attempts to
cure. They are on your right arm and . . . they are blue, aren't they?"
Alias's brow knit in a puzzled furrow. Winefiddle had shown her the letter
before he'd sealed it. There was nothing in it about the color of the tattoo.
'How do you know that?" she asked with astonishment—certain he had some
sort of trick, but completely unable to guess what it was.
"Good artists never reveal their secrets." Dimswart winked.
"But maybe, if we hit it off, I'll let you in on this little one. Now, how
about giving me a look at that arm."
Alias, feeling like a much chewed bit of marrowbone, held out her arm in the
firelight. The room was warm, and drops of perspiration beaded the skin over
the symbols.
"Hmmm," was all Dimswart said for several moments, and he said it
several times. He reached for a magnifying glassware and studied the symbols on
her arm even more closely. Dragonbait positioned himself behind Alias's chair
and tried to see what the sage did. Dimswart raised his head so the lizard
could peer once through the glass, watching bemused as Dragonbait pulled back,
apparently astonished at the sight of human flesh in such detail.
"A nice piece of work, that," said Dimswart, snapping his
magnifier into its case and leaning back in his chair. "The sigils aren't
composed of mere pinprick punctures in the flesh like an ordinary tattoo. Each
one is made up of tiny runes and patterns packed close together. They appear to
have great depth as well, and yet—" the sage kneaded her forearm gently,
like a surgeon feeling for a broken bone "— there doesn't seem to be any
substance to them. They look as though they are buried beneath your skin. Your
flesh above must be invisible, or we could not see the symbols. They also seem
to move. All in all, a most fascinating series of illusions. Very artistic. And
positively unique. I'd stake my reputation on it. Do they hurt?"
"Not now, no. The tattoo ached some when detect magic spells were cast
on it though, and it burned like the Nine Hells when Winefiddle cast a remove
curse on it."
"How about when magic is cast on you in general? Like a curative
spell?"
Alias thought of the assassin's magic missiles from the previous evening.
Fat lot of good the signs did for her then Why hadn't it flashed into the eyes
of her assailants when she really needed it to? "No effect, as far as I
know." She shrugged. "I'm really not in the mood to experiment on
which spells do what," she added.
"I don't doubt you're not," Dimswart replied sympathetically.
"Who have you crossed recently? Any dark lords from deep within the pits
of the Nine Hells? Steal any unholy artifacts? Break the hearts of any
cavaliers whose older siblings dabble in the dark arts? No?"
Dimswart sat back and pulled a pipe from inside his vest and began stuffing
it with tobacco. He leaned toward the fire for a brand, but Dragonbait beat him
to it, holding a flaming twig up to the pipe bowl as the sage puffed on the
mouthpiece. The sage might have been waited on all his life by scaly servants,
his reaction to the lizard was so casual.
"You have him well trained," Dimswart noted. "Where did you
get him?"
"We met at the seaside," Alias answered.
Dimswart lapsed into a thoughtful silence, forgetting to puff on his pipe,
so that it went out. Finally he asked, "When did you notice this . . .
condition?"
"When I woke up last night."
"From a long sleep?"
"Three days, I'm told," Alias admitted. "Though I've slept
nearly as long after overindulgences with ale. When I first woke, I thought I'd
been drinking, but now I'm not so sure. I have a lot of missing memories,
several months worth, and that's unusual for me."
"No doubt, no doubt." Dimswart pulled his pipe from his mouth and
leaned toward her. "What's the last thing you remember before you picked
up this little token?"
Alias sighed. "I don't really know. I clearly remember leaving my
company, the Adventurers of the Black Hawk, on good terms about a year ago.
They were going south. I never liked the warm climes, so I took my share and
left. Drifted. Light work, you know. Caravan guard, body guard, challenges in
bars. When I woke up I had a vague memory of a recent sea voyage—but it's all
too hazy. I..." Alias halted for moment, trying to pull her memories out
of the darkness. "I met Dragonbait last night, but I think I knew him from
before." She shook her head. "I just don't remember."
"Does Dragonbait talk?" Dimswart asked.
Alias shook her head. "What about these symbols? You called them
signals?"
"Sig-ils," corrected the sage, spreading out the pronunciation.
"Sigils are a higher kind of symbol. They're like a signature symbolizing
a greater power. Clerics use the ones belonging to their churches. Mages invent
their own and protect them, sometimes quite jealously. They aren't really
magical, but on a document they carry the authority of their owners, and on any
other object they indicate uncontestable ownership of a valuable
property."
Alias felt herself growing hot, hotter than could be accounted for by the
fire. It was a heat from anger burning within. "I've been branded as
someone's slave?"
"Possibly," said Dimswart, "though that's a very special brand.
Something that intricate could only have been done with the help of magic—magic
that resists its own diminishment. I suspect it's responsible for clouding up
your memories. If you knew how you got it, you might be able to remove it.
That's probably the way it thinks."
"What do you mean, 'it thinks? You mean it's alive?"
"Not in the sense that you or I or this polite lizard is, no. But in
terms of a magical creation with its own will to survive, given the desires of
its creators, yes. Just as an automaton or golem or summoned creature is
alive."
Alias slumped in her chair. "So where does that leave me?" This
might be more expensive than she had anticipated.
"Quite frankly, it leaves you in trouble," said the sage, pulling
on his pipe and finding that it had gone out. He waved away the fresh brand
Dragonbait offered. "Unless we find out what those sigils are."
Alias drew her gaze away from the fire and fixed it firmly on the sage.
"What will it cost?" she asked. Her look warned she was in no mood to
haggle.
"You're not that rich." Dimswart held up a hand. "Yes, I know
that, too. You do seem a fairly competent adventuress, however, and I need
someone like that at the moment.
"You've undoubtedly noticed the hubbub outside." The sage jerked
his thumb toward the study door, and Alias nodded. "My daughter, Gaylyn,
is getting married. Last of the brood, thank the gods. I may finally get some
peace and quiet. Anyway, her young squire is from a noble family here in
Cormyr—the Wyvernspurs of Immersea, some distant relations of the crown. The
upshot is, in order to impress these new in-laws, I have to lay out quite a
spread indeed, and to that end I've worked wonders: big tent, finest chefs
liberated from the crown's kitchens, silver wrought for the occasion, and four
clerics for the ceremony. Stuff from which boring songs are written." He
gave a cynical laugh.
"I also sent for a bard," he sighed. "No ordinary songster
earning meals in a noble's court, but one of the greats. The renowned Olav
Ruskettle, from across the Dragon Reach. The caravan Ruskettle was traveling in
was attacked by the Storm Horns Dragon. Have you heard about it?"
"I heard that the dragon has chewed up another adventuring company
since the caravan."
"Yes. Well, in the caravan with Ruskettle was a merchant who brought me
an eyewitness account of the attack. Ruskettle tried to sing the beast into
submission, the mark of a great bard. The beast apparently liked the music, but
instead of submitting, took Ruskettle in her claws and headed back for her
lair. Suzail sent out a group of adventurers in retaliation, but they were, as
you said, chewed up. I did, however, manage to obtain from the survivors the
location of the monster's lair and a secret 'back door' into it. My question
for you is: Will you help a sage who is desperate to avoid breaking his
youngest daughter's heart?"
Alias thought for a moment, then asked, "You want the dragon
dead?"
"I want the bard, Ruskettle, to play at my daughter's wedding,"
the sage responded. "Clerics of Suzail want the dragon dead. Deal with
them if you want to kill dragons."
Alias shook her head. "I'd rather sneak in, reappropriate your bard,
and sneak out. I prefer to leave dragonslaying to those in good standing with
their gods."
"It's agreed, then," said the sage. "I'll take time out from
the wedding preparations. There are a million-and-one things to do yet, but
Leona, my wife, can handle them better than I. Besides, I'll feel more useful
helping you find out what those sigils mean. In the meantime, you'll bring me
my bard. Let's see that arm."
Dimswart drew Alias over to his desk. He opened up a fat volume to an empty
page, and with a pen and astonishing skill, quickly copied the insignias on
Alias's sword arm. "None of these are familiar to you?" he asked.
"I've seen one of them on a card carried by assassins who, I believe,
intended only to capture me."
"Really? How very interesting. Very interesting."
"Now, where do I find your dragon?"
"The merchant I mentioned before will take you there. He has some
interest in helping free this bard as well." The sage called out,
"Come on in, Akash," and a figure breezed in-clad in a familiar
crimson robe striped with white.
Akabar Bel Akash bowed formally. "We meet again, lady. As I told you,
Sir Dimswart, she would leap at the opportunity to aid us." The Turmishman
beamed with pleasure.
Alias scowled, first at him, then at the sage. Akabar ignored her glare.
Dimswart, having revealed the source of his information, arched his eyebrows
like a stage magician demonstrating the trickery behind his feats.
Dragonbait, realizing no one was interested in smoking, blew out the burning
brand he'd been playing with and threw it into the fireplace.
4
Akabar and the Back Door
Alias shivered in the damp darkness of the cavern and silently wished the
vengeance of Tyr and Tempus down on the heads of Akabar and Dimswart and even
Winefiddle for getting her into this predicament. And while they were at it,
thrice-damn that mysterious lizard and damn thrice more the demon-spawn who
branded her!
The mystical sigils glowed like stained glass on a murky day, illuminating
Alias so that she stood out like a beacon in the pitch dark of the cold,
dripping cave. When she exhaled, the streams of her breath danced like small
azure elementals before her eyes.
At the beginning of her vigil, Alias had kept the treacherous arm with its
glowing brands beneath her cloak. She was waiting for the merchant-mage,
Akabar, to return from scouting out the passages leading to the dragon's lair.
After spending a half-hour huddled in the dark, though, it occurred to her that
most dwellers of this cold, wet, limbo would be able to see the heat from her
body and smell her above-world scent while she remained blind. Dumb, dumb,
dumb, she chided herself and cast aside the cloak. At least now she could see
anything that attacked her.
Where is that damned mage? she wondered for the half a hundredth time.
Tymora! He could have scouted from here to Sembia by now. How far can this
cavern go?
She knew her impatience had little to do with how long the mage was taking.
Mostly it had to do with not liking to have to rely on anyone—especially not
some greengrocer.
Alias chuckled every time she remembered how, before they'd left Dimswart
Manor, Akabar Bel Akash had informed her in that stiff, formal, southern way
that House Akash did not sell vegetables. Tymora; He was so naive. He didn't
even know he was a greengrocer.
"Riding a wagon along protected trading routes in a guarded merchant
caravan doesn't make you an adventurer," she had informed him. "Until
you've hiked more than twenty miles a day, slept in a ditch, and eaten
something that tried to kill you first, you're not an adventurer. Anyone who
isn't an adventurer is a greengrocer."
But the merchant-mage had insisted that he come along and render what
assistance was in his power, and Dimswart had insisted she take him with her.
What reasons the Turmishman could possibly have for helping to rescue the
kidnapped bard, Alias could not imagine. She had deliberately not asked, and
Akabar had not volunteered his reasons. He had them, and that was enough,
There was something about Akabar Bel Akash that annoyed her—something that
wasn't really his fault, but which she blamed him for nonetheless.
As the three of them, Akabar, Alias, and Dragonbait, began their three-day
journey into the mountains—walking because Alias still felt uncomfortable
advertising her presence with horses—Akabar had insisted on telling her all
about himself—about the fertile land of Turmish, about customs in the south,
and about his wives. He had two, and they were shopping for a third co-wife,
which was why he was in this savage land in the first place—to earn money for
the new partner. He told of his voyage across the pirate-infested Sea of Fallen
Stars, the outrageous import taxes he'd had to pay on landing at Saerloon in
Sembia, and his profitable detour from Hilp up to Arabel and around the Great
Wood of Cormyr. He ended with the disastrous caravan attack by the dragon on
the road from Waymoot.
Alias had ground her teeth impatiently, There had been nothing for her to
say. She could not remember what she'd been doing or how she got to Cormyr. She
had not even been able to answer questions about Dragonbait. The whole trip out
she had remained as silent as a stone, angry that anyone had the ability to
remember when she could not.
The thing that Akabar described the most was the thing that distressed Alias
the most—his sea voyage. He had begun by discussing Earthspur, the center of
the pirate activity dreaded by sailors, its lawless organization of cutthroats,
and the well-known bombards that protected it Then, he had given her a humorous
description of the fear-ridden Sembian ship captain continually scanning the
horizon for the pirates who, he assured Akabar, were lying in wait for a prize
such as his ship. The mage then described all the interesting creatures that
made their home in the Inner Sea, followed by an essay on ship life. Yet,
despite all this talk, the period around Alias's own sea trip remained as
fog-ridden as the port of Ilipur.
Finally, it had occurred to the mage that the swords-woman might have
adventures of her own which, though unshared, would make his tales sound dull.
Embarrassed and crushed by the weight of her silence, he had slid into an
equally solemn mood. It had never occurred to him the frustration he had put
her through.
As Alias stood alone in the water-carved cavern, she realized she could not
pin down exactly where the borders of her memory loss were. Pieces of her past
seemed to have dropped out. Her mind was like a swamp connecting dry land and
open water. There was no exact point where murky waters swallowed her memories;
islands of certain recollection spotted every time period.
Even worse—without the days, rides, or months of connecting space, the past
seemed to belong to someone else, another Alias who stopped, gained the mystic
runes, then moved on as another person entirely, bearing the same name. Since
she'd awakened in The Hidden Lady, she'd used the battle-skills of the old
Alias, skills as finely honed as they were automatic. Although there was some
comfort in the fact that she hadn't forgotten her craft, there was something
disturbing about the way she felt when she assumed a fighting stance.
Instincts took over. She didn't have time to think and plan. Only react.
Like a guardian golem. She remembered Dimswart saying the sigils were alive the
way a golem was. Are the brands making me fight, like they made me try to kill
Winefiddle? Should I be giving them credit for my ability? She shook off this
notion instantly and angrily. I was a good swordswoman before I got these
things, she thought, and I'll be a good one long after I've gotten rid of them.
Then the most disturbing idea of all occurred to her. Perhaps I died and was
resurrected by someone who decided to take his price out of my hide. Literally.
Don't those newly raised from Death's Dominions feel uneasy and disquieted?
More than a few of her companions, after their first visit to the afterlife,
chose to retire—to live as farmers, smiths, greengrocers. Speaking of which,
she thought with annoyance, where is that damned mage, anyway?
Alias was beginning to consider retreating through the passage back to the
outside. Something must have gone wrong for Akabar to take so long to return.
Before she'd made up her mind, the downward passageway brightened and a
glowing orb floated up into her cavern. The size of a melon and radiating an
orange light, the orb held the image of the merchant-mage's head.
"What kept you, Turmite?" she asked with a sniff.
"I had to wait until the dragon bedded down," replied the mage.
His voice was muffled by the effects of his spell, a meld of wizard eye—so he
could spy out the territory from the entrance to the tunnel in relative
safety—and a special phantasmal force—so he could report his findings back to
Alias. "It wouldn't do to have Her Evilness awake when you tried to sneak
in. It would spoil our surprise.
"My spell is almost exhausted, and I must leave our mission's
completion to you, swordslady. Ahead of you lie a few gentle curves, no serious
drops. The ceiling is low about fifty yards ahead, then the passage narrows to
shoulder width. It lets out on a ledge above the main cavern floor. Our bard is
in a small cage atop a dais on the far side of the cavern." The mage's
image began blurring, as if a snow-storm had erupted within the orange sphere.
"Spell's wearing off. Anything I should do with your pet?"
"He's not my pe—" Alias began, but Akabar's spell was breaking up
too quickly to waste time arguing. "Just keep him from entering the
cavern," she ordered. "And don't get him mad at you. The last
spell-caster who did didn't live long enough to regret it."
"Gods' luck to you." Akabar's voice sounded a long way off. His
image was gone, and the orange sphere was shrinking. "I hope you know what
you're doing. You have fought dragons before?"
"This will be my first," she answered quietly, but the sphere was
gone and there was no reply from Akabar. I wonder if he heard me, she thought.
Better if he didn't.
*****
Five hundred yards behind and somewhat above her, at the cavern entrance
overlooking the road from Waymoot to Suzail, Akabar the Turmishman came out of
his trance. Dragonbait was still crouched at the mage's feet, watching the
cavern entrance intently. The air about them was warm, humming with large
bumblebees dotting, diving, and dodging about the mountain daisies.
Akabar sat down and leaned against a rock. He made quick thanks to his
southern gods that he was not the one about to face a dragon in its lair. He
pulled an apple from his backpack and bit into it. Dragonbait twitched at the
sound of the crunch, but the creature did not takes his eyes off the cavern
mouth that had swallowed Alias.
*****
Alias continued cautiously along the tunnel Akabar had scouted out for her.
The Turmish mage's report had been reasonably accurate in so far as there were
no hairpin curves and none of the drops were impassable, but the passage was
not so smooth that she looked forward to a possible hasty retreat. The low ceiling
didn't bother her, but she was a trifle alarmed at the sound her armor made
scraping against the walls when the corridor narrowed. Less frightening, but
quite annoying, was having to slosh through the small, icy stream that had
carved out the tunnel— something Akabar had failed to note. Too bad I can't
shrink into an orange melon and float effortlessly along this passageway, she
grumbled to herself.
Still, she was grateful that they had learned of this back door. With any
luck, the dragon wasn't aware of it, or at least ignored it as too small to
worry about.
A splattering noise warned her that the stream was nearing a considerable
drop, and she slowed accordingly. She wrapped her glowing arm back in her cloak
to hide her presence from the dragon. She reached the end of the tunnel and
stepped out onto the ledge Akabar had mentioned. The stream fell twenty feet or
so into a small pool on the cavern floor. Excellent! The waterfall will cover
any noise I make climbing down.
Light filtered in from another, larger passage in the side of the cavern.
This passage provided the dragon egress from its lair. Holes in the domed
ceiling let in more rays of light. At first Alias was glad of the light because
it drowned out the dim glow of her sigils, and she unwrapped her arm. Then she
noticed the black, cawing birds fluttering in and out of the holes in the
ceiling.
Crows! Nine hells! Alias cursed under her breath. Crows were bad luck—not
just a sign for the superstitious, but a danger for anyone relying on stealth. One
of their raucous cries raised in challenge of her intrusion into their
territory would be enough to wake the dead. For the most part, the birds
roosted in crannies near the ceiling, though a few circled in the thermals
rising from the dragon's body. Since I have no intention of approaching the
dragon, there's no reason for them to get excited, she reassured herself.
The great beast itself lay curled catlike. Alias had no doubt that the
monster was a light sleeper. She wouldn't be surprised to discover brittle
twigs or bells scattered across the main entrance. It was even possible that
the dragon was capable of casting magical spell guards to wake her if anyone
crossed the threshold into her treasure hold.
And what a hoard that hold held! Even by a dragon's standards the loot was
immense. It included not only chests of gold lions and other precious coins,
but split bags filled with trade bars, tapestries, and bolts of satin and
velvet, marble statues, and bound books. Many of these items were still packed
in the wagons that had been picked up and flown here by the monster. The dragon
lay between the front entrance and the mounds of shimmering wealth, but nothing
blocked Alias's access to the beast's hoard.
If the treasure was enough to start the adventuress sweating with gold
fever, the bones were enough to quench that fire. Alias could spot piles of
white as large as the treasure itself. Most were the remains of cattle and
other large beasts the dragon used for food, but more than a few human skulls
gleamed among all that ivory—the remains of adventurers Alias did not intend to
join.
Alias leaned against the rock and watched the dragon's massive chest scales
rise and fall with the deep breathing of slumber. Akabar's description of the
monster had been accurate. The drab rust scales that darkened to a purplish hue
toward the belly confirmed that the creature was a female, and her huge size
could only come with great age.
The crows danced over the beast's hide, picking at the bugs beneath her
scales. Alias realized the crows were actually ravens with wingspans as wide as
she was tall. They only looked small, dwarfed by the size of the dragon.
Alias tore her eyes away from her unwitting hostess. No sense in hypnotizing
myself with awe, she thought as she peered across the cavern for the bard's
cage. She spotted it perched solidly atop an altar carved into the rock. This
must have once been a temple, she decided. To what god?
The body in the cage lay slumped against the bars. Tymora, Alias prayed
silently, don't let me be too late. The figure rolled over, apparently in its
sleep, and Alias sighed with relief. She prepared to enter the lair.
As quietly as possible, she secured a rope to a stalagmite on the ledge
where she stood. She kept herself facing the dragon as much as possible as she
climbed down, using only her arm muscles, not daring to push against the wall
to break her descent for fear of setting loose rock clattering down. A few
ravens spied her and retreated to the roof, but others continued scavenging on
the dragon's hide.
Slipping warily between the piles of treasure, Alias checked the ground
carefully so she didn't accidentally crunch her foot down on a dry bone and
tested her footing lightly so she didn't slip on any loose stacks of coins. She
threw off the temptation creeping over her to grab something valuable and flee.
She was here for one thing only. Once that had been secured, well... maybe on
the way out she might manage a few sacks of gold.
She tiptoed up the stairs leading to the altar. The cavern air was filled
with the wheeze of the dragon's breathing, the splash of the waterfall, and the
occasional croak of a raven. Not until she'd reached the top did Alias take her
eyes from the floor and study the cage. It was sloppily lashed but quite
sturdy. A small form lay in its center, balled up tightly in a cloak of
expensive, gaudy brocade. Alias spied a plait of fire-red hair fastened with a
green bow.
Damned mage. He should have checked more closely. This is a little girl, not
a bard. I've risked all this for nothing. Ruskettle is no doubt already
residing in the dragon's belly, to make room for this new toy.
The swordswoman was so angry that she spun about, intent on leaving that
very instant, but she turned back to face the cage. She would rescue the
prisoner anyway, not from any sentiment or human kindness, but just for the
pleasure of shaking the child in Akabar's face and proving to him what a fool
he was. Sliding her sword between the bars, she gently poked the cloaked
bundle.
The brocade-wrapped form turned over rapidly, causing the cage to groan
slightly where the ropes held its timbers in place. The package opened to
reveal not a child, but a small creature dressed in garb that made Akabar's
crimson and white robes seem conservative. A creature without footgear, but
long, curly red hair on her hands and feet that matched the mop on her head. A
halfling! Alias whined silently. And a female halfling at that.
"Rescue at last!" cheered the halfling in a happy whisper.
"Shh!" warned Alias. Why did it have to be a halfling? How come no
one mentioned Ruskettle was a halfling? Or even that Ruskettle was a she?
Suddenly, Alias sensed the deadly quiet. The stream spattered on, but the
dragon's regular breathing and the crows' occasional caws had stopped. The
halfling's eyes widened, transfixed by something behind and above Alias.
Something horrible cleared its throat with a cough like a bag of lead coins
dropped off a tower.
With a sigh of resignation, Alias turned around slowly.
"Looking for something in particular?" asked the dragon. "Or
are we just browsing?"
5
Mist
The dragon, though she had not bothered to rise, was no longer balled up
like a cute kitten by a fireside. Her front paws curled beneath her bulk, her
body rested comfortably below the level of her rear haunches, and her neck
curved in a relaxed S-shape. Even seated in this way, her jaws hung twice as
far above the ground as Alias's perch on the raised altar, and her reptilian
golden eyes looked down from another ten feet higher than that.
From what little Alias could see of her belly, it was a twisted mass of
scarred, purple and violet scales. Several of the scars were still fresh and
oozing—compliments of the adventuring party that had tried to defeat her but
failed.
With those long tendrils hanging down from her chin and face, Alias thought,
she looks like a cat. I guess that makes me the mouse. Then the swordswoman
noticed, tucked behind the monster's left ear, a raven regarding her with a
stare as unblinking as the dragon's—the only one that had not retreated to the
ceiling. The dragon's spy.
"Poor dear," rumbled the dragon. "Are you ill-versed in the
common tongue? Where do they send these robbers from, anyway?
Asken bey
Amnite? No. You don't look like a southerner.
Cheyeska col Thay? Not
that either. Do you speak am' language known to the Sea of Fallen Stars? I
detest not knowdng where my next meal is coming from."
The dragon's ramblings shook Alias from her trance. The beast had transfixed
her with a gaze that would have done a basilisk proud, yet here she was,
nattering like some fishmonger's wife. Alias tried to speak several times,
until the words found purchase in her throat and she spat out, "I come
from Cormyr." For the moment, she added mentally.
"Oh, so you are native flesh," said the dragon, coiling her neck
back as if to view Alias in this new light. "How precious. I do hate
foreign mystery meat. They put such odd things in their bodies."
Alias blinked hard, fighting the sudden drowsiness that descended on her.
First the dragon's gaze, then its rich, rumbling words, seemed to drain the energy
from her body, as if the rest she had received earlier in the week had done her
no good. This must be what they call dragon-fear, Alias realized. She shook
herself out of the lethargy.
"I am no foreigner, but Alias of the Inner Sea, swordsmaster and adventuress,"
she announced.
"Oh, really?" replied the dragon. "You must forgive me for
not knowing anything about you, but I've been so out of touch. I am
Mistinarperadnacles Hai Draco. You may call me Mist. And I'll call you . . .
supper? Yes, it's about time for a light, early supper. So nice of you to
deliver yourself."
The dragon shifted its weight, and Alias saw for the first time the front
paws of the beast, huge, three-toed triangles, each corner of the triangles
sporting a claw. Further up each foot glinted an opposing dew claw. All the
claws were as crimson as fresh blood.
Alias held up her sword with both hands—not to attack, but as a warning
gesture. She replied, "You must forgive my unwillingness to serve as your
meal, O great and powerful Mistinarperadnacles, but instead I think I will
challenge you to the Feint of Honor."
"The Feint of Honor?" Mist echoed the last words with a tone of
surprise. Then she chuckled, a sound that echoed like thunder about the cavern.
"What can you know about the Feint of Honor, O Supper?"
Alias stepped back until her back was touching the wicker of the cage and
replied, "It is the proper name given to the ritual combat of subdual
instigated in the most ancient of times by the wisest of dragons."
Mist sniffed, "And I presume you know why?"
"Because, in the most ancient of times, your people fought amongst
themselves so fiercely that many promising wyrms died. Indeed, scholars believe
you may have wiped yourselves off the face of the land had not the Feint been decreed."
Alias pressed her calf against the cage bars in hopes that the halfling would
notice the dagger in her boot.
"Yes. True enough." The dragon nodded, settling back on her
haunches. "Having heard of this custom, all manner of militia and
mercenary have come barrelling into my home and the homes of my brethren,
beating on us with the flat of their blades, firing blunt-headed fowling
arrows, and generally disturbing our rest until we are forced to destroy them
just to regain our composure. A little knowledge is a dangerous thing. It
implies a lot of ignorance." Mist twisted her neck so that her jaws were
uncomfortably close to Alias's head. "You see, the Feint is a code for
dragons. It has nothing to do with you puny, but delicious, mortals."
"Not so, O Mistinarperadnacles. True, many humans may attempt subdual
without following the formal codes, and their senses are as
bootless as
a
halfling. And he who walks in here without sense, walks in here
unarmed.
You are then entirely within your rights to exterminate them as you see
fit." Alias felt a pat behind her knee, a signal, she hoped, that the
halfling had understood, but she had no sensation of her dagger being slid from
her boot. "But you may not with honor deny a challenge properly made—"
"Your speech is oddly accented," said the dragon. "I think
you come from beyond Cormyr."
"Unless, of course," Alias continued, "you are a common
dragon. Then, of course, you may behave as you will."
Fire flared in Mist's eyes. "And do you know the formal codes, O Supper?"
"I know first to ask the dragon's name if it is not already
known," replied Alias.
"Common courtesy, at the very least, common sense as well."
"At this point, I must say you have offended me. You have monopolized
the services of this halfling, an offense to art; you have kept her imprisoned
in this cage, an offense to humanity; and you have referred to me as Supper, an
offense to my honor. For these barbarities, Mistinarperadnacles, red mistress
of flame and sunsets, I challenge you!"
"Quite nice," said the dragon. "Your composure does you
credit. You astonish me, young one. This is a custom veiled in antiquity. I
don't believe one sage in a hundred could recall the formalities so precisely.
Just where did you acquire this knowledge?"
Alias did know the answer to that question. She remembered it, but she did
not know how. Instead of trying to answer Mist's questions, she continued with
the terms of challenge.
"My weapon will be this single blade." Alias indicated her sword
with a nod of her head. "You may use your claws. No biting, no breathing
fire, and no magic."
Steam was beginning to rise up from Mist's nostrils, indicating the beast
was no longer amused or intrigued, but losing her patience. Alias continued
hurriedly, "We fight until the first three hits or until the other
surrenders. If I am victor, I demand you free the halfling Ruskettle and allow
both of us to leave your lair safe and free."
"What? No demands for a chest of gold or for me to leave this happy
land and never to return?" Mist mocked her.
"None," Alias replied flatly. According to the code, the more
demands she made, the more compromises she would have to make toward the
dragon's terms. If they even came to terms. Steam now poured from Mist in great
billows.
She could breathe fire anytime, Alias thought. If her ego and pride don't
bind her to the ancient code, I'm dead meat.
"It is a sad state of affairs," Mist growled, "when a dragon
cannot use those gifts invested in her by Tiamat. At the very least, I must use
my claws and my teeth. We will fight until you are dead or you convince me to
surrender. In compensation, if you win, I will grant you a chest of gold. I am
a generous spirit, you see."
"Accepted," Alias replied without hesitation.
The dragon reared back, her head raised into the stone dome high above. The
raven flapped noisily from her head. Surprised, Mist could only foolishly
repeat, "Accepted," thus locking herself into the agreement.
"The code is honored, the pact is made," Alias declared and lunged
forward beneath the dragon's chest. She slashed out with her sword, catching
the beast just below the forward knee. The blow was not forceful enough to cut
into the scales, but it hurt. The dragon roared, and her knee buckled so that
she toppled forward. Alias dashed between her hind legs. Careful to avoid the
creature's tail, the swordswoman dragged her blade across Mist's purple-plated
rump, knocking loose a few half-healed plates.
Mist howled and spun about. Her gleaming eyes seemed to burrow into Alias.
"Foul!" she hissed. "You used the sharp side of your
blade."
"Our contract did not limit me to the flat of my weapon, wyrm!"
Alias shouted, dodging backward to avoid the slash of the triple scythes at the
end of the dragon's paw.
"O ho!" Mist cackled, following up her first assault with a thrust
from the other front paw. Alias twisted and rolled away as claw tips scored
deep into the wall she'd had at her back a moment before. "So you are now
a lawyer as well as a fighter!" Mist taunted as she yanked her claw from
the rock, causing a small avalanche of stone to topple down.
Alias retreated back among the treasure and bone piles, sparing only a
glance for the now-empty cage on the altar. She averted her eyes quickly so as
not to alert Mist to the halfling's escape. Have to keep the wyrm's attention
on me, Alias thought. Unfortunately, that should be no problem.
Instead of lunging her neck toward the warrior, Mist retreated and rose to
her hind legs, unfurling her wings. The leathery folds of flesh caught the
subterranean breeze like sails, then fanned the air back in powerful waves
toward Alias's corner of the cave.
The last raven retreated to the roof to avoid the assault but Alias had no
way to evade the force of the wind. She was lifted from the ground and buffeted
over several large treasure chests. Her rough passage knocked the arm and leg
guards off one side of her armor and left her pinned beneath a granite statue
of some forgotten Hillsfar noble.
She began squirming out from beneath the stone, but Mist loped forward and
laid her chin down on top of the statue. Her fetid breath made Alias gag.
Mist's mouth tendrils curled in glee. Alias closed her eyes, certain she was
about to have her head bitten off.
"So, little lawyer," Mist hissed, "I can slay you now by
fire, for who would know I violated the codes?"
"Well, me for one," came a high-pitched but resonant voice from
above. "And you know the old saying—tell a bard, and you tell the
world."
Mist whirled around in surprise. The halfling bard stood on the ledge by the
opening to Alias's back door. She leaned weakly against the rock wall, but her
eyes sparkled with mischief and vengeance. Alias took advantage of Mist's
inattention to escape from the embrace of the Hillsfar noble and began to climb
up a wagon loaded with treasure.
Ruskettle strummed a chord on her tiny yarting, a miniature guitar with
seven catgut strings. "Now let's see, this is spur of the moment, mind,
but how about—" The bard began to sing:
I heard the mighty rush of fire
From the ledge above the cave.
The attack of a common coward
No dragon, just a knave.
She broke her oath in combat,
Now shunned by one and all.
Not even other dragons
Will have her in their hall.
"Then of course we'll need a chorus for everyone to join in on,"
Ruskettle continued hurriedly:
Oh, listen to the story
Of the scandal of the wyrms.
Red Mistinarperadnacles,
Rumored mad and quite infirm.
With a single belch of fire,
This fool dragon with no shame,
Her honor she has vaporized
Like the Mist that is her name.
Alias cringed at the lyrics' strained meters, but had to admire the singer's
nerve. Great clouds of steam filled the dome above Mist's head. The bard hadn't
a chance of outrunning the fires that had to be burning inside the wyrm.
Instead of escaping, though, Alias noted, she risked her hide to gain time for
me to wriggle out of danger.
Goaded forward by the image of a roasted halfling and a failed mission,
Alias launched herself from the lid of a large cask toward the dragon's head.
She fell short of her mark, but managed to catch a fistful of the tendrils
hanging from Mist's chin. Arching her back and kicking her legs like an
acrobat, the swordswoman swung herself backward, over the side of the dragon's
mouth, past her dripping, exposed teeth, beyond her steaming nostrils, and
landed squarely on the bridge of the dragon's nose.
Alias wedged her blade between Mist's eyes, so that the creature's pupils
crossed, trying to focus on her foe.
"Match was until surrender," Alias panted, sweat rolling down her
face in rivulets. Her exhaustion deepened with her proximity to the dragon's
steaming and foul exhalations, yet she tightened her grip on her hilt. "Do
you surrender, wyrm, or shall we see how much of your brain I can reach when I
plunge my blade into one of your eyes?"
For Alias, the next few moments were frozen in time. Steam rose about her
and water splattered to the floor, but the principals of the tableau stood
motionless: the dragon considering the value of her eyesight and the length of
the warrior's blade, Alias trying to remain perched on the creature's scaly
nose, Ruskettle awaiting the outcome, so eager to witness it she would not flee
like a sensible person.
Finally Mist hissed, "This time, little lawyer, you win."
"I accept your surrender," Alias replied. She kept her gaze on the
creature and her sword over Mist's nose. No blanket of condensing steam poured
from the beast's mouth to indicate she had cooled her inner fires.
Mist has no intention of honoring the pact, Alias realized. She wants me
dead even more than ever, but she doesn't dare try to kill me unless she can
get the tell-tale bard with the same blow. All she has to do is breathe fire
once I'm standing beside Ruskettle.
Alias's mind scrambled for a scheme to delay the dragon's attack, hoping
that the halfling had enough wits to play along. "I'd like to be let down
over there by my friend," the swordswoman said.
"But, of course," Mist replied, her tone full of sugary venom. The
dragon kept her head perfectly steady as she swung her neck over to the ledge,
anxious that Alias should not slip or lean on the blade and drive it into an
eye.
Alias hesitated before she stepped off Mist's snout. Winking at the
halfling, she said, "That ring of fire resistance makes you a lot braver
than usual, bard."
"What? Oh, yeah. The ring of fire resistance. Well, you know my motto:
If you got it, might as well flaunt it. You think I'd have risked singing to a
dragon without one?"
Alias leaped from Mist's head to the ledge and sidled behind the halfling,
as if to use her tiny body for a shield. The swordswoman's heart pounded as she
ordered the dragon, "Now go fetch the chest of gold you promised me."
Mist's eyes narrowed to tiny slits. Steam rose from her nostrils. Tymora,
make her believe the ruse! Alias prayed silently. The dragon turned her head
away from the ledge and lumbered toward a pile of gold. Alias swallowed hard.
"Why didn't you kill her when you had the chance?" Ruskettle
whispered through clenched teeth.
"And fall to my death or get crushed by a dragon in her death throes?
No, thank you. That wasn't what I was paid for. Now, let's get out of
here."
"What?" the bard asked.
"We're leaving," Alias replied, grabbing a handful of the
halfling's cloak. Alias slipped into the passageway leading out of the lair,
trying to tug the halfling with her, but Ruskettle jerked herself loose.
"We have to wait for the gold," the bard insisted.
With an exasperated growl, Alias grasped the small woman by her shoulders,
pulled her into the passage, and shoved her in the lead.
Their way dimly lit by the runes embedded in Alias's flesh, Alias prodded
and pushed at the halfling until they reached the upper cavern where the
swordswoman had waited for Akabar's scouting report. Once they reached this
point, however, Ruskettle twisted from her grip and dropped angrily to the
floor. Alias slipped her sword arm into her cloak before the halfling caught
sight of the glow of the sigils.
"Why'd you do that?" the bard demanded. "She was going to get
us some gold!"
"Stupidhalfling!" Alias panted, her words running together.
"Mist is a red dragon! That makes her as greedy and as untrustworthy as an
Amnite merchant! The only thing that stopped her from burning us to cinders was
the fear you would escape and tell someone."
"But she believed your story about me having a ring of fire
resistance."
"For the moment. But if she had sniffed any jewelry on you when she
first kidnapped you, she would have made you take it off. You aren't wearing
any rings. Any minute-now she's going to remember that, and then—"
Cool air from the outside rushed down the passage. Alias could picture Mist
sitting by the ledge, inhaling deeply, smoke from her hidden forges pouring out
of her snout.
"Come on!" the swordswoman shouted, picking up the halfling,
tucking her under her arm, and running for the surface exit. Ruskettle was
unexpectedly heavy, and between the extra weight and having to check her
footing, Alias felt as though she were running underwater.
A roar began behind her, a deep rumbling sound. Harsh cries followed—ravens,
she realized, caught in the conflagration. Her back grew uncomfortably warm as
the dragon's breath chased her down the passage. If she didn't reach the exit
quickly, the approaching wall of super-heated air would do her in before the
beast's metal-twisting flames even reached her.
The heat grew unbearable, and Alias wondered if she might already be burned
so badly that she would die but her muscles and mind didn't know that yet. The
halfling was still squirming in her arms as she made a final leap toward the
opening in the mountainside, praying to Tymora that she would clear it before
the hot air singed her flesh and the fire stripped it from her bones.
The moment Alias cleared the stone passage, Dragonbait's tail snaked out
from the right. The powerful muscles in the scaly, green ribbon knocked the
swordswoman and her passenger down the slope of greasy grass.
Alias looked back. The opening where she had been only an instant before was
now filled with flame and soot. The rock about the cave entrance melted in the
heat, twisting and flowing until the passage was sealed shut. Silence settled
over the mountainside.
Dragonbait rubbed his mildly scorched tail and gave a reptilian whimper.
Akabar, upon hearing the sound of the dragon's inhalation, had assumed a safer
position several paces away from the back door. He now looked down at the
soot-blackened women with amusement.
Alias looked down at Ruskettle, and it suddenly dawned on her why the
halfling had been so heavy. On her tumble down the hill, the bard had lost, in
order, Alias's dagger, two pouches of gold coins, an opal the size of a
cockatrice egg, a handful of jade statuettes, a ratty scroll, and a large,
ornate book marked with the sigil of Akabar Bel Akash.
For half a score of heartbeats, Alias lay among the flowers of the mountain
meadow. She gasped in the thin mountain air, trying to will away the stabbing
pain in her chest and the searing agony across her back. She imagined the
dragon-heated metal of her chain shirt burning through her jerkin and inwardly
cringed.
Dragonbait, having knocked her and the halfling out of the direct path of the
dragon's breath, was at her side immediately, his clawlike hands on her
shoulders, helping her rise. He smelled heavily of woodsmoke, but his
chivalrous aid helped make Alias feel a little better.
Farther down the slope, the halfling was scurrying about, trying to recover
the items lost in her tumble. She grabbed one of the leather-bound tomes, but a
sandal-clad foot suddenly appeared and held it tight to the ground.
"I believe," Akabar Bel Akash said, "that this particular
item is mine."
The halfling gulped. "You were the wizard in the caravan," she
piped, wheels visibly turning behind her eyes. "Of course. I brought this
from the dragon's lair to . . ." she sighed deeply, "... to return to
you."
Akabar harumphed and, keeping his foot atop the book, reached over and
picked up the age-torn scroll lying near it.
"That's for you, too," the halfling offered, jamming the opal and
the jade figures back into her pockets.
Alias had by this time removed her charred cloak and shucked off her chain
mail shirt. The cloak was a total loss; the heavy cloth had taken the brunt of
the blast. The heat had been enough to fuse portions of her chain into solid
lumps along the back and leave the light leather jerkin beneath hard and
cracked. The leather must have insulated her back just enough though, for what
she could see of her skin there, while pink, was not charred.
Blind Tymora's luck, Alias thought. Her back ached as though she had a
sunburn, but no more. She abruptly shouted to the others, "Let's get a
move on!"
The newly rescued bard ambled up the hill with the mage. Akabar held his
recovered tome pressed tightly under his arm and used his hand to hold open the
battered scroll, scanning its contents as he approached Alias.
The halfling planted each foot firmly at shoulder-width, and stuck out her
hand toward the swordswoman. "We haven't been properly introduced.
Ruskettle is the name, song and merriment the—"
"Not now," hushed Alias. "Look. In about five minutes, ten
minutes at most, the red reptile is going to check to be sure we're dead.
She'll come lurching out of the cave entrance. It's at least a mile to decent
tree cover. . . ."
Dragonbait sniffed the air and growled. The halfling turned to the lizard and
offered her still outstretched hand. Dragonbait backed away a step and bared
his teeth. Ruskettle hastily lowered her arm.
"If we flee," Alias said, "it's likely we'll be caught in the
open and fried." She arched her eyebrows and looked at the mage.
"Any suggestions?"
"Seal her in?" Akabar offered.
"Sure," countered Alias. "Have an avalanche handy?"
"Mayhaps," the Turmishman replied with a grin. He held up the
scroll he'd been perusing. It was crammed with tightly calligraphed symbols.
"This title says it is a spell to conjure a wall of stone."
Alias's eyes lit up. "Can you cast it?"
The magic-user nodded. "All I need do is use a simple trick to read the
magic. That will evoke the powers locked within the text. Of course, it may not
work." He spread his hands in a gesture of uncertainty.
"Half a chance is better than none," the warrior insisted.
"Let's try it out on the beast's front door. Dragonbait!"
The lizard stopped staring at the halfling and followed the swordswoman and
the mage over the scattered boulders that ringed the mountain. The halfling
brought up the rear.
They don't stand on ceremony much here, it occurred to Ruskettle moodily. As
she walked, she pocketed her latest acquisitions, a ring and a small vial
smelling of cinnamon.
By the time they reached the lair's main entrance, steam was billowing from
within. The cavern's front opening was small but still quite wide enough for a
dragon to pass through. From somewhere deep within, beyond their sight, a deep,
throaty muttering rose and fell.
"Can the dragon use spells?" Akabar asked the halfling, concerned
that the beast might have other, hidden talents.
"No. She's just cursing," the halfling explained. "The old
girl talks to herself, deciding what she should do, where she should go, who
she should eat, and so on. All that stuff."
Alias said grimly, "Can we just seal her in and get out of here before
she reaches a decision?"
Akabar held the scroll out at arm's length and began intoning its spell in a
low, melodic voice. Every so often, he would glance up at the entrance, then
back to the paper.
Alias looked at her sword arm, but the symbols remained inert. Relief was
quickly replaced by a sensation of horror as she spotted Ruskettle ambling over
the stones directly toward the cavern's mouth.
The small humanoid took up a position some twenty yards from the cavern and
cupped her hands before her mouth. She bellowed, or at least shouted as loud as
a small creature could, "Heyyy, Misty!"
All at once, the mutterings in the cavern stopped.
Alias held her breath. Akabar looked up and almost scrambled the spell by
missing an inflection. He continued to read aloud, though faster than before.
Alias looked for Dragonbait, but the lizard was bounding over the rock-strewn
hillside toward the halfling.
Ruskettle continued her taunting. "We made it, you big sack of shoe
leather! We got out, and I'm going to tell everyone you're an oath-breaker! You
jackass-faced salamander!"
Dragonbait was only halfway to the halfling's position when a deep rumbling
came from within the mountain, like the sound of an erupting volcano. The mage
quickened his verbal pace yet again. Alias was torn between worrying that the
mage's speed would spoil the scroll's spell and that the wall created wouldn't
be large enough to cover the lair's entrance or strong enough to stop a dragon.
"Oath-breaker, Fight-faker!" brayed the halfling. Twin amber
lights appeared far within the cavern, growing larger by the second. They
framed a red, open mouth set with swordlike teeth.
"Flame-brain, Lame-brain, Tame-brain,
oooff—" The
half-ling's jeers were lost in a sharp exhalation as Dragonbait slammed into
her, knocking her down the hillside for the second time in ten minutes.
The rising roar of the oncoming dragon now hurt Alias's ears. Akabar was
shouting as well, spitting out the last phrases of the incantation. The scroll
itself was being consumed by the force of the magics and was burning bright
yellow in the merchant-mage's hands.
Everything broke loose in the span of a breath. Mist's body appeared from
the darkness, visible in the sunlight that shone only a little way into the
cavern. The dragon was flying low and fast, about to shoot through the small
opening, falling upon the party like a hawk among sparrows.
Then there was a great
whooshing noise, and a huge wall of stone
blocked the party's view of the monster. They heard, however, a bone-crushing
smash coming from the far side of the wall, and saw the barrier arc outward at
its center, trying to contain the force of several tons of wyrm flying at top
speed.
When the wall bulged, Alias was sure that the magical mortar would give.
Astonishingly, it held, even losing half of the bulge by springing back some.
Silence descended on the mountain meadow. Akabar collapsed by the burned
remains of the scroll and put his head in his hands.
Ruskettle picked herself off the ground, scowled at the lizard, and shouted
down at Alias, "That was hard work. When do we eat?"
6
Olive and the Crystal Elemental
For the next few miles, as they wound down the hillside and into the cover
of deeper woods, Alias kept checking over her shoulder. Despite having sealed
Mist in, the swordswoman half-expected the dragon to dive on them from the sky,
bathing the entire forest in flames. Logic insisted that Mist had to be at
least slightly injured from her sudden collision, and it would take her at
least a day to dig her way out, but Alias felt more comfortable playing it safe
by assuming that Mist was pursuing them.
The swordswoman made the party turn off the road onto the first trail into
the woods, so it was nearly dusk by the time they reached the stone circle
where she and Akabar and Dragonbait had spent the night before.
In the setting sunlight, the red hewn rock of the druid circle blazed as
though the hillock on which it stood was afire. According to the map Dimswart
had given Alias, this site had long been abandoned by the clerics of nature,
yet the pines encircling the clearing showed no sign of encroaching and
reclaiming the area. Alias wondered whether the trees were discouraged by the
rocky, frost-cracked soil or thwarted by some lingering magic.
At any rate, the bare space discouraged her as well. Last night they had
found the clearing too cold to use as a camping site. Twenty feet down the slope
under the cover of the pine branches, on the soft carpet of pine needles, they
were sheltered from the wind and considerably warmer. This night, the trees
would also shelter them from Mist's gaze. Alias was glad to have good reasons
to avoid the stone circle. The giant columns, set in no detectable order, made
her uncomfortable. She and Dragonbait hurriedly retrieved the party's gear from
its hiding place in the hollow at the foot of one of the sandstone rocks.
Akabar was puffing on smoky, sparking pine needles when Alias and the lizard
returned to the dark camp under the trees. While Akabar prepared dinner, Alias,
wrapped in a cloak from the cache, patrolled the edge of the clearing,
occasionally glancing at the bard.
Ruskettle was short, even for a halfling. Not even three feet high. There
was nothing childlike about her figure, though. She was in the full bloom of
womanhood, with plenty of curves, but she also had a slender waist and none of
the plumpness most members of her race had. Her leanness, the muscles of her
calves, her deep tan, all indicated to Alias that the bard was an adventuress
like herself. Yet, Alias was not prepared to like or trust her at all. The bard
hadn't made the slightest effort to help Dragonbait and Akabar set up camp or prepare
their meal. Besides, halflings were trouble. Alias had never met an exception
to the rule.
She joined the others for dinner, seating herself opposite Ruskettle, still
watching her intently.
"I don't know how to thank you properly," the halfling bard
mumbled between bites of smoke-cured mutton. "The halflings of the south
have a saying: I owe you my life, your belongings are safe with me."
The mutton leg, which might have lasted Alias and Akabar another two days,
was quickly disappearing. Ruskettle tossed her long, curly hair over her
shoulder and motioned with her clay bowl for another helping of soup, still
chewing as though her life depended on it.
Akabar furrowed his eyebrows at the small creature's gluttony, but he ladled
out another portion of the hearty gruel, a thick barley stock with bits of
salted coney seasoned with herbs from the merchant-mage's copious pockets.
"I can see you're keeping our food safe," Alias joked. "Are
you sure it's the musical ability of Olav Ruskettle that is renowned, and not
her appetite?"
The bard swallowed and wiped her mouth. "The name's Olive, dear. Olive
Ruskettle. Don't worry. Everyone makes that mistake."
"Dimswart said it was Olav," Alias muttered as a tiny fear crept
over her. Perhaps she had rescued the wrong person.
"Well, I should know my own name, don't you think? The problem is that
some fool clerk made a mistake writing it down once on some official document
and ever since I've had to correct people."
"I see," Alias replied suspiciously, wondering whether Mistress
Ruskettle wasn't wanted under the name of Olav for something more serious than
straining rhymes.
"As for my appetite," Olive Ruskettle explained, washing down a
loaf of bread with a long pull on a waterskin, "you should know that that
witch of a dragon, while having a civilized appreciation for my musical
talents, had a lot to learn about the care and feeding of a halfling. Her own
eating habits were anything but regular, and I had a devil of a time convincing
her that I could not live on raw venison. Then I discovered that her cooking
technique left something to be desired. If you had not come along, my
dear," she said shaking her head sadly and patting Alias's boot, "I'm
afraid my little bones would have joined those of the heroes littering the
floor of the dragon's lair."
As the bard continued to make up for a ride's worth of lost meals, Alias
thought of the heroes' bones littering the caverns of Mist. Heroes with all the
bravado and lack of sense of the halfling. Alias shook her head remembering the
bard's outrageous behavior at the mouth of Mist's lair.
Alias's first adventuring party, the Swanmays, had been like that, all flash
and fanfare. One encounter with trolls had taught them the wiser course of
stealth and surprise.
She remembered the battle with the trolls clearly, as though it had happened
last week. So why can't I remember last week? she thought with frustration. She
was so wrapped up in her thoughts that Akabar nudged her.
"I'm sorry, what?" she asked.
"I said, 'Do you think we'll return in time?' For the wedding, I
mean."
"We'd better, or all this effort was for nothing," Alias answered,
oblivious to the feelings of the halfling.
Olive Ruskettle apparently took no offense. Her mind was also on other things.
"As anxious as I am to make my Cormyrian debut, I simply haven't the
strength to keep pace with you. I shall have to have a mount."
"I don't care for sore feet and aching muscles any more than you,
Mistress Ruskettle," Alias replied. "We walked here for secrecy's
sake, but, since we seem to have eluded the dragon, horses sound like an
excellent idea. How lucky for us you managed to acquire so much of the dragon's
wealth while I was fighting for your freedom and life. We can purchase mounts
at the first farm we come to."
Olive moved the mutton bone away from her face long enough to give Alias an
unabashed grin. "I assure you, my feet made a bee-line for safety while
you so valiantly risked your life to rescue me. My hands would have felt left
out if they'd been any less useful, don't you know?" She waved the bone in
the direction of the sacks of treasure. "Please, feel free to consider
this the party's treasure to be used to cover expenses. Whatever remains should
be divided evenly among those who survive our encounters. Even—" she
cocked an eyebrow in Akabar's direction "—if some were less useful than
others."
Akabar's brow furrowed in astonishment at the woman's nerve. "That is
very human of you, small one," he said. "Particularly since that
spellbook you pulled from the dragon's lair was my own. Most strange, though,
because that book was missing from my wagon since the first day out of Arabel,
which was, I believe, where you joined our caravan, several days before the
dragon attacked us."
"Most strange, indeed," Olive agreed, returning Akabar's level
glare. "But"—her eyes returned to her soup bowl, and she took a gulp
of broth before continuing—"these are strange times, so the sages say.
Mannish kingdoms war and plot while old gods, long forgotten, stir in their
restless sleep." She lifted the soup bowl as if making a toast.
"Let's celebrate your good fortune at having your valuable tome returned
to you, instead of probing into yet more mysteries." She drained the soup
bowl and held it out again. "Is there, perchance, any more soup?"
Akabar drained the last of the pot into Olive's bowl. Olive leaned toward
the treasure pile, plucked the magical book from the coins and carvings, and
held it out to the wizard as he held out her soup bowl. Both parties gave the
other a smile that was less than earnest as the exchange was made.
Akabar inspected his book for signs of damage. Alias reached for a tiny
pouch near the treasure pile and loosened the string about its neck.
"Not that," Olive objected. "Those are some of my personal
effects." But Alias had already dumped the contents of the pouch on the
ground. A collection of keys, picks, and wires glittered in the dirt. A small
gold ring rolled toward the fire.
"Oops, sorry," Alias said nonchalantly as Olive snatched the ring
from the ground. "You know, that ring looks familiar," she added
before the bard had a chance to pocket it.
"Oh, this? I picked it up in the dragon's lair as well."
"I have one just like it. Same blue stone set in gold."
"Maybe you dropped it when you were fighting the dragon," Olive
suggested. "Can you prove it's yours?"
Alias regarded the halfling's nervy challenge with considerable amusement.
Olive slipped the ring on her finger. At first it jangled about, too large
for her tiny digits, but a moment later it shrank to a perfect fit. "Oooo.
It's magic. Was yours magic? What did it do?"
Alias was unable to reply since she had not bothered to experiment with the
ring she'd looted from the assassins. But she knew now as well as Akabar just
how safe her possessions were in the care of the halfling bard.
Akabar looked up from his books, which he'd been checking for damage.
"You had best be cautious with that thing, little one" he warned.
"Nonsense," Olive said with a sniff. "There's no danger as
long as you know the right way to deal with these things. All you have to do is
hold your hand over your head—" the half-ling demonstrated, while Akabar
stepped backward and Alias rose to her feet "—and command the ring, 'Show
your power to me.' If that doesn't work then there are certain key words you
should—"
They never heard the rest of the bard's lecture. Suddenly the ring's power
did indeed display itself. Akabar's tome began to glow a soft blue, as did a
ring on his finger and the one on Olive's. Alias's sigils outshone them all,
emitting blue beams crazily about the pine forest.
"Damn!" the swordswoman shouted, tears brimming in her eyes. She
wrapped her cloak tightly around her body, though a blue glow peeked out at the
hem and neckline.
"What was that?" Olive gasped, her eyes glued to Alias.
"Detect magic, I imagine," Akabar answered, moving to the
swordswoman's side. "You aren't in any pain, I trust?"
"I'm fine," Alias muttered between clenched teeth.
Olive continued to stare at the swordswoman as though she'd grown a second
head. "You have a magical arm!"
"Ignore it," Alias muttered.
"But, it's really magical! Incredibly magical! More magical than
anything I've ever seen. I'll bet you could have sliced Mist into pieces. Maybe
we should go back and try it."
"I said, ignore it!" Alias shouted.
For the next several minutes an embarrassed silence reigned in the camp.
Akabar cleaned out the dinner pot and used it to heat water for tea. Olive
finished her soup and polished the mutton bone nearly to ivory. Alias clutched
her wrapped arm close to her until the sigils' light began to dim.
Dragonbait laid more wood on the fire, and then stepped outside the campsite
to stand in the darkness, facing the hill-top, as though he expected danger
from that direction.
"So, tell me, mage," the halfling piped up, obviously
uncomfortable without chatter about her. "Where did you find your
familiar?" She indicated Dragonbait by nodding her head in his direction.
"I've seen nothing like him from the Sword Coast all the way south to
magical Halruaa."
Alias snapped, "Dragonbait is my companion, Ruskettle, not the mage's
familiar. I did not find him. He found me. He has proved more than
useful."
"Aye, I've noticed. Especially at pulling halflings out of the fire. I
meant no offense, I assure you. It's just that I've never heard of a lizard
acting as a manservant before. But then I've never heard of a magical arm
before either"
Alias gritted her teeth. If the halfling wasn't going to give her curiosity
a rest, it was time to go on the offensive. "You know, I've never heard of
a halfling bard before."
"Well, that's easily explained," Olive smiled. "I gained my
training in the south; things are very different there."
"I am from the south as well," said Akabar. "And now that the
lady mentions it, I have never encountered a bard of the halfling race,
either."
"Ah," replied Olive, staring sadly into her empty bowl.
"Well, you are from Turmish, I seem to remember."
"Yeees," the mage said, anticipating what was to come.
"Well, I was trained farther south than that."
"Anywhere near Chondath?" Akabar asked.
"Chondath? Yes, just a wee bit farther south than that."
"Sespech?"
"Yes, Sespech. There is a barding college there with a fine teacher who
taught me all I know." The halfling flashed Akabar a beaming smile.
"How odd," drawled the mage, tugging at the edge of his beard.
"One of my wives comes from Sespech, on the Vilhon Reach, and while she is
quite talkative about the merits of her native land, she has never mentioned
halfling bards."
"Ohhh. No, no, no, no," corrected Olive. "You're talking
about Sespech between the Vilhon and the Nagawater. I was referring to a place
much farther south. How far south have your travels taken you?"
"I've traded as far south as Innarlith, on the Lake of Steam," the
mage said. The halfling nodded.
"Our company ..." Alias wrinkled her brow, trying to dredge up
memories as bright but as liquid as quicksilver. "Our company fought on
the Shining Plains. Yes, that's right, and we traveled through Amn once or
twice."
The halfling looked at Alias a moment, confused by her interruption about
places farther to the west and outside the realm of the discussion. She
shrugged and continued her far-fetched explanation to the mage. "And in
Innarlith there were dwarves from the Great Rift?" she asked.
"Yes, from Eartheart," Akabar replied.
"Well," Olive concluded triumphantly, "below the Great Rift,
on the Southern Sea, is the land of Luiren. We have a Sespech there, and a
Chondath, which are small but bustling towns, the namesakes no doubt of your
larger nations. Anyway, in Sespech, the one in Luiren, I was trained, having
made a long pilgrimage from Cormyr. I was attempting to return to my homeland
when that fool wyrm plucked me from my wagon."
"Dimswart says you came from across the Dragon Reach," Alias said,
puzzled.
"No, I come from Cormyr. You see, traveling by boat does not agree with
me, so I journeyed to Luiren around the western edge of the Inner Sea. Desiring
to see even more of the Realms, I returned from Luiren around the eastern edge
of the Inner Sea, through many wild and dangerous lands. I made a name for
myself in the nations of Aglarond and Impiltur. I had just entered Procampur
when I received Master Dimswart's most generous offer to entertain at his
daughter's wedding. And glad I was to come home, Procampur being a stuffy town,
too restrictive for an artiste."
Alias and Akabar exchanged glances. Akabar looked frustrated, but Alias had
to smile at the halfling's tale. There had to be at least a dozen lies tangled
up in her story, but it wasn't worth the trouble proving it. Olive, like any
other halfling, would only invent more lies to cover the originals. Better to
wait until she accidentally let the truth slip out.
Alias stood up and stretched. "Going to be a cold night. We need more
wood." She walked toward the clearing where the moonlight revealed fallen
limbs.
"So, what's her story?" Olive whispered to Akabar, jerking her
head at Alias's retreating figure.
"Story?" echoed Akabar. "To what are you referring?"
"She has a magical arm!" Ruskettle's voice rose half an octave.
Akabar shrugged. He was taking a lot of pleasure in thwarting the woman's
unbearable curiosity.
"Look, mage," Olive sighed. "I owe her. I want to help."
Akabar's feelings softened somewhat. "Not that I believe you for a
moment," he said, "but just in case your words are earnest, I will
tell you. The glyphs on the lady's arm are magical, not the arm itself. Some
unknown power carved them into her flesh, but she cannot remember the event. As
a matter of fact, she cannot remember the events of several of the past months.
In exchange for the meaning of the glyphs, she has agreed to deliver you safely
to Master Dimswart. The best service you can do her is to come along peacefully
and perform well at this wedding."
Olive pondered the information for a few minutes, then she speculated aloud,
"So anything could have happened during the time she can't remember. She
could have been a slave, or a concubine to a powerful sorcerer, or married to a
foreign prince—a princess dripping in jewelry."
"Or a wandering swordswoman," added Akabar.
"Or a princess," Olive repeated to herself, "dripping in
jewelry, her lover killed, her kingdom usurped, and her memory lost through the
fell magics of her enemies."
Akabar shook his head at the bard's wandering fantasy. He was reaching for
another log to throw on the fire when a strong wind suddenly rushed down from
the hilltop. The pines danced with alarming energy, and sparks from the
campfire scattered across the ground. The ground shook, and over the howl of
the wind came a malicious laugh that brought both mage and halfling to their
feet.
"Alias!" Akabar shouted, dashing toward the clearing.
Olive Ruskettle grabbed a brand from the campfire and rushed after him. If
Alias had some wealth, the halfling realized, she could prove profitable to
have in one's debt.
*****
While Ruskettle was trying to persuade Akabar Bel Akash to tell her about
Alias, the swordswoman was searching for Dragonbait. She'd assumed he had gone
off to collect more firewood. If that were the case, Alias thought, he would
have returned by now. He kept eyeing the hilltop. I'll bet he's gone to
investigate that stone circle.
With a sigh Alias began climbing the hill.
A shadow at the edge of the clearing moved, accompanied by a scrabbling
sound. The lightning-blue beams emanating from the sigils had died away, but
the cursed patterns still gave off light enough to rival the moon. Alias drew
her arm from her cloak and held it up. A large shape by the base of a pine
tree, startled by the second light source, scampered down the hill into the
darkness. Only a porcupine, peeling tree bark for dinner, O great warrior,
Alias mocked herself. But don't worry, you scared it off.
Chuckling, she doubled her pace until she reached the center of the stone
circle. The half moon hung overhead like a gold lion coin split apart by
looting pirates. In the moonlight, the red stones appeared black and their
edges and corners, dulled by the wind and rain, blurred into the darkness. She
wondered why more enduring and brighter rock had not been used in the circle's
construction. All the druid temples she'd ever visited before had been built of
granite, not sandstone, and placed among oaks, not pines.
She jumped on a rock and surveyed the landscape. The tops of the encircling
pines stood out against the moonlit sky like triangular crenelations of a
castle wall. The original path to the temple was overgrown with brambles which
reflected the moonlight. Of Dragonbait there was no sign.
Some parts of the hill dropped away in miniature canyons, and Alias began to
worry that perhaps he had slipped or fallen down one of these. She shivered in
the cold air. She'd suddenly felt very vulnerable. Like a fool, she'd forgotten
her sword. She jumped from the rock and headed down the slope toward the
campsite.
A glint of metal on the ground caught her eye. She veered from her intended
path and moved toward it. At the foot of a larger than man-sized boulder lay
Dragonbait's oddly shaped sword. Alias leaped forward and lifted the gleaming
blade off the ground. The weapon's weight astonished her. It felt no heavier
than a fencing foil, and its balance was not awkward in the least. It also felt
warm to the touch—not just the grip, but the blade as well.
A shadow stirred on the boulder. Alias spun about with Dragonbait's sword
raised, keeping the stone to her back, but there was no one there. Slowly,
Alias turned back toward the boulder. Then she saw that, unlike all the other
rock about the hilltop, this one was clear, like a huge hunk of quartz, and the
shadow she'd thought moved across it had really moved in it. She pressed
her face to the stone.
Thrashing at the heart of the rock, like a fly caught in pinesap, was the
lizard's twisting form. "Dragonbait!"
Suddenly, something heavy struck the back of her legs below the knees and
she toppled backward, crying out in surprise. A violent wind sprang from
nowhere, slapping the pines about the clearing.
She tried to roll away from whatever enemy had felled her, but something
held her ankles fast. She stared at her feet in horror. They were bound in
crystalline manacles, and her horror grew into panic as the rock crept farther
up her legs in a twisting motion, like a vine climbing a pole.
Using Dragonbait's sword, Alias beat on the stone bonds with fury, not
considering what damage she might do to the weapon or even to herself. The
blade did not shatter, but cut through the engulfing stone as though it were
liquid. Like sap, or syrup, the clear stone oozed back over the hack marks and
continued growing faster than she could chop. Soon the stone oozed beneath her
legging plates where she could not reach it, miring her tightly in place.
The ground trembled. With a squelching thuck a dome of earth rose
before her, carrying with it the crystal boulder that imprisoned Dragonbait.
Alias looked up in horror and realized that the rounded eruption was a huge,
monstrous rock head. Dragonbait's prison rested on top of the head, a lump
above its temple. Farther down, two eve-disks glowed a sickening yellow. Below
these was a gaping maw smelling of sulfur.
The sound that issued from the mouth sent an ice dagger slicing down Alias's
spine. The head laughed, a familiar, hoarse, wheezing laugh. Familiar, she was
sure, to her old self, the self whose memory was missing, lost in whatever
darkness this monster had sprung from.
A moment later, a great stone arm rose from beneath the earth. The
creature's chest rose from its mossy bed as well, dark red earth set with a
glowing blue symbol of interlocking rings— just like the set on her arm.
With a sickening lurch, Alias felt herself hoisted above the ground. The
stone about her legs proved to be part of the amorphous fist attached to the
arm of the monster. The monster held her up to its face. As she swung upside
down in the hellish yellow glare of its eyes, she felt her sigils jump and
writhe and flare as brightly as they had when Winefiddie had tried to dispel
them, until an aura of near blinding blue shone all about her, the monster's
head, and the crystal prison holding Dragonbait.
The creature laughed again. Its chortle unnerved her, and she hacked at its
fist, its face, its eyes, anything she could reach with Dragonbait's blade. The
sword passed through the creature's body; its "flesh" was the
consistency of peat, but neither the creature's eyes or voice registered any
pain The hoarse laughter brought a lost memory fluttering across her inner
vision, but like a bat in the darkness, shp felt it but could not grasp it.
The monster raised her up to its temple and held her against its head so
that she stood next to Dragonbait's crystal cell. The lizard gestured to
himself, a motion that caught her attention. She took a deep breath in an
effort to calm herself while she watched him miming the same motions over and
over. First he would raise his hands together over his head, then pound them
against the transparent wall of his trap, then slap himself on the forehead.
Huh?
Raise, pound, slap. Raise, pound, slap.
The creature of earth tugged its other arm from the soil The newly freed
fist held a gemlike twin of Dragonbait^ prison. The earthen giant brought this
second crystal up to where it caught the blue rays from Alias's sigils and
scattered them into the dark night. Then the great stone cracked and split
along its center. The blue light of her cursed runes revealed a clear, rippling
slime within the crystal's open heart. Any moment she would become another bug
in amber.
Raise, pound, slap.
Why does Dragonbait keep slapping himself on the head? she wondered.
Dragonbait pointed at her. She slapped herself on the head. He shook his
head furiously and pointed at the crystal over his head.
"Not my head!" she yelled excitedly, finally understanding.
"The creature's head!"
Clenching both her fists about the hilt of Dragonbait's weapon and twisting
her body, Alias smashed Dragonbait's sword against the lizard's crystal prison.
Steel screeched on rock, and the force of the blow traveled up Alias's arm,
leaving it numb. The crystal split like an eggshell, and Dragonbait spilled out
of the jagged hole, followed by a mucky ooze that poured down the monster's
face.
The monster shrieked, a baneful cry that carried leagues on the wind and
seemed to set off a gale that bent large pines and snapped their heavy
branches. A moan issued from the earth, echoed by the rocks of the stone
circle, and then the huge beast's shoulders slumped and began to flow back into
the ground.
Patting her hand gently, Dragonbait took his sword from her numbed grip. He
slashed at the rock hand that held her, and the stone flowed away from her legs
like sand. They were free, but there was a forty foot drop from the monster's
head to the ground, and Alias was reluctant to make the leap.
She spotted Olive Ruskettle below, throwing daggers at the behemoth. The
halfling's weapons buried themselves in the monster's chest. The tiny blades
couldn't possibly hurt the monster more than a bee sting would harm a human warrior,
yet the monster cried out again like a feral child.
More goo oozed from the shattered crystal on the monster's head. The wound
was undoubtedly mortal, but Alias worried now that she and Dragonbait might be
crushed by the monster's death throes. Dragonbait tugged on Alias's arm and
forced her to half-leap, half-slide to the rock monster's shoulders.
Akabar's voice rose in a chant, and a lance of rainbow fight struck the
creature in the chest above the dimming rune of interlocking circles. The rainbow
broke into a thousand small motes, spreading across the creature in a dancing,
swirling pattern.
With one arm about Alias's waist, Dragonbait began climbing down the
monster's back, using his hand and foot claws to keep his grip. Dragonbait
jumped the last ten feet just as Akabar's magic consumed the creature's torso
and slid up its head and arms. The moon shone through the stone wherever the
rainbow light covered it.
The creature gave one last plaintive groan and faded into the night. Even
the torn earth where it had risen fell neatly back into place. Akabar and Olive
ran toward Alias, shouting victory cries. Behind her, she smelled the woodsmoke
scent that seemed to cling to the lizard. A clawed hand squeezed her numbed
shoulder gently, and Alias felt warmth flow into the limb. Dragonbait looked up
at her, and she felt sure there was concern in his eyes, though they looked as
dead yellow as ever. The lizard drew back as the halfling and the mage reached
Alias's side.
"Did you see?" Olive asked. "While this one was struggling to
remember his spell," she jerked her head in Akabar's direction, "I
wounded it to the quick with two daggers to its heart. My aim was never better.
What was it, anyway?"
Akabar looked down at the bard in disbelief. "Perhaps later you would
care to hone your abilities by throwing at the side of a barn," he
suggested dryly. "That was some type of earth elemental, though not one of
the standard breed normally called up by magic-users. Perhaps it was from the
Plane of Minerals, which abuts the Earthen Plane. At any rate, it was a
conjured creature, or my dispel magic chant would not have worked on it."
He turned to address Alias. "I'm sorry I cast my spell before you could
finish climbing down, but I judged you were safer falling than being crushed
beneath the monster."
"Quite right," Alias answered, nodding her head, though she was
obviously preoccupied with some other thought.
"Someone summoned something that big just to capture you?" Olive
gasped. "You must be someone important."
Akabar turned to study Dragonbait, who sat on a rock, studying his blade in
the moonlight. The lizard-creature ran a clawed thumb along the edge and
growled like a cat. "It seems you've nicked his blade," Akabar said
to Alias, pointing to the lizard. Dragonbait pulled something from his belt
pouch. Alias watched as Dragonbait began sliding a whetstone along the steel
edge.
"He seems more worried about his weapon's condition than yours,"
the halfling sniffed.
"Quite right," Alias repeated. She shivered. Pulling her cloak
about her, she headed back down the hill to the campfire. Her head still echoed
with the stone creature's hoarse laughter. Familiar, she thought, familiar as
an old friend. Familiar as death.
7
The Wedding Reception
In the backyard of Dimswart Manor, two days journey from the mountains, in
the countryside near Suzail, laughter and the clink of fine crystal filled the
wedding tent. Now and then the multi-colored cloth walls shivered as some
high-spirited child ran into the slender, black vloon wood rods supporting the
sides. The white roof wafted alarmingly each time some tired or drunken soul
leaned against the huge center pole that supported the tent roof.
Alias and Akabar had arrived late the previous night, mud-spattered and
exhausted, but with a famous bard on the pony between them. Dragonbait loped
along behind them since he refused to ride. Fortunately, he'd had no trouble
keeping up with the group.
The lady of the house welcomed them with as much hospitality as she could,
considering her home was already full of visitors, all certain of their supreme
importance in the scheme of things. Small but comfortable rooms were found for
the adventurers in the servant's wing.
Their hostess insisted they attend the wedding, though it was obvious to
Alias that she did so only because it would be awkward to ask them to leave.
Gratitude for the service they'd just rendered was the last thing on Lady
Leona's mind. She had given Alias the distinct impression that, in her opinion,
fighting a dragon was a snap compared to planning a wedding for three hundred
people.
More suitable attire was found for the female guest—a sky-blue strapless
gown with leggings and a capelet. One accessory had been added, a pair of
arm-length, fingerless gloves, no doubt supplied to cover up her
"affliction."
Alias was uncomfortable in the gown, despite the good fit and excellent
cloth. She felt naked without her armor, and she kept tripping over the skirt.
You'd think I'd never worn a dress in my life, she chided herself the third
time she'd neglected to lift the hem and stepped on it. After all, I wasn't
born in armor.
As far as her unreliable memory could recollect, she had worn dresses before
becoming an adventurer. Even after she took up the sword, she'd risked teasing
from the male members of her party and allowed herself the luxury of a more
feminine wardrobe while she stayed in town.
That thought reminded her of her purpose in remaining here. Dimswart had
uncovered information on the sigils, but wouldn't have time to review it with
her until after the wedding. She scanned the crowd anxiously for the father of
the bride, hoping that he might have a moment to give her some clue, something
that would make the wait, in this warm tent full of frivolous people, bearable.
Dimswart was mingling through the crowd, looking as jolly as a trader who
has deceived the tax collector. When Alias spotted him, he was lending a
friendly ear to a gathering of his daughter's friends, no doubt hearing a
saintly version of the bride's last night of freedom. Shrieks and giggles
emanating from the bride's quarters had kept Alias awake into the small hours
of the morning. Yet, the bride looked fresh as morning, and though she was
important enough to warrant a seat, she would not stay in it. Instead, she
roamed the tent and the lawn in her white gown, with the crest of her upswept
hair bobbing like peacock feathers.
Nothing holding that girl up but the stays in her bodice, and nothing
keeping her moving but nervous energy, Alias thought. The bride, Gaylyn, had
greeted everyone, even taken a moment to thank Alias for all her help. It was
doubtful she knew exactly what Alias had done, since she'd greeted many people
with the same platitude, but she seemed in earnest. She'd go far in court,
Alias decided, even without help from her new in-laws.
The groom, Lord Frefford Wyvernspur, towed along by his new bride, sparkled
almost as brilliantly, dressed in the green and gold of his family, the
Wyvernspurs of Immersea.
The wedding was the social event of the season and, in a spirit of festive
goodwill, the imported nobility bumped elbows against the local
hoi palloi.
His Majesty, Azoun IV, remained in court in Suzail on the advice of the court
wizard, Vangerdahast. However, a number of lesser Cormyrian lords and ladies
were present to benefit from meetings and conversations with the heads of
rising Suzail merchant households and local freeman leaders.
Alias caught a glimpse of swirling crimson and white on the far side of the
tent. Akabar's head poked above the press of shorter Cormyrians. Tired of being
a stranger among so many, she decided that even the foreigner's company would
be preferable to standing alone. Elbowing her way through the crowd, she caught
fragments of conversation.
"Well, if you ask me," said one bass voice, "they should have
had a cleric of Ilmater there. God of endurance, suffering, and
perseverance."
Alias gave a derisive snort. Considering the confusion caused by having four
clerics at the marriage ceremony, a fifth might just have helped start a jihad.
The swordswoman recalled the moment when both the bishop of Chauntea and the
patron of Oghma stepped forward at the same time to offer the blessing. For
seven heartbeats the priest and priestess stood, staring stonily at each other
until the male bishop bowed deeply and surrendered the floor.
"If you must know," a disconnected whisper confided, "we
dressed in blackface and wrote filthy slogans on the side of the citadel.
Horrible, horrible things about Princess Tanalasta and a centaur."
A strong political statement, Alias thought sarcastically.
"Go ahead, Giogi," a slurred female voice encouraged some unseen
gentleman. "Do your impression of His Majesty. Giogi does the most
on-target imitation, you can just close your eyes and picture the old stuffed
codger. You know that line he always uses, 'Let me state, O people of Cormyr,
my people.' Everyone says that even Azoun himself would do a double take.
Pleeease, Giogi."
Yes, please, Giogi, the swordswoman begged silently. Anything to keep the
woman from whining.
"No, you're quite wrong," a gravelly male voice replied in a
different conversation. "The problems in the Moonshaes are completely
local. The rise of their goddess has nothing to do with the tenets of
Chauntea's faith."
Alias shook her head incredulously at the speaker's arrogant assurance. As a
traveled adventurer she knew better. No problem was ever completely local;
problems rippled through the Realms from shore to shore. Now where did I hear
that line before? she wondered.
"Lady Alias?" a familiar voice addressed her. "I trust you're
having a fine time?"
Alias turned and blinked twice to accustom her eyes to the shadowed side of
the tent. Dimswart stood, his comrade-in-ale, the priest Winefiddle, right
behind. Each held a foaming mug of beer.
"Yes, yes I am," Alias replied politely, brushing a loose strand
of hair from her face. "I was just trying to cross the room, but it's like
wading through soft sand." She could not meet the eyes of the cleric. In
addition to trying to kill him, she had also cheated his church of his fee.
But Winefiddle smiled absently at her, and the sage nodded in blank
agreement. Their faces were both more flushed than the heat in the tent
warranted, and they swayed from side to side, bumping into each other.
Giving her elbow a little fatherly squeeze, Dimswart bellowed over the
noise, "We'll talk about your little problem just as soon as Leona and I
get the children off. That way I'll get out of the clean-up." He laughed,
and some of the ale sloshed from his mug. "Have you eaten? Had a mug?"
Alias shook her head, and Winefiddle pressed his flagon into her hands.
"Hardly touched," he slurred.
Alias smiled nervously and, not wishing to give the curate any further cause
for offense, took a swig. The ale was as vile as The Hidden Lady's.
"No more, thanks," Alias said, passing the mug back to Winefiddle.
"I think I'd better keep keep my wits about me."
The curate shrugged and took a long, hearty draught. Alias excused herself
and plunged back into the crowd in the direction she'd last seen Akabar's head.
She spotted Olive Ruskettle seated on a small bench in front of the wedding
table, leaning low over her yarting as she tuned it so she could hear the
strings over the noise of the crowd.
Alias's attention was drawn away to Akabar, who was watching something with
great amusement. Empty crystal cups rose and fell above the heads of the crowd
in an ever increasing number. How odd. I would have thought jugglers too common
for Lady Leona, Alias puzzled.
"Higher taxes will be the death of me," complained a voice in the milling
crowd.
"A lovely couple," an elderly woman declared. "I wonder if
he's told her about his second cousin. The one who went quite mad and became an
adventurer, you remember?"
"Oh, go ahead, Giogi," wheedled the slurred female voice Alias
recognized from earlier. "Just once. He really does sound just like King
Azoun."
Finally, Alias squeezed between the multi-hued bodies and stood beside
Akabar. Upon spying the juggler though, she growled with annoyance. Dragonbait
lay on the ground dressed in fool's motley, tossing and catching seven pieces
of Lady Leona's crystal with all four feet and his tail. Akabar was just
tossing an eighth cup into the fray.
The clear hemisphere landed in the lizard's right front claw and scribed a
complicated journey behind its mates from right front to left rear to right
rear to left front to tail, and finally bounced up in a high arc by the tail to
land again in the right front claw. Already an admiring crowd had gathered,
allowing the lizard more open space in the mob than anyone else had received.
"What's he doing here?" Alias hissed to Akabar.
"It's called juggling. Don't you have that in the north?" The mage
grinned as he added a cup to the bobbing glassware.
"I can see that," Alias replied, beginning to lose her patience.
"Why?"
Akabar shrugged. "Some northern women assumed he was a pet and began
tossing him food. In their excitement, they began bombarding him, actually.
Rather than appear impolite he began juggling what he couldn't eat. I thought
it would be easier and cleaner to toss cups than fruit salad."
"But he's not supposed to be here," Alias insisted through
clenched teeth. "I told him to stay in my room."
Suddenly, Lady Leona broke through the crowd, and the party-goers went
deathly quiet. The noisiest members of the group turned away hastily to engage
themselves in the more civilized pastime of conversation.
The mother of the bride gave a polite but firm cough, such as a god might make
on the last day's dawning. Dragon-bait lost his concentration, and eight cups
tumbled to the grass. The ninth cup bounced off his nose, and he looked up
sheepishly at Lady Leona.
Dimswart's wife glared at Alias. "If you are quite through with your
pet, I would like to signal for the professional entertainment to begin."
"He's not my . . ." began Alias, but Lady Leona swirled about and
headed for the wedding party's table. The crowd parted for her as a rank of
archers breaks at the arrival of a formation of lancers.
Alias hustled the lizard to his feet. "Where did you get that
ridiculous getup?" she asked, tugging on the silk motley.
Dragonbait smiled and spun about so she could see the whole outfit. Little
bells attached to the costume jangled.
Alias sighed. "Pick up the cups," she ordered, pointing to the
crystal on the ground.
With exaggerated care the lizard obeyed, stacking the glittering hemispheres
on the table with the punch bowl.
Lady Leona's voice rang out from the wedding table. "Attention,
everyone. Lords and ladies." The tent quieted to a low hum, and the mother
of the bride continued. "I am very pleased to introduce Olive Ruskettle,
master bard and songsmith. Mistress Ruskettle has composed an ode to
commemorate the joining of our two families."
Polite applause followed, and then people were still again.
Alias decided to take advantage of the temporary emptiness of the doorway to
escort Dragonbait back to their room. She grabbed a handful of the baggy motley
and began tugging him away from the crowd. Whimpering slightly, he pointed at
Olive.
"I think he wants to hear the bard sing," Akabar said.
Alias sighed in resignation.
Dragonbait folded his arms and tilted his head, the very archetype of a
music connoisseur. Except for being a lizard.
Ruskettle began strumming the yarting. The opening chords sounded to Alias
like those the bard had used to taunt the dragon three days ago.
Though the halfling sang well and her tune was catchy, conversations
continued about the edges of the tent, out of earshot of the hostess.
Alias caught the words of a nasal voice. "As I said to Sir Rafner,
taxes. Raise taxes."
"She seems awfully short for a bard," remarked one of the bride's
girlfriends, "but I wouldn't know good music if it attacked me in the
dark."
"Not much, just fourteen or fifteen mugs," a drunken voice
insisted from the ale table.
"Giogi, do it for me, please?"
For gods' sake, Giogi, Alias thought, would you just get it over with?
Giogioni Wyvernspur sighed. Minda would not quit asking him to repeat the
imitation until he complied. He should never have done it for her in the first
place. Giogi was not a young man of much sense, but he had enough to realize
that his cousin Freffie's wedding reception was not the sort of place one did
imitations of one's sovereign king. His only hope lay in getting it over with
quickly and quietly.
Alias heard a young man's voice reply, "All right."
"Hooray, Giogi!" the woman cheered.
"Finally," Alias mumbled.
"Let me gather myself," Giogi said. Then his voice changed,
becoming deeper, huskier, masking the squeakiness of youth and taking on a
mountain lander's burr.
"My Cormytes. My People. As your king, as King Azoun, and as King Azoun
IV, I must say that the need to raise your taxes is a result of the direct
depravations of ..." The voice dropped to a whisper. "Vangy, who is
being depraved this time?"
Alias's breath quickened. She focused her attention on Giogi's altered
voice. To her, the rest of the chatter died away, leaving only the husky tone.
A powerfully sinister feeling swept over her, leaving her dizzy. The crowd was
suffocating her. Her arm began to ache miserably. Nearby she heard a growl.
Panic rose in Alias. Her body was moving of its own accord, just as it had
when she nearly killed Winefiddle. She tried to hold herself still, fight the
urge to lunge at the Wyvernspur noble, but without success. Far off she heard
women screaming and men shouting. Something nearby was burning.
Standing right beside Alias, Akabar felt her stiffen. He noticed the smell
of smoke almost immediately. With horror he watched the glove that covered her
tattoos blister and burn away. Then he heard Alias snarl like a dog, and saw
her face contort into a mask of rage.
Dragonbait turned to look at her in confusion. When Akabar laid a hand on
her left arm to offer his assistance, she shoved both man and beast away with
unbelievable strength, propelling herself in the opposite direction. With
murder in her eyes, Alias leaped onto Giogi.
She landed on top of him with a scream, her hands about his throat in an
instant. She might have wrung his neck, but she caught sight of a long, sharp
knife used to cut pies and cake. She reached for it, but lost her grip on the
young man as she did so. Giogi managed to twist away from her, and she plunged
the pastry blade into the table where he'd been pinned only a moment before.
"I say, I wasn't that bad," the green-and-gold-clad noble
sputtered, "I didn't want to do it, really. It's just that Minda kept
begging me, you know?"
Alias yanked the blade from the tabletop and drew a fresh bead on her
target. Giogi backpedaled furiously. Women screamed and several Wyvernspur
menfolk, seeing their kin beseiged, shouted a battle cry and moved in on the
attacker. Alias kept them all at bay with the knife. One cocky fellow got too
close and received a slash across his cheek to show for it.
Several of the groom's relatives, faced with a mad assassin, fled the area
as quickly as possible, leaving the tent sides flapping where they'd torn up
the stakes.
Olive, her ode interrupted, her audience gone, moved toward the fight. She
helped Akabar up from the ground as she demanded, "Just what does she
think she's doing?"
"I think the sigils," Akabar explained in a whisper, "are
trying to make her kill that man because he sounds like the king of
Cormyr."
Olive glanced over at Giogi, who was now crawling along the ground.
"But he doesn't look anything like Azoun."
"The sigils don't know that," Akabar pointed out, wracking his
brain for some way to put the warrior woman out of commission without injuring
her too severely.
A northerner of huge girth tried tackling her from behind. Alias pivoted,
jammed an elbow into the man's belly, and backhanded him in the face with the
handle of the knife. Bleeding from the nose, the man fell into the crowd.
Having lost her target, Alias's eyes swept through the tent. She spotted
Giogi cowering beneath the punch table. She dove for him just as he managed to
scramble to the other side.
Dimswart, realizing that it would not look good if one of his clients
murdered one of his new in-laws, grabbed Akabar's shoulder. "Do
something," he demanded.
Akabar nodded his head, but he hadn't prepared any magical spells that would
be useful at a wedding celebration-turned-brawl.
Olive seized control of the situation by grabbing Dragonbait. "We have
to stop her!"
The lizard cocked his head in confusion.
In a flash of inspiration Akabar cried, "Stop her, before she gets
hurt!"
Dragonbait nodded. Dodging the confused, fleeing guests, he tackled the
central pole of the tent. The huge beam slid across the grass, pulling the
walls up and the roof down. Stakes ripped from the ground, and the pole toppled
over with a thud, bringing acres of tent down and putting an end to the
pandemonium with a great
whoosh.
8
The Sigils
Akabar was one of the first to emerge from under the cloth, his red and
white silk robes only slightly stained with grass. He immediately scanned the
area for Alias's figure, but his view of the grounds was blocked by the growing
throng of refugees. He waited by the edge of the collapsed structure, assisting
others to their feet and hoping the swordswoman would appear.
When Giogi emerged from beneath the tent, he kept crawling until he bumped
into the knees of a dowager Wyvernspur.
"Giogioni, you are a fool," the lady declared. "This civil
unrest is a direct consequence of your open disrespect for our sovereign. I've
warned you time and again that you were courting disaster."
"Yes, Aunt Dorath."
"Get off your knees, you idiot."
"Yes, Aunt Dorath."
The bride and groom and their attendants rolled out from the tent, giggling
hysterically. Lady Leona emerged near Dragonbait, looking less than amused.
Upon seeing whose scaly hand had helped her rise, the woman jerked her arm back
while blasting the Turmishman with a withering glare. She looked about
impatiently for Sir Dimswart.
When the sage finally appeared, empty mug in hand, Leona drew him aside. In
quiet but threatening tones she declared, "I will not have Gaylyn's
wedding day ruined. I am taking our guests into the garden to continue with the
celebration. You must deal with this . . . situation."
Spying Olive Ruskettle, who was smoothing out her bulging pockets as best
she could, Leona made her way to the bard and escorted her to the garden.
Dimswart turned to Akabar. "Your adventuress has caused a great deal of
trouble." His voice was even, but his upraised eyebrows made his point.
"If you could have spared fifteen minutes from testing ale this
morning," Akabar said in equally polite tones, "and not kept her
waiting, this would not have happened."
"You forget she is my hireling," Dimswart said. "I am not
hers."
"In the south we say the gods bless all duties faithfully performed.
Alias has accomplished her task, while you have yet to complete your end of the
bargain."
Dimswart grimaced but accepted the chastisement with good grace. Like many
sages, he liked to consider himself a man of the people. It wasn't in him to
behave haughtily. "That's still no reason to start a brawl at my
daughter's wedding," he replied with a sniff.
"It was not her, I believe, but the sigils."
"Really?" Dimswart's scholarly curiosity was peaked.
Akabar described how Alias's glove had burned just prior to the attack.
"Fascinating," the sage muttered. "Where did she go?"
A handful of servants rolled back the tent, revealing a few more guests, but
no Alias. The refreshment tables stood on the bare lawn like the skeletal
remains of some huge beast. The ale keg was immediately carried off to the
garden, followed by the punch bowl and tables to hold them. The food was a
little crushed, but already reserves were being carried from the kitchen.
Akabar spotted Dragonbait circling the beaten grass where the tent had
stood, emitting interrogative whines.
"He sounds confused," Dimswart commented.
Akabar went to the lizard. "We'll find her, don't worry."
Dragonbait gave him a distressed look and issued a sort of chirp.
"You look in her room," he ordered the lizard. "I'll search
the stable."
Their search of the house and grounds came up empty. Akabar found Dragonbait
on the lawn, staring off at the horizon.
"We'll have to try the roads," the mage said. "I need to
study my spells. You pack and ready the horses."
An hour later, Akabar, dressed for traveling, cornered Dimswart, demanding
Alias's information.
With a shrug the sage ushered him into his study and reviewed what he had
discovered about the sigils on the swordswoman's arm.
"Where will you search?" Dimswart asked Akabar when they'd
finished.
"I'm not certain," the mage answered. "There's a good chance
she's gone back to Suzail, since that's where we first met. But if she's gone
in another direction ..." His voice trailed off, and he shrugged his
shoulders.
"Why are you bothering, Akash? She's nothing to do with you. You just
met the woman."
"She needs help. Isn't that reason enough?"
"A lot of people in the Realms need help. That doesn't usually get them
the attention of wealthy Turmish merchants. House Akash probably wouldn't think
too highly of you galloping off after some northern warrioress."
That was true enough, Akabar knew. House Akash, his first wife's firm and
its partner, Kasim, his second wife's business, would probably never
understand. He shrugged again. "The dragon destroyed my inventory. I have
no other duties in this region."
"Any other merchant would cut his losses and head home while he still
could," Dimswart pointed out. "But not you. You've got it bad,
haven't you, my friend?"
Akabar stiffened angrily.
"Adventure-lust," Dimswart sighed. "Not content to remain a
greengrocer, are you?"
No, I'm not, Akabar realized. How is it this northerner understands me
better than I understood myself?
"You could have picked an easier quest to begin with," Dimswart
continued. "This woman, these sigils, are very dangerous. They represent
very evil powers."
"You have a saving up north, do you not, concerning the number of times
opportunity knocks. Besides, I like her.
"No reason why you shouldn't. She's talented, headstrong, arrogant. The
two of you have so much in common."
Akabar grinned. "All the things upon which my friendship with you is
based.
Amarast, Master Dimswart."
"Amarast, Akash."
Dragonbait was waiting in the stables with the three horses they had bought
after freeing Olive Ruskettle. He left Olive's mount, a pony she had named High
Roll. behind for the halfling. Akabar had named the first horse, a white
stallion, Windove, in honor of its speed. The pack horse, a black gelding, they
jokingly called Lightning because it was the only mount docile enough to allow
Dragonbait's touch. Alias had chosen a purebred chestnut for herself.
"That one's a real lady killer," she had said when they bought it.
"Lady Killer," Akabar whispered as he patted Alias's horse before
mounting Windove. He shuddered, wondering if the chestnut's name hadn't been a
bad omen.
He and Dragonbait walked the horses out of the stable and away from Dimswart
Manor. The mage led them toward the main road to Suzail. Dragonbait, still
dressed in motley, snuffled and snorted in the road's dust. Akabar had just
mounted when he caught the sound of short legs trotting toward them. A shrill
voice blew over the hill.
"Akabar, you charlatan, wait up! You're likely to get hurt traveling
out here alone!"
"If we double time it," the mage said to Dragonbait without
looking back, "we can probably lose her in the dust."
Upon hearing the halfling's voice, however, Dragonbait's face broke out in a
grin and he halted, keeping a firm grip on Lightning's reins. Since the pack
horse held most of Akabar's belongings, the merchant-mage had no choice but to
wait, too, as Olive Ruskettle came charging over the hill, bouncing up and down
on her pony.
"You can't leave yet," Akabar said. "The celebration is
supposed to last until midnight."
"Look," Olive said, "I've done my three sets. If I don't put
my foot down, that Leona woman will have me singing till I lose my voice. They
don't pay me enough to lose my voice."
"They won't pay you at all if you don't give them satisfaction."
"Show's what you know, clod. I'm an artiste. I get paid in advance.
Now, which way do you think our lady's heading?"
Akabar scowled. He wondered if it were really true that someone as
supposedly wise as Dimswart had paid Ruskettle in advance, yet it seemed
impossible that the woman would leave without what was owed her—and not just to
help Alias. Akabar remembered the way she'd smoothed her pockets after crawling
from under the tent. Even if she hasn't been paid, he realized, she's already
picked up her share of the wedding loot.
Akabar's fists clenched in frustration, but there was nothing he could do.
"We are going to look for her in Suzail. It's only a half day from here,
and she knows the city."
"Ah, Suzail, gem of Cormyr, home of his most serene and wise
marshmallowness, Azoun IV. Think she's going after the king after practicing on
that Wyvernspur buffoon?"
Akabar scowled. "Your disrespect for your own lawful king is
appalling."
Olive laughed. "Down south your leaders behead people for that sort of
talk, don't they? We halflings have a saying: If you take your leaders too
seriously, they're going to start taking themselves too seriously. Azoun's all
right, for a human. But he is a marshmallow. He let his pet wizard keep him at
court today, didn't he?"
"Perhaps the mage Vangerdahast had some idea of the danger there,"
Akabar said.
"Which leaves my original question. Do you think our madwoman's going
to try something foolish in Suzail?"
"I fail to see what interest you have in the matter."
"I already told you, I owe her. I pay my debts."
"With whose money, I wonder?"
The halfling gave the mage a sly smile, unruffled by his distrust. From what
Olive had seen, Alias did not rely on him for advice, and it was Alias who
interested her. The halfling had no doubt the attractive warrior and her
magical arm would lead to a fortune. And even if the swords-woman didn't, she
would make a good subject for a song.
As they traveled south, Akabar remained buried deep in his own thoughts,
trying to make up contingency plans should they discover Alias was not in
Suzail, or worse, that she was, as Olive had suggested, attempting to
assassinate King Azoun. Dragonbait loped along beside the pony High Roll, with
the bells from his jester's costume jangling. Olive chattered away to the
lizard about all the celebrations she'd played at. Akabar wished she
had
lost her voice singing.
At dusk, three hours later, Dragonbait suddenly stopped moving. He tilted
his head and placed his hand over his chest. Then, he moved on down the road
with more energy.
"Think he's picked up her scent?" the bard asked. Akabar studied
Dragonbait. "He senses something."
They arrived in Suzail shortly after dark. Without hesitation Dragonbait led
them right to The Hidden Lady and into the tavern room. Akabar wondered if the
lizard could sense Alias's presence, or if, like a dog, he simply expected her
to be there. Whatever the case, there she was.
She sat in a booth at the back. The hem of her blue gown was dirty and
tattered. Her legs were drawn up to her chest in a tight ball, and her head lay
on her knees. She was crooning a love song, explaining the tears of Selune—the
mysterious glittering shards that followed the moon's path. In all her travels,
the bard had heard neither the haunting lyrics nor the lovely melody, marred
somewhat by the swords-woman's sniffling and drunken timing.
A toppled mug oozed thick mead over the oak table in front of Alias. She
took no notice of the group as they approached—until Akabar's height blocked
out the light from the hanging lamp that illuminated her table. She stirred
herself and, with some effort, raised her head to look up at the trio. Her eyes
were rimmed with red.
"Go 'way," she croaked.
"Are you all right?" Akabar asked.
"It's a shame you had to leave," Ruskettle chirped up. "I
thought I might not survive the crush of people when the tent fell, but it was
all for the best. Imagine trying to sing to three hundred people in there. The
party got much better after we moved. Everyone said so."
Dragonbait looked at Alias with his head cocked, making a soft mewling
noise. The bells on his jester's hat jingled when he moved his head.
Again Alias told them, "Go away," but her voice was much softer.
The barkeep came to the booth. "Did you want company, lady?" he
asked protectively.
When Alias did not reply, the barkeep asked the others what they were
having.
Dragonbait pointed to the overturned mug of mead. Akabar ordered white wine.
"I'll have a Red Rum Swirl," Ruskettle said.
"Never met one," the barkeep answered.
"How 'bout a Dragon's Bite?" the bard asked.
"What's that when it's at home?" the barkeep asked.
"All right. A Yeti's Breath. You must know that one."
The barkeep shook his head.
The halfling sighed. "Rivengut then."
"Sorrv, all out. Don't get much call for it so's I don't order much of
it."
"I'll have a Black Boar then."
"I'll see what I can do."
Before the man could walk away, the southern mage took his arm gently and
whispered, "How many has she had?"
The barkeep held up two fingers.
"Two? Just two?" Akabar mouthed.
The bartender shrugged his shoulders, unable to explain Alias's
intoxication.
Akabar slid into the booth next to Olive. Dragonbait perched on the stool at
the end of the table. "Would you like another drink?" the mage asked
Alias.
"They can't make good liquor in this god-forsaken hellhole," said
the woman warrior, not raising her head.
"I'll say," agreed the halfling, "Imagine not knowing how to
make a Yeti's Breath. Now there's a drink with . .. um." Olive grew silent
under Akabar's glare.
Dragonbait reached over and placed his hand on Alias's shoulder. She tried
to shrug it off at first, but when the lizard gave a little worried chirp she
let the hand remain.
The barkeep brought their drinks and another mead for Alias.
"Perhaps a tray of food would be in order," Akabar suggested.
"Great idea," Olive agreed. "I'm starving. Would you like to
hear the ode to the couple?" she asked Alias. "Since you didn't get
to hear all of it before. They made me repeat it three times afterward.
Everyone was so impressed by it."
"Not now," Akabar answered quietly, elbowing the bard.
Ruskettle frowned and guzzled her drink. She set her glass back down on the
table and took a deep breath. "Hey! That wasn't a Black Boar.
Barkeep!"
"It happened again, just like the last time," Alias said softly,
her voice cracking on the final word. "I should have known it was coming.
I remember my arm hurt. I didn't want to lunge at that poor fool or grab that
knife, but I wasn't in control. It was like a nightmare. Then the tent fell. I
ducked out before anyone else and took off.
"I couldn't stop myself from running. Whatever was controlling me would
have made me run until I dropped, but I caught a ride into Suzail on a farmer's
wagon. When I remembered the information Dimswart had for me, I tried to jump
off and go back, but I couldn't move. It wasn't until twilight that I was free
to do as I choose. I came here. I didn't know where else to go." She put
her head down again on her knees, and her lean form shook with sobbing.
Dragonbait pulled the hair back from her face and tucked it behind her ear.
He stroked her head gently. Ruskettle waved her empty glass, trying to attract
the barkeep's attention, but finally settled for stealing Alias's untouched mug
of mead.
Akabar stared at the table until the warrior had calmed down. Then he asked,
"So, was it the sigils that made you drink yourself into a stupor?"
Alias's head snapped up, and she glared at the mage. "Listen, Turmite,
you don't know what it's like to not remember anything. To not know if you're
going to forget even more things. To not know who you're going to attack next.
First a priest, then a Corrnyrian noble—"
Olive, whose mind had been occupied with memorizing snatches of the song
Alias had been singing when they arrived, looked up suddenly, asking, "Did
you say a priest?"
"Didn't Akabar tell you?" Alias retorted icily. "I tried to
kill the priest who attempted to remove this curse. But it wasn't a curse, it's
a thing alive in me."
"The thing, not you, tried to kill the priest," Akabar corrected.
"What difference does it make? I can't get rid of it. It's not going to
let me go back to Dimswart to get the information he found for me. Gods! I'm
lucky it didn't make me kill Dimswart."
"Maybe this thing was keeping you from the scene of the crime, so to
speak," Akabar suggested. "Unless it can make you deaf, I hardly see
how it can prevent you from learning Dimswart's information."
"What?"
"I brought Dimswart's information."
Ruskettle's ears perked up, and the bells on Dragonbait's cap jingled again
as he tilted his head with interest.
"Well?" Alias prompted.
"First, I want you to promise me something."
"I don't have to promise you anything. This is my information. I earned
it."
"True. But who knows what might happen if you try to return to the
sage's manor to ask for it."
Alias snarled at the mage. "You desert snake—"
"All I want," Akabar interjected, "is for you to let me
accompany you on your quest to remove this thing."
"Are you crazy?" Alias hissed. "Don't I have enough trouble
without dragging my frien—complete strangers in on it."
"Who better to drag in it than frien—complete strangers?" Akabar
smiled, then he lifted his head proudly. "Besides, I still owe you a debt
of honor for helping me to recover my spell book."
Yes, Alias realized, even if he wasn't so anxious to prove he isn't a
greengrocer, he'd help me because he's the type who takes debts of honor
seriously. "I'm not exactly socially acceptable these days," Alias
pointed out weakly.
"As a rule, men of my nationality are not invited to many parties in
the north," Akabar replied with a shrug.
While Akabar was insinuating himself into Alias's quest, Olive was
frantically trying to make up her mind. People who tried to kill priests
weren't, as a rule, to be trusted, she argued with herself. But it would make
such a fascinating addition to the song. Better make it a lay. Or maybe even a
book.
The Magic Arm Chronicles, as told by Olive Ruskettle. All thoughts
of danger faded before the imaginary promise of gold and fame. Besides, Olive
told herself, I have to find out the rest of that song about the tears of
Selune.
"Hang on," the halfling interrupted. "If anyone owes this
swordswoman a debt of gratitude, it's me. She saved my life. If you take this
one along," Olive said to Alias, jerking her head toward Akabar,
"you're going to need someone to keep him out of trouble. A fast
thinker."
The corner of Alias's mouth twitched in amusement. She had no illusions
about Olive. Pure greed motivated her. Still, the halfling's debt was even
greater than Akabar's. It was likely she'd prove more hindrance than help, but
at least she was an experienced traveler.
"My journey may prove perilous," Alias warned, hoping to
discourage the small woman.
Olive shrugged. "As the halflings in Luiren say, 'From perils come
pearls and power.' I've seen my share of danger"
"And more than your share of pearls, I'll warrant," Akabar
muttered under his breath.
Alias looked at Dragonbait. "I don't suppose you'll be leaving my side
either."
The lizard tilted his head with a jingle.
Something inside Alias's chest grabbed her heart. She had an uncomfortable
suspicion the lizard wouldn't know what to do if he wasn't serving her.
Alias sighed. "All right. You can help, but remember—I tried to talk
you out of it." She turned to Akabar. "Now what did Dimswart tell
you?"
The mage pulled a small package from a pocket. He unknotted the yellow cord
that bound it and flipped away its leather wrapping. Within lay five copper
plates.
"Flaming dagger," said the mage, laying the first plate on the
table. A flaming dagger sigil was etched into the soft metal surface, and
beneath it in neat, delicate letters of Thorass, was a paragraph of
explanation. "Interlocking rings, mouth in a palm, three concentric
circles, and a squiggle that looks like an insect leg." Akabar laid down a
corresponding copper with each description. "Which would you like me to
cover first?" he asked Alias.
Alias pointed to the plate with the flaming dagger. "The assassins who
attacked me carried a card with this design."
Nodding, Akabar stacked the five plates together with the dagger on top.
"The symbol is derived from a Talis deck. In Turmish, we use the suit of
birds, but here in the north it has been converted to the suit of daggers. In
either case, the suit represents money and theft of the same. The symbol was
adopted by a small group of thieves and assassins in Westgate that calls itself
the Redeemer's Guild, but the group is more commonly known as the Fire
Knives—from its calling card.
"The Fire Knives are not native to Westgate, but came originally from
Cormyr where they ran a very profitable operation. Until, that is, they
incurred the wrath of His Royal Majesty, Azoun IV. He broke their charter,
executed their leaders, and sent the rest packing across the Lake of Dragons.
They set up shop anew in Westgate, with the permission of the local crime
lords, the Night Masks. Naturally, they have no love for Cormyr, its king, or
its people."
"Do any of them carry their symbol as a brand or tattoo?" Alias
asked.
Akabar shook his head. "It has never been reported that they do. Of
course, your attack on someone who sounded just like King Azoun was the sort of
thing they desire. Somehow, they might have ensorceled you to do so."
"Then why did they attack me the other night?"
"Perhaps they thought you discovered their plan and would warn His
Majesty," the halfling guessed.
"No," Alias said. "I had no idea I was going to do something
like I did. Besides, they went to a lot of trouble to capture, not kill
me."
"Perhaps they were planning on delivering you to the king's
court," Akabar mused. "You know, Azoun might have come to the
wedding. His mage, Vangerdahast, advised him against it. At least, that was the
rumor I heard."
"It's just coincidence that I ended up at Dimswart's," Alias
replied.
Akabar shrugged. "Perhaps. But if Azoun had attended—"
"I'd have tried to kill him instead of that fool Wyvernspur."
"Not a chance," Olive said. "Vangerdahast goes everywhere
with His Marshmallowness. He would have fried you with a lightning bolt before
you got within an arm's length."
"I don't think this conjecture will get us very far," Akabar said,
confused. "Shall I continue with the other sigils?"
Alias nodded, and Akabar held up the card bearing the sign of three rings,
each interlocked with the other two. "The trinity of rings is pretty
common as well. It was used by several trading houses about the Inner Sea until
the Year of Dust, over two centuries ago, when it was taken up as a banner by a
pirate gang in Earthspur. After a few years new pirate leaders toppled the old
and adopted a new banner.
"Since then the circles have been used as a signature mark for a notable
Cormyrian portrait artist, as a stamp for a Procampurian silversmith, and the
sign of an alehouse in Yhaunn in Sembia. The alehouse, by the way, was
fireballed fifty years ago by a wizard because their symbol happened to be his
sigil. He claimed the exclusive right to use it. He was a pompous northerner
known as Zrie Prakis."
"I knew some fell wizard had to be involved," muttered Alias.
Akabar held up a finger to continue. "Prakis protected his mark
religiously, seeking out any others who used it and destroying those who would
not give it up. It's a mark of his success that the symbol is now considered
unlucky among many taverns, silversmiths, and artists. However, Zrie Prakis was
supposed to have died in a magical battle some forty years ago, somewhere near
Westgate."
"Someone must have made a mistake," Olive pointed out. "After
all, when two mages are fighting, no one in their right mind gets close enough
to tell who's winning. This was the symbol on the crystal elemental that
attacked us in the Stone circle, isn't it?"
Alias nodded, remembering how the sigil had blazed from the monster's chest.
"Anyway," Akabar concluded, "Master Dimswart got a cleric to
do a divination for him. The exact question was: Does Zrie Prakis, whose symbol
was the triple rings, still live? The answer was: No."
"Well, I'm not a work of art or a silver dinner service," Alias
said. "That leaves me branded by a defunct pirate gang or an alehouse.
Neither very likely candidates."
Akabar, though tempted, did not disagree with her about the alehouse. He
held up the next copper plate engraved with the insect leg-shaped squiggle.
"The sorceress who destroyed Zrie Prakis was named Cassana of Westgate.
This happens to be her sigil. To the best of Dimswart's knowledge, Cassana still
makes her abode in Westgate. She's reputed to be fairly powerful, but she's
extremely reclusive. No one's seen her for years. She's not dead, but she must
be getting on in years."
"Maybe this Prakis fellow had an apprentice," Olive suggested.
"The apprentice is greedy for power, see, and he teams up with his
master's enemy, this Cassana, and tells her how to defeat him. Then, when
Cassana kills Prakis, the apprentice takes his master's sigil."
Akabar's eyes narrowed into slits. "Your expertise on the workings of
betrayal is quite interesting."
Olive smiled sweetly. "Over the years I've made a study of all the evil
you humans perpetrate on one another."
Alias's head began to throb. Anxious to get this discussion over with, she
pulled out the next copper plate, but the writing blurred before her eyes. She
held the plate up to Akabar. "What about this mouth in the hand?" she
asked.
"Dimswart found this most curious," answered the mage, running his
fingers along the engraved fangs in the mouth. "This is a holy symbol—or
the unholy symbol, rather—of a cult that has been dead for a thousand years or
more. They worshipped Moander the Darkbringer. He, she, or it—the texts keep
changing the pronoun over time—had a huge temple complex in the days of Myth
Drannor, the elven kingdom, and was a continual menace to the forest peoples.
Eventually, the elves burned the complex to the ground, slaying all its priests
and banishing the god-thing from the Realms.
"The town of Yulash was built on the site of the complex, but Yulash
has itself long since been turned to rubble. Hillsfar and Zhentil Keep are
continually battling over its strategic location. Dimswart gave me the name of
another sage who may know more, but he warned me that getting an appointment
with this person may prove to be a problem"
Alias held up the last copper plate. The blue upon blue bull's-eye was
represented on sheet metal by three concentric rings, its deepening shades of
color not represented at all, but described in the upper right hand corner. Nothing
was written below the sigil. Alias looked up at Akabar, her eyebrows raised.
The mage shifted nervously. "Dimswart has seen naught like this in his
travels or his books. He thinks it's something new, perhaps an up-and-coming
power. Note that the two magic-user's sigils are grouped together, but this
sigil follows the marking of a dead and banished god."
"So Dimswart thinks it may be another cult," said Alias. She
picked up her now empty mug and stared into it. The halfling studied the
ceiling beams.
"Actually, that was my own observation," Akabar replied.
"Balancing the sigils seemed logical to me, but . . ."
"But we may not be dealing with balanced or logical people," Alias
concluded for him.
Akabar nodded. "The evidence that the Fire Knives are involved is
pretty incontrovertible. The attack of the summoned earth elemental would seem
to indicate that some mage is definitely at work here as well. The pattern
circling the symbols is common throughout nations of the Inner Sea, symbolizing
unions or contracts. Ivy and rose vines are generally used for weddings,
dragons for royal charters ..."
"Serpents for evil pacts," Alias added in reference to the
serpentine pattern that wound around the runes on her arm.
"What about the sixth party?" Olive asked.
"What sixth party?" Akabar demanded.
Alias held out her arm, wondering herself what Olive was talking about.
The bard pointed to the swordswoman's wrist, where the serpentine pattern
that linked the five sigils wound about an empty space.
"There's nothing there, you fool," Akabar snorted.
"Not yet, there isn't," Olive said. "Maybe Alias escaped
before they got around to adding it, or maybe they're waiting for a sixth
member to pay up their dues. Maybe a sigil's going to grow there."
Alias shivered and curled her arms back around her knees.
Akabar tried giving the bard a kick on the ankle to shut her up, but the
little woman's feet swung too far off the floor for him to reach.
"As much as I'd hate to slander a patron," Olive continued,
"I think you need better advice than Dimswart's given you."
Alias was inclined to agree. "Where'd this other sage live, the one
Dimswart recommended?" she asked Akabar.
"Shadowdale. That's rather far off though," the mage pointed out.
"It would be simpler to investigate Westgate first."
The barkeep came to their table and wordlessly unloaded a platter of
sandwiches and fresh drinks.
"Shadowdale is on the way to Yulash," Alias said.
"But it makes more sense to head for Westgate," Akabar argued.
"The Fire—" he looked up at the barkeep "—two of the five guilty
parties work out of Westgate. Another one died there." He smiled at the
barkeep. "Thank you. That should do nicely for some time," he said,
dismissing the man. "We can reach Westgate by ship in two or three days.
If we can discover nothing there, then a trek to the north would make more
sense."
Alias remained silent, feeling nauseated at the sight of food. With a last
paternal glance toward the swordswoman, the barkeep left the table and returned
to his other duties.
Olive picked up the five copper plates and began idly shuffling them. Her
little hands moved the pieces with amazing dexterity.
Annoyed, Akabar reached over and lifted the sigil engravings from the
halfling's palm. He rewrapped and tied them and handed the bundle to Alias.
"So, shall I arrange passage for the morning?"
"I'm almost positive I came to Suzail by boat," she mused.
"By ship," Akabar corrected.
"Couldn't we travel to High Horn and circle around the Lake of
Dragons?" Olive suggested. "The roads to Westgate are pretty
good."
Akabar remembered the little woman had claimed to dislike sea journeys.
"We're going to Yulash," Alias said quietly.
"What?" both the bard and the mage demanded in unison.
"Suppose I came to Suzail from Westgate," Alias whispered,
"fleeing from whoever did this to me—the Fire Knives or this Cassana
person. Instinct tells me to avoid Westgate. I don't know why—1 can't remember.
Maybe I was there and tried taking care of someone else the Fire Knives don't care
for—then I could be wanted by the law, as well as by the underworld. Besides, I
don't want to take on two enemies at once. I've already waltzed into one
dragon's lair this month. I don't intend to do it again for at least another
year. In Yulash, as far as we know, I have only one enemy. Also, this master
sage you mentioned is on the road to Yulash. We may get more information from
him."
"But the temple in Yulash is destroyed," Akabar objected.
"Yulash is in the hands of the Zhentarim, and they're not. . . decent
people. It is too dangerous."
Alias frowned. "Look, Akash, whose quest is this, anyway? You want to
accompany me, you can come with me to Yulash. If you're afraid, you can go to
Westgate without me, or better yet, just go home and forget about me."
Akabar colored. Whether he was more angry that Alias would not take his sage
counsel or embarrassed that his honor and courage had been called into
question, Olive could not tell for sure. She chimed in, "If this sage in
Shadowdale can help, we may not even have to go to Yulash."
Alias turned to glare at the halfling. "I'm going to Yulash," she
hissed. "I leave in the morning!" With that, she rose from the table,
staggered two feet, and passed out on the wooden floor.
"Better make that late morning," Akabar sighed. He rose to settle
accounts with the barkeep while Dragonbait and Ruskettle hauled the fallen
warrior to her room.
9
Trek Through Cormyr
It was almost noon when the party left Suzail. Akabar had spent the morning
purchasing supplies. His was the easy job.
Olive and Dragonbait had the dubious honor of tumbling Alias out of bed so
she could lead them to Yulash. The swordswoman cursed them both feebly. When
they finally got her to sit, she threw up. Finally, they got her cleaned up and
dressed. She moaned all the while and wept some, too.
"To hear her complain," Olive sniffed, "you'd think she was a
fifteen-year-old debutante suffering from her first drunk. Is she always like
this?" she asked Dragonbait.
The lizard made no sound or gesture in reply.
The halfling looked about the room for another bottle of liquor. According
to the barkeep, the swordswoman had had only two mugs of mead. Granted, it was
good, potent stuff and the barkeep's mugs were a generous size, but that
couldn't possibly be enough to leave a seasoned warrior so incapacitated, Olive
decided. Yet, there was no sign of alcohol in any of Alias's belongings.
Olive remembered her aunt who would go into a crying jag after a single
glass of wine. It wasn't the booze, her mother had explained to her, it was the
feeling in her heart when she drank. The halfling wondered how anyone could be
so depressed. Alias had her health, gold in her purse, she wasn't love-struck
over anyone, and this afternoon she'd he three steps ahead of the law on open
road. Who could ask for more? Humans! Go figure. Olive sighed and ran a coo!,
damp rag about Alias's face.
By the time a scowling Alias stumbled out of the inn, her hood up to shade
her eyes against the bright sunlight, Akabar was waiting with the party's
horses and pony saddled and packed.
If Alias had any appreciation for Akabar's efforts and skills as a
quartermaster, she didn't bother to note it aloud. "I have to make a stop
somewhere," she whispered, nudging Lady Killer into motion. The others
followed her to the Towers of Good Fortune.
"Wait here," she ordered. The mage and the halfling remained
mounted as she entered the temple to Tymora. Dragonbait scratched Lightning's
muzzle thoughtfully.
Alias kept her hood up even in the dim light of the church. There were three
priests and about twenty people seated in the congregation hall, some
whispering, others praying silently. She knew it was unlikely Winefiddle had
returned so soon from Dimswart's, but she really didn't want to run into him in
case he had.
So she stood near the doorway, studying the carving of Lady Luck in front of
the altar. The image of Tymora had short hair, tousled like Alias's. The
goddess's figure was more boyish, but no more muscled than the swordswoman's.
The sideways shift of her eyes and the half-grin gave her a crafty look Alias
had noted a few times on Olive's face. Halflings, she remembered, worshipped an
image of Tymora that resembled a halfling female. Alias tried to remember the
last time she'd grinned that way.
All I've had lately, she thought, is bad luck. I don't even believe in luck.
What am I doing here? At her elbow was the poor box where she was supposed to
have left the green gem the night Winefiddle had tried to remove the runes on
her arm, the night she'd try to kill him.
Personally, she addressed the goddess in her thoughts. If someone tried to
kill one of my priests and then cheated me out of what they owed me and then
came back and tried to make it up to me by paying me even more, I don't think
I'd feel any better disposed toward them.
From her purse she drew out the opal Olive had liberated from Mist's lair.
The huge gem felt warm and smooth in her palm. She dropped it into the poor
box. Just in case you aren't like me, she thought. She turned about and left
the temple.
Alias just didn't have the energy to lay a false trail out of the city. She
led her party through the east gate which led directly to the road north. She
rode along without a sound
Wracking his brain for something to say that might make her feel even a tiny
bit better, Akabar came up with, "I had noticed, as regards liquid
refreshment, that the emphasis north of the Inner Sea is on strength as opposed
to flavor. It is no doubt a common thing for a person to be caught unawares by
the power of the beverages served here—"
The mage soon regretted having said anything. Alias made no reply, but, even
worse, the bard launched into a defense of the drinks of the northern Realms.
Her comparison of a Delayed Blast with a Flaming Gullet did nothing to disprove
Akabar's original point, and only served to turn the swordswoman a more
distressing shade of green.
Akabar remained as quiet as Alias after that, but Olive continued chattering
to Dragonbait for some time. When she got tired of talking to the mute creature,
she sang. She was on the thirteenth verse of her fifth ballad when Alias
finally spoke,
"Olive, please, try to show some consideration for the dying," the
warrior whispered.
"Oh. I'm sorry, Alias. Are you still feeling poorly?"
"I meant you."
"But, I feel fine," the halfling replied in confusion.
"If you don't shut up, I'm going to have to kill you. Then you won't
feel fine at all."
The bard gulped and remained silent for about half a mile. Finally, though,
she dropped back some ways from the party so she could continue humming softly
without incurring the swordswoman's wrath. Dragonbait slowed down to join her,
perhaps out of pity, though Akabar suspected the lizard really was a music
lover.
"Cheerful people are so depressing," Alias muttered.
The mage smiled, and they rode on in silence.
After a good night's rest at an inn in Hilp, Alias seemed fully recovered.
As they progressed northward, Alias kept a watchful eye on Dragonbait, who
loped along beside the horses. She'd admonished him to let her know if they
went too fast. The lizard had responded by running around the horses with a
curious bouncing gait and then turning three cartwheels.
Alias even tolerated the halfling's prattle and went so far as to try
teaching the bard a ballad she claimed to have learned from a Harper.
"Not a Harper!" Olive gasped, obviously impressed.
Alias nodded.
"I don't understand," Akabar said. "What is so special about
playing the harp?"
Olive shook her head and sighed.
"Up north," Alias explained, "one who plays the harp is a
harpist. A Harper is something rather different."
"What then?" the mage asked.
"Well, they're usually bards or rangers, though sometimes they ask
other adventurers to join them. They ..." Alias hesitated. It would sound
so banal to say it aloud. "They work for good things," she answered
quickly and then launched into the ballad for Olive.
Akabar mused over Alias's words. He now recalled having heard a story or two
about these Harper people, but he had not paid much attention. They were
supposed to be a mysterious, powerful bunch, but Alias's reaction interested
him more. The woman had seemed flustered when giving her explanation.
He listened now to her singing. Her voice was better than the bard's. It had
a clear, lilting quality. The song she sang was better than any of Olive's,
too. Like the song she'd sung about the tears of Selune, two nights ago in The
Hidden Lady, the lyrics were haunting. They told of the Fall of Myth Drannor,
the splendid elven city, now a ruin in the woods.
The song caused Akabar to begin speculating on Alias's lost past. Only now
his speculations were even wilder than Olive's had been. Suppose she was more
than just a mercenary. Certainly evil things were after her. Had she, to put it
in her own words, "worked for good things" so well that she was
considered a threat? Had she been enchanted with those fell runes on her arm so
that she would do some evil and thereby destroy her reputation?
"You know," Olive said after she'd managed to pluck out the melody
to Alias's song on her yarting, "I've often wondered how one gets to be a
Harper. Do you volunteer for a position, or do you have to be asked?"
Alias shrugged. "I've no idea." Inwardly she smiled, trying to
picture the powerful and righteous Harpers accepting the help of a greedy,
arrogant pickpocket of a halfling with pretensions to bardhood. Alias felt too
good at the moment however, to destroy Olive's grandiose illusions.
They skirted the countryside about the city of Immersea. ancestral home of
the Wyvernspurs, and made camp at dusk beside the road. Rain drizzled the
entire next day, and they traveled mostly in silence.
They reached Arabel by nightfall. The inns were crowded with merchants and
adventurers all taking advantage of the city's shelter. Alias's group had to
settle for a remote inn by the city wall, but they were grateful to have
shelter from the rain.
Alias found the noise and light and driving rain strangely comforting. The
violence of the elements made her own inner turmoil seem mild in comparison.
Her rage at being branded and used faded somewhat, humbled by the anger of the
sky.
The next morning dawned bright and clear.
"I estimate it will take us two rides to reach Vulash," Alias said
before they set out.
"Not possible," Akabar disagreed. "The distance is much
greater than that."
"Two rides if the weather holds good and no disasters hit us."
"It will take at least twenty days," Akabar said.
"Isn't that what I just said?" Alias snapped.
"Not at all. You said it would be only two rides. An impossibility,
even for a very strong horse."
Olive started giggling. "He thinks you mean a ride, not a ride."
"Huh?" both mage and warrior asked at once.
"A ride up north," Olive explained to Akabar, "is ten days."
"No man can ride for more than two or three days without becoming
exhausted," Akabar insisted.
"Forget it," Alias said. "Twenty days. We're going to spend
the next six camping at night. I don't want to risk any trouble from the
soldiers at Castle Crag, the north Cormyrian outpost," she explained to
Akabar. "We'll skirt around it."
She outlined the rest of their route as they traveled. Once through Gnoll
Pass, she planned to leave the main road, which detoured east through Tilverton
and, instead, travel along a ranger's path, which led straight through the
Stonelands to Shadow Gap. Olive was indignant at missing the sights of
Tilverton, which boasted an inn of some renown, but Alias was adamant.
Olive sulked quietly, which was more nerve-racking than her constant
chatter. Finally, Alias began describing the North Gate Inn, which lay at the
top of Shadow Gap. She painted so rosy a picture that Olive began to look
forward to seeing the mountain resort.
The pattern of the next several days—riding, setting up camp, dinner
(prepared with surprising skill by Akabar), breaking camp—repeated over and
over, restored Alias's confidence. This was the life she knew best—although a
few saddlesores and aching muscles told her that she'd spent a lot of the time
lost to her memory taking things too easy. Singing songs with Olive on
horseback by day and lying beneath the stars at night gave Alias a feeling of
contentment that had too long been missing. The sigils on her arms retreated in
importance, becoming no more a threat to her and those around her than mosquito
bites.
Stranger still, the farther north and away from the shores of the Inner Sea
they traveled, the more cheerful Alias began to feel. Akabar was sorry to leave
the green woods and fields of Cormyr, but the winds whipping across the stony
soil of the vast plain north of the Storm Horns delighted Alias. She would face
into the wind and smile, as though it blew away all her miseries. Despite the
fact that they had to veer off the trail or cower in undergrowth occasionally
to avoid parties of ores and goblins, the warrior grew steadily calmer.
Alias's new tranquility even prompted her one evening to apologize to Akabar
as they stood watch together. She'd begun to feel guilty about the way she'd
shamed him into following her north.
Akabar, too proud to show himself offended by so small a thing, shrugged off
her apology, but Alias persisted in tryine to explain her reasoning.
"I know you're a wise man," she said, waving aside the pro. tests
his modesty compelled him to make. "Fools don't get to be mages, and all
your reasons for going to Westgate were good ones. But when you've been an
adventurer for as long as I have, you begin to think with your gut. I had a gut
feeling that Westgate was a mistake. Poking around in Yulash feels more like
the right thing to do."
Akabar didn't know what to say. He was afraid to spoil her newfound peace of
mind by speaking his own. Secretly, he was afraid the sigils were maneuvering
the swordswoman toward Yulash. Once the site of a temple to great evil, it
remained a place of unquestionable danger.
"You've also been very kind, helping me through a bad time and
accompanying me. I've never led a party before. Usually, I traveled with bands
who debated and voted on their plans. Anyway, I just wanted you to know that I
didn't take your advice lightly, and I won't in the future, should you, well,
give me any more."
Her sincerity left Akabar speechless for several moments Finally, he managed
to say, "You honor me with your trust.
It was a ritual Turmish saying. Strangely enough, Alias knew the proper
reply. "Your honor is my own."
They were silent for a while, until Akabar could no longer resist his
curiosity. "Do you remember ever having visited Turmish?" he asked.
Alias shook her head. "No, I don't remember."
The next evening, their fifth out of Arabel, they camped at the base of the
foothills of Shadow Gap, the high pass between the southern extension of the
Desertsmouth Mountains.
10
Giogioni Wyvernspur
Giogioni Wyvernspur, sitting in the muddy road, cursed his bad luck. After
all the misfortunes that befell me at Cousin Freffie's wedding, he complained
to himself, you'd think it was time for a little sunshine to fall into my life.
But no. I've got a cloud of Tymora's blackest luck following me.
"Daisyeye, come back here!" he shouted as he picked himself off
the ground and tried, as best he could, to brush the wet mud from his velvet
britches. "That's the problem with really good horses—they spook so damned
easily."
The mare that had thrown him was now out of sight, having galloped around a
bend in the country road.
"If it isn't one thing, it's another," Giogi muttered. He began to
relate his adventure aloud, rehearsing it for his chums. "First I made a
fool of myself at Minda's behest and did that silly imitation of Azoun. This
caused the bard's lovely but quite mad sell-sword to attack me with a cake
knife. Then Darol seized the opportunity to make himself look like a hero in
front of Minda and got himself slashed across the face. Minda positively
swooned with admiration when she saw his scar, and she gave the scurrilous cove
permission to accompany her carriage to Suzail.
"Naturally, I considered I might play up to Minda's sympathies as well.
After all, I was the one the lady in blue tried to assassinate. I'm not
completely witless. I knew this was not a good time to visit court. Aunt Doroth
is a horrible gossip and just a little too palsy with His Majesty's pet wizard,
Vangerdahast. And if Aunt Doroth doesn't let the whole sordid affair leak out,
you can bet Darol will find a way to let His Majesty know all about my
remarkable impersonation.
"So while everyone is riding off to the capitol, I'm forced to travel
back to Immersea, all alone, on horseback. Though I must say that Dimswart
fellow was quite decent, putting me up for an extra two days until I recovered from
my shock. I left early in the morning, traveling up the road to Waymoot. I was
thanking Chauntea for the nice weather when Daisyeye reared up on her hind
quarters and galloped up the road, leaving me in the mud."
Suddenly realizing that if he didn't catch Daisyeye in a hurry he'd never
reach Waymoot by nightfall and would be forced to stay in some roadside inn, or
worse, a farmer's bed, Giogi set off after his mount. He hummed what he called
"that catchy little number" written by that Ruskettle woman for
Freffie and Gaylyn. Rounding the curve in the road, he noticed a clicking
noise.
"Is that you, Daisyeye? You naughty girl. Whatever possessed you to run
off like—" Giogioni halted in his tracks, his words constricting in his
throat. Very cautiously, he took a step backward, then another.
"Just where do you think you're going?" an imperious voice
demanded.
The young Wyvernspur froze, unable to answer the red dragon who had
addressed him. Quite aside from the shock of discovering poor Daisyeye serving as
the red dragon's entree—quite a shock since there was blood oozing all over the
cobblestone, and Daisyeye's eyes remained open in death as though accusing him
of something—he couldn't get over the size of the monster. A single one of its
paws could block traffic along the road, and Daisyeye looked like a chicken leg
next to the beast's maw.
"Well?" the dragon asked.
"I-I-I—"
"Oh dear, a stutterer," the dragon sighed. "Try to relax. The
words will come out more easily."
"—don't want to disturb your meal. I'll just be moving on. Don't mind
me," Giogioni gasped.
The dragon swished its big russet tail around so that the scaly appendage
made a curl about Giogioni, blocking all avenues of escape. "You've been
so kind to provide me with lunch," the monster said, swallowing another
gobbet of Daisyeye's haunch, "the least I can do is offer you a
lift."
"Oh, that's very kind, but I wouldn't want to trouble you any."
Giogioni took another step backward.
"Freeze!" the dragon ordered.
Giogioni froze.
"What's your name?"
"Giogioni Wyvernspur. Ah, everyone calls me Giogi."
"How quaint." The dragon sliced off the straps to Daisyeye's
saddle with a single claw and shoved it over to Giogioni's feet. "Have a
seat."
Giogioni collapsed onto the saddle, feeling a little green. I never realized
that such a pretty horse could look so awful with her middle slit open, he
thought, reaching down into his saddlebag and pulling out the flask of Rivengut
he always kept there. Thank Oghma, he prayed silently, it was more than half
full.
"D-d-do you mind if I pour myself a drink?" he asked the dragon.
"Be my guest."
Giogioni took a long, hard pull on the flask of liquor. "If I might
ask, what shall I call you?"
"Mist."
"Is that all?"
"That's all," the beast snapped and went back to rasping her
tongue along Daisyeye's ribs.
Giogioni took another swig of Rivengut. If he was going to be dessert, he
decided, he didn't want to feel it. He wondered idly if he would be served en
flambe,
so to speak.
"I heard you singing," Mist said when there was nothing left of
Daisyeye but shattered bones. "Catchy little tune."
"Yes, something composed by that new bard, Olive Rus- oh, gods!"
The man gulped. "You're
that Mist."
Suspicious, Mist cocked an eybrow and asked, "Just what did Mistress
Ruskettle have to say about me?"
"Nothing, nothing. Er—just that she was your prison— uh—guest."
"She still traveling with that tramp, Alias of Westgate?"
"The red-headed sword-sell, er, I mean, sell-sword? Maybe. If she could
find—um, I have no idea."
Mist grinned from ear to ear—not an attractive sight with parts of Daisyeye
still caught between her teeth. She rested a claw on Giogioni's shoulder.
"We musn't have any secrets, my dear boy."
"I don't know, really I don't. She went a little crazy at the wedding,
this Alias person, that is, and then she ran off."
"Which way did Ruskettle go?" Mist asked.
Giogioni gulped. Only a cad would betray that cute little bard. He was
determined not to be a cad.
A little steam escaped from Mist's nostrils, but enough Wyvernspur blood—and
Rivengut—pumped through Giogioni's veins to give him the courage to keep
silent.
"Very well," the dragon sighed. "If that's the way it has to
be." She slipped a claw through the back of the man's shirt and lifted him
from the ground.
"Oh, gods!" he gasped, sure he was about to follow Daisyeye into
heaven. Instead of swallowing him, though, the dragon lifted him up, beat her
massive wings, and took off from the ground.
Mist spiralled up over the Cormyrian countryside. When she reached a
cruising altitude of one thousand feet she barked, "Look down,
Giogi."
"No, please! I'm not very good with heights."
"You'll be an expert on them in a moment, for all of eight seconds—at
which time you'll hit the ground rather hard— unless you tell me which way
Ruskettle went."
"Suzail!" Giogioni gasped. "She headed toward Suzail! On a
small pony named High Roll."
"Such a nice boy. I knew we could come to an understanding. Now, I need
a message taken to King Azoun."
"Oh. I'd be happy to, but there's just a teensy problem. You see, at
the moment, I'm not very welcome in court. I wouldn't be the best person to
represent your interests."
"That's too bad, Giogi," Mist said. "If you can't help me
out, I don't have any more use for you, and if I don't have any more use for
you, I may as well just drop you here."
"No! No. I'll do it. Anything. Just don't drop me, please!"
Mist smiled, and dove toward the earth.
*****
Azoun IV focused his telescope at a point west of the city walls, on the
Fields of the Dead. "What cheek," he muttered. The dragon, Mist, had
taken up a post on Suzail's burial ground, outside the gates of the city, but
near enough to be seen by any of the populace who cared to swarm on top of the
walls. And swarm they did, too intrigued by the preening wild beast to fear for
their lives. No work would get done in the city until the monster left.
"If only we still had the Seventh Division in the city," His
Majesty sighed.
Vangerdahast spoke from the doorway, where he awaited reports from his own
network of spies. "I assure you, Your Highness, that Tilverton's need of
them was greater than our own. Besides, Lord Giogioni said that she would fly
off only if attacked, and then her offer will be rescinded."
"It would have to be a sudden, single deathblow. I don't suppose any
foolhardy adventurers have come forward, offering their services?" Azoun
turned from the window to address his court wizard.
Vangerdahast shook his head. "The wyrm has chosen her ground too well.
There is no cover for a sneak attack, and she will leave before sunset, so we
cannot use the darkness to any advantage. Mist is too wise to fly over the city
and set off the magical wards protecting it."
"Well, I don't like this. Dealing with a creature like that goes
against my grain."
"Her offer is quite generous, Your Highness, if she keeps her word and
departs the area forever. In addition to making the merchant caravan routes
safe again, there are livestock and Your Highness's own hunting grounds to
consider, both of which Mist has seriously depleted of late."
"I can't believe I'm hearing this from you, Vangy. Naturally I'd expect
the merchants to jump at the chance of ridding us of the dragon at the price of
a human sacrifice. I, however, must consider the safety of all my people, even
some poor, little adventuress."
"This Alias claimed to be from Westgate, Your Highness,"
Vangerdahast said, already putting her in the past tense.
"Even worse. How would it look to the outside world, foreign traders
and travelers, if I simply turned over one of their own just to rid my realm of
a dragon?"
"If it please Your Highness, there is something more you should know
about this poor, little adventuress. Something to indicate a more sinister
nature."
Azoun tapped his foot impatiently. "Well?"
"Perhaps you should hear it from a firsthand witness: Vangerdahast
suggested, nodding toward the young man who stood in a corner, working hard at
steadying his nerves with large snifters of brandy.
"Giogioni!" Azoun snapped. "What do you know about this Alias
of Westgate?"
"Me?" Giogioni squeaked, turning toward Azoun.
"You," the wizard insisted. "It would be best if His Highness
heard it in your own words,"
"I suppose so," Giogioni whispered, though he didn't suppose so at
all.
"Spit it out, boy," Azoun ordered.
"She was at the wedding, Freffie's, uh, Lord Frefford's. She attacked
me. Tried to kill me. Would have succeeded, too, if the crowd hadn't gotten in
her way."
"What was this lady killer doing at the wedding of Lord Frefford and
Sage Dimswart's daughter?" Azoun asked.
"Dimswart said he was doing some research for her because she was under
some curse," Giogioni blurted.
"Dimswart would have to come up with an excuse," Vangerdahast
said.
Azoun wrinkled his brow in confusion. "Why would this woman try to kill
you?"
"She thought I was you," Giogioni answered with a gulp
"What nonsense. You don't look anything like me."
"No, Your Highness," Giogioni agreed.
"He does, however, do a remarkable impression of Your Highness's
voice," Vangerdahast explained.
"He does? You do?"
Giogioni nodded weakly.
"Well, let's hear it," Azoun said.
Giogioni's jaw dropped, and his face went pale.
"Come on, boy," Azoun prompted him.
"If you please, Your Highness," the Wyvernspur nobleman gulped,
"I would rather n—"
"That's an order!"
Giogioni gulped. "M-m-my Cormytes," he began. "My people, as
your king, as King Azoun, and as King Azoun IV, I must say that the need to
raise your taxes is a result of the depravations of-of-of th-this
d-dragon."
"I don't sound like that," Azoun said, scowling.
"With respect. Your Highness," Vangerdahast intervened, "you
do."
"I don't stutter like that," Azoun objected.
"No, Your Highness. Lord Giogioni's stutter is a consequence of the
shock he's had. Ordinarily, his impression of you would be much better.
Apparently, he was giving a performance at the wedding when he was
attacked."
"But he still doesn't look like me."
"No, but perhaps this Alias woman thought you were in disguise. You
have been known to travel incognito. Any good assassin would know that.
If she did indeed come from Westgate, there can be little question exactly who
sent her."
"No," Azoun agreed, remembering the numerous threats made by the
Fire Knives when he banished them from his kingdom. Their new headquarters was
in Westgate.
There was a knock on the tower room door, and Vangerdahast left to answer
it.
Azoun looked at Giogioni, who swayed slightly. Wyvernspur blood must be
getting thin for one little dragon to upset him so, the king thought.
"Better sit down, boy," he said kindly. "Not there, that's my
chair," Azoun corrected him before the young man sank onto His Majesty's
own royal, purple cushion.
Vangerdahast returned to the conference table. In his wake was a portly,
balding man in a tavernkeeper's apron.
"Who's this?" Azoun asked.
The man bowed his head. "Phocius Green, Your Highness. Owner of the inn
and tavern The Hidden Lady."
Azoun shot a questioning glance over the barkeep's head to Vangerdahast.
"The woman Alias stayed several evenings in The Hidden Lady," the
wizard explained.
"Oh. You came to tell us about her?" Azoun asked the bar-keep.
"Begging Your Majesty's pardon, but I was summoned."
"Oh?" Azoun looked surprised.
Vangerdahast explained further. "Since I have been unable to track this
Alias woman by magical means, a suspicious circumstance in and of itself, I
summoned Goodman Green here. I knew the woman had stayed at his inn, because
one of Your Majesty's citizens reported her last week to the town guard.
Apparently, he thought she was a Rashemen witch."
"Mitcher Trollslayer," the barkeep muttered.
"What made the man think that?" Azoun asked.
"She was branded with a bizarre tattoo," the wizard explained.
"A member of the Council of Mages went to the inn to register her, but the
woman was unconscious, so the councilman let her be."
"Please, Your Highness," the barkeep interrupted. "She was no
witch, just a sell-sword. She came in with so much iron on her she wouldn't've
been able to cast a light even if she were magic."
"Where is she now?" His Majesty asked.
The barkeep shrugged. "She left nearly a ride ago, Your Highness."
"When exactly?" Vangerdahast asked.
The barkeep thought for a moment. "The fifteenth, Your Lordship."
"Eight days. Do you know which way she was heading?" the wizard
asked.
The barkeep stiffened. He turned to address his answer to the king.
"Please, Your Highness, you aren't going to tell the dragon where she is,
are you? She hasn't done any harm, She's just an adventuress with some bad
luck."
"What makes you think she has something to do with the dragon?"
Azoun asked.
"Well, she fought it, now didn't she?" the barkeep said.
"Freed Olive Ruskettle, the famous bard. The bard herself told me."
"That's right," Giogioni piped up from his chair. "She told
us all about it at the wedding party. Ruskettle told us, that is. Wonderful
bard."
Having confirmed the barkeep's story, Giogi went back to slurping His
Majesty's brandy and humming snatches of Ruskettle's wedding song.
"Did you know about that, Vangy?" Azoun asked.
The royal wizard colored slightly. "No, Your Highness."
Azoun turned to the barkeep. "For the time being we need to know where
this Alias is. She may be nothing more than a sell-sword, but she could be
something much more dangerous. We must know all about her. Now, which way was
she heading?"
The barkeep sighed. "She and the bard and the Turmish mage said
something about going to Westgate, then they said something about going to
Yulash."
"Yulash?" Azoun exclaimed. "How bizarre."
"The two towns are in opposite directions," the wizard pointed
out. "Which way did they decide to go?"
The barkeep thought for a moment again. He remembered the Turmish mage
listing all the reasons for going to Westgate. The barkeep was a loyal subject
to his king, but he didn't quite trust the wizard Vangerdahast. To him, Alias
would always be the hidden lady and hence, like the name of his inn, good luck.
She had looked so miserable the last night she'd stayed at his hostel. The
barkeep was not keen on turning her over to the undoubtedly less than tender
ministrations of the royal wizard.
"The lady wanted to go to Yulash," he told Vangerdahast.
"Thank you for your cooperation, Goodman Green," the wizard
replied. "You may leave now."
The barkeep bowed his head to the king and left the tower room.
Vangerdahast's eyes followed him thoughtfully.
"I don't know many assassins who rescue bards in distress," Azoun
said to his wizard.
"But many make deals with dragons, Your Highness, and as is the way
with their kind, they often cheat on their agreements. The dragon might only be
interested in collecting an unpaid debt."
"But why would the bard lie about her rescue?"
"This Olive Ruskettle is a halfling. She may not be a bard."
Giogioni rose from his chair. "Now, hold on just a moment," he
said. "She's a fine bard. What gives you the right to slander people just
because they're short?"
Vangerdahast fixed the noble with a cold stare.
"Well, I thought she was good," Giogioni muttered, sitting back
down.
King Azoun struggled with his conscience and his reason. On one hand, if
this woman were an assassin, he wasn't troubled by letting the dragon take care
of her. On the other hand, if she were some innocent victim of a curse, he
wasn't going to sleep well that night. Still, it was a long road to Yulash. The
dragon might not find her, he reasoned, and Alias had defeated it once already.
Ridding Cormyr of a dragon was no small accomplishment for a king.
He nodded his assent to Vangerdahast's plan.
"Lord Giogioni," the wizard said. "Upon receiving the
dragon's promise to leave and never return to Cormyr, you will inform the
creature that Alias of Westgate left Suzail eight days ago. To the best of your
knowledge, the adventuress was headed toward Yulash."
Giogioni rose to his feet with a sigh, bowed his head, and left on his
mission.
"Perhaps now that he's served as Your Majesty's messenger, he might
consider rendering you some other service."
"Such as?"
"Investigating Westgate," the wizard suggested.
Azoun's brow furrowed in anger. "You mean that barkeep was lying! Why
didn't you tell me?"
Vangerdahast shook his head. "No, Goodman Green was telling the truth,
though perhaps not all of it. The woman and her companions were seen leaving by
the Eastgate, which leads to the road north."
"So, why send Giogi to Westgate?"
"The barkeep may have been mistaken. Alias could make it to Yulash and
back to Westgate without the dragon finding her. Someone who knows her
appearance and holds your interests to heart should be sent there, just in
case."
Azoun nodded. He turned back to the window and peered over the western wall
again. "You remember, Vangy, when I was your pupil and you used to give me
those tests in ethics?"
"Yes, Your Highness."
"I always hated them. Still do."
"Only now, Your Highness," Vangerdahast replied softly, "they
are no longer tests."
11
Shadow Gap
Whenever Alias saw Shadow Gap she thought of some weary titan dragging his
axe behind him as he stepped over the hills. At least that was how she imagined
the creation of the steep-sided, steep-sloped gorge that split the mountains in
two.
No more than an hour of noon sunlight ever reached the floor of the pass. At
all other times, it remained in the shadow of the mountains, hence its name.
The gap was barren, save for a scattering of short, scrubby bushes. The road
through it wound upward in an interminable series of hairpin curves and
ascending switchbacks, resembling a dry wash. Alias had passed through the gap
as a caravan guard many times and remembered how, in the spring, water followed
the same course down the hill as the merchant wagons.
Heavily laden wagons draped with thick rugs and waterproof slickers would
rumble up the gorge at a snail's pace. The lord merchants urged the drivers on,
while mercenary sell-swords watched the cliffs for ambush. Occasionally, a
procession of pilgrims on foot interruputed the flow, oblivious to the bustling
world around them. More rarely a wizard's wagon, with lumber sprouting fresh,
spring leaves, clattered through the vale on ancient wheels, pulled by oxen,
gorgons, or more fantastic beasts.
Today, all that was absent, banished as if by magic. The vale was emptier
than a tax collector's Yule party. The only sound the travelers heard was the
clopping of the horse hooves beneath them. Alias wondered what could have
halted the trade so completely. A war, perhaps, or rumor of one. But she'd
heard nothing of that sort in Cormyr, and the Cormyrians were not, as a rule,
insular.
Akabar, having never passed through the gap before, rode at the head of the
party as if nothing was amiss. Behind him, Olive found the stillness jarring.
Dragonbait hissed once, never p. good sign, and Alias caught a whiff of
something that smelled like ham. She furrowed her brow in puzzlement and
sniffed again. Nothing. Must have imagined it, she thought, but she made sure
that her longsword was loose in its scabbard and her knives were handy.
Something croaked her name, harsh and low, and she came up with a dagger in
hand. The others seemed not to hear the voice.
Did the wind carry it to her ears alone? Or did sorcery? she wondered,
remembering the attack at the abandoned druid's circle, where the wind had
drowned out her cries for help.
The swordswoman reigned in her horse behind the others and listened. The
sound came again, a harsh, dying croak that called her name, this time from one
of the scrub bushes on Alias's left.
Spotting Alias behind them, Olive harrumphed.
Akabar called back, "Alias? Are—"
Suddenly, the bush near Alias rustled and exploded in a flurry of feathers.
Old reflexes took over, and Alias felt like some mechanical toy. She aimed,
snapped her wrist back, and flicked her knife forward, loosing the dagger.
The spinning weapon struck the bird, a huge raven, at the base of its left
wing and stuck there. A smaller creature would have been skewered, but the
raven took to the air with the blade embedded in its flesh—the dagger's
gold-wrapped hilt jutting out and flashing in the sun.
Hissing, Dragonbait drew his sword.
"Lee-as, Lee-as, Lee-as," the bird shrieked as it rose straight
up, spun, and flapped in an ungainly manner toward the nearest cliff wall, taking
Alias's weapon with it.
The woman warrior shook her head angrily. The unnatural silence had
unsettled her, and her little flash of paranoia had cost her a good throwing
dagger.
"I thought it was something more dangerous than a blasted bird,"
Alias said, rejoining the group. "I thought it was calling my name."
Then she laughed, one of the first deep hearted laughs she'd permitted herself
in gods knew how-long.
"It was only a robberwing," the mage said, surprised by her
reaction. "They're quite common on the southern shores of the Inner Sea. I
thought they were well-known in the north, too. They take shiny objects on
occasion, but otherwise they're harmless."
"In Waterdeep," chimed in the halfling, "a corrupt lord
trained a flock of robberwings to steal for him."
"Natives of Waterdeep," replied the mage, "have all sorts of
odd ways to pass the time . . . when they aren't counting their money."
"Robberwings are considered an ill omen in Thay," Olive added.
Dragonbait hissed again. His dead, yellow eyes glared at the cliff where the
raven had disappeared.
Alias's laughter subsided. "It's all right, Dragonbait," she said,
patting him on the back. "I know it was just a raven." She turned to
the others. "It's just that I was expecting ... a dragon. Or a harpy. Or
at least a nest of blood-sucking stirges. I feel a little foolish at having
lost a weapon to ... just a bird."
"A lost weapon's like a lost meal," said the halfling, wheeling
around on her pony. "Replaceable, but you have to know where to look. Speaking
of which, are we going to sit here until dark or press on to this marvelous inn
of yours?"
"We press on," Alias said.
"Thank heavens," the bard said, kicking her pony past Akabar's
stallion. "Great adventure can wait. Hark, I hear something calling my
name, too." She held her hand up to her ear. "It's a warm bed and
something else ... a hot meal, one not spiced to within an inch of my
life."
Ruskettle peeked out from under her wide-brimmed hat to catch Akabar's
reaction, but his face remained impassive. Five nights before, Olive had
complained about the mage's cooking and announced that, if Akabar didn't go
easier on the pepper, she'd be forced to take a hand in the cooking herself.
Since then, she had continued to complain about the spicing, but had yet to
lift a finger to help prepare meals.
The halfling set her pony in a trot. Akabar followed, looking regal on his
white mount. Dragonbait waited for Alias to pass him, then brought up the rear,
still watching the cliffside warily.
"Don't worry," Alias told him. "I can get another dagger when
we reach Shadowdale."
Dragonbait did not look away from the cliffs for a long time.
Olive's dreams of a warm bed and a less-seasoned meal were shattered when
they topped the last set of switchbacks. Instead of a charming house and a
warm, welcoming cup of mulled wine, they found the remains of a great hall, its
massive timbers blackened by flame, its stone floor littered with slate from
the collapsed roof.
"Don't tell me, let me guess," Olive snapped angrily. "This
place has gone downhill somewhat since you last visited it."
"Obviously, the clientele has changed," Akabar said dryly,
gingerly poking his foot through the rubble. He, too, had been looking forward
to a comfortable bed.
"Nine circles of Hell," Alias muttered. Above the shattered roof,
the last rays of the evening sun were playing against the eastern cliff,
turning it as red as blood.
"There are no bodies," Akabar pointed out, "and the fire
damage looks several months old, so I don't think there can be much danger. As
to comforts, there's still some roof left in that corner and the firepit is
serviceable. Shall we stay or ride on?"
Alias sighed. "We may as well stay."
Inwardly, she was thankful for the mage's calm assessment. She had been
looking forward to collapsing in the inn, and her disappointed muscles revolted
at the thought of riding any farther.
Akabar nodded. "Stay it is."
"I say we should go," Olive objected vehemently. "There's
still daylight left, and we can be a few miles beyond this place when whatever
did this comes back."
"As I said—this damage occurred some time ago," the mage argued.
"Increasing the likelihood that whatever caused it will return," retorted
the bard.
"There are no bodies," Akabar insisted.
"That's even worse," Olive cried, her voice growing shrill.
"It just proves that whatever did this burns or swallows people whole,
probably vomiting up their bones in its lair. Look!" Ruskettle lifted up a
very large, heavy, two-handed sword. "Not even the owner of this sword
could defend himself." She dropped the blade in disgust.
"Or—" Alias interrupted, "—or it proves that this was just an
ordinary fire—an accident—and everyone got out in time or other humans buried
the corpses. Try not to overreact, Olive."
"Me?" Olive squeaked. "You're the one who tried to skewer a
robberwing for calling out your name. If it were just an ordinary fire, why
didn't they rebuild the inn? Why isn't anyone using the pass?"
Alias shrugged. "They'd have to import the building materials, and that
would take a few months. I'm sure we simply went through the pass on a slow
day." She knew her last comment was improbable, but she also knew she'd
feel foolish giving in to the halfling's anxieties.
"Ha! This is just the kind of place you tell children about to keep
them from straying into the woods."
Alias reached under her stallion to unbuckle the saddle straps. "Well,
Olive," she said, lifting the saddle from her horse, "just be sure
you don't stray too far, then."
Olive growled in frustration and left to tend to her pony.
Dragonbait, who was snuffling over a pile of timbers, snarled once.
"See!" Olive turned excitedly. "Even Dragonbait votes we
should go."
Alias laughed. "He's more likely snarling at a garden spider. Besides,
Dragonbait doesn't get a vote. He can't talk. He barely understands what we're
saying."
"He understands well enough when it really matters," Olive
muttered.
"Pardon?"
"I said, we could be halfway down the gap, away from this place before
night fell."
"Then we'd have to eat a cold supper," the mage teased.
That was food for thought to the halfling. In the end, she decided safety
was more important than comfort. "It wouldn't matter, vou'd only add too
much spice anyway."
"Perhaps you should show me how to do it properly."
"I wouldn't dream of depriving you of the joy of figuring it out for
yourself," Olive replied. "Besides, I have a more important job this
evening." She drew out a set of pasteboard cards from a jacket pocket.
"Oh? And what job is that?" Alias asked with a smile.
"Teaching your lizard to vote," the halfling announced grabbing
Dragonbait firmly by the arm and hustling him to a far corner of the ruins.
"You keep an eye on Olive, Dragonbait," Alias called. "Don't
let her wander into the woods."
Akabar started the fire, using pieces of charred wood from the inn. The mage
struck a spark off his flint onto some wool and soon had a small blaze going.
Alias squatted on her haunches and blew into the flames, spreading them among
the drier tinder until the heavier kindling caught.
Akabar pulled out a pan, some cooking utensils, and a package of meat from a
saddle bag. "Lamb, I think." Carving the meat into strips, he added,
"We're going to have to start hunting soon."
"I know," Alias sighed, staring into the flames. "If I hadn't
been such a frightened ninny and had hit that bird square on, I'd still have my
dagger and we'd be eating fresh meat tonight."
"Your aim can't always be perfect," he said.
"Why not?"
The mage laughed. He poured a splash of oil into the cooking pan and
balanced it on two large logs which straddled the fire. "You're only
human."
"What's that got to do with it?"
"Why is perfection so important?" he asked her.
"Why is being alive important?" she returned. "One miss too
many and I could end up someone else's supper."
"You lead a hard life."
"It's worth it," the swordswoman insisted.
"Why?"
Alias shrugged. "The feeling of being free, I guess."
"Free of needing others?"
Alias did not reply. She fished a brush from her saddle bag and walked over
to where Lady Killer stood munching the stiff mountain grass.
The mage smiled as he watched her grooming the purebred stallion. If she took
that brush to her own hair, he thought, she would look as well bred. Akabar
believed he understood why she spent her affection on the horse. The creature
would never betray her, it didn't really need her, and it didn't ask questions.
Rather like her other companion, the lizard.
He shook off the pity he felt for her, knowing that if she saw it, she would
go for his throat. The oil in the pan spat, and the mage added the strips of
lamb.
The mountain air was chill. Before long. Alias returned to the fire to warm
her hands.
"Do you think a dragon may have caused this damage?" Akabar asked.
The thought had been preying on his mind, but he had not wanted to appear
nervous.
"No," Alias replied. "A dragon wouldn't leave things so neat.
It'd burrow through the stones on the floor, looking for treasure. The damage
was probably caused by an ordinary fire. Unless two mages decided to fight it
out here with heavy magic."
"I was just wondering," the mage explained as he covered a pan of
boiling broth and millet, "because you said Mist had ravens as familiars.
This is the height of the trading season. It is unusual, is it not, for this
route to be so deserted?"
"Yes," Alias admitted. "But it might have nothing to do with
the inn's destruction. Trade routes go out of fashion for other reasons than
monsters. Sometimes it's just the rumor of monsters, put out by secret
societies to discourage competition. Wars. Too little grain to trade. Import
taxes and tolls. You know more about trading. What do you think?"
"I think something is wrong, but it may or may not concern . . .
us."
"You mean me, of course. And my affliction."
"Have there been any problems?" the mage asked.
"Not since the wedding."
Alias watched as Akabar lifted the lid from the pan and crushed a fistful of
dried peppers over the steaming grain, letting most of it settle in a quarter
of the pan.
"I take it that's Olive's portion," Alias noted, smiling.
The mage grinned fiendishly. "The vengeance of wizards and cooks can be
subtle but terrible. Each day I add another quarter fistful. Eventually
Mistress Ruskettle will help prepare a meal, or her tongue will fall out of her
head."
"More likely, you'll run out of spices."
Akabar chuckled.
Alias looked over to the far corner of the ruined inn, where Olive sat
cross-legged before Dragonbait. The bard held a card in front of the lizard and
said something Alias could not hear. Dragonbait looked at the card with a
deadpan stare, then abruptly plucked it out of her hand and started to nibble
on the edge.
"The halfling has less chance for success than a fat school priest
trying to convert kobolds," Alias said with a smirk.
"You remind me of my younger wife. What she cannot see, she will not
believe. When I return, she'll sit and count the money I bring home, but she'll
laugh in disbelief at the wondrous things I tell her about the north
country."
"She'll be laughing pretty hard about this troupe," Alias
predicted.
"Perhaps when you have finished your quest you might accompany me back
to Alaghon, where my wives base our business."
His tone was light, but Alias felt something underlying it, something deeper
that he struggled to keep from surfacing. "I hope that wasn't an
invitation to join your little harem, Turmite." She intended the remark to
sound like a sneer, but it became more of a question.
Akabar sighed inwardly; he'd made her shy away again. He forced a smile he
did not feel. "The invitation was only for a traveling companion, not a
future bedmate. I hoped to prove to my wives that women of the north wield
dangerous weapons and travel where they please. You need not fear my desires.
Turmish women keep their mates so enraptured with their amorous abilities that
foreign women pall by comparison."
"I see," Alias replied, looking down into the fire to keep her
grin from showing.
"Besides," continued Akabar, "as I've explained once, they
have veto power over co-wives. They would never approve of you joining the
family. You're much too hot-tempered, and my older wife is offended by the
smell of damp wool."
Alias laughed and threw the horse brush at him. "You smell like damp
wool, too, Turmite." She gave a tug on his cloak.
Akabar shrugged. "Yes, but my wives cannot veto me."
Olive and Dragonbait joined them at the fireside, the only warmth and light
for miles now that the sun had set. The lizard carried wood for the fire. The
bard was all smiles.
"I've done it," Olive declared.
"Done what?" Akabar asked, tasting his concoction.
"Taught Dragonbait to speak to us," the bard said. Fixing Alias
with a reproachful stare, she added, "It's surprising no one thought of it
before."
"So, let's hear what he says," Alias said, holding out a piece of
flat trailbread for Akabar to spread with the meat and grain mixture.
"It doesn't work like that," the bard explained. She pulled out a
deck of Talis cards from her pocket. "He doesn't speak any tongue I
recognize, but he can understand us. Watch." Ruskettle leafed through the
cards, pulling out two.
"The Holed Plate, Primary of Stones, means yes," Olive said.
"The Flaming Dagger, no. He picked that one himself."
"I wonder why," Alias smirked.
"I ask him a question and he can give the answer. Watch." She
turned back to the creature and, smiling like a maiden aunt. Alias thought, she
asked, "Dragonbait, are you a lizard?"
The lizard-creature held up the Holed Plate indicating yes.
"Are you hungry?" Olive asked in the same cheerful tone.
Dragonbait held up the same card. Another yes.
"Should we stay in this haunted place?" Olive demanded, suddenly
stern, pointing to the burned rafters.
Dragonbait lifted the Flaming Dagger card.
Olive turned back to face the swordswoman and mage. "You see. You've
held this poor creature, virtually as a bondservant, for weeks now without even
trying to communicate with him. I reached his mind in a single session."
Olive shook her head sadly. "I wonder why you humans are running the world
at all."
Alias studied Dragonbait curiously. She had tried to communicate with him
back at The Hidden Lady without success. Why did I give up so soon? she
wondered, but she knew the answer to that. Dragonbait seemed to understand what
she wanted without her even having to ask, and besides, he'd offered her his
sword, which made her his leader. Still ... is it possible that I didn't want
to know anything he could tell me? She felt more than a little annoyed with
herself.
Akabar polished off his supper and licked his fingers.
"Congratulations," he said to Olive, handing her a folded meat and
millet sandwich filled from the far side of the skillet. "May I try?"
"Of course," the halfling replied, relinquishing her seat beside
the lizard. "Answers told, mysteries revealed."
Akabar sat in front of the lizard, frowning in deep concentration.
"Dragonbait," he asked, "can you understand me?"
The lizard held up the Flaming Dagger. No.
"Well," the mage said, "at least he's honest." With a
smile he asked, "Is the halfling a perfect fool?"
Dragonbait lifted up the Holed Plate. Yes.
Alias giggled.
Akabar screwed his face into a scowl. "Would you mind very much if we
threw her on the fire for kindling?"
The Flaming Dagger. No.
Akabar burst into laughter. "Idiot bard! You've trained him to show the
yes card when you smile and the no card when you frown. He's a quick study, but
there are trained monkeys in Calisham who know that trick. Now, eat your dinner
before it gets cold." He and Alias turned back to the pan for second
helpings.
"The way you spice food, it could melt steel for hours," the
halfling grumbled. Before she took a bite of the peppery mixture, she glared at
Dragonbait, saying, "I bet you're proud of yourself, lizard."
Dragonbait held up the Holed Plate, cocked his head at the halfling, and a
strange clicking sound came through his stubby teeth. Olive felt certain he was
laughing at her.
12
The Dream and the Kalmari
The evening sky over Shadow Gap was overcast except in the far south, where
a few stars glittered between the mantle of clouds and the horizon. Alias
exhaled slowly, watching the vapor from her breath rise and drift away in the
cool mountain air. Despite the chill, she was quite comfortable. Akabar had not
stinted on warm clothing and blankets for their trip north.
On second watch. Alias looked over at Akabar, who lay under only one wool
cover, and his arms over that. Gently, she dropped a fur hide over him from
chin to knees. In no time he pushed most of it aside, and his arms, clad only
in his flimsy robe, once again lay exposed to the cold air.
Either he's got some magic trick to keep warm, or he carries the heat of the
southern sun inside him, Alias thought.
Olive, under the pretext of keeping the extra bedding dry and safe from
marauding beasts, slept on top of most of them. In sleep she looked deceptively
childlike and innocent, the swordswoman thought. But Akabar, with his beard and
the sun-wrinkles about his eyes, looked older.
Alias studied the sleeping Dragonbait, trying to decide if he looked older
or younger. He slept as peacefully as a child, yet even with his tail drawn up
between his legs and curled beneath his head, the power of his warrior's frame
was apparent. Alias wondered if he didn't sleep, as the saying went, the sleep
of the righteous, untroubled by his dreams because he lived up to his own
standard of goodness.
He was neither a slow riser nor one to awaken with a start. Whenever she
awakened him, he opened his eyes curiously, smiled that toothy grin, and gave a
pleasant chirp. The few times the party had shifted camp in the middle of the
night to avoid being stumbled upon by goblins and ores, Alias had discovered
the lizard already awake, lying very still, sniffing the air, his hand wrapped
around the hilt of his sword.
She wrapped one of her own blankets about the lizard's shoulders, a custom
she'd adopted from her travels with the Company of the Swanmays. She'd missed
the sisterly concern the seven members, all women, had had for one another, but
she hadn't felt comfortable enough among the strangers with whom she now
traveled to perform so intimate a gesture . . . until tonight.
She thought very hard about Dragonbait, about all he'd done for her, all she
knew about him, all the things she felt about him. He was the least human of
her companions, he couldn't talk to her, and she had little idea what went
through his mind, yet Dragonbait was the only member of the party she trusted
completely. Regardless of what Olive had said about failing to communicate with
him, she knew that the two of them, lizard and swordswoman, had an
understanding.
"You're not my bondservant, are you?" Alias whispered to the
sleeping lizard. "You're my brother."
She'd never really had any siblings, at least as far as she knew. Her
mother, an uncommunicative fisherman's widow, had never told her of any, and
when her mother died, just after Alias reached her teens, no long-lost
relatives appeared at her wake. The following year Alias ran off to avoid being
bonded to a decent but unimaginative weaver. It wasn't until she had insinuated
herself into the Swanmays that she felt any kinship to anyone. The Swanmays had
relished the risks and beauty of the open wilderness as much as she did. Just
remembering them now made her throat tighten with emotion.
Yet, the feeling she had for Dragonbait, one she was certain he shared,
could not possibly be based on mutual interests. As far as she knew, they had
none. His behavior toward her was most definitely the tender protectiveness of
a brother. Oddly enough, Alias realized that she felt the same way about him.
And the strength of that feeling without, as she perceived, any logical foundation,
was what made her so certain there was no one closer to her in all the world.
Despite the admission of her feelings for the lizard, she was no closer to
remembering anything about their past association than before.
Her relationship with Olive was as clear as glass. Alias knew she could
trust the halfling to look after the halfling first, the party's possessions
second, and everyone else probably not at all. Though the bard had shown one
flash of bravado in Mist's lair, taunting the dragon long enough for Alias to
get back on her feet, bravado was not the same as courage, and had nothing at
all to do with heroism. Alias realized that Olive would weigh every risk
against how much treasure she estimated lay at the end of Alias's quest.
Akabar was a little more complicated. He was on a quest of his own to prove
to himself that he was more than a Turmish merchant. Eager to collect his own
adventures to relate to his profiteering wives and, Alias conjectured, probably
anxious to keep from returning so soon to a family with little tolerance for
such nonsense as adventures. Alias was certain that if he hadn't stumbled
across her case, he'd have found some other adventurer to lavish his attentions
on. She felt she could trust him not to deceive her, but she wasn't going to
count on him to lay down his life for her. She knew the mage possibly had one
other reason for accompanying her, but he had been wise enough to deny it, so
she wasn't going to dwell on it.
She wasn't aware she was falling asleep, but when the wreckage of the inn
began to shimmer and reform into the building she remembered from years ago,
she knew she'd drifted into some dream. Angrily she tried to shake herself
awake, frightened that her dereliction of duty would bring great harm to the party,
but she had no success.
The inn took on an increasing solidity. First, the thick timber walls
returned, their joints sealed with dabbed mud. Doors and tables and chairs and
the bar seemed to rise from the ground. Without moving, Alias found herself seated
at a small table by the firepit.
Alerted by the groaning beams above, Alias looked up. Overhead, the charred
timbers grew whole, the drooping section of ceiling that had survived the fire
straightened. Planed boards crisscrossed the timbers and, though she could not
see them, Alias heard the clatter of pottery shingles as they multiplied across
the boards outside. Chains began to snake downward from iron hooks which
sprouted from the main timbers. The ends of the chains blossomed into
gourd-shaped lamps, burning oil from small wicks.
The flame in the firepit flared into a roaring blaze, and the North Gate Inn
began filling with customers, though they did not enter by the door. Alias
heard them first, the mutter and roar of many people speaking all around her.
She fixed her attention on a booth in the corner where she heard an argument,
but all she could see were shadows.
Of course, I might not be dreaming, Alias considered. This could all be some
fantastic illusion. But the noise would have wakened the others, and they would
still be here sleeping beside me. No, this was a dream, she concluded.
Suddenly there was a tremendous clatter to her right. Her head turned in
time to witness a burly man berating a small servant girl for spilling wine
down the copious cleavage of his female companion. As the youngster protested
her innocence, the man stood up and loomed over her. He was twice her height,
but Alias caught the glint of sharp steel as the servant reached into her apron
pocket.
A loud roar came from the corner booth again, and she turned her attention
back to it. No longer occupied by shadows, it was filled with people of depth
and color. A tired cleric and a young fighter argued some fine religious point.
The cleric insisted that
Tempos was a corruption of the southern
Tempus,
and that
Tempus was the correct pronunciation. This supposition seemed
to madden the fighter, a northern barbarian on his manhood journey, no doubt.
His face, already quite red from several drinks, flushed even darker. He was
preparing his argument by reaching his right hand over his left shoulder to
grasp the lionheaded hilt of the massive sword strapped to his back.
Alias wondered which of the two arguments would be the first to cause a
room-clearing brawl.
"Neither," answered a pleasant voice. Alias started at the reply.
A young man stood beside her table, holding two crystal glasses in one hand and
a dusty bottle in the other. He sat in the chair beside her, setting the items
he carried on the table. "But devastation will arrive shortly," he
assured her with a lopsided grin and a wink. Alias would have judged him to be
not yet twenty, but his suave manner belied her estimate. He wiped off the
bottle and extracted the cork with an expert ease.
The youth's blond hair hung loose about his shoulders and glistened in the
firelight. He had what the members of the Swanmays would agree was a
well-formed figure, yet his blue eyes reflected the firelight back in pinpoints
of red. As attractive as Alias found him, he made her quite nervous. She felt
as if she were waiting for someone in the dream, but this man was not that
person.
"I took the liberty of ordering a wine special. I know you'll like
it." He smiled as he poured copper-colored liquid into both glasses.
"How do you know what's going to happen?" Alias asked.
"We all have our little curses," he whispered, running a finger
down her right arm along the brands. They tingled, an entirely new sensation.
"My curse is that I'm required to read the script before the play
begins." He held up his glass and waited for her to do the same. "In
a few minutes the plot will pick up. Plenty of time to finish your drink."
Alias lifted the delicate crystal by the stem and allowed her host to clink
his own against it. "To drama," he said.
Alias sniffed the beverage warily, afraid to discover yet another Cormyrian
mixture unsuited to her tastes. Instead, a pleasant, tangy scent wafted to her
nostrils. She took a sip and then, without thinking, drained the glass. The
sharp, sweet taste of mountain berries clung to her lips, and the alcohol
coursed through her body like a shock. Her face warmed immediately, as if she stood
in bright sunshine, and the aching muscles of her back relaxed. It wasn't just
the only good thing she'd tasted in a long time. She had a strong suspicion it
would be the best thing she would ever taste.
"Which of these incidents is responsible for the fire?" Alias
asked the young man as he refilled their glasses.
"Neither," the man said. He nodded toward the burly man and his
buxom companion. The servant girl had convinced the man at knife point to
return to his seat and stop fussing. She tossed the woman a dingy towel and
left them.
"Labor troubles are quite common this far north," the youth told
her. "Every potscrubber dreams of becoming a petty lord, inspired by the
few who, with luck and reckless-ness, have done so. The situation here in
Shadow Gap is, of course, exacerbated by the minute population, making not just
good help, but any help at all hard to find."
"And the loud barbarian and cleric?" Alias asked, turning to
discover the reaction of the other patrons when the fighter pulled out his weapon,
but both were engaged in draining large mugs of ale.
"They're old friends from way back. They've had this argument at least
a hundred times before in this very place, and in as many other inns."
"So, what did cause the fire? Does it have anything to do with why the
pass is deserted?"
"Patience, my dear, patience," her drinking companion chided. He
raised her glass to her mouth and tilted the ambrosial liquid so that it flowed
past her lips. Alias grasped the stem and swallowed until the entire draught
was consumed. A greater heat washed over her, and she slipped off her cape.
"You know what your problem is?" the man asked.
"No, what?" She reached for the wine bottle and poured herself a
third glass.
"You aren't used to acquiring information slowly, listening to people
explain things in their own way, experiencing life as it comes. You expect
someone to just pour everything you want to know into you, as though it were a
bottle of wine." He raised the wine bottle and filled his glass again. "Ah!"
he said with glee, his eyes fixed on the doorway. "Finally, a principal
actor."
Alias turned. The man was not the one she was waiting for either. A small
man, he was dressed like a merchant, with a purple robe gathered at his waist
and a fat, over-stuffed hat with a long, swan feather plume on his head.
The small man climbed upon a low, stone platform opposite the fire pit,
waved a parchment scroll over his head, and shouted "Silence!"
Half the conversations died out, but a few scattered patrons continued
chattering. The quieted persons turned their attention to the merchant. Assured
of at least a partial audience, the man unrolled his scroll and began to read.
"Hear, all and sundry, the words of the Iron Throne." The last
words caught the attention of those who had ignored him. Silence blanketed the
room.
The herald paused for effect. Alias frowned. The eyes of the young man
beside her twinkled merrily. "The Iron Throne," her companion
explained in a hushed whisper without taking his eyes from the speaker,
"is a young trading organization, just beginning to compete with the
better established merchant houses. Their favorite strategies include force,
treachery, and magic."
The herald read on. "The Iron Throne is much concerned with the growing
violence in the north, violence fed by the arms merchants who line their own
pockets at the expense of others."
"The Iron Throne should know, their pockets bulge, too!" a heckler
called out, followed by a spattering of applause.
The herald's eyes narrowed. "Hence, the Iron Throne pronounces an
anathema upon the warmongering merchants and will close Shadow Gap for thirty
days."
Boos and catcalls followed.
"It would take four divisions of mercenaries, at least, to hold this
pass," Alias commented.
"You think so?" the young man replied with a laugh. "Wait and
see, shall we?"
"All those within Shadow Gap will be allowed to leave, but they may
carry no weapons of war. Thus will the Iron Throne demonstrate its ability to
keep peace in the region," the herald concluded.
"Bull spittle!" shouted the barbarian in the corner booth, rising
drunkenly to his feet. "The Iron Throne is shipping weapons by the
cartloads to goblins and maggots from Zhentil Keep! They just want to keep the
Dales light in armaments for their Zhentarim masters! It will take more than a
proclamation-spouting toady to keep us from aiding the free people of the
north."
The herald glared malevolently at the barbarian.
Sensing some unseen power, the cleric tried to pull his friend back to his
side, but the barbarian strode over to the herald. The warrior towered above
the smaller man, even though the herald stood on the raised platform. He yanked
the parchment scroll out of the herald's hand and shredded it, tossing the
pieces in the herald's face. "Send that message back to the Iron
Throne."
"You needn't worry about safe delivery of your master's weapons to his
contact in Daggerdale," the herald hissed. "The contact is already
dead, a victim of his own penchant for violence."
The barbarian drew in a shocked breath. "You killed Brenjer, you
murdering swine! I'll show you violence!" He drew his two-handed sword,
swung the massive blade over his head, and struck the herald in the forehead.
The steel sliced through its target down to the waist with the same ease and
sound it would make ripping through taut canvas.
Alias gasped, for the body of the herald did not gush blood or fall to the
floor, as would a carcass of meat. Instead, two ragged shards of purple cloth
drifted to the floor and a black mist rose from them, forming into the shape of
an inverted tear drop above the barbarian.
Two unblinking, yellow eyes glowed within the cloud of dark vapor. Beneath
the eyes a huge gap parted, revealing rows upon rows of needle-sharp teeth.
From this maw came the sound of a thousand snakes hissing in a stone room.
"A kalmari," the youth whispered to Alias. "They're native to
the lands of Thay, used by the Red Wizards and their allies. Some speculate
they are relatives to intellect devourers. Remarkable, isn't it?"
Alias, intent on watching the barbarian deal with the monster, did not
reply. The barbarian passed his sword through the mist, but his blow did no
more damage than it would to smoke. The kalmari gave a rattling laugh, then
distended its jaws so its mouth made up more than half its body. The creature
fell forward over the man and swallowed him in a single gulp, broadsword and
all.
For a moment there was silence while the inn's occupants struggled to
comprehend what had happened. Then the room erupted with a clatter of toppled
chairs and tables and shuffling feet as the inhabitants sought escape.
Clerics and mages intoned the words of half a dozen spells and wardings as
they backed away from the beast.
The kalmari tilted its head back and spit out the barbarian's sword, its
blade propelled upward in a twisting ribbon of flame. The sword flew into the
upper rafters and stuck there, imbedded to the hilt. The flames spread across
the ceiling, engulfing the rafters in a white heat
The kalmari smiled, a wide grin that stretched three-quarters of the way
around its body. The smile lasted only a moment before a battery of offensive
spells struck—bolts of lightning and flame and radiant blue daggers of magic
missile. Alias felt her right arm ache and, looking down, saw that her own
runes glowed.
She tried to rise, intent on aiding in the battle any way she could, but the
youth beside her placed his hand over the sigils on her forearm and, with the
lightest of pressure, held her trapped against the table.
"You'll get your chance," he grinned mysteriously. "What's
your hurry?"
The fires spread with unnatural speed, and soon the entire area, save for
where Alias and her companion sat, was engulfed in flame. Through the dancing
flames Alias could see the kalmari swallowing a mage whole, then belching up
another burst of burning ichor.
Yet Alias felt no heat. A moment later, the flames, the kalmari, and its
opponents diminished to shadows against the walls of the common room. Then,
even the shadows vanished. The inn around her was whole and sturdy, unaffected
by the fire, but nearly barren of inhabitants.
Still seated beside the youth, Alias spotted a solitary figure at a table
across the room. The figure's features were completely concealed by a cloak and
a hood. This is the one I've been waiting for, she told herself with certainty.
But now she was reluctant to make the meeting.
The young man drained the last of his wine and rose to leave.
"Wait!" Alias insisted, grabbing his arm. She wanted to say "Don't
leave me alone with that one," but she knew her words would not influence
him. So instead she asked, "When did this happen?"
"While you were still hunting halfling-stealing dragons west of
Suzail."
Surprised that she got him to answer so easily, she pressed her
interrogation further. "Where is the kalmari?"
"Still at large, defending the area for its masters.'
"How does one ward against it?"
"It fears only the mark of its maker."
"How is it defeated?"
"The kalmari cannot eat anything twice."
"What does it have to do with me?"
"Enough," a woman's voice whispered.
Alias shivered and turned to look at the figure seated across the room. All
about the inn was fog.
The woman's voice cut sharply through the rising vapor. "You've gone
too far, Nameless. You are dismissed."
"But she asked a question," the youth objected. "I want to
answer all her questions."
"You have stalled our interview long enough. I will answer this
question for her. The creature is, after all, mine."
There was something very familiar about the sharp, feminine voice, and Alias
felt her right arm throb. When she stood, her senses began to spin. She cursed
the wine silently and turned to accuse the youth of getting her drunk, but he
was already gone, swallowed in the dream mist.
"Well?" Alias demanded, trying to appear undaunted as the figure
rose and drifted, like a ghost, toward her.
"The kalmari is a meager demonstration of my power," the woman
said, making a sweeping gesture with her right hand, palm up. Her features
remained concealed in the shadows of the hood, but Alias noted that her left
arm was in a sling. "It's just something I had out on loan to the Iron
Throne, who wished to demonstrate their power. Many will think twice before
crossing the will of the Iron Throne."
"But what does this have to do with me?" Alias repeated. She stood
only an arm's length from the woman. Alias realized she could easily reach out
and yank back the woman's hood to reveal her face. Perhaps, Alias hoped, if I
can recognize the face, it will help to explain my lost memory or the tattoo on
my arm. Yet, why do my instincts hold me back tell me to flee fast and far? Is
she a lich or a medusa?
"Why, the kalmari is another of my creatures," the woman laughed.
"I was going to station it here to watch for you. The Iron Crown's fee
only sweetened the pot."
"Another one of your creatures," Alias repeated, certain she had
gained a new insight. "Like the crystal elemental?
The woman snorted derisively. "Please. You insult me, my dear. Such a
heavy-handed, clumsy thing. My creations have always been elegant."
"Then what other creature did you mean?" Alias asked.
"Why, I meant you, my child. You're one of my creatures Of course, I
must share you with the others, but I will always think of you as my own."
The woman held out her good arm in a beckoning gesture, as a mother would
welcome a prodigal daughter. Very slowly and sweetly she said, "Come back
to Westgate, Puppet. We're your masters. You need us, and we want you
back."
Alias's breathing came fast and heavy. "I'm my own master," she
shouted angrily, "not anyone's puppet." With a sudden movement she
jerked the hood from the woman's face.
She looked into her own face.
Alias screamed in her dream and woke with a start. The camp was back to
normal. She sat near a dying fire in a root less hostel. It was only a dream,
she told herself over and over. She wondered how long she'd been asleep.
Only a dream, she thought again. Though a very bad dream. When was the last
time I dreamed like that?
Never, the answer came from the back of her mind. You never dream like that.
Ever.
The dream had to be magically influenced, Alias decided, and the woman in
the dream had to be Cassana, the Westgate sorceress who branded me with one of
these sigils. Why did she look like me?
Alias closed her eyes and concentrated on the woman in the dream. She didn't
look exactly like me, Alias realized The woman looked older. Perhaps she is a
long-lost relative no one ever told me about. Who's Nameless, then?
Alias stood and stretched by the fire's dying embers. Her thoughts remained
fuzzy, and she had a difficult time concentrating on details. Am I still
sleepy, she wondered, or is it possible I'm drunk on dream wine?
Then she heard a noise that set her hackles rising, a noise from her
dream—the sound of a thousand hissing snakes in a stone room. The sound of a
kalmari.
She whirled about, scanning the boundaries of the campsite, but the darkness
defeated her eyes. She glanced over the campsite. Dragonbait lay curled like a
cat. Olive snuggled in a nest of blankets. Akabar—there was only darkness where
Akabar should have been.
Something in the darkness glittered, and Alias recognized the rows of
needle-sharp teeth. Only then was she able to make out the silhouette of the
beast. From the tear-drop shape extended a dark, prehensile tail. The
creature's shadow shifted just enough for Alias to make out Akabar's sleeping
figure. The kalmari wrapped its tail about him and began lifting the mage to
its gaping maw. Muttering in his sleep, the Turmishman struggled feebly, trying
to kick off the blanket entangling his legs, but he did not awaken.
With a shout, Alias leaped forward. Her movement was sloppy and awkward.
Damn dream wine! I'm not sober, she realized as she accidentally kicked the
sleeping Olive. The kalmari, still hovering with its tail firmly wrapped about
the mage, fixed its unblinking, yellow eyes on the warrior.
Alias drew her sword but she hesitated, remembering that the barbarian's
two-handed weapon hadn't even bloodied the monster. If the dream was true, her
weapon was useless. But if the dream was true and the kalmari was indeed one of
Cassana's creatures, then according to Nameless, it could be warded off with
the sorceress's sigil on Alias's arm. If Nameless had been telling the truth. .
. .
Frustrated with all the uncertainties, the swordswoman stopped analyzing the
situation. Still holding her sword, she raised her branded arm over her head,
wrist forward. Her arm felt heavy and sluggish, as though a solid gold shield
were strapped to it. Damn wine! she thought. She gritted her teeth and kept the
arm up. A brilliant, blue light shot from the sigils, illuminating the campsite
and making the black, smoky form of the kalmari easier to discern.
Lacking the eyelids to blink in the strong light, the kalmari's elongated
pupils narrowed to slits, and the creature floated backward the length of a
sword. Its grip on Akabar was still firm, however, and it held its tail
forward, using the mage as a shield.
I can keep the creature back, Alias thought grimly, but how do I get it to
drop Akabar?
In her dream she had asked Nameless how to defeat the kalmari. He had told
her, but the details of the dream were already drifting from her memory. Alias
struggled to remember his words.
He hadn't told me what to do exactly. He'd said something about what the
kalmari couldn't do. It couldn't eat something. It couldn't eat something
twice. What nonsense! Alias thought. If you've eaten something, you can't eat
it again, can you? Unless you're the kind of creature that regurgitates the
bones of your victims.
Behind her came a high-pitched curse from Olive. "What in the burning
lake is that?"
Ignoring the halfling, Alias lunged at the monster, slicing her blade
through the extremity that entrapped the still unconscious Turmishman. The
monster's hissing increased in pitch and volume. It was not Alias's sword that
troubled it, though.
The closer she got to Cassana's creature, the brighter her brands blazed.
Annoyed by the intense light or perhaps, as Nameless had said, afraid of its
mistress's sigil, the kalmari retreated farther, though it did not appear ready
to flee.
Alias's eyes roamed across the floor, looking for remains of the northern
warrior or other travelers already consumed by the kalmari. Finding nothing to
feed the creature, she lunged again, plunging her sword into one of the
monster's eyes. Again, the beast moved away from the light of her arm, but
showed no damage from her sword.
Sword. The barbarian's sword! The kalmari had spit out the barbarian's
sword. A sword with a lion-headed hilt, just like the one Olive had plucked
from the ruins.
The adventuress shot quick glances over her shoulder, her eyes scanning the
rubble-strewn floor. Nothing. Alias cursed silently. It had been there before.
What could have happened to it? Or who—
"Olive!" she shouted. "You found a sword with a lion's head
grip in the ruins earlier."
"I vaguely recall something of that nature," the halfling
answered.
"You must have it, damn it! Give it to me!"
"Really," the halfling huffed. "I was going to give it to you
later as a surprise."
"I don't want to hear any excuses, just go get it!" Alias
screamed.
"But it's on the other side of the wall—on the other side of the
monster!" Olive squeaked. "Why can't you get it?"
"If I move away, it's liable to eat Akabar. It can't touch me, but if
it asked for dessert I'd be inclined to serve you to it. Understand?"
Ruskettle muttered something that sounded like cursing in an unknown
language, but she nevertheless moved to Alias's left, swinging wide around the
edges of the destroyed hostel and the kalmari.
Alias moved to her left, too, keeping the arc of her circle smaller so that
she remained between the monster and the halfling. Then Dragonbait was at her
left shoulder, fully awake, his sword at the ready. The sigils bathed them both
in an eerie blue radiance. With Dragonbait clearing a path for her through the
rubble, the swordswoman managed to back the kalmari into the corner of the
hostel that still stood. Alias suspected the wall would prove no impediment to
the monster's retreat, but perhaps it couldn't pass through the wooden beams
without letting go of the mage.
There was a scrambling noise from the edge of the wall behind the kalmari.
The kalmari's hissing grew louder and more threatening. It twisted ever so
slightly, keeping one eye on the two warriors, while turning the other on the
halfling pawing at the rubble not twenty feet away.
Alias's throat constricted in fear. Olive seemed to take forever pulling out
the massive blade. The weapon stood taller than the halfling, and she could
barely lift it. To Alias's horror, the kalmari turned both eyes on Olive. At
that moment the halfling looked up and froze.
"Olive! Use the sword!" Alias shouted. "Use it to defend
yourself!"
Alias moved to her right, hoping to force the monster to turn its eyes from
the bard, but the leaden feeling in her arm seemed to spread over her entire
body, and she tripped over a fallen roof beam and sprawled across the floor.
Her body's heaviness persisted; her attempts to rise were met with failure.
She felt not just drunk, but as though she'd been drugged. It was an effort
just to raise her head to watch the kalmari close in on the bard. "Set the
sword like a spear!" she cried.
Olive snapped out of her shock and raised the sword. Perhaps she'd only
caught the last few words of Alias's command, or maybe she had some
halfling-berserker blood in her, but Olive did not remain standing still,
waiting for the monster to impale itself on the weapon. Instead, she charged
the creature, holding the sword like a spear. Astonishingly, it looked to Alias
as if Olive might succeed in skewering the monster—until the halfling slipped
on a pile of broken roof shingles. The sword flew from her hands, and the bard
crashed to the floor beneath the kalmari.
The kalmari smiled so broadly that Alias could see its grin from behind. The
creature made the same rattling laugh as in her dream. Alias had a clear view
of Olive's terrified face as the halfling looked into the throat of the
kalmari—about to become an hors d'oeuvre before Akabar's main entree.
A blur of dark green shot across Alias's vision as, with one continuous
motion, Dragonbait dashed toward the barbarian's sword, lifted it, leaped
toward the kalmari, and plunged the weapon in the monster's back. The sword dug
into the kalmari's form with a satisfying
thuck. Dragonbait had to jerk
the weapon out before he could strike again.
The kalmari made a high-pitched whine Alias hoped was a scream. Turning away
from the halting, the creature dropped the mage. Dragonbait swung again, this
time striking the monster above its eyes, and the kalmari whined again, lashing
out with its tail. With lightning reflexes, the lizard-warrior met the strike
with the sword, severing the appendage. The monster whined again, now at an
unbearable pitch, and came at Dragonbait, mouth first, obviously intent on
swallowing the scaly warrior. Dragonbait threw the sword, point first, into the
monster's maw.
The kalmari's smoky body disintegrated into a dozen tiny motes of darkness,
which in turn ruptured into smaller fractions, like a drop of oil shaken in
water. The bits of darkness were blown away on the night breeze. The
barbarian's sword clattered to the floor of the devastated inn.
Shards of light pricked at Alias's vision and then faded. Her head dropped
to the floor, and she allowed the darkness of unconsciousness to take her.
Through it all Akabar had remained asleep, snoring softly.
*****
Alias awoke to the sound of Olive and Akabar arguing. By the sun's position,
she could tell it was late morning. She felt a little hungover, and it took her
a moment to remember the wine Nameless had helped her guzzle.
"Your story is most amusing, little one," the Turmishman was
saying to Olive, "but just not probable. My dreams were pleasant and my
sleep uninterrupted. I would have been awake in an instant if the events you
described had truly occurred."
"I tell you, this thing was huge and black and had more fangs than you
have hairs in your beard. Its mouth opened so wide—" Olive flung her arms
out as far as they would stretch "—that it could have swallowed itself.
Akabar laughed. "It sounds to me as though perhaps my cooking was mer
a lammer for you," the mage commented, using an expression in his
native tongue. "Much and too much," he translated for the halfling.
Alias shook the last bits of sleep from her head. "Olive's telling you
the truth, Akabar. Hard to credit, I'll admit, but she wasn't the only witness
to the attack."
The grin disappeared from Akabar's face. "Why did it strike at me
first, I wonder."
"Maybe you looked the tastiest," Olive suggested.
"The creature was a kalmari, impervious to normal attacks," Alias
said. "It probably recognized you as a mage, and hence the greatest
threat."
Then Alias remembered what Cassana had said in her dream. "I have
reason to believe that it was waiting here for me," she added, "and
that it belonged to one of the wizards who branded me. When I got close to it,
the sigils began to glow again, something that also happened in the presence of
the crystal elemental. Perhaps my foes have judged you too useful to me and
have decided to have you removed. A demonstration to prove the futility of
defiance."
"A kalmari," Akabar mused, no longer puzzled. "Yes, such
things can hold a man in slumber. How did you defeat it?"
"Chopped it with a sword it had already swallowed."
"Ah, yes," the southerner nodded. "They cannot digest steel,
so they spit it out. They can be poisoned by the very secretions that they've
left on the blade.
"You've fought one before?" Alias asked.
"No," Akabar admitted. "I have read of them. They are a
horror attributed to the Red Wizards of Thay, I believe."
Alias nodded.
"Even with a regorged weapon, it could not have been an easy battle.
However did you manage?" he asked Olive.
Alias smiled. No doubt the bard had exaggerated her role in the destruction
of the monster.
Olive looked down at her furry hands. "I got some help from
Dragonbait."
"Where is Dragonbait, anyway?" Alias asked.
"I noticed him climbing that hill," Akabar said, pointing to the
western slope looming over the top of the pass. "He was carrying a
monstrous sword."
"Hmmm. You two start breaking camp," the adventureress ordered.
"I'll fetch him, and we'll be off. I'm not inclined to hang around
here."
Climbing toward the western slope, Alias heard Akabar chiding Olive.
"Why didn't you tell me it was a kalmari instead of babbling on about a
big, black, fang-toothed thing?"
Catching the sound of soft, whistling tones, Alias followed them to a
spring-fed pool, where she found Dragonbait. The lizard had made a set of bird
pipes, and the tune he twisted out of them, while sad and plaintive, was also
exultant, a cry of loss and pain spun into beautiful music. Somehow Alias knew
it was made to honor a fallen hero.
She sat beside the lizard and waited for him to finish. A long, low mound of
dirt stretched before him. When he was finished, he lay the pipes, very gently,
on top of the newly turned earth and bowed his head silently.
A bird twittered in some distant glade. The air smelled of roses. Dragonbait
finally looked up at her and smiled. Not really a happy smile, but a
bittersweet one, though Alias doubted anyone but she could tell the difference.
"That the sword?" she asked, pointing at the thin grave.
Dragonbait nodded.
Alias sighed. "It could be magical. We could use a weapon like
that."
Dragonbait shook his head, though Alias could not tell if he was denying the
sword's possible enchantment or their need for such a thing.
"Someone else will only dig it up," she argued, though her own
heart wasn't really in it.
Dragonbait shook his head again.
Alias sighed. "Okay. We'll leave it as a memorial. Come on now. We've
already lost half a day, and we're tempting untrustworthy gods by staying here
any longer." She patted the lizard's arm as she rose. His tightly knit
scales reminded her of warm jewels, dry and smooth.
As she turned to make her way down the slope, it occurred to her that
Dragonbait couldn't have known about the sword's owner. Unless he had the
ability to sense an object's past or he had read her mind or ... Alias halted
in mid-step and turned around. "Did you dream the same dream?"
The lizard cocked his head as if he didn't understand.
"Never mind," she said, realizing that, though they did
communicate with one another in a fashion, some questions were just too
complicated for her to convey. "Just finish up here. We'll be waiting at
the camp."
Dragonbait remained at the grave for a few moments, then rose and followed
his lady out of the glade. The birds picked up his pipe-song and carried it
throughout Shadow Gap, south into the Stonelands and north into the Dales.
13
Shadowdale
After inspecting his maps Akabar had assumed that Alias had overestimated
the time it would take to reach Yulash. Her experience of the roads north,
however, proved more accurate than the parchment image of the land he had
purchased in Suzail. On his map, the road from Shadow Gap to Shadowdale passed
through clear terrain, but in reality the land was quite different.
The route twisted out of Shadow Gap, and approaching the dalelands it
climbed and descended numerous hillocks. Akabar found the land pleasing to the
eye. Sheltered from the Great Desert by mountains, the Dales were nothing at
all like the barren Stonelands to the south of Shadow Gap. The hills were lush
with greenery and wildflowers.
On the third afternoon outside of Shadow Gap, a storm lost them half a day's
travel. As they cowered in a vale beneath their waxed tarps, the sheet of black
water falling from the sky was broken only by flashes of lightning.
The next day the rain continued, but with only half the ferocity. Horses,
supplies, and clothing drenched, they took a quick vote. They decided to push
on to Shadowdale rather than sleeping on wet ground again, even if it meant
riding all through the day and night. Dragonbait abstained.
With the coming of night, the rain let up, but the moon and stars remained
hidden behind dark clouds. They all shivered with damp and fatigue, but they
pressed on. Just as the dawn light began to highlight ominous purple clouds
with red streaks, they crossed the ancient bridge spanning the Ashaba River and
looked out over Shadowdale.
The town of Shadowdale was the southern entrance to the region of
Shadowdale. Olive rambled on about the myriad legendary adventurers who had
come from Shadowdale or had made it their base or who had retired there. She
had never been there herself, she admitted, but Shadowdale was mentioned in
more ballads, lays, and drinking songs than any other city in all the Realms.
As they passed the Tower of Ashaba, Olive tugged excitedly on the mage's
robes, insisting he take in the sight of the off-center spire with its landing
decks for aerial mounts.
Alias rode on without stopping, too tired to take in the sights. She had
been here before, and the only sight that interested her now was a bed in The
Old Skull, Shadowdale's inn.
Still, it was a relief to find the city standing and not a burned out shell.
She hadn't been back for seven years, ever since the Swanmays had disbanded,
but she had many fond memories of the town.
As they'd crossed the river, she'd spotted two new temples. Otherwise,
nothing had changed since the time when the Swanmays had rescued Alias from
servitude in Westgate and smuggled her north.
Alias had been the youngest of the seven women who made up the Swanmays, and
a thumb-fingered fighter. If not for the shielding of the other members of the
company, she would have been skewered in her first battle. But she'd grown into
a seasoned swordswoman within three seasons, while the company earned its
living guarding caravans through the Elven Wood.
The group had broken up over a foolish argument concerning a worthless man,
and each member had gone her separate way. Alias found that she still cared
enough about them all to wonder what had become of them.
Naturally, Alias had been closest to Kith, since they'd been closest in age.
Kith had been a very beautiful young girl—so lovely she'd made Alias feel
awkward and plain. Kith had been like a sister to her though. They'd even
pricked their thumbs and become blood-sisters. Alias used to plait Kith's long,
silky, chestnut hair and Kith had taught Alias to read and write. Kith had
received her magical training in Shadowdale, from the river witch Sylune.
Maybe I'll visit Sylune before we leave here, Alias thought. If she can tell
me her former pupil's whereabouts, I might look Kith up after I put this sigil
mess behind me. It feels wonderful to remember something so fully. I can
remember it as clearly as though I'm reading it from a book. I only left the
Black Hawks a year ago, but their faces and names are fuzzy. Somehow, though,
returning to Shadowdale has brought back ail my memories of the Swanmays.
"An excellent reason to visit here, even if it weren't on the way to
Yulash," Alias muttered.
"I beg your pardon?" Akabar asked, pulling his horse up alongside
Lady Killer. Olive, on High Roll, and Dragonbait, leading Lightning, clomped
far behind.
"Nothing," Alias replied. Just for a while she wanted to keep to
herself the joy of these clear memories. Akabar could not possibly understand,
and Alias didn't want the memories belittled by someone else's indifference.
The Old Skull had not changed a bit. The stalwart building of timber and
stone still rose three stories high, its upper levels lined with windows.
The smell of smoke mixed with damp clay and fresh-baked bread attracted
Alias's attention to the building next to the inn. She remembered it was the
shop of Meira Lulhannon, a potter and baker. Funny, Alias thought. I don't
remember noticing the smell before. Not that it's unpleasant, but still, you'd
think it would stick in my mind.
The Old Skull's innkeep was Jhaele Silvermane, a pleasant, motherly woman
who had joined the Swanmays for more than one evening of strong tales and
stronger drink. Alias remembered that when she'd last visited the inn, Jhaele's
son had grown sons, so Jhaele had to be at least in her late fifties by now.
Her hair was grayer and the lines around her eyes deeper, but otherwise she
looked just as Alias remembered.
If Jhaele recognized Alias she gave no sign. Alias, for her part, did not
feel up to rehashing the good old days until she'd had ten hours of sleep and
had cleaned herself up. So, from beneath her sopping hood, she asked if the
Green Room, the Onyx, and Warm Fires were available. In The Old Skull, each
room was decorated differently and given individual names, a custom that had,
unfortunately, died out in more civilized and overpopulated regions like
Corrnyr.
Jhaele informed her that all three rooms were vacant and ready for guests.
She gave Alias a curious look as she led the party to the third floor, no doubt
wondering if she was a previous patron.
Olive grumbled about the inordinate number of stairs in human buildings.
Even Dragonbait puffed and growled some. Alias didn't care, though. To her mind
they'd rented the best rooms in the house.
Alias claimed Warm Fires, a room with three separate hearths, all blazing
merrily. Akabar choose the Onyx, with its white carvings. Ruskettle sniffed at
the wilderness scenes on the tapestries that completely covered the walls of
the Green Room.
"This will do in a pinch," she declared, sprawling out on the
bright yellow bedspread, and promptly falling asleep.
"Her room has no windows," Akabar noted to Alias as he closed her
door. "Keeping an eye on her comings and goings will be that much
easier."
"You don't say? That's just the reason the leader of my first
adventuring group always reserved this room," Alias explained. "We
had two sleight-of-hand artistes."
Akabar grinned. "If I'm not here when you wake, I'll probably be
speaking with the sage Dimswart recommended."
"Fine." Alias nodded sleepily.
"Pleasant dreams," he wished her,
"Pleasdream," Alias mumbled, closing her door.
With Dragonbait already curled before the largest hearth, snoring deeply,
Alias stripped off her clothes, wrapped the bed coverings around herself, and
crawled onto the goose down mattress. She was awake only long enough to note
the rain had started again, a steady drizzle which lulled her to sleep within
minutes.
*****
When Alias awoke, the rain had stopped and the sun was low in the western
sky. She rose leisurely, stretching and yawning and wriggling between the warm
sheets, luxuriating in what nine silver pieces a night could buy.
Finally, Alias sat up and looked around. Her clothes were spread before the
blazing hearths. Dragonbait's doing, Alias realized, but where'd he taken
himself to? she wondered.
The warrior yawned, stretched, and padded across the room, collecting what
she would wear. From two floors below came the rythmic thumping of people
dancing. The locals had already begun their evening festivities.
She pulled on her leggings, stiff from drying. Instead of an ordinary tunic,
she chose from her pack a new robe, something made from wool dyed a turquoise
color. Its long sleeves tied around her wrists, hiding her arms completely.
Tonight she would forget her problems for a few hours if she could.
Dragonbait had already polished and dried her armor, but she was sick of
wearing it. Tonight she would forget her profession, too. She wouldn't even
bring her sword, not even peacebonded. She didn't need it for feasting,
drinking, singing, or dancing. Besides, she was known in Shadowdale. No one
here was an enemy.
She slid her remaining dagger in a boot sheath—only because daggers could be
used in games, she told herself. She made a mental note to purchase another, to
replace the lost one, but promptly forgot that, too. Akabar will remember, she
thought with a grin.
Alias knocked on the mage's door. There was no answer, so she went down to
the taproom alone. Olive was already there, holding court for a roomful of
locals. Dragonbait sat at her feet. The halfling held her hands to her mouth,
fingers spread and curled in imitation of fangs and then opened her arms wide.
Alias realized she was recounting her battle with the kalmari.
A sudden anxiety swept over the swordswoman. The foolish halfling might
babble about the sigils. It hadn't occurred to Alias to forbid the bard to
mention them. Stupid, stupid, stupid! she scolded herself. Did she think she
could rely on Olive's halfling sense of propriety?
Tonight of all nights she did not want to be identified as a marked woman, a
magnet for danger.
"Your friend spins quite a tale," a mellow voice beside her
commented. "How much of it is true?"
Alias turned toward the speaker. He was an attractive man, clean-shaven,
well-dressed, with the lean body of a fighter. The only ornament he wore was a
ring of red metal, inlaid with three silver crescents wrapped in blue flames He
had the smooth polish of the Dale's nobility, polite, but not stuffy, yet Alias
could detect a trace of a western accent. He almost, but not quite, lost the
"h" when he said the word "how." He's from Waterdeep, Alias
thought.
"Depends on what she's saying," Alias replied with a smile.
"And how many drinks she's had, of course."
"Of course." The man smiled back. "She says Shadow Gap is
clear of the Iron Throne's monster. If that's true, the people of the Dales owe
you thanks."
"Oh?" Alias said. "Olive hasn't explained how she alone
defeated the monster with nothing but her quick wits and magical voice?"
A charming grin spread over the man's face. "No," he answered,
"she admitted to relying as well on her prowess with a broadsword that
once belonged to a barbarian god, a holy artifact of Tempus, or so we have been
given to understand. Under the constant reminders of the creature at her feet,
we have elicited a confession that you and the creature had some part in the
affair as well."
Alias smiled fondly at Dragonbait. Always where he's needed most, which
right now happens to be keeping an eye on the halfling.
"I get the feeling," the man continued, "that besides making
the halfling share the credit, there's something specific the lizard-thing's
keeping the halfling from mentioning. Her chatter is the usual bard tales about
adventurers, red dragons, elementals, and royal weddings, but in every episode
there is some point where the creature nudges her and she changes course, so to
speak."
Alias had to force herself to remain calm. "We all have our little
secrets, um . . . you haven't told me your name," she said.
"Mourngrym. Mourngrym Amcathra."
"Alias."
Mourngrym bowed his head. "On behalf of the people of the Dales, I
thank you for ridding us of a fell beast."
"Your thanks are graciously accepted," Alias answered, bowing her
own head modestly. Inwardly, however, she felt guilty. The kalmari was in the
gap partly because of her. But she couldn't bring herself to spoil the one
little moment of glory due her by confessing the truth.
Something about Mourngrym's official tone made Alias wonder just who he was.
"Are you one of Lord Doust's men?" she asked.
Mourngrym smiled. "I had that honor until last year, when the good
cleric retired. Not that he was too old for the job, but he wanted to spend
more time with his family. He lives in Arabel now."
"Oh." Alias hadn't heard about that. Why hadn't she heard about
that? Something that important happening, in such an important place, it should
have been talked about for months. She had to have known. It must have been
lost with the memories of the last year. "Who is lord of Shadowdale
now?"
"Me," Mourngrym said, grinning.
Alias blushed deeply.
"I'm sorry," he said softly. "I thought you knew. If there is
anything you need, I'm sure we can provide it. In thanks."
She had the lord of Shadowdale offering her whatever she needed, and all she
could think of was her lost dagger. She wasn't going to bother him with
something that small.
Someone struck up a reel on a songhorn, accompanied by the rhythmic thumping
of a tantan. "How about a dance partner?" Alias asked shyly.
Mourngrym's grin widened. He rose, offered Alias his arm, and led her to the
center of the floor.
The reel was fast and lively, and Alias loved every minute of it. Mourngrym
was a fine dancer, and it had been a long time since Alias had done something
so frivolous. When it was over her partner led her to a chair.
"Not as easy as swinging a sword, is it? What will you have Alias, ale
or wine?" Mourngrym signalled the waiter.
"Wine, please," Alias panted. "I must have danced that reel a
dozen times a night when I was younger. Of course, I wasn't so lucky in my
partners back then. There used to be a dearth of gentlemen in this inn, and
Kith and I always had to dance with each other."
"Kith?" Mourngrym asked.
"She was our mage," Alias explained. "Long ago I was with the
Company of the Swanmays. We guarded caravans through the Elven Wood. We used to
winter here."
The waiter stood at Mourngrym's elbow. "Ale for me, Turko, wine for the
lady. Swanmays," he repeated as Turko hurried off. "Yes, Elminster's
Tales mention them. Six women, all fairly hot-tempered, if I remember
correctly."
"Seven," Alias corrected. "I was the youngest."
"Wasn't the youngest a mage?" asked Mourngrym.
"That was Kith," said Alias. "She was half a year my elder.
She studied under Sylune for a short while."
"Yes, the witch mentioned her once," smiled Mourngrym. "Not
too favorably, as I recall, but spellcasters are a temperamental bunch."
"Speaking of temperamental spellcasters, have you seen the other member
of my party?"
"The Turmishman?" Mourngrym asked. "Aye, he came down late
this afternoon and paid a lad a gold eagle to ask Elminster for an audience. He
waited until about an hour ago, when Elminster's reply came back. The message
was—and I quote Elminster's words—'Hie thy backside to my outer office and
await there on my pleasure.' So your spellcaster is probably pacing the tower
floor right now."
The waiter returned with their drinks.
"Good fortune," Mourngrym toasted, raising his mug.
"Good fortune," Alias agreed before she sipped the cold, pink liquid.
She'd come to the conclusion that part of her curse involved not being able to
enjoy ale. After her dream in Shadow Gap, she'd decided to try wine instead.
The drink the waiter brought her was nowhere near as pleasant as the wine in
her dream, but it was at least palatable and, with any luck, not so potent.
"Poor Akabar," Alias said. "Elminster must be this local
master sage he was so anxious to talk to. Akabar is so responsible, he'll miss
out on all the fun. I hope he isn't wasting his time. Is this Elminster any
good?"
Mourngrym nearly choked on his ale. "Elminster? You used to winter here
and you've never heard of Elminster the sage?"
Alias shook her head. "That was over seven years ago. I take it
Elminster is someone new."
"Only as new as the Sunset Peaks and twice as craggy," the lord of
Shadowdale replied, giving her a strange look. "He's been here forever.
He's the wisest man in the Realms. He's the reason most people come to
Shadowdale, though he doesn't usually hire his services out anymore."
Damn, damn, damn, damn! Alias thought. I've gone and spoiled everything
again. How could I remember so much about this town, and not remember someone
so important?
Alias lowered her eyes. "I'm afraid I have trouble remembering things
sometimes," she explained.
"Well, as you said, that was seven years ago. You were young, and young
people don't often take much note of old sages and their ilk," Mourngrym
answered kindly.
The songhorn began another melody accompanied by Olive on her yarting.
"I remember this song, though," Alias declared. It was an elvish
tune, but its lyrics were in the common tongue. It was about the Standing
Stone, the monument erected to commemorate the pact made between the dalesmen
and the elves of the wood over thirteen centuries ago.
Determined to put the awkward moment behind her, Alias began to sing, her
voice clear and strong. The taproom patrons turned from the musicians to the
swordswoman. Alias shifted her glance from one face to the other, catching the
eyes of her audience, making them feel as if she sang for them. She spotted
Dragonbait smiling at her, keeping rhythm with the end of his tail. The only
eyes she did not catch were Olive's. The bard bent over her yarting strings,
apparently too intent on her fingerings to look up.
When she finished, the room burst into applause. Alias blushed and turned
back to the table. What could have possessed me to show off like that? she
wondered. She had always kept as low a profile as possible in towns. Now she
was behaving like a child. For a moment she thought of the runes, but there was
no tell-tale heat or light coming through her sleeve.
The songhorn player came up to her table. "Excuse me, my lord.
Lady," he addressed Alias, "do you think maybe, if you have time, you
might give me the words to that song? They were just wonderful. Did you write
them yourself?"
"No. I learned that song here, to that melody. You've never heard the
lyrics before?"
The musician shook his head. "No, lady. I learned the tune from an elf,
but he told me it had no words."
"But I learned it here," Alias insisted.
"Sometimes these old songs get lost if they aren't written down,"
Mourngrym said. "Isn't that right, Han?"
"Yes, my lord," the musician agreed.
"I thought it was a common song in the dalelands," Alias said,
growing a little frustrated.
"It will be soon, lady, if you tell me the words. With your permission,
I'll sing it from here to Harrowdale."
"I'll write them down later," Alias promised the musician,
"and leave them with Jhaele before I go."
"Thank you, lady." The young man smiled. "Excuse me," he
said, bowed to Alias, and went back to his stool to play more sets with Olive.
Alias looked up and spotted Jhaele just then. "Would you excuse me,
Your Lordship? There's someone I'd like to say hello to."
"Certainly," Mourngrym said, nodding. He watched Alias walk over
to the innkeep, and then he turned to focus his attention on the musicians. The
swordswoman was acceptable, he decided, a little addled maybe, but nice. From
experience, though, he knew it wouldn't hurt to keep an eye on the halfling.
Alias went up to the bar, smiling at Jhaele. The woman smiled back, but
still gave no sign of recognition, so Alias asked her, "Jhaele, do you
remember the Company of the Swanmay?"
"Yes, I do." The innkeep's smile spread further across her worn
features. "They were hell-raisers, that lot."
"How many were there?"
"Well, let's see, The two fighters, a pair of thieves, a cleric, and
Kith, the would-be mage. Six in all. All women."
"You don't remember me?"
Jhaele stared at Alias for a long moment. "No, I'm sorry, lady. I can't
say that I do. The Swanmays would sometimes pick up strays, but none of them
stayed in my memory, I'm afraid. I won't forget you now, though. Your song was
wonderful. I'm honored you sang it in my taproom."
"But, Jhaele, you taught me that song," Alias insisted.
Jhaele laughed. "You must have me mistaken for another, lady. I can't
sing a note. Never could."
Alias opened her mouth to laugh, thinking Jhaele was teasing her, but the
sincerity in the innkeeper's face unsettled her. She blushed and fled through
the door to the kitchen. Jhaele looked after her, but the swordswoman ran out
the side door into the night.
"Something eating at that one," Jhaele muttered and returned to
her chores at the bar.
The sun had just slipped behind the distant Desertsmouth Mountains, and the
sky was a deep, dark blue. The night air was cold, but Alias was too furious to
notice as she strode hastily away from The Old Skull eastward down the road
toward the common and the river.
"This doesn't make any sense," she growled. "I wasn't some
stray the Swanmays picked up! I was a member! For three seasons!"
It was one thing for this new lord, Mourngrym, to forget the tale of the
Swanmays, but Alias had wintered twice in The Old Skull. She and Kith and
Belinda had spent at least a hundred evenings in Jhaele Silvermane's company.
The innkeep had mulled wine especially for them and taught them bawdy songs
about men in general and certain male adventurers in particular. And Jhaele had
taught her the song about the Standing Stone.
"How could she forget me?" Alias whispered angrily. Her throat constricted
as tears welled in her eyes. She gulped uncomfortably for air.
How can you blame Jhaele, when you don't even remember Elminster? her
conscience said. To hear Mourngrym describe him, you'd think this sage was a
town landmark. I could not possibly have missed noticing him in a town as small
as Shadowdale. And even if I had, according to Mourngrym I should have heard
about him from people in the outside world. He's supposed to be famous.
Maybe, she thought, Mourngrym was exaggerating the sage's renown. Anyway,
Mourngrym hadn't been here seven years ago either, so how could he know for
sure if Elminster was around then? Maybe these Elminster's Tales that
Mourngrym mentioned weren't all that accurate. How could this Elminster mention
the Swanmays and not mention me? How dare he forget me?
Having passed the dozen or so buildings in the heart of town, and exhausted
by her tirade, Alias considered going back to the inn to sleep. Secretly, she
hoped that when she woke up she would discover the disappointments of the
evening had all been part of another bad dream. That's about as likely as my
tattoo disappearing in the morning, she taunted herself. She walked on.
She passed Tulba the weaver's house. Next to it was a small, well-beaten
path leading up to the side of the grassy rise known as the Old Skull. She
could just barely make out a dilapidated sign by the path. It was marked with
an upturned crescent with a ball hovering between its horns.
Alias stepped onto the path to inspect the sign more closely. Below the
symbol, in the common tongue, was written, "No Trespassing. Violators
should notify next of kin. Have a pleasant day. —Elminster."
Alias's eyes traveled the length of the path up to the hillock, where it
ended at a ramshackle building perched awkwardly on the side of the rise. It
was a sort of tower, but so many additions were built against it, cluttered
with further additions leaning against or built on top of them, that it was
hard to pick out the original structure. However, a spire of solid stone
reached at least three stories higher than all the more recent constructions.
Thick vines of flowering kudzu covered the tower and additions.
Alias remembered every other building she had passed, from Lulhannon's
pottery to the weaver's, but the path and the sign and the building were a
blank. Alias had never seen them before. Ever. Not once in the thousand times
she'd traveled this road. It was possible to miss a sage—he might have stayed
inside all winter to protect himself from the cold—but she couldn't have missed
this building.
The path could have been beaten hard in a year, the sign could have
weathered to look that old in seven years, but the building was ancient. Kudzu
grew like crazy, but it would have taken centuries for its vines to grow so thick
and high.
Maybe there were more trees here before, blocking the view, Alias mused. But
then, wouldn't I have seen it from the top of Old Skull? I scrambled up there
often enough with Kith.
With a surge of excitement, Alias began to wonder if Cassana and company
wanted her to forget Elminster for a good reason. Maybe he could tell her more
about her sigils than Dimswart. With a new determination, ignoring the sign,
she strode up the path, planning to join Akabar as he waited on Elminster's
arrival.
Reaching the building, she knocked loudly. She waited several minutes but
there was no reply, even though lights could clearly be seen glittering in the
upper windows of the tower. Certain that someone was within, Alias called out,
"Hello," and knocked again even louder. A shadow went across one of
the windows. Several minutes passed, but still no one answered her or came to
let her in.
With just a trace of embarrassment, Alias tried the doorknob, but it would
not turn. She tried other doors, and even a window, but found them all held
fast. With a huff she spun about and marched back down the footpath.
At the road she turned east and walked down the left-hand fork of the road
that followed the River Ashaba south. "I'm going to find someone who
remembers me," she declared. "Sylune will remember me. She didn't
know me well, but she never forgets anyone."
In her haste she was oblivious to the shouting that came from the tower
behind her.
14
The Scribe and the Old Man
"What do you mean, more forms?" Akabar bellowed, finally losing
his temper. Secretly he hoped that his shouts would gain the attention of someone
besides the bureaucratic fool of a scribe who stood before him—someone with the
insight to understand the importance of his problem, someone who would rescue
him from this morass of paperwork. Someone like Elminster.
"Well, ummm, here," Lhaeo the scribe said and pointed to a place
on a form Akabar had completed over an hour ago. He blinked at the southern
mage through a strange set of thick lenses wrapped in wire which perched
precariously on his nose. "Here, where you mentioned that you have more
than one wife, you should have gone to line twenty-three and listed all your
wives' mothers' names, instead of line twenty-two, where you listed your first
wife's mother's name. That error is going to require a special schedule HL, in
order to keep our files straight."
"Files?" shrieked Akabar. "Look around you!" he
demanded. "Does it look as if anything has been filed here in the last
millennium?"
The question was purely rhetorical. The scribe's outer office, which also
served as a waiting room for those seeking audience with the great Elminster,
was a firetrap waiting for a spark. Parchment scrolls, leatherbound tomes,
sheaves of loose leaves of paper, empty folders clearly labeled
Important
or
Confidential, and bark textbooks stained with berry ink, and chalk
dust lay on every available horizontal surface or leaned against a vertical
surface. Colored streamers, on which were scrawled the most exotic letters,
hung from the ceiling.
Besides the gray slate used to write temporary messages, such as
Attend
Azoun's Coronation and
Warn Myth Drannor of Attack, there were stone
and clay tablets and sheets of soft metals to hold more permanent messages, the
ones to be handed down through history—
Pick Up Laundry and
Pay
Lhaeo.
All this, of course, was a tribute to Lhaeo's ability to intimidate
adventurers and keep them from disturbing Elminster. Akabar sensed this to some
extent. At least, he could not believe that anyone, including Lhaeo, really
gave a bat's dropping for what he wrote down. His perception was that Lhaeo's
forms were some sort of test of his patience or intelligence or desperation. If
he just stuck it out long enough, he was certain, Lhaeo would finally recognize
his worthiness as a candidate and remind his master that a southern mage waited
in the outer office.
However, Akabar had been waiting five hours—three at the inn and two in this
dismal, cramped room. His patience was spent, his intelligence exhausted on
figuring out the ridiculous forms. Desperation was his final strategy. He
considered dashing from the room to the tower, but without Lhaeo's guidance
through the maze of halls and doors and rooms, he wasn't sure he could find it.
Even if I did find the stairs, Akabar mused, I have no guarantee that Elminster
is in the tower.
Lheao shrugged. "You must understand, Elminster is a very busy man.
This is the only way we have of determining if a problem is truly important
enough to warrant interrupting his already overcrowded schedule."
"Just what size dragon does it take to land in this room to merit the
sage's attention?"
"Oh, Elminster doesn't consult with dragons," Lhaeo assured the
mage. "Consults on dragons, perhaps, but not with them. The sage is very,
very busy, and he does not, as a rule, waste his time with dragons. That's what
adventurers are for. And if, um, when you get in to see him, I would advise you
to mention dragons as little as possible."
"Look," Akabar said, "I understand that the sage is busy.
When I got his message to hurry over, I assumed he would see me on his dinner
break or something."
"Dinner break?" The scribe used a delicate finger to push the wire
rims around the lenses higher up his nose. "I don't think Elminster has
taken a dinner break since, let's see . . . umm ... this is the Year of the
Prince, then that makes it. . ." Lhaeo consulted a calendar.
"Does anyone ever make it past this blizzard of parchment?" Akabar
growled.
"Well," Lhaeo sat and thought for half a moment. "There was a
delegation from the Forest of Anauroch."
"Anauroch is a desert, not a forest," Akabar said.
"Well, now it is, yes."
"Was that supposed to be a joke?" Akabar snapped.
"Am I laughing?" the scribe asked, looking at Akabar over the rim
of his glasses.
"No."
"Then it couldn't be a joke, could it?"
"Look," said Akabar, "I realize the sage can't spare time for
everyone. I wouldn't bother him with a petty problem. I'm a mage of no small
water. Another member of the sage community, Master Dimswart of Suzail, was
unable to handle all the complexities of my case. He recommended I see
Elminster. I traveled all this way to do so."
"Oh!" Lhaeo exclaimed, his eyes lighting up behind the thick
lenses. "You're a referral! Well, then we need to start again with a
different set of forms. One moment, I'll get them." The scribe put his
hand in a drawer and drew out a bird's nest of shredded paper. "No, this
can't be them. They must be in that other cabinet."
Akabar counted to ten.
Far below, someone knocked on a door, but in his search for the referral
forms, Lhaeo ignored it.
"Here we go," the scribe announced. "Last copy, too, so we
need to fill out an acquisition memo to file with the local merchants for the
next shipment of parchment." The referral form passed dangerously close to
a candle flame. "Oooch, singed it a little, but, uh, we can just, yes, we
can just make out an addendum form to explain that the singed parchment was my
fault."
From below, someone knocked again, only louder.
"Isn't someone going to answer that?" Akabar asked.
"Well, no."
'Why not?"
'It's way after business hours. We're closed."
"But, I'm here," Akabar said, then nearly bit off his tongue.
"So you are. We'll need another form for that. Nocturnal
visitors."
The knocking stopped.
"Now, please, include as much information on the sage Dimswart as you
can recall. What you asked him on this line, what he answered on this one, what
he didn't tell you on this one. Any reasons you may have to believe he may have
been incorrect on this line."
Akabar dipped a quill in the inkpot and began again. He wished he'd brought
Alias along. Broadswords had such a nice, satisfying way of cutting through red
tape. It wasn't until a minute later, upon discovering there was a form to fill
out because Alias, not he, was the sage's real client, that Akabar lost his
temper again and renewed his loud verbal assault on the sage's scribe.
*****
Sylune's hut was atop a low rise overlooking the road and the River Ashaba.
Alias remembered the dwelling as small but comfortable, covered with vines,
with smoke always drifting from a chimney for a cooking fire. She remembered
Sylune as a radiantly beautiful woman with shining silver hair. Kith had told
her that Sylune was at least a century old but kept young with her magics.
Alias had always suspected that Kith planned to use her power toward the same
goal, improving and maintaining her looks.
The thought put a smile on her face that disappeared as Alias topped the
rise. Illuminated by moonlight, Sylune's hut was nothing but rubble, its
timbers and stone shattered and scattered along the hilltop. A rocky stump,
once the fireplace, was the only indication that a dwelling had once stood
there.
"Bhaal's breath," Alias cursed as she walked through the remains
of the hut. The damage had occurred years ago. Her boots struck an occasional
flagstone, but the majority of the floor had long since disappeared beneath
grass and creepers.
The hairs rose on the back of the swordswoman's neck, and she realized
Shadowdale was no safer a haven for her than Shadow Gap had been. She
immediately regretted leaving her sword in her room. Then she thought, what
difference does it make? The sword was useful against the assassins, but it
could never have cut through the crystal elemental the way Dragonbait's did,
and only the barbarian's sword could have defeated the kalmari.
Reason told her to flee back to the inn and the safety of her companions,
but feelings of pain and anger overwhelmed her and made her fey. I'm sick of
retreating, she thought. I want a fight.
"This is as good a place as any," Alias muttered. Her voice rose
in volume and pitch. "First, there's the old ruin—an abandoned or
burned-out shell. Darkness all around. The stage is set." She began
shouting. "What are you waiting for, O mighty masters? Here's where the nasty,
creeping horror lurches out at me, isn't it?"
She laughed. "What's the matter? Can't make up your minds what to send
this time? How 'bout a beholder, all round with flashing eyes? Oh, no, wait!
I've got it! Send a mind flayer or, better yet, an intellect devourer! It'll
starve, you know, because you're driving me crazy!"
Her raging bellows carried across the Ashaba.
"Show yourselves, you cowards!" she shrieked, losing all control
of her anger. "I'll teach you to make a puppet out of me! Come on, attack
me! I dare you!"
"Well, I don't want to," a reedy voice answered her from the
fireplace. "But if ye don't stop shouting, I will."
Alias whirled around, but all she could see in the dark was a shadow near
the ruined stump of the hearth. She instantly came to her senses and reached
down to grab the dagger from her boot.
"I'm . . . sorry," she whispered, still crouching, ready to cast
the blade if the shadow made any sudden moves. It appeared to be an ordinary
man, but then the kalmari had looked like an ordinary merchant in her dream
until it was ripped asunder and the deadly cloud rose from its shell. "I
thought I was alone up here."
"Talk to thyself often, do ye?"
"Well, I mean, I thought someone might be listening Someone far
off—hopefully."
"Keep shouting like that," said the shadow, "and ye'll bring
the entire dale up here. I was about to lay a watch-fire. Do ye care to help me
tend it?"
Without waiting for an answer, the figure turned awav from her and knelt by
the hearth. Alias stood up straight and the tension she'd felt eased as the
cool metal hilt of the dagger warmed in her palm. The figure by the hearth
hummed an aimless tune while piling the logs and tinder together. There was a
spark, then a second flash, and the dry tinder went up, casting a circle of
light and warmth from the center of the ruined hut.
Illuminated, the shadow transformed into a beanpole of a man, dressed in
weatherbeaten and stained brown robes His gray beard was stringy and unkempt,
and his hood was thrown back to reveal a balding pate which gleamed red from
the flames of the fire. He seemed nothing more than an elderly, crotchety
goatherd.
"If ve aren't going to take advantage of the warmth," the old man
said, "at least come into the light so I can see ye use that dagger."
Alias stepped into the firelight, feeling foolish for having been caught
raging at fate, but even more foolish for having threatened an old man. She sat
down crosslegged before the hearth.
"I'm looking for the river witch Sylune," she explained
The old man sat down facing her and leaned his back against the broken
fireplace wall. He pulled a ball of tobacco from a pocket and used his thumb to
shove it into a thick, clay pipe. He looked at her thoughtfully. "She's
dead" he said quietly.
"What?"
"She's dead," repeated the old man. "Deceased. Here no more.
People die. Even here." He lit the pipe with the end of a burning twig.
"How?" Alias whispered. The news hit her like a blow to the gut.
She had never been close to Kith's mentor, but everywhere she went, anytime she
felt close to getting some answers, her efforts were thwarted. I'd been
counting on Sylune more than I realized, she thought.
"She died battling a dragon," the old man explained. "A
flight of 'em descended on the region a couple winters back. They destroyed a
bunch a' towns. One of 'em took advantage of Elminster bein' out of the
country. When this dragon attacked Shadowdale, Sylune was the only power
around. She didn't stand a chance, but she had this staff."
Alias realized that the old man meant a magical staff, a staff of power.
"She broke it across the critter's nose, and everything went up in a
pillar of flame—the dragon, the staff, and Sylune. It happened right across the
way there." The old man pointed to the other side of the river.
By the moonlight, Alias's eyes could just pick out the naked, burned-out
area of the woods. "Damn," she whispered softly.
"Aye."
There was silence between them for a while. Then the old man spoke again.
"I heard thy singing at Jhaele's," he said. "I never thought I'd
hear that old song again."
"You know it?" Alias's head snapped up.
"I heard it once."
"Where?"
"Ye tell me first," the old man insisted, "where ye learned
it."
"I learned it from Jhaele," Alias said.
The old man laughed. "Jhaele! Impossible. The woman's tone deaf"
Alias shrugged. "She doesn't remember teaching me, but she did. I know
she did," she said vehemently.
The old man peered at Alias through half-closed eyes, considering her
answer. Finally he asked, "Do ye know any other good, old songs? One about
the moon maybe?" He pointed to the bright sphere. "And the lights
that follow it?"
"The Tears of Selune," Alias said.
"It's a love song, isn't it?" the old man asked.
"Yes," Alias answered. "About how the goddess of the moon
weeps because her lover, the sun, is always on the other side of the
world."
"That's the one. Where'd ye learn it?"
"You want me to sing it?" she asked.
"That's not what I asked, now, is it?"
"No."
"Well?" the old man prompted.
Alias did not answer. He'd laughed when she said Jhaele had taught her the
song about the Standing Stone. If she told him she'd learned The Tears of
Selune from a Harper, he probably wouldn't believe that either.
As though he were reading her mind, the old man asked "Do ye think ye
learned it from a Harper maybe?"
It was Alias's turn to stare at him.
"Your short friend, the bard, was singing a song about Myth Drannor.
She said a Harper had taught it to her."
Alias snorted. "Sounds like Olive."
"You savin' she didn't learn it from a Harper?"
"She learned it from me," Alias said.
"Which leaves the question—where did ye learn these songs?"
"A Harper," she admitted.
"I thought so," the old man said smugly. "What was this
Harper's name?"
Alias thought very hard, but she drew a complete blank. "I don't
know," she whispered.
"I thought not," the old man said.
"No, you don't understand. I'm telling you the truth. I just don't
always remember things."
"Oh, I understand, all right. More than ye know. I believe ye. Ye
learned the song from a Harper, but he never told ye his name."
"That's not possible," Alias said, wracking her brain for memories
of the Harper. "We were close. . . ." Her voice trailed off. She
could not even remember the Harper's face, let alone where or how they had met.
"He was a Harper," she insisted.
"He was," the old man echoed.
Warmed by the fire, Alias pushed her sleeves up to her elbows without
thinking.
"An interesting tattoo you have there," the old man said, nodding
at her right arm.
Alias was about to pull her sleeve back down, but the old man snatched her
wrist and pulled her arm toward him. The firelight flickered over the blue
sigils. The markings remained still for the moment: they could almost pass as a
normal tattoo. Yet, Alias felt uncomfortable revealing the sigils to strangers.
"It's not mine," she said.
"Oh. Ye just rented it for the month of Mirtul?'" the old man
joked.
"Someone put it on me without my permission," Alias explained.
"I must have been drunk." She shrugged.
The graybeard raised his eyebrows and squinted. "Nice work, nice work,
indeed. I've seen naught like it. They aren't very nice symbols, are
they?"
"What would you know about them?" Alias asked, trying to yank her
arm back, but the old man's grip was surprisingly firm.
He tapped the sigil at the crook of her arm. "Flame Daggers," he
muttered.
"Fire Knives," Alias corrected.
"Oh, right. Right. They're a guild of Thieves and Assassins from
Cormyr. Young Azoun sent 'em packing. They operate out of a warehouse in
Westgate now."
Surprised by the old man's knowledge, Alias quit struggling and let her arm
rest in his grip.
"And the two below," she prompted him.
He snorted. "What do I look like? A sage?" he retorted.
"Well, yes, kind of," Alias said.
The old man chuckled. "Ye can't live in a town as small as this one
without pickin' up stuff. Elminster's always out advisin' on the lambin' and
the hayin', always tellin' stories. He could tell ye what these were without
blinkin'."
"We've never met," Alias replied with a sniff.
"I suppose not. He doesn't care much for adventurers."
"Oh. I suppose he prefers greengrocers," Alias retorted.
"Greengrocers?"
"Townfolk. Farmers. Traders. People more interested in profit than
adventure,"
The old man chuckled again. "They've got land and a town to show for
it. What have ye got?"
Alias had never thought about that before. She had some gold, but it would
be gone before long. If she'd actually got a chest full of treasure from Mist,
she could have bought herself some property. But then she'd be a greengrocer,
too, and she had no intention of retiring, ever. All she wanted to do was
travel freely throughout the Realms.
"My memories," she answered, but she knew that wasn't saying much,
at least not in her case.
The old man grinned. "Ye are smarter than ye look." He tapped her
wrist where the snake pattern wound about empty space. "There's nothing in
this place."
"I got lucky, escaped before they finished, I think."
"Ye think so, do ye? Maybe."
"Do you know the other sigils?" Alias asked.
The old man was quiet for so long Alias thought he had drifted off to sleep.
He let her arm slip from his grasp. Suddenly, he said, "Zrie and
Cassana!"
Alias started. The old fool couldn't be just a goatherd and know that, unless
. . . unless Olive had managed to babble something in the bar before Dragonbait
could stop her.
"What do you know about them?" she asked.
"It's an old story, one that happened before ye were born—quite a
scandalous one." The old man clucked his tongue and poked at the fire with
a stick, sending sparks and flames flying.
"Well?" prompted Alias.
"A deep subject, that," the old man teased.
"The story," Alias insisted.
"Oh, the story of Zrie Prakis and Cassana?" the graybeard asked.
"It's quite common, ye know."
"I've never heard it," Alias said. "They didn't know the
story in Cormyr."
"Oh, Cormyr;' the old man muttered. "Well, they wouldn't. But
around here, in the Dales and in Sembia, I think everyone knows the tale. They
turned it into an opera in the Living City. It's a long-winded piece where one
character tells another to be quiet in a long, screaming five minute speech,
and the other replies he'll be quiet in another long, loud five minute speech.
Absurd thing, opera."
"The story," Alias whined.
The old man clucked disapprovingly. "Not the patient type, are ye? Ye
know, if ye just sit quiet and listen, ye'11 learn a lot more than if ye poke
at people all the time."
Alias remembered that Nameless had said something very similar. It was true.
She wanted the information poured into her. She didn't like the game of asking
questions and then having to listen to all the roundabout replies prople gave
her. "Please," she asked.
The old man sniffed. "I ought to make you travel to the Living City and
listen to the opera."
Alias glowered.
"Very well. I suppose that I'd better make it the short version before
ve explode, hmm? Ye wouldn't appreciate the poetry of the tale, or the subplots
of the opera, would ye? I'll cut to the heart of the matter.
"Zrie and Cassana met when they were both magelings. They fell in love,
pledged their eternal faithfulness. Then they parted. In one version of the
story their masters send them to the opposite ends of the Inner Sea for their
journeyman quests. In another version, one of them lands in the ethereal plane
and it takes him or her years to return. In the opera Cassana is kidnapped by
pirates.
"Anyway, they each grow vain, proud, haughty, and very powerful. When
they meet again, somewhere in the south, they end up burying their love for one
another in an argument over who is the most powerful. They duel over it, and
Zrie loses big. Cassana kills him. Not real tragic, considering what a
mean-spirited cuss he was, but Cassana feels remorse over slaying her first and
true love. Being, by this time, a basically sick, depraved person herself,
Cassana packs Zrie's charred bones in a glass sarcophagus that she keeps by her
bedside for the rest of her life."
The old man was silent for several moments. "That's all?" Alias
asked.
"Of course, that's all," the old man snapped. "I didn't want
to get ye all hot and bothered by going into too many details. In the opera
ye've got to sit through a description of every pearl on Cassana's gown when
Zrie first meets her. I don't imagine ye're much interested either in the
story's symbolism or the implications it makes about the nature of power and
evil, are ye?"
"No," Alias admitted.
"Then what's your problem?"
Alias shrugged. "Nothing. I was just hoping it would shed some light on
how I got these things." She held up her arm to indicate the sigils.
"Ye could always go to the Living City and catch the opera."
"No, thanks."
"Do ye wish to hear the story about Moander?" the old man asked.
Alias looked up, startled. He did know a lot. He wasn't simply some old
goatherd. To recognize most of the sigils on her arm he had to be some sort of
wise man or mage. Probably an ex-adventurer himself. "I thought the elves
banished him from the Realms," she said.
"They wish," the old man snickered. "No. The best the elves
could do was use powerful enchantments to lock Moander up deep beneath the
ruins of his temple in Yulash. They wiped out his priests and priestesses,
hoping the god's power in this world would shrink to nothing if he was starved
of worship."
"Did he?"
The old man shrugged. "Probably not. A lot of Moander's worshipers
survived and fled south, where they resurrected the priesthood. Every now and
then Zhentil Keep or Hillsfar forces—whichever one happens to be squatting in
the ruins of Yulash at the time—come across a party of Moander worshipers
trying to release their god. They're usually executed as looters, but they keep
trying. There was this prophesy, see, about a non-born child freeing the
Darkbringer—that's what they call Moander. The priests of Moander have tried to
force the event, no need to go into the gory details about how they try and get
non-born children, but so far they've all failed. Non-born child—mean anything
to ye?"
Alias shook her head. "No. I remember being born."
The old man laughed as though she had said something funny.
Alias asked, "You know anything about this last one?" She pointed
to the blue-on-blue-on-hlue bull's eye between Meander's symbol and the blank
space at her wrist.
"Its a new one on me."
"That's just great," Alias muttered. She shoved the shavings of
the twig into the fire, wiped her dagger clean, and sheathed it. "I knew
the other ones already. This is the one I have to find out about."
"Why?"
"Because I don't know anything about it," Alias said, exasperated.
"Ye think it will make a big difference in thy life?"
"It might," she insisted.
"If I were ye, I'd work on the assumption that it is big and
evil."
"Kind of broad assumptions."
"No broader than the one ye've obviously made about the sixth space by
your wrist," the old man said.
"It's empty," Alias objected.
"There's nothing worse than nothing."
Reminded of her missing memories, Alias could not disagree. "You've
been some help. Can I pay you something?" she asked, uncertain whether she
would offend his pride.
"All ye have to show for thy adventuring life are thy memories,"
he reminded her. "Were ye planning to pay me in those?"
Alias smiled. "I have some gold."
"1 don't need gold. Suppose I asked ye to never sing again. Ever. Would
ye do that?"
"That bad, am I?" she joked.
"I'm serious."
Alias looked into the old man's eyes. He held her gaze without blinking.
"This is about those songs, isn't it? You didn't tell me—Who did you
hear them from?"
"Probably from the same person ye did."
"A Harper?" Alias asked.
The old man nodded.
"What was his name?"
The old man did not answer.
"Tell me his name." Alias lunged forward and shook the man by the
shoulders. "Say his name."
A slow grin crept over the old man's mouth. "Why don't ye say it?"
he asked.
"Because I don't remember it!" she shouted, shaking him with every
word.
The old man put his hand up to her cheek and stroked it gently. "I'm
sorry," he said.
Alias took a deep breath and released the old man. She slid out of his
reach. "It's not your fault," she answered. "I just forget
things sometimes. I'm sorry I shook you. I don't know what came over me."
"Not remembering makes ye angry?"
Alias hesitated. It didn't make her angry. She looked into the old man's
eyes. "It makes me frightened, and that makes me angry."
"A terrible curse, not remembering," he whispered.
Alias shrugged. "Could be worse. Could have forgotten my own
name."
"What's that?" the old man asked.
"Alias."
"Unusual name."
"It's pretty common in Westgate," Alias said.
"Is it, now?" The old man chuckled.
"Why won't you tell me the Harper's name?" Alias asked.
"I'm an old man. . . ." His voice trailed off.
"Are you saying you forgot it, too?"
Her companion did not reply.
"You won't lie about it, will you. You haven't forgotten. Why won't you
tell me?"
"Harpers are a secret organization."
"You've taken some sort of oath?"
"I can't tell ye," the old man said. "I'm sorry."
Alias sighed.
"If I told ye about the sigil ye don't know, would ye agree not to
sing?"
"You do know it!" Alias growled.
The old man shook his head. "No. But I might be able to find out. Would
ye pay me what I ask?"
Alias tilted her head in puzzlement. It was a stupid request, but she had to
consider if the information were worth the price. It might help her keep a step
ahead of Cassana, Fire Knives, and company if she could discover the last
secret partner. And, after all, she was a swordswoman, not a damned bard. Olive
might be a little disappointed if she stopped teaching her songs, but no one
else would care.
Except me, she thought, Singing has consoled me when I grieved and brought
me joy and pleasure when times were better. Everyone sang. Even people with no
talent for it. Nine circles of Hell! Even orcs sang. How could anyone ask
anyone else to give that up? Why? It isn't my singing the old man objects to,
she realized, but the songs themselves. But they're good songs. Everyone likes
them. A Harper taught them to me.
Suddenly, the old man made Alias nervous. She slid farther away from him and
rose to her feet. "I won't!" she answered. "They're good songs!
They deserve to be sung! How can you ask such a thing? It's cruel, wicked,
evil!" She backed away from the fire, turned, and fled down the path.
The path lay in the hill's moonshadow. Alias had a difficult time picking
out the trail. She sunk her right foot into a chuckhole filled with water. She
lost her balance and came down hard on her left knee, her body sprawled across
the wet, muddy ground.
She heard a chuckle on the path behind her. She could see her own shadow in
the soft, glowing light coming up behind her. Then a hand reached down under
her arm and lifted her to her feet. It was the old man's left hand. In his
right he held a yellow crystal that illuminated the area around them evenly,
without the annoying flicker of a lamp.
"Are ye all right?" he asked.
Alias yanked away from her rescuer without replying. Her right ankle ached
some, but she did not think it was a serious sprain.
"Ye'd better take this," the old man suggested. "It's a
finder's stone. Help's the lost find their way." He held the glowing
crystal out toward her. His features, lit from below, looked sinister.
I ought to give him a shove and run off again, she thought, but she couldn't
resist the temptation to ask, "How much is it gonna cost me?"
"Mourngrym thought we should help out supplyin' ye, in thanks for
takin' care of the monster in the gap. Just doin' my bit."
At the mention of Mourngrym's name, Alias felt a little calmer. The lord of
Shadowdale had been gracious, and, well, normal, even if some of his citizens
were a little strange. She reached out with her sword arm. The blue sigils
reflected back the light, but remained still. She took that as an indication
the stone wasn't some harmful magic, like the crystal elemental or the kalmari.
She took the stone from the old man's hand.
She looked up at the old man and held his eyes for a dozen heartbeats.
"Why?" she whispered.
"Try to remember this, Alias," he said, "good and evil aren't
always." He turned about and began climbing back up the hill.
"Aren't always what?" Alias called after him.
"Good and evil," he called back.
Alias watched until his retreating form disappeared into the darkness. She
had no idea what he meant, but she was grateful for the light.
"Thank you," she whispered. Then she jumped. She thought she heard
the old man whisper, "Ye're welcome, Alias," right in her ear. Only a
freak breeze and my imagination, she tried to assure herself. Even so, she
scurried down the path and headed back to town, tired of the night's
adventuring.
*****
Back atop the hillock that once held the hut of the river witch Sylune, the
old man used a stick of charred wood to sketch out Alias's five sigils on one
of the flagstones. He tapped the unknown one with his stick and frowned.
"Why is it," he muttered, "that the years seem to fly by, but
the nights seem to last forever?"
15
Olive's Deal and Dragonbait's Secret
It was long past midnight when Olive weaved her way to bed. The local
merchants had been thankful for the figurative nose-tweaking Ruskettle and her
companions had given the Iron Throne by destroying the kalmari, and they showed
their appreciation in the form of several kegs of Jhaele's finest ale.
It was no Luiren Rivengut, Olive thought, but still a potent brew. With
Akabar off kissing up to some high sage, her high-and-mighty ladyship
disappearing into the night, and the lizard watching everything mutely from a
corner, someone had to accept all the congratulations and free brew being
passed around.
Actually, Olive had a dim recollection of Alias returning to the inn. At the
time, the bard had feared the sell-sword might resume her foray into musical
entertainment, but Alias had simply hurried to her room.
The trouble with humans, thought the halfling as she rested on the second
story landing, is that they're no fun at parties.
She glared at the stairs she had yet to climb. And their buildings are the
wrong size, she added. No doubt her ladyship thinks it amusing making me climb
steps that come up to my knees.
Olive wondered if some servant would carry her up to her room if she
pretended to pass out. More likely, she realized, they'd call out her ladyship
or her pet lizard to dispose of my body. It doesn't matter, anyway. I'd never
willingly suffer the indignity of being carried by a human. It's bad enough
putting up with the pats on her head. Some day, Olive knew, she'd take a bite
out of one of those hands— when she could afford to be considered a
"tempermental" artist.
"Happy thoughts, Olive-girl," she muttered to herself. That was
her motto when living among humans. No matter how patronizing or cruel or
stupid they are, she told herself, keep a smile plastered to your face. Tonight
wasn't too hard. This celebration, she realized, was the group's first tangible
reward since they rescued me from the dragon.
Olive ordinarily would have considered herself a fool for offering to share
the loot she'd secreted from the red's lair, but the halfling had been grateful
to Alias for her rescue. She'd even forgiven the sell-sword for lugging her
around like a sack of potatos as they made their escape.
For a foolish human, Olive thought, her ladyship sure knew what made dragons
tick. Olive shivered at the thought that, were it not for Alias, she would
still be a prisoner beneath the Storm Horns, wasting away until she was too
feeble to sing. Then the dragon would make a light meal of her, an appetizer
before a hearty meal of a herd of cattle or a brace of villagers.
This thought distressed Olive so badly that she craved the comfort of a late
snack. However, the thought of all those stairs deterred her from raiding the
kitchen.
She scrambled up the remaining stairs quickly, to get then; over with. then
zigzagged down the long corridor to the Green Room. She was sober enough,
however, to notice the bits of shaved wood on the floor before the door.
Olive had put the wood shavings between the door and the jamb at halfling
waist-level, where a human was unlikely to spot them fluttering to the floor
should they open the door. In her mind rose the image of someone malicious
pawing through her things, looking for treasure.
The halfling knew that the mage hadn't come back yet and the lizard was
still sitting by the taproom hearth. Could it be her high-and-mightiness? Olive
wondered. Or an outsider?
Olive turned the knob slowly and eased tlie door open a crack. With her eye
to the opening, she could see the human-sized overstuffed chair and tea table
that stood opposite the bed. A single, tallow taper illuminated the room,
affording Olive a sight to warm the chilliest of halfling hearts. A small
figure seated in the chair was counting and recounting high stacks of thin,
glittering, silverish coins.
"Ahem," Olive coughed politely.
The small, seated figure looked up. An inhumanly wide grin spread across his
childish face. He was a male halfling dressed in the robes of a southerner.
"Excellent," her guest said. "I wondered how long it would be
before you stopped taking bows and decided to retire for the evening."
"An artist never tires of her audience," Olive replied as she
entered the room, scanning it for other intruders. There was no one else.
"Though, alas, the opposite is often true," she added.
"But there are audiences, and there are audiences."
"True enough. But that is a discussion for another day. Who now graces
my presence with this display of breaking and entering?"
The little figure slid from the chair and took a moment to smooth his robes.
Then, he thrust out a hand and said, "Call me Phalse."
Olive closed the door behind her and stepped forward. She gave Phalse's hand
a single, brief squeeze, as was the custom among halflings. "False
what?" she asked.
"Just Phalse will suffice for now," the intruder answered, smiling
smugly.
He had the most peculiar eyes, Olive noted. Dark blue where the whites
should have been, sky blue irises and pupils the blue-white of hot iron. It
must be some trick of the candlelight, she decided.
"You are Olive Ruskettle, companion to the warrior Alias?"
"We're traveling in the same direction," Olive corrected, hoisting
herself onto the mattress and perching on the edge. Phalse hopped back into the
chair and leaned back against the cushions with his legs stretched out across
the seat.
"And your destination is ... ?"
"I'll know when I get there," Olive replied. "Bards need to
travel, to gain information, pass on tales."
"I see," Phalse said. "I think i have a tale for you."
Carefully, he pushed a single stack of coins across the tea table in Olive's
direction.
The bard kept her eves on the coins. From the bed, she could see they were
not silver, but platinum. Keeping her voice as level as she could, she said,
"I'm always interested in tales."
"I thought you might be," said the other halfling, flashing another
wide grin, a grin too wide for a human and almost too wide for a halfling.
"It's a tale about two people who were traveling in the same direction.
One was a woman, the other a human female."
"Is this woman a bard?" Olive asked.
"If it makes a suitable story," Phalse replied, pushing another
stack of coins toward Olive.
"This human female had done something horrible. She was a very sick
human female—she carried a curse, you see, a curse which could not easily be
removed. Fortunately, certain powers were seeking to capture and imprison her
until such time as a cure might be found for her.
"Unfortunately, part of this human female's curse was that she
deliberately avoided these powers. As a matter of fact, this human female
killed all the agents sent to bring her back to those who would help her. Of
course, the woman who was a bard knew nothing of this; she did not realize what
peril she was in."
A third stack of platinum joined the first two.
"Horrors," Olive said, her voice still even, her eyes still glued
to the money on the tea table. "What could this woman who was a bard
possibly do when she found out these things? I take it this human female was
much, much bigger and stronger than the woman who was a bard?"
"True," Phalse said, "but according to the tale a helpful
stranger approached the woman and offered her a ring set with a yellow
stone." He twisted his wrist and revealed a golden band set with a large,
jagged crystal.
"Nice palm," Olive complimented. "I almost didn't see it.
What does this tale say is the ring's power? '
"The tale doesn't say, exactly. Only that the stranger offers it to the
woman who is a bard as a token of appreciation from these powers, should she
agree to continue traveling in the human female's direction and keep an eye on
her."
"I fail to see why any woman, bard or no, would hang around a human
female if she were so powerful and posed such a threat. Would this human female
have a short, dragon guardian and a human mage for companions?"
"It would make a good tale," Phalse agreed.
"Personally, were I this woman," Olive said, "I would seek to
put great distance between me and the human female in question, having been
warned that she poses such a danger. What could possibly encourage the woman in
your tale to remain near this dangerous human female?"
"Well, for one thing, this woman wanted to do the right thing and help
these powers find this human female before she did anymore horrible things.
This woman who was a bard was brave and clever enough to manage it."
Phalse shoved his remaining stacks of coins toward the others. One of the
stacks toppled, and the slender coins bounced and rolled about the floor in a
mercantile dance. Phalse did not interrupt their ringing, clattering music. He
simply continued to smile.
As Olive watched the spilled coins, her mind raced toward a decision. She
had no reason to doubt this "tale" was not a true one, and several
incidents supported it. Alias had, by her own admission, attempted to murder a
priest and later, right before Olive's very eyes, tried to assassinate a
Cormyrian nobleman. Who knows what else she had done? Olive thought. The tale
would explain why Alias chose to travel north to Yulash and avoid Westgate, as
well.
If her ladyship's road leads to imprisonment and not treasure, Olive
realized, this would be a good time to begin saving for the inevitable rainy
day. Besides, the sell-sword knows a lot of interesting songs. Naturally, we'll
have to come to a parting of the ways in the future. She sings just a little
too well, and she sings for free—very unprofessional. I have enough problems
without adding competition from my own bodyguard to the list.
"If I'm to wear this ring myself," the bard said, "I have to
know what it's for. I'm no fool."
"The ring will let these powers know your location at all times, so
they won't lose track of the human female's trail. Then these powers can all
close in on her at once, making her capture a little less . . . messy."
"Is that all?"
"That is sufficient. For the moment."
"If these powers are so powerful, why don't they just use scrying magic
to keep track of her?"
"Alas, something very peculiar about the woman prevents them or anyone
else from doing so."
"How'd you—um—this stranger know where to look for her to offer the
woman bard this ring then?"
"The human woman is known to frequent certain haunts. These were staked
out by various agents, including the humble stranger."
"Couldn't they plant the ring on the human female?" Olive asked.
"No," Phalse explained. "It must be carried by a halfl—by the
woman who was a bard."
"What makes this humble stranger so certain that the woman who's a bard
won't accept his offer and then throw away the ring and leave the company of
this dangerous human female?"
"In that case, she could easily be found by serving magic, and she
would be dealt with . . . accordingly."
"The woman who was a bard might develop doubts about the humble
stranger's motives and throw away the ring and remain in the company of the
human female"
"In that case, eventually, the powers seeking out the human female will
find some other way of tracking her. Then the woman who is a bard will realize
she should have kept her end of the bargain. Alas, by then it may be too late,
since the servants these powers might have to employ to capture the human
female are neither gentle nor kindly beings. And the humble stranger would not
be inclined to intervene on behalf of the woman who was a bard to ensure her
safety." Phalse's smile was now as wide as a cat's, revealing a mouth full
of sharpened teeth.
"You're not a halfling," Olive said, a note of surprise escaping
into her otherwise steady speech.
"Dear Olive, I am as much a halfling as you are a bard." Phalse's
smile spread until it almost split his head.
Olive gave Phalse a blank stare.
"Oh, I realize that everyone you've run into so far assumes that a
halfling bard is merely one of those wonderful things they have never
experienced, but the well-traveled will always recognize you for a charlatan."
"I can sing, play, and compose original verse," Olive replied, her
tone quite chill. "It seems to me, therefore, that the burden of proof
lies on my detractors. Threats of slander are ill-advised, especially here in
Shadowdale where I already enjoy the gratitude of the population."
Phalse bowed his head in acknowledgement. "Bard or no," he said,
still smiling that frighteningly large smile, "you are a halfling, and I
have never seen a halfling walk away from a table full of coins."
Olive did not reply immediately. She would like to turn down Phalse's offer,
just to replace that grin with a look of astonishment. People did not endear
themselves to her by suggesting she did not take her art seriously. But the
platinum coins were so beautiful. Not only their color and size and shape and
the ringing sound they made, but the sheer number of them. Enough to wash your
hands in, as her mother would say.
Olive sighed. "You are a good judge of halflings."
"I'm sure you know the saying—a halfling will never sell her own mother
into slavery. Not—"
"—when she can be rented at a greater profit," Olive said sourly,
beating the pseudo-halfling to the punchline. She hated that joke.
Phalse interpreted her knowledge of the saying as agreement. "Do we
have a deal?"
Olive gave herself a moment to brood over the offer. As far as she could
see, it would bring her no harm. Phalse's friends would take care of the
sell-sword long before she caught on to Olive's treachery.
The halfling would miss the warrior. She'd have to get Alias to teach her as
many songs as possible before Phalse's friends caught up with her, but then the
songs would be Olive's. The unpleasant scene tonight, where Alias had swept the
halfling's audience away and then returned it like a plate full of meat cut up
for a child, would never happen again.
She'd miss traveling with this particular set of companions, too. They were
the first adventurers who hadn't forced her into the role of cook. But who
knew? Mavbe Akabar would come out of this unscathed and she would travel with
him to the south.
Olive had no doubt that Phalse's friends would succeed And Dragonbait would
probably lose his life defending Alias, though gods knew why. Olive didn't see
that her decision made too much difference in the long run. She was, at worst,
only hastening Alias's capture.
"I find your tale most interesting. Well worth the price. Leave the
ring. And the coins. The woman who is a bard will stay with the human
female."
*****
Akabar awoke with a stiff back from having spent an uncomfortable night in
an overstuffed armchair. The morning light illuminated dancing dust motes in
Lhaeo's office. The scribe sat at the desk, still scribbling on parchment, just
as he had been when Akabar dropped off last night.
Akabar yawned and stretched. "Noble scribe, I don't suppose the sage is
awake yet?"
"Oh my," Lhaeo said as he looked up at the Turmishman with a
startled expression. "He's been here and gone. He rises early, when he
does go to bed."
"What!" Akabar shouted. "You mean he's left?"
"Oh, yes, definitely. He's gone on an extended tour of the planes. You
just missed him."
"Why didn't you wake me?"
"Well," the scribe replied matter-of-factly, peering over the rim
of his wire-framed lenses, "I didn't have the proper form."
The door nearly snapped off its hinges as Akabar yanked it open and threw it
against the wall. But, like many wizard-built things, its fragile appearance
was deceptive. It had survived many men angrier than the mage and would survive
many more in the future.
Lhaeo made a reproving tch-tch sound as the Turmishman stalked away
from the building without closing the door behind him. With a wave of his quill
pen, he closed the door quietly, and the scribe returned to his work.
Akabar stalked down the hill, cursing vehemently. He reached into the
tongues of Calimshan and Thay to find the right invectives, pronouncing them
all on the head of the Sage of Shadow-dale. The availability, and hence
usefulness, of any sage always seemed to be in inverse proportion to his
learning. Dimswart had not exactly been a genius, but he had been a pleasant
host and a useful resource. Elminster must be the most learned sage in the
Realms, Akabar concluded, owing to the fact that no one could ever talk to him!
As he passed the warning sign at beginning of the path leading to
Elminster's, Akabar heard a voice coming from behind the weaver's shop. Its
tone was low and serious. Akabar would have ignored it, mired as he was in
frustration and anger, but he caught the words, "Alias, the warrior
woman."
He froze in his tracks. He could not have been mistaken. The voice was
unknown to Akabar, who prided himself on his recognition of voices as a way of
remembering customers. The speaker's voice was succinct enough for that phrase
to carry over the high hedge. It was probably only a townsman reporting the
story of how Alias had cleared the kalmari from the gap, but Akabar, his
curiosity aroused, was overcome with the urge to peek through the hedge and see
the speaker.
As Akabar crept up to the hedge, the scent of freshly baked bread wafted
over him, setting his stomach rumbling and reminding him that he hadn't eaten
for over twelve hours. Then he heard the same voice say, "I think ye will
find ye are mistaken," then pause, then say, "I did not mean to
question thy discernment—" then pause again. This led Akabar to the
conclusion that there was a second speaker who spoke too softly to be heard by
any but the first speaker. When the mage finally discovered a break in the
greenery, that was not what he saw.
The first speaker was a tall man, taller than Akabar, and thin, with
expressive hands withered with age. He wore a cloak with the hood pulled up,
and his back was to the hedge, so Akabar would not have been able to identify
him even if he had known him. But the person the hooded one spoke with was
known to Akabar. It was Dragonbait.
The lizard knelt on a bench beside a vat of water he must have commandeered
for a washbasin. He held a fluffy, brown towel up to his chest.
The hooded one stood opposite him on the other side of the vat. He asked
Dragonbait a question, but all Akabar caught were the last words—"remain
here?"
What puzzled Akabar, besides the lizard traveling down the road to wash, was
that the hooded one stood before the lizard, still and attentive as though he
were listening to the creature. Yet Dragonbait remained mute. The scent of
roses from some garden caused the Turmishman's nose to twitch irritably. He
held his fingers up to his nostrils hoping to stifle the sneeze he felt coming
on.
"I can offer ye much," the hooded one said. Then his words grew
more quiet. But the last one was clear to Akabar—home.
Dragonbait whistled, not with his lips as a human would, but from the back
of his throat. It was really only a wheezing cry, but it conveyed the same
sense of awe a human whistle would have.
"Once they're removed, ye'll be completely free," the hooded one
continued, pointing to the towel Dragonbait clutched to his chest.
Dragonbait dropped the towel on the bench.
Akabar gasped, fortunately not loudly enough to give himself away. There on
Dragonbait's chest was a snaking pattern entwining sigils by now quite familiar
to the Turmishman. In the same bright blue colors, the same symbols Alias wore
on her arm were imbedded into the lizard's green scales!
Only the shape of the lizard's tattoo was different. While the sigils on
Alias's arm lay in a straight line, those on Dragonbait's chest were arranged
at the points of a hexagram. At the top-most point, the joining snake pattern
wound about an empty space. Clockwise from that lay the Flame Knives marking;
then the interlocking circles once so aggressively defended by Zrie Prakis; at
the bottom, Cassana's squiggle; then Moander's unholy symbol; and finally the
unknown bull's eye sigil.
Akabar's mind raced. Is this the bond that keeps the lizard so close to
Alias? If she knows of it, why hasn't she told me? Of course she doesn't know
it. The lizard has kept it a secret from her. That's why he's come all the way
down here to wash. No doubt he is afraid of losing her trust if he reveals that
he too is branded. Is he truly just a benign companion helping her evade her
enemies or is he one of the enemies' servants helping to track her?
Akabar caught one last phrase spoken by the hooded one. "Sure ye will
not accompany me?" he asked.
Dragonbait hissed and shook his head.
"Ye've chosen the hardest path. I'd wish ye Tymora's grace, but I don't
believe in it." The hooded one turned to leave.
Hastily, Akabar leaped back to the path and began walking toward the road to
conceal his eavesdropping. But when the Turmishman rounded the hedge, the
hooded one had vanished and Dragonbait's back was turned as he pulled on a
shirt of kelly green cotton.
Confused by the hooded one's disappearance, but anxious to see Dragonbait's
reaction to his own sudden appearance, Akabar called out cheerfully,
"Dragonbait? What are you doing here?" as though he'd just spotted
the lizard.
Dragonbait wheeled about and went into a defensive crouch. Startled, Akabar
fell back a step. Hardly the behavior of an innocent creature, the mage
thought. Aloud, he chided the lizard, "Jumpy this morning, aren't we? I
just got through at the sage's. Are the others at the inn?"
Dragonbait glared at him suspiciously and nodded curtly.
"Well, you had better come back there with me then." The lizard
continued to glare at him.
"Can't have you dawdling about people's backyards," the
TLirmishman joked. He felt as though he were addressing a wall, and a hostile
wall at that. Dragonbait's gaze was like a snake's, unblinking and unwavering.
Finally, the lizard turned and snatched up his towel and cloak from the
bench by the water vat. Akabar could tell something long and stiff was wrapped
in the cloak. Undoubtedly the creature's sword. Dragonbait pushed past the mage
without a sign or sound and headed down the road toward the inn.
As he followed Dragonbait through the town, Akabar marveled at the
creature's rudeness. In Alias's presence, he was always the polite, servile
clown. Perhaps he really is an arrogant servant of some sinister power, Akabar
thought. His conversation with the hooded one must have upset him greatly. He's
dropped his guard and revealed himself.
If he told Alias of Dragonbait's behavior, with no one else to substantiate
his words, would the swordswoman believe him? Probably not. Alias was very
attached to the lizard. She felt safe with him.
Which left Akabar to decide whether or not to tell the swordswoman of the
markings on her scaly follower's chest. Trying to get the creature to remove
his shirt to prove it would no doubt prove painful and perhaps even violent.
And was no guarantee of Alias's reaction. It was possible that she would
perceive the lizard keeping his markings hidden from her as an act of betrayal,
but it was more likely that she would feel even more attached to him, believing
him to be a fellow victim. Were Akabar to try to convince her otherwise, she
would no doubt accuse him of jealousy or paranoia.
No, he would be better off waiting, keeping a close watch on the lizard
until he could discover some incontrovertible proof of the creature's guilt.
But would it be too late by then? he wondered.
As he reached The Old Skull, Akabar remembered he had one other subject
which required some consideration— his meeting with the sage. Alias, intent on
reaching Yulash, had not really shown any interest in the mage's self-appointed
mission to the sage of Shadowdale, but it would not have slipped her mind. She
would ask about it. In the face of his uselessness the evening Dragonbait had
destroyed the kalmari, the Turmishman was loath to confess his failure to gain
an audience with Elminster.
*****
The hooded one flipped down his shadowy cowl and shook out the full, gray
beard that he had kept tucked within it. "Surely our guest hasn't given up
waiting on my pleasure so soon," he joked.
Lhaeo looked up and shrugged. "For a magic-user he seemed a bit
impatient."
"Takes all types," Elminster commented sagely as he threw his
cloak over the chair Akabar had only recently vacated. He sat down and
stretched out his long legs.
"Did you discover what you needed to know?" Lhaeo asked.
"I have all the pieces of the puzzle and I have put them all together.
But the picture makes no sense."
"Oh?" Lhaeo said, a little surprised.
"I may have to make that journey to the other planes after all,"
"Shall I begin packing?" Lhaeo asked.
"Not just yet," the sage replied. "There's a good chance the
puzzle may just throw itself on the fire." But a rare ache crept over his
bones and he knew he was wrong. "In the meantime, maybe ye'd better dig
some of the old Harper scrolls out of the vault."
Lhaeo nodded and slipped out of the office jangling a set of great iron
keys. Elminster retired to his study to research a single puzzle piece.
Back at The Old Skull, oblivious to the sage's concern, the four adventurers
tended to their own business.
Akabar worried about the meaning of the sigil he had been unable to trace
and considered how to trap Dragonbait into betraying himself.
The lizard kept his own council and told no one of his plans.
Olive counted the platinum coins four more times, finally tucking them
neatly into the pockets of her backpack.
Alias slept the morning away, and when she awoke in the early afternoon on
the last day of Mirtul, she felt refreshed and peaceful.
16
Run Aground
Giogioni Wyvernspur, suddenly aware of his duty to posterity, began the
first entry in his journal, despite the inconvenience of the rocking boat. With
a stick of soft lead he scrawled:
The last day of Mirtul has dawned fair and bright, and the Dragonmere's
southern coastline is now in sight. The trip across the lake from Suzail has
been a pain in the britches. The ship, on which that cad Vangerdahast has seen
fit to book passage for me, is no larger than a festhall and a good deal less
clean. A violent storm last night threatened to capsize this vessel, and
consequently dinner was not served. But all that hardship is behind me. We will
dock tonight in Teziir and proceed to Westgate in the morning, traveling along
the coast, with land in sight at all times, thank Tymora.
This business of being a royal envoy might not be so bad, Giogi thought as
he closed his journal. All he had to do was carry a letter from Azoun to a
member of Westgate's ruling council, find out if they knew anything about this
Alias person, and then keep an eye out for her in case she showed up within the
next two months—all at the crown's expense.
As he stood at the upper deck's railing, the Wyvernspur noble could pick out
snatches of the conversation the captain was having with Teziir's harbormaster.
Something about an increase in the docking fee—another ten gold pieces was
owed. A reasonable sum for making it to land, Giogi thought, but the ship's
captain had another opinion.
"Outrageous! I won't suffer such extortion. I'll bring her in without
your help. See if I don't!"
Somewhere astern, on the lower deck, a high-pitched voice asked another
passenger, "Penurious, our captain, or merely recalcitrant?"
Giogi turned toward the sound of the voice. Funny, I didn't notice any
halflings aboard before.
The passenger the halfling had addressed was a lady cloaked from head to
toe. When Giogi saw her face he froze. The halfling was male, completely
unfamiliar, but the woman's face—he couldn't be mistaken. It was her!
"Why, Master Phalse," the lady smiled. 'If I had known you were
traveling on the same vessel, I might have forsaken dinner with the captain for
your company."
"Dinner with the captain, dinner with me, while poor Zrie is left alone
in Westgate. You can be so cruel, Lady Cassana. You know he falls to pieces
without vou.
So, Giogi thought, Alias isn't her real name, after all.
The Lady Cassana laughed with cruel amusement. "He needs the reminder
occasionally. What are you doing here? I didn't notice you board."
"That's because I only just popped in. I thought I might accompany you.
How's your arm?"
The lady frowned. "How did you know about that?"
"My master's been scrying you to be safe. There was a blur as the One
approached your bird form. When she passed by we noted the dagger in your
wing."
Cassana shrugged. "All healed when I polymorphed back to my own
body."
"Well, our condolences on the failure of your mission."
The lady snarled. "The beast sleeps with his damned sword, so I could
only use the subtlest of magics lest I alerted him to my presence and he
dispelled my attacks My creature would not approach him, branded as he is. I
almost had the mage and the thief, but Puppet managed to shake me off in time
to raise an alarm."
"Well, there will be other opportunities," the halfling replied,
shrugging.
"We were lucky she had the brands checked for magic, or we might still
be searching all compass points. But it was a fluke she had it done again near
Zrie's old rock garden, and a fluke that my creature spotted her in the gap.
Don't you think it's time your master got involved in this?"
"There is no need when he has such efficient, clever helpers as
myself."
"Oh? And what have you done lately to earn such praise?"
"Planted a tracking device in the One's, or as you would say, Puppet's,
party. A device strong enough to be detected despite the enchantment of
misdirection about her."
"Planted with the thief, I presume."
Phalse nodded.
"But, how did you find the party?" Cassana asked.
"Upon interrogating Nameless I learned of a peculiar desire he had to
sing in Shadowdale. Like father, like daughter. I kept watch on the town. As
soon as my scrying power became blurred, I knew the One must have arrived.
Sneaking in was a bit perilous—the town is heavily warded against my kind, but
nothing I couldn't handle. Now, aren't you glad I didn't let you kill poor,
foolish Nameless? "
Cassana smiled slyly. "I suppose I am." From her pocket she drew
out a small serpent. The reptile tried unsucessfully to slither from the
woman's grasp.
"You took him with you?" The halfling sounded surprised.
"He proved quite useful in holding Puppet's attention. He really is a
remarkable storyteller." Cassana slipped the snake back into her pocket.
Giogioni withdrew hastily from the railing. It isn't possible, he thought.
She's supposed to be heading to Yulash. Something has gone very wrong. She's
here, discussing the most sinister-sounding things. Using magical attacks against
branded people, threatening to kill someone's father, and turning humans into
snakes. Instead of a sell-sword named Alias, now she's a sorceress called
Cassana. Giogi didn't know what to make of it all, but his duty was clear. The
woman had to be placed under arrest.
The sailors were all too busy dropping lines overboard and calling out
numbers, so the Wyvernspur noble made his way toward the captain. "Excuse
me, sir, but there is a woman aboard your ship who is wanted by the Cormyrian
authorities. A very dangerous woman."
"Ten!" a sailor shouted from the port bow.
The captain seemed not to see Giogi. His eyes were fixed on the port, his
hands clenched about the ship's wheel.
Giogi stepped closer, whispering confidentially. "Why, not sixteen days
ago she tried to assassinate a very important Cormyrian official."
"Eight," shouted another sailor from the starboard bow.
"The fourteenth of Mirtul to be more exact," Giogi said.
"Nine," the first sailor called out.
"We all thought she'd gone north to Yulash, which is over six hundred
miles away, but," Giogi gave a nervous laugh, "I just saw her on the
lower deck."
"Seven," called out the sailor on the starboard bow.
"It doesn't seem possible. I mean, it would take nearly two rides,
twenty days, for her to get back here that quickly, but maybe she never went
there to begin with, don't you see."
"Five." This last came from the starboard bow.
"Five!" the captain shouted. "Nine Hells!" He twisted
the wheel furiously, but it was too late.
Giogi felt the deck rise in a most peculiar fashion. It began sloping rather
steeply down to the stern and remained that way. "I say! Have we hit a
shoal or something?"
The captain glared at him with murder in his eyes. "Strike the
sails!" he shouted.
The ship's first officer approached with his evaluation. "It's no good,
sir. We've grounded too far. Have to wait for a change of wind to shift
us."
The ship listed perilously to starboard, and Giogi was forced to grab the
wheel to keep from slipping on the deck. A peculiar cracking noise came from
the housing beneath.
The first officer looked at the captain with alarm in his eyes.
"Prepare to disembark the passengers, Master Roberts. Start with this
one." The captain jabbed Giogioni Wyvernspur with his index finger.
"That's most thoughtful, Captain," Giogi said. "I say, but I
can wait for the woman and children first. Wyvernspurs know their duty when
they see it."
"Sir," the captain said. "You can disembark now in the
longboat, or you can walk the plank."
Giogioni found himself lowered in the longboat. He'd been too busy fretting
over his baggage as the other passengers were loaded in beside him, so it came
as quite a shock to look up and find himself staring into her eyes,
Giogioni gasped, "You!"
"I beg your pardon," Cassana said. "Have we met?"
Giogi gulped. This close up he realized he'd made a mistake. This was not
the lovely, mad sell-sword Alias. The woman seated opposite him was too old.
Her hair was the wrong shade. Her flesh was soft and unmuscled.
"Excuse me," he mumbled. "I mistook you for someone
else."
"Attractive men need never apologize for mistaking me for someone else.
Provided they never mistake me again. I am Cassana of Westgate." Cassana
squeezed the Wyvernspur noble's knee in a suggestive manner.
Flustered, Giogi tried to explain further. "I meant—that is, you look
just like her, except older. I swear you could be her mother, er, older
sister."
Cassana's eyes narrowed, and Giogi kicked himself mentally for violating a
sacred rule about never telling women how old they really looked.
"This woman I look like," Cassana whispered, "Tell me about
her."
Giogi gulped again. Oh, gods! Suppose she is her mother? "Well, she's
like you. Very pretty. With red hair and green eyes. She's a sell-sword though,
not a lady like you."
Cassana laughed. "So tell me, who are you and how did you come to know
this sell-sword who looks like me?"
All the while they were being rowed to land, Cassana tried to pump
information from Giogioni. He explained he'd met Alias at a wedding, that she
was merely a passing acquaintance, but this did not satisfy the woman with the
strange resemblance to his attacker. Unwilling to reveal the truth, Giogi began
to invent details of an imaginary conversation he held with the sell-sword.
Remembering Alias had rescued Olive Ruskettle, he said they had discussed
music.
He grew increasingly uncomfortable in Cassana's presence. She moved
alarmingly close to him and insisted on arranging his alternate travel plans to
Westgate. She's just the type of woman Aunt Dorath is always warning me about,
Giogi realized. Not that I need any warning—with my sixth sense when it comes
to danger.
He was very tempted to ask what had happened to the halfling he had seen her
with earlier, but he realized just in time that that might give away what he
had overheard.
He found the answer to his question soon enough. As they rowed up to the
dock, the halfling reached a hand down to help Cassana up the ladder lowered to
the longboat.
"There's another boat to Westgate pulling out in an hour. I've arranged
passage," Giogi heard the halfling say.
Fervently Giogi prayed Cassana would forget him in a rush to get to her next
ship, but he saw her whispering something to the halfling. Phalse looked down
at the Wyvernspur noble with curiosity.
If I know anything at all, Giogi thought, I know that going with that woman
and halfling would be a serious mistake. I need a distraction. Something to
take their mind off of me, before I end up in the sorceress's pocket.
Giogi handed up his gear and climbed the ladder. Cassana did not even have a
chance to introduce her companion before Giogi shrieked. "Oooh! Keep it
away!"
"My dear Giogioni, what is wrong?"
Giogi pointed a shaky finger at a pile of crates on the dock. "A snake.
A huge snake." He spread his hands out the tiny distance of two hand spans
to be sure his exaggeration was not mistaken. "It crawled into that pile
of boxes. I don't mean to be such a ninny, but a snake swallowed my Aunt
Dorath's pet land urchin once. It was horrible."
Phalse was no longer paying attention to the young Cormyte. He was too busy
searching through the crates for what he had been led to assume was the snake
Cassana had kept trapped in her pocket. The sorceress, however, instinctively
checked her pocket first, but that moment of inattention was all Giogioni
needed.
Scooping up his baggage, he fled from the dock into the city of Teziir,
desperately searching for a horse, a coach, or any quick means of escape from
this den of foreign villainy.
17
Brunch in Shadowdale and the Trek North
"Well, that's a switch," Alias muttered as she drew back the
curtains to let daylight into her room. Dragonbait lay by the fireside,
snoozing away. She was awake before him. Of course, he'd been up late last
night keeping an eye on Olive, and he had walked, not ridden, from Cormyr.
He must need rest very badly, she thought, more than the rest of us. And
he's done the most to earn it, too. Still, she couldn't help wondering
mischievously what he would think and feel and do if she were gone when he
awoke.
When she'd returned to The Old Skull the night before, he'd been standing
near the door of the inn, obviously torn between keeping an eye on the halfling
and leaving to find the swordswoman. She had offered to stay in the taproom
with Olive so that he could retire, but he had shaken his head in refusal.
Alias, feeling worn from their forced march and with her ankle throbbing from
her trip in the darkness, had accepted his gallantry gratefully and gone to bed
herself. She had no idea what time he'd come up to sleep.
Now she felt just a touch guilty. She crept about quietly as she dressed.
Another pang assaulted her conscience as she sat on the bed, pulling on her
boots. Dragonbait always slept on tile floor. It had never occurred to her to
rent him his own room; she'd always assumed he would want to stay near her. She
might at least have asked for something with an extra bed for him. "I'll
make it all up to you. Somehow," she whispered to the sleeping lizard as
she slipped out of the room and very gently pulled the door closed.
The taproom was empty when Alias came down the stairs, but Jhaele popped her
head out of the kitchen to wish her a good day and ask if she'd slept well.
"Very well, thank you," Alias assured her. 'Do you have any idea
where my friends have gone?"
"Did you try their rooms, lady?" Jhaele asked "I would have
thought they'd all still be sleeping."
"Oh. No, I just assumed they'd be up and about by now."
Jhaele shook her head. "Mistress Ruskettle didn't retire until the very
small hours, and she drank a good deal of bottled sleep, if you catch my
meaning. And your Mister Akash was out all night. Didn't come home until after
dawn. Same with the lizard-creature. He sat by the fire until morning, slipped
upstairs for a minute, then left the inn for about an hour and returned with Master
Akash."
Alias ordered breakfast, then took a seat at a table. She stared around the
room, feeling a little sad. Everything here was so familiar (except of course
the new lord, Mourngrym, and the elusive Elminster), and it hurt that no one
remembered her. Last night, however, she'd come to the conclusion that that was
part of her curse. Besides making her forget things, the azure brands made
other people forget her. Both conditions were bound up in the same spell.
Akabar came down the stairs just as Jhaele was bringing in a tray loaded
with waffles, ham, fruit, and tea. "I'll whip up more of the same,"
the innkeep offered.
Alias nodded and pulled out a chair for her companion.
"I understand your meeting with the wise Elminster kept you out all
night," she said. "How'd it go?"
Akabar smiled weakly. "It was all right, I suppose."
"And?" Alias prompted. "What did he have to say?"
"Say?" Akabar echoed.
Something in his manner made Alias suspicious. "Something bad?"
she whispered after Jhaele had laid out extra tableware for Akabar and left.
Akabar shook his head. "I waited half the night to see him, and I came
away with nothing more than what we learned from Dimswart back in Suzail."
"Did he mention the lay of Zrie Prakis and Cassana?"
Akabar made a noncommittal noise as he poured syrup over some waffles.
"Did he?" Alias asked, taking the syrup from him.
"Did he what?" Akabar grumbled, feigning listlessness.
"Did he tell you about the lay of Zrie Prakis and Cassana?"
"No, he didn't," Akabar answered and promptly stuffed his mouth,
with waffles to give himself time to think. What was he going to do? So far,
all his answers had been the truth. He had waited half the night for Elminster
and longer. He had not learned anything new, and Elminster had not told him
about any lay. He could not keep up the ambiguous and vague answers much
longer, though. He would either have to admit his failure or lie to her.
He had thought that, when the time came, one action or the other would come
easily to him, but they did not. He had been little help protecting Alias,
rather the reverse, needing her to irescue him from the kalmari. Now his role
as information-gatherer had completely collapsed. His pride could not cope with
the admission of his own uselessness.
Yet, surprisingly, the alternative—lying to her—did not come any easier. In
his dealings as a merchant, Akabar could stretch the truth with a skill that
would make Olive Ruskettle's head swim, but that skill did not extend to
deceiving women. He had never been able to lie to his wives either, even though
it might have made some of his nights a little less tumultuous.
"What's the lay of Zrie Prakis and Cassana?" a shrill voice
chirped. Olive climbed into a chair and promptly popped one of Alias's
strawberries into her mouth.
"Apparently," Alias explained, "they were lovers before they
went at each other in the duel that killed Zrie Prakis."
"Ooo, You humans are such fascinating people. Did Cassana throw herself
off a cliff in remorse?" Olive asked, using an extra fork to swipe a large
piece of one of Alias's waffles.
Alias shook her head. "No. She did keep his bones, though. By her
bedside as a keepsake."
"Yuck," the halfling muttered as she chewed.
"Definitely. I'm surprised Elminster didn't mention it. It's supposed
to be a common story up north. There's even supposed to be an opera about
it."
"Perhaps Elminster is not a big opera-lover," Akabar sniffed and stuffed
more waffle into his mouth.
"I don't blame him," the bard said. "I've heard that people
commit murders at operas, and no one notices because everyone on stage is
bellowing at the top of his lungs."
"I don't see how this story about the mages helps us any," Akabar
said.
"It doesn't, really," Alias admitted, "but I just wanted to
show that you're not the only one able to get information. I pick up bits here
and there."
Inwardly injured by the swordswoman's remark and encouraged by the presence
of the halfling, Akabar somehow found the strength to invent a meeting with
Elminster.
"I got nothing from this supposedly renowned sage but the standard
material we already know. He might have looked it all up in the same book
Dimswart used. He had no idea what the last sigil was, either. His reputation
is overrated. It must be based on past victories. I only hope when I'm that
decrepit and befuddled, I'll have a profitable business in the hands of my
daughters and not have to rely on gulling foolish adventurers."
"Elminster was decrepit and befuddled?" Alias asked, remembering
Mourngrym's description of the sage as the wisest in the Realms. Still, perhaps
Mourngrym's standards weren't up to those of Cormyr or the lands farther south.
She had harbored one odd idea, however, so she had to ask, "What did he
look like?"
"He looked like a spider," lied the Turmishman, leaning over the
table and speaking in a low voice. He had to be carried about from room to
room. His hands were shriveled into useless sticks, so that he had to be
dressed and fed by his manservant. I know. I watched him eat. It was most
unpleasant."
Alias pondered the mage's description while she sipped her tea. She had
suspected her goatherd to be Elminster, though he had tried to lead her away from
that idea. Powerful, famous people often traveled around dressed as commoners,
at least in lays and songs. But if the sage was chair-ridden, her goatherd had
to be someone else.
That didn't mean she valued the old man's advice any less, and she certainly
appreciated his finder's stone, kept safely tucked away in her boot top. It
made her feel a lot less nervous, knowing he had been just a wise, old man. Had
Elminster himself taken such an interest in her singing, she'd know she was in
more trouble than she could handle.
Jhaele brought out another breakfast tray and unloaded the contents onto
their table.
"Pass the strawberries," Olive demanded, dumping the contents of
the fruit bowl on top of another grilled cake and handing the empty bowl back
to Akabar, who put it aside without noticing. He was nearly holding his breath,
afraid Alias might make some comment about Elminster that Jhaele would hear and
contradict, belying his story.
"I need to do some shopping," Alias announced, draining her tea
cup. "Would you mind very much taking care of the food provisioning?"
she asked the Turmishman.
"Not at all," Akabar assured her, forcing a smile to his lips.
That's all he felt good for lately, buying the groceries from other
greengrocers like himself.
Alias rose from the table and went over to knock on the kitchen door. Jhaele
handed her another tray.
"I'm taking this up to Dragonbait," she explained to the others.
"Why? Is he sick?" Olive asked.
"No. I just thought he deserved breakfast in bed for a change."
Akabar tried not to look too anxious when he asked, "When are we
leaving here?" The sooner they were gone from Shadowdale, the sooner his
lie about Elminster would be safe from revelation. Also, it would be easier to
keep an eye on the lizard when they were on the road.
"About two hours. There's a way station up the road about ten miles.
I'd like to reach it by nightfall."
"Anything I can do?" Olive asked offhandedly.
"Keep out of trouble," Alias suggested.
"I might manage that," the halfling said with a prim nod.
Dragonbait was still asleep when Alias returned to the room. She set the
tray down by his nose. He inhaled before he opened his eyes.
"Hungry, sleepy-head?"
The lizard sat up and smiled. His cloak fell away as he broke off some waffle
and popped it in his mouth.
The scent of lemon wafted about the room. Aren't we too far north for lemon
trees to bloom? Alias wondered.
She began packing up her clothes. The turquoise wool tunic lay across a
chair. Last night it had been mud-spattered from her fall. Now it was
mysteriously laundered and dried. She gathered it up in her hands and went to
sit beside Dragonbait.
"Look, you've got to stop doing things like this."
Dragonbait tilted his head and made a chirping noise.
"Don't give me that I-don't-understand look," Alias said. "I
don't care if you tease Olive, but I know you understand me. I want you to stop
this servant routine. You're not my servant. You're . . . my traveling
companion. I know I'm lazy about looking after my things sometimes, but you'll
spoil me if you keep this up. I know how useful you are. You don't have to keep
proving it to me. Do you understand?"
Dragonbait met her gaze with his unblinking yellow eyes. He nodded.
"All right, then. Better finish your breakfast. We're leaving in a few
hours. I'm going to the smithy to have the kinks ground out of my blade. You
can bring your sword down too if you want."
Suddenly anxious to leave for the open road, Alias hurried to finish
packing. While the lizard polished off his meal, she wrote out the words to the
Standing Stone song and left them for Jhaele to give to the songhorn player.
No one in town would let them pay for supplies or services. Mourngrym had
passed the word that bills were to be submitted to the tower. Alias was glad
she hadn't assigned the halfling any shopping tasks. Who knew what the bard
would pick up on the town's tab? For herself, Alias picked up a new dagger and
shield from the smithy and had him sharpen her blade.
Dragonbait looked a little anxious about turning his own bizarre weapon over
to the craftsmen, but the man reassured him with the special care he took
handling the sword before he began working on it.
They left town four hours before sunset. A few townsfolk bid them farewell
as they traveled along the road, but Alias caught no glimpse of her goatherd.
*****
The weather held fair and warm, and no extraordinary encounters marred their
travels. A singularly stupid troll attacked Dragonbait on watch their second
night out from Shadowdale, but when the rest of the party woke up the troll was
burning merrily on the fire. The next day, they lost several hours in the Elven
Wood, hiding uncomfortably in a damp cave to avoid a large party of ores.
Their stay in the town of Voonlar was cut short when a sheriff's deputy's
purse was found in Olive's room at the inn. Rather than arrest them, the deputy
accepted an apology accompanied by the return of all his gold, thrice what
could have possibly fit in the leather pouch. They also had to agree to leave town
immediately. Alias was ready to throttle the halfling, but Olive argued her
innocence so vehemently that the swordswoman believed her.
More than the loss of a night in clean sheets troubled Alias. There were
rumors of a war to the east, and she hadn't had any time to confirm them.
They camped outside of town and continued toward Yulash in the morning.
Twice that day the shadow of some great, flying beast crossed the sun, causing
all the horses to panic and rear on their hind legs.
Still, Alias remained unperturbed. She felt that "they," the
people who had branded her, had given up. There were no more disturbing dreams
or giant monsters or assassins in black. The swordswoman was willing to bet
that the kalmari in Shadow Gap had been their last card. I've passed out of
their range, she assured herself. Only Moander is up here, and he's been locked
up beneath Yulash.
By twilight they were in sight of the great mound on which the city of
Yulash stood. The single hill sloped gently, resembling a giant shield lying
face-up on the plain. According to Olive, once upon a time an individual
standing in the highest citadel atop the crown of the hill could see the smoke
rise from the dark furnaces of Zhentil Keep, and the fog roll off the shores of
the Moonsea.
"One of the merchants in Shadowdale told me that the Yulashians could
have seen the glow of fire when dragons destroyed Phlan, except they were being
destroyed by dragons themselves at the time. A horde of them came down on the
Dales two years back," Olive explained. "Destroyed one of
Shadowdale's high-muckety witches."
"Sylune," Alias snapped.
"Yes. That was her name. Anyway, the dragons left Phlan and Yulash in
ruins, killed all the rulers and mages, and scattered the commoners."
"Now Zhentil Keep forces occupy the rubble," Akabar reminded them.
"Its altitude makes it a strategic location."
As the darkness settled, they could see there were fires on Yulash mound,
punctuated by flashes of fireball and other magical flames.
"The war is at Yulash." Alias spat with annoyance.
"Hillsfar forces trying to take it away from the Zhentil Keep army
stationed there," Akabar guessed.
The next day they traveled more cautiously as they passed great, burned
stretches of overgrown fields, untended orchards completely shattered by
lightning, and ridges of ground torn up by the claws of great beasts.
When piles of rusted weapons and rotted carrion began to dot the side of the
roads, they dismounted and walked beside the horses and pony to calm them and
to avoid presenting themselves as targets.
They could have ridden into Yulash before sunset if it had been a more
peaceful season. Instead, they camped a quarter mile away, using an overturned
wagon to shelter them from view of the forces defending and attacking the
town's main citadel. Even if they could get closer without being hit by a stray
arrow or magic spell, they could be caught by an army and executed as spies.
They were close enough to hear metal clashing on metal as some of the
combatants met in swordplay, commands barked out by captains, cheers from men
who'd just managed to kill someone or something, and cries of horror from men
who had seen their last battle.
After dark, a great, glowing whirlwind spun around the top of the mound,
igniting members of the attacking force. As their bodies scattered down the
slope, they looked to Alias, from a distance, like sparkling seeds falling away
from a flaming dandelion.
"Well, it certainly is more amusing to watch than your standard
campfire," Olive commented. "Though it lacks a certain warmth."
They hadn't dared light their own campfire for fear of being discovered by a
foraging patrol, so after a cold dinner, the four adventurers sat huddled
against the overturned wagon as the night air grew more and more chill. Olive
shivered, wrapped beneath her own cloak and two of Akabar's. The mage affected
a pose of calm unconcern, but Alias caught him blowing into his cupped hands,
trying to keep them warm. Dragonbait kept peering around the side of the wagon,
fascinated by Yulash mound. The horses, tethered nearby behind the one
remaining wall of an ancient farmer's cottage, whickered uncomfortably.
Dragonbait echoed the sound, though whether he was trying to comfort them or
agreeing with them Alias could not tell.
In the soft glow of the finder's stone, Alias could not escape the
halfling's accusatory stare or Akabar's expectant one. "When I led us up
here, I had no idea the area would be so unsettled." Each intermittent
flash from the city's ruins drew her attention. I feel like a moth, she
thought, trying to get into a lantern, beating against the glass. Somewhere in
that maze of ruins lies the answer to my curse—I'm sure of it.
"I had assumed the city would be firmly in the hands of one side or the
other. Then we could use the same trick we used in the dragon's lair. Akabar
would scout ahead with his wizard eye trick, Olive would accompany me to help
with locks, traps, and other tricky parts, and Dragonbait would remain behind
with the gear."
Olive muttered something about "thief's tricks," and Dragonbait
scowled, but Alias ignored them both. "However," she continued,
"that was all assuming we only had to elude a sleepy city guard. With two
active forces looking for enemy troops, our chances of sneaking in unnoticed
are . . ." she hesitated, trying not to sound falsely optimistic.
"Slim," Akabar suggested.
"Try nil," Olive retorted. "Humans. Always fighting over who
gets the better view."
"They don't battle over it just because it's the only major terrain
between the forest and the river," Akabar lectured. "Remember, it
sits on the route south from Zhentil Keep. If Hillsfar should take and hold the
city, they would effectively blockade Zhentil Keep's bulk trade."
"And there's probably more gold and treasure left in the wreckage, in
hidden cellars and dungeons, than in the active mines of the dwarves,"
Alias added.
Olive perked up a little, cheered by the thought of treasure. Dragonbait
stood and walked over to the horses to stroke Lightning. All the while the
lizard's eyes remained fixed on the glowing hill.
Akabar followed the lizard.
"Where are you going?" Alias called to him.
"To help Dragonbait with the horses."
"You've been fussing over him ever since we left Shadowdale," the
warrior noted. "Helping him fetch wood, keeping watch with him. He can
take care of himself." She tugged on the mage's robes until he was forced
to sit back down beside her. "Now, what do you think our chances would be
if we contacted one side or the other to make a deal?"
Trying not to appear too distracted with keeping an eye on Dragonbait,
Akabar said, "If you do, contact Hillsfar. Their ruler, I've heard, is a
merchant-mage like myself. His name is Maalthir. If one of these forces is
indeed his, it will include a company of his prize mercenaries, the Red Plumes.
We need only look for their banner."
"Yes, then we'll have found the Red Death," Olive growled.
"That's what Maalthir's mercenaries are called among my people. Under his
orders, they carried out a campaign to purge Hillsfar of thieves. Human thieves
could hide, but all halflings were thieves, as far as Maalthir's Red Death was
concerned. They drove every halfling from the city in the middle of the night,
forced them to leave their valuables behind, didn't even give them a chance to
sell the land or shops they owned.
"As distasteful as Hillsfar's policies might be, you can hardly expect
us to deal with the baby-slaying Keepers. I've heard that they plight their
troth with succubi, eat the brains of elves, and worship gods so black they
make Moander seem nice. Their names are feared as far south as my native land.
And the council who rules them, the Zhentarim, are twice as dark as the
Keepers."
"I didn't suggest we deal with the Keepers," Olive replied.
"I was only reporting on the firsthand news I have about the Hillsfar
government. I have no reason to expect better of the Zhentil Keep soldiery.
They're all human, too, at least mostly, I'm told. You must realize, though,
that all the accusations you've made against Zhentil Keep are the standard lies
told about any successful city by its jealous enemies."
"There are too many stories told of the Zhentarim for them all to be
lies. As a bard you must know stories of their methods—how they secretly
support ores so they will attack any who oppose the Zhentarim's will."
"And as a bard," Olive said, "I have the ability to separate
the grain from the dross."
"Gold," corrected Akabar. "Gold from dross. Grain from
chaff."
Alias sighed and stood up. The mage and the bard could argue until Yulash
was dust. She strode over to watch the battle with Dragonbait. As the finder's
stone illuminated their mounts, she could see the beasts stood alone. She poked
her head around the wall, but the lizard was not there. She went back to the
wagon and peeked around that, but he wasn't there either.
Olive was continuing her testimony on the cruelty of the Hillsfar people,
while Akabar was trying to interrupt her with some point about the evil of the
Zhentarim.
Made impatient with a sudden attack of anxiety, Alias snapped at both of
them. "Listen to yourselves. You're not disagreeing with each other,
you're just arguing for the sake of arguing. Can't you see something's
wrong?"
"What is it?" Akabar asked.
"Dragonbait's gone," she whispered.
"Gone where?" Akabar asked, glancing around their campsite while
cursing himself for not keeping an eye on the potentially treacherous lizard.
"Just gone," Alias said. A particularly bright flash filled the
sky, and thunder rumbled all about them. The swordswoman peered across the
momentarily illuminated open fields, but she could not pick out the lizard's
figure.
"Perhaps you better stay down," Akabar suggested.
"He's disappeared," Alias whispered, still standing.
"He's probably only out looking for firewood or something," Olive
suggested.
"We haven't got a fire," Akabar growled.
"Maybe he decided we should have one," Olive retorted.
If I hadn't been such a fool, Akabar berated himself, arguing with the
halfling and allowing myself to be distracted from watching the lizard, this
wouldn't have happened. Who knows what sort of betrayal I've let us in for now?
"Or he could be out filching us a nice, hot, ten-course meal, with
wine," Olive continued brightly.
Alias scowled. She noticed Akabar frowning as well. She hadn't realized he
cared for Dragonbait as much as she.
Should I tell her about the lizard's brands, Akabar debated. I can't prove
it now, and it still might not make her doubt him. No, better just to watch for
him.
Alias stared at the city. The crackling of the fires and magics burning
there pulled at her like a siren's call. Olive could be right. But suppose he's
scouting out the territory to prove he should not be left behind? It was one
thing to leave him guarding the equipment or even to have him fighting at her
side, but imagining him out there, alone, unable to call for help, not even if
he were injured. . . . Alias moaned softly, feeling suddenly miserable.
"He'll come back," Olive said again. "He always does."
The night grew even colder, and eventually, as the combatants on the hill
wearied and let their fires and magics die out, it grew darker, too. Olive was
a snoring lump in a bundle of furs, Akabar a motionless mannequin in his
colored robes and one blanket. Alias shivered in her only cloak, but she could
not stay wrapped in her blankets. She spent her watch pacing and staring into
the darkness, waiting for Dragonbait to return. She did not bother to wake
Olive, but continued to watch past her turn.
But Dragonbait still did not return.
A few pins of light from watchfires in the city pricked at Alias's eyes.
He's there, was all she could think. He went into the city without me.
Like I planned to do to him, she added. Again she felt the draw of the city,
an ache to learn the mystery within.
Her heart prompted her to look in Yulash, but her head insisted she had no
proof that he was there. He could be anywhere. He might have been captured by
the Keepers or the Red Plumes. That thought made her more anxious. As far as
she knew, both Akabar and Olive had been right in their claims of Hillsfar and
Zhentil Keep atrocities.
Actually, Alias couldn't think of any army that would let a creature as
blatantly non-human as Dragonbait pass unchallenged. They'd try to capture or
kill him immediately, Probably kill, Alias admitted, because he'd put up a
fight.
She was ready to wake the mage and bard and set out immediately when another
thought made her hesitate. If he's wandering out on the plains, lost, but finds
his way back to an empty camp, he'll think we've been captured. Someone has to
stay, she decided. But Akabar looked so concerned by the lizard's
disappearance, Alias knew he would insist on accompanying her, and Olive would
not stand for being left behind, believing there was treasure to be had in the
city.
She hovered uncertainly over the two sleeping forms for several moments,
trying to make up her mind. Going alone would only perpetuate the lizard's
folly, but she could not help herself. She bent down over Akabar's pack and dug
out a stick of charcoal and his map. On the back she wrote: "Looking for
D. Wait here."
She lay the parchment by Akabar's head. Then, after slipping the finder's
stone in her boot, she picked up her shield and sword and walked away. Her
steps drew her toward the great mound city.
*****
Akabar's eyes snapped open the moment Alias opened his pack.
The mage had cast a magic mouth enchantment on his earring to tell him if
Dragonbait returned, and at first he thought that was what had awakened him,
but when the piece of jewelry repeated its magical warning, whispering,
"Someone's in your pack," he realized his mistake.
After the earlier disappearance of his magical tome, back when the halfling
had joined his caravan, the mage had decided that it would not be squandering
his power to use it to protect his property, even from a fellow traveler.
Still, he wondered at Ruskettle's nerve and dishonor.
He lay perfectly still, focusing on his baggage through the slits of his
eyelids, but the figure rooting through his belongings was too big to be
Ruskettle. It couldn't be Dragonbait; his other magic mouth spell would have
warned him.
When the figure straightened, Akabar nearly gasped and sat up in surprise.
It was Alias. She scrawled something hastily on his map and then took a step
toward him.
Akabar closed his eyes. He almost held his breath, but caught himself in
time and began feigning the shallow breathing of a sleeper. Through his
eyelids, he could sense the stone's light on his face and then sense it move
away. He peeked through one eye. Alias took up her sword and shield and left
the camp.
Slowly, Akabar rose and looked out across the plains. He caught a flash of
moonlight glinting off of Alias's polished shoulder-plates. She was headed
toward Yulash.
He spied the map. He picked it up and tilted it until the letters could be
read by Selune's light.
Wait here, indeed! thought the mage, tossing the map onto his sleeping
blanket with a deep frown. She lugs us all the way up here and when things get
really dangerous, when she could use our help, she abandons us to chase after
that lizard—who's probably reporting us to his hidden masters, setting up a
trap for her to walk into.
His first impulse was to chase after the warrior woman and convince her to
return, use force if necessary to keep her from marching into Yulash. He would
tell her it was smarter to wait for daylight. But he knew in his heart that
once the sun had risen, he would only try to convince her that the nightfall
might be a better time after all.
She would never hesitate to go searching for the creature she thinks is a
friend, while I, Akabar Bel Akash, mage of no small water, cower behind an
overturned merchant's wagon. I am more greengrocer than master mage, the
Turmishman thought, ashamed of his fear.
He could wake the halfling, and they could follow Alias together. Olive
would have no trouble making up her mind what to do, Akabar realized. You could
call her anything except late to looting. Still, taking the halfling did not
seem particularly wise. As the old Amnite saying went, when matters are bad,
think how much worse they could get if halflings were involved. Akabar didn't
want to put her in any risk of running into the Red Plumes.
Standing with his face toward the waning moon, Akabar began to intone a spell.
The deep, rich words rolled off his tongue as his right hand sliced through the
air. In it, he held a bit of his own eyelash embedded in a resin of tree gum.
At the end of the evocation, his left hand came down hard on the tree gum. The
sticky pellet flared a bright blue, consumed by mystical energy.
Akabar held his hands up in the moonlight and watched them go transparent,
as though they were sculptures of ice. Then they vanished completely. His
vision blurred for a moment, then the world refocused for him. He could see
normally, save that when he looked down at himself there was nothing to see but
a pair of depressions in the grass.
The parchment map rose from the ground, hovered for a moment, then settled
next to the sleeping halfling. What Alias had written could apply to both of
them.
Then he used his long legs to stride toward Yulash in the wake of the
swordswoman. Nothing but a wave of bent grass blades marked his invisible
passing.
18
Yulash
A fog began to roll in across the plains minutes after Alias left the
campsite. The swordswoman was uncertain whether she should thank Tymora for the
weather or not. On one hand, it would make spotting Dragonbait more difficult,
but on the other hand, it would cover her approach to the mound. The soft glow of
her tattoo was enough illumination to see the ground beneath her feet.
Their camp had only been a quarter of a mile to the base of the hill, but it
was another quarter mile climb up to the wall. Alias avoided the roads into the
city; there were plenty of footpaths up the slope, and she knew they'd be less
patrolled. Twice she thought she heard someone following her and she waited on
the path, hoping maybe it was Dragonbait tracking her scent, but no one
appeared. The third time she backtracked quickly, thinking perhaps she was
being stalked by a sentry, but still she discovered no one.
Halfway up the hill, Alias emerged from the fog. She turned to survey the
plains There was nothing to see though; all below her was whiteness. Yulash was
an island in the clouds. She climbed farther up the slope.
The great walls that once ringed the cities were breached in more than a
dozen places. She avoided the larger, more easily navigated breaks on the
assumption that they would be guarded. She chose a hole that afforded her
shoulder plates enough space to slip through.
The wreckage of the town spread out before her in all directions.
Occasionally a section of wall remained braced by a door or corner, but there
wasn't a rooftop to be seen on any of the old buildings. Ahead and a little to
the east stood the fortifications of the old citadel, rebuilt by the Zhentil
Keep soldiers trying to hold the region. A campfire blazed in that direction,
so Alias moved off to the western section of the city.
A scraping noise came from back by the hole she had used to enter the city.
She whirled around, blade ready, expecting some assassin, wishing it were
Dragonbait, but there was no one there. Just loose rubble, she thought,
disgusted with her nervousness. She continued west.
Rather than walk in the streets, Alias picked her way over the razed walls.
Anything that might have survived the dragon invasions, human armies, and
looters had been carried off long ago. If there was treasure to be found in the
city, it was well-hidden.
There was a jiggling of horse-rigging in the streets, and Alias crouched
behind the wall. A single rider approached. He held his reins in one hand and a
hooded lantern in the other. Enough light leaked from his lantern that Alias
could see he wore a scarlet cloak and a silver helmet with a single plume
jutting from the top, also scarlet.
As she watched the rider pass, something across the street caught Alias's
eye. Reflecting the rider's lantern light, lying in the rubble, was a familiar
symbol—a fanged mouth gaping in the palm of a hand.
Moander, at last, Alias thought with glee. A third stroke of luck. Tymora
must be favoring her. She crept out from behind the wall, ready to dodge back
into the shadows if the horse so much as nickered. The horse and rider
continued down the street, eyes forward, oblivious to her presence.
Alias scurried across the street, but when she reached the broken stone
there was nothing there. Was her mind playing tricks on her? A mossy smell
assailed her nostrils. She peered into the darkness, searching for its source.
The pile of rubble where she stood was part of a ring of collapsed wall.
Within the toppled stone was a broad pit. At first, Alias thought it must just
be the cellar of some collapsed building, but the darkness within the center
was so complete that she realized it must be a very deep hole. She spotted a
narrow staircase winding around the edge of the hole's interior. On the wall by
the first few steps was another hand glowing blue.
The glow of her tattoo was insufficient to illuminate the stairs so Alias
risked pulling out the finder's stone. Its light seemed dimmer here,
illuminating no more than four or five extra steps, but that was enough for
Alias to make out a set of tracks preceding her into the pit, tracks made by
something with three-toed feet, separated by a single groove, made by the heavy
tail of a lizard.
What do you know? Alias thought. The finder's stone did help me find someone
who was lost. She began her descent into the pit. Each step felt as if she were
pushing against water, as if something were resisting her entry. The stairs
were steep as well as narrow, and the rim of the pit soon rose over her head
and swallowed tier.
With total darkness around her, the yellow glow of the stone seemed to grow
brighter, but Alias no longer needed it. An azure aura sprang from beneath her
right sleeve. Alias hesitated and wondered if she were walking into a trap. Of
course, her arm was going to glow as she got nearer Meander's temple, just as
it had glowed in the presence of Cassana's kalmari and the crystal elemental.
She didn't know what she had to worry about. Moander was locked up. According
to the goatherd in Shadowdale, only someone unborn could free the ancient god.
Since she knew she'd been born—she could remember the day quite clearly: the
snoring of her mother, the cooing of the midwife, being sniffed at by the house
cats—she had no fear she might accidentally unleash one of the evil elements
responsible for her mutilation and lost memory.
Alias could now discern pungent, all-too-human smells. The pit was used as a
midden. The stench grew more powerful the deeper she went. The steps grew damp
and slick, and pockets of muck and slime collected in the depressions worn into
the stairs by a millennium of visitors. Bits of green goo dripped from one step
to the next.
A stone bounced down from above, followed by a shower of small rocks. Alias
looked up, expecting to see someone tossing a bucket of something foul over the
rim of the pit, but only the dark sky hung over the darker hole.
A stray soldier idly investigating the city, Alias guessed, and continued
her descent until she came to a wide, stone. work platform ringed with rubble.
The staircase ended. though the pit continued down. The finder's stone was
unable to light the bottom of the stinking darkness. Alias doubted if even the
moon could do so were it to shine directly in. There was no trace of Moander s
sigil.
Alias studied Dragonbait's tracks. The three-toed imprint wandered about the
muck-covered platform, to the begin ning of the blocked stairs, to the edge of
the platform, to the wall of the pit, but there was no trace of them after
that.
He wouldn't have jumped over the edge, Alias puzzled She lifted the finder's
stone and investigated the slime. encrusted walls. There was a faint vertical
shadow from a line of moss buckled against more moss. The line continued above
her head, running horizontally and then back down. It was a door, recently
opened and closed.
Reluctantly, Alias ran her fingers along the slimy moss and lichen, feeling
for a catch to push, pull, or slide. In the center of the door, at waist level,
she discovered a hole Mindful of finger guillotine traps set against intruders,
she poked her smallest finger into the hole.
No blade sliced at her digit, but a stinging charge of energy ran up her
arm. Her runes writhed and danced, but caused her no pain. From behind the
stone wall came the clattering of lock mechanisms tumbling and falling.
When the azure sigils were still again, though still glowing, Alias withdrew
her finger and stepped back. The hidden door swung out silently. A foot thick,
it pivoted on an unseen post.
Beyond the doorway, the smell of fresh waste and muck gave way to the older
decay of ancient paper and bones. Warm, dry air blew from the passage. The
walls were carved with tiny, intricate, flowing designs. They reminded Alias
more of the tree sculptures grown and shaped by elves than of something wrought
of dead stone.
Then she saw the three-toed footprints on the dusty floor. The curiosity
that had beckoned her this far now tried to drive her forward like a fire
forcing wild animals through the woods. She was sure that not only Dragonbait,
but the answers to all her questions lay at the end of the mysterious passage
before her.
She wanted to rush right in, but her adventurer's sense of caution asserted
itself just in time. Stepping back on the platform, Alias grabbed a large,
wedge-shaped rock from the pile of rubble and slipped its smaller edge beneath
the door. She found several others like it and shoved them beneath the door as
well. Then she shifted a pile of rocks to the edge of the door frame.
Satisfied with her precautions, she entered the passage. About six paces
down the corridor, she felt a stone beneath her foot shift nearly an
imperceptible amount. Behind her, the door jerked a hand's span but was held
fast by the rocks. Something mechanical whined a high-pitched plea. The whining
grew louder as though the trap were crying out desperately to fulfill its only
purpose in life. Within a minute, the whine dropped in pitch and then was
silent. The door was still. Smiling to herself and feeling smug, Alias
continued down the corridor.
Her mood was soon quelled by the walls around her. They were carved with
horrible bas reliefs interspersed with lines and lines of engravings of archaic
runes. The carved figures depicted heroes suffering deadly tortures at the
hands of leering humanoids, torn apart by chaotic beasts, and fried, frozen,
dissolved, and poisoned by dragons and beholders and other deadly creatures.
The ugliness of the walls seemed to go on forever and, with each twisting
and widening of the passageway, the scenes grew larger as well as more obscene
and gory.
Alias felt a growing revulsion which turned her stomach sour and tightened
her throat. She kept her eyes forward and tried not to look at the walls
anymore.
The passage widened further one last time before ending abruptly in a wall
twenty feet ahead. This wall was completely different from the disturbingly
carved stone passages Alias had come through. Constructed of blue glazed brick,
it was bound together with a red-tinged mortar. Down the center of the mortar
work were great gouges, as if a giant claw had been scratching at it. At the
base of the Wall lay the crumbled figure of Dragonbait.
The swordswoman rushed forward and knelt at the lizard's head, laying the
finder's stone on the ground.
"Dragonbait' Are you all right?" she asked. She'd whispered the
words, but the corridor caught and amplified them so that her echo boomed back
at her.
As Alias knelt beside him, the lizard turned his head tu look up at her. The
change in him was horrifying. He was completely emaciated. His scaly flesh hung
about his frame as if his muscles had been eaten away by months of starvation.
Wear and exhaustion were etched deep into the lines of his face. His tongue
lolled out the side of his mouth, and he panted heavily in the dusty air. His
eyes, normally a dead, yellow color, now looked even worse—their clear sparkle
had turned to a murky gray.
A deep, violet perfume rose from his body, something Alias had never noticed
before. Forgetting he could not really answer, she asked, "What happened
to you?"
The lizard pointed his finger back down the way they'd both come, and he
tried to push her away from him in that direction, but his shove was far too
feeble to budge her. A low snarl escaped his lipless mouth.
Alias stood up. "All right, I'm going," she agreed, understanding
his signals perfectly. "But not without you. Come on, I'll help you
up."
Dragonbait pulled heavily on her arm and rose to his feet. His legs looked
too spindly to support his weight. He leaned on his sword like an old man with
a cane.
What could have done this to him? Alias wondered. She felt reluctant to
leave without exploring this place, but she was too frightened by the lizard's
condition to delay getting help for him. Maybe, she thought, I can find a
cleric to heal him in one of the army camps.
Then she noticed that many of the backward-curved teeth at the end of his
sword were damaged—chipped off or curled askew. Realizing the sword had caused
the scratches in the brick wall, she joked, "If you wanted a slegehammer
for a weapon, you should have asked back in Shadowdale."
Dragonbait tugged on her arm, anxious to hurry away.
Alias had never seen him frightened before, but she had no wish to meet
whatever had done this to him either. She stooped to retrieve the finder's
stone.
As she stood up with the goatherd's gift, Alias felt a throbbing curiosity
about the blue and red wall. She reached out to stroke the blue-glazed bricks
with her fingertips.
The wall glowed. For a single pulse of a human heart, the bricks shimmered
and then became translucent. From behind the wall, a bright blue light shone,
silhouetting the lines of red mortar and turning the passage where Alias stood
an eerie aqua. Then the bricks returned to normal and the light faded.
Alias stood, staring at the wall in amazement. It was some moments before
she became aware of the writhing sensation on her arm. The sigils were wriggling
and twisting like maggots nesting in her flesh, and the unholy sign of Moander
seemed the most vibrant. The fingers of the hand appeared to clench and flex,
while the mouth in the palm snapped its fanged teeth open and closed.
Fascinated, Alias reached out to stroke the wall again. Dragonbait's hand
snatched at her wrist and pulled her back. Then some pain forced him to release
her and clutch at his chest. He fell forward, his sword clattering to the stone
floor, making a ringing noise down the passageway.
"Dragonbait! What's wrong?" Alias gasped, kneeling again beside
him. Then she saw it—a bright, blue light, pouring out between the weave of the
lizard's shirt, escaping even through the flesh of his hands held over his
chest.
"Gods! "the warrior whispered. "No. It can't be." She
shook the lizard by the shoulders, dropping the finder's stone to the floor.
"What's on your chest?" she demanded.
Dragonbait took a deep breath and held his head up. He untied the fastenings
that held his shirt closed.
Alias gasped. The same sigils. In a different shape, but the same sigils.
The same blue, gemlike, writhing, azure-lit brands. The scales over the pattern
were translucent just as the flesh covering the pattern on Alias's right arm
was.
"Why? Why didn't you tell me? Are you one of their pets, too?" she
growled angrily.
Dragonbait met her angry eyes with his own, but there was neither shame nor
triumph in his look, only sadness. Now he smelled to Alias of roses. It brought
to her mind the morning in Shadow Gap when he'd buried the barbarian's sword.
The sword he'd used to destroy the kalmari.
"Oh, Dragonbait. I'm sorry," she whispered. Of course he wasn't an
enemy or a traitor. He was her friend and probably another victim like her.
That had to be the reason she felt such a kinship with him.
"Why didn't you tell me?" she whispered gently, reaching up with
her right hand to touch the markings that scarred his body. Energy crackled
through her fingertips and over the lizard's chest. Dragonbait drew a deep breath.
The lines smoothed from his face, his shoulders straightened, and his eyes
widened in surprise.
Alias gasped and drew back her hand, uncertain what she had just
experienced. She didn't feel any weaker, so she didn't think Dragonbait had
sucked the energy from her. But she couldn't possibly have healed him. She had
no training as a cleric. Could the sigils know how to help someone else branded
the same way? It didn't seem likely, but Dragonbait's awful condition had been
corrected by the mere touch of her hand.
Dragonbait retied his shirt fastenings and stood up easily. Shouldering his
sword, he offered her his arm. Alias accepted it with a smile and used it to
balance herself as she rose to her feet. The warrior woman shifted her sword to
her left hand as she reached down to scoop up the finder's stone.
Alias gasped. Her fingers reached of their own volition, not for the light,
but for the wall. She broke out in a sweat in her effort to pull her hand away
from the blue bricks. She hadn't actually felt the wall this time: her hand
seemed to pass through it as though it were an illusion. The wall reacted in
the same extraordinary way it had before.
Again, the bricks seemed to go clear and the passageway was bathed in blue
light. The effect lasted a few moments longer this time. The sigils on her arm
grew brighter.
Dragonbait knocked her to the ground, away from the blockade, and whatever
lay on the other side, beckoning her hand to turn traitor to her body.
Dragonbait stood over her, his muscles taut, ready to keep her from reaching
out for the wall again. The smell of violets wafted from his body even more
strongly now, and Alias wondered if that was the scent of his sweat or his
fear.
Out of nowhere came the chant of a magical spell, and a sparkling dart
slammed into Dragonbait's body. The lizard was propelled backward into the
brick wall.
Alias gasped again. The wall remained solid and unaffected by contact with
the lizard's body. She leaped up and spun about, sword raised to defend against
the attacker.
"Akabar! Have you taken leave of your senses?"
The mage stood in the passageway, his invisibility negated by the casting of
the magic missile he'd used on the lizard. He had had a lot of trouble coming
down the staircase in the dark. He had turned the corner into this passage just
in time to watch the lizard send Alias sprawling across the floor. "Are
you blind, woman?" the mage snapped. "He just attacked you."
"You fool! He was trying to help me—"
"No. He's one of them! And I can prove it!" Akabar shouted,
leaping toward the lizard with his dagger drawn.
Dragonbait could have responded by raising his sword and letting the mage
skewer himself, but instead, he held his arms out to grapple with him. Akabar
was no weakling, and the lizard discovered too late that the Turmishman would
not be so easy to shove away. Akabar slashed at the lizard's shirt, ripping the
ties so the garment fell open.
"Stop it!" Alias shouted. She dropped her sword and rushed forward
to pry Akabar loose from the lizard. The two males shifted their weight, and
Alias stumbled. All three fell toward the wall, but while Akabar's and
Dragon-bait's shoulders hit the barrier with a thud, Alias's hand and wrist
plunged right through the brick and mortar. Only the lizard's body kept her
from falling in farther.
The bricks went transparent yet again and the hellish, blue light that
filled the passage from the other side of the wall caused the sigils on her arm
to perform an entirely new trick. They replicated miniature illusory copies of
themselves which slipped from her flesh. The little daggers, rings, fanged
palms, and the rest circled about her arm like angry hornets. Alias tried to
pull her arm from the wall, but it was mired fast, just as her legs had been
trapped by the crystal elemental. "No!" she screamed. "I'm stuck!"
Dragonbait, squished between her and the wall, let his sword drop and tried
pushing her shoulders away.
"No good,'' Alias groaned. "You're pulling my arm from its
socket."
Brought to a more reasonable state of mind by the new crisis, Akabar ceased
struggling with the lizard. "How did you do that?' he asked, amazed at her
ability to pass through the wall.
"It's not me, you stupid Turmite. It's the arm. That's why Dragonbait
pushed me away from the wall. He must have known there was danger."
"He might have planned all this," Akabar insisted. "To help
capture you. He's branded the same as you."
"Tell me something I don't know," Alias snarled. "Like how to
get my arm out of this wall!"
"Try pushing forward a little and then jerking back," the mage
suggested.
Alias pressed forward up to her elbow, covering all the sigils, but she
could not pull back a fraction of an inch. "Great," she growled.
"Now I'm stuck worse." Instinctively she put her foot up to the wall
to use it as leverage to pull herself out, but the foot slipped through the
brickwork as well, all the way to her knee.
"Any more bright ideas, Akash?"
Despite his awkward position, Dragonbait remained pressed against the wall,
rather than risk losing Alias. Pulled closer to him, Alias could smell the
scent of roses again, mixed with the odor of violets. Suddenly, it came to
her—the rose smell always was present when he was sad. He was mourning her
already. "Don't give up on me yet, chum," she whispered to him.
Dragonbait tried to smile, but it was meant for her benefit, not one he
felt. She was in too much danger.
Akabar ran his fingers along the wall. He tapped on the brick and scratched
at the mortar with his dagger. "This is the most unusual brick I've ever
seen," he murmured. "But the grouting is common enough. Mortar mixed
with gorgon blood, or something similar. It's used to block the passage of
beasts that can walk through walls."
"Well, I can't walk through walls. Why isn't it stopping me?"
Alias said through gritted teeth. Dots of perspiration formed at her brow.
"Precisely. It wasn't made to stop people. That's what the brick is
for, I presume."
"The brick's not stopping me either!" Alias shouted. "Akabar,
stop jabbering and do something!"
"All right, already." The mage ran nervous fingers through his
hair. "I'm going to try to dispel the magic they must have cast on the
wall while the mortar hardened. It was undoubtedly cast by a more powerful mage
than I, but if the spell dates back as far as the destruction of the temple, it
may have decayed some over the centuries."
"Cut the lecture. Just do it."
Akabar stepped back and spread his arms out so as to encompass the entire
wall in his field of disenchantment. He began preparing to cast his spell.
Alias shrieked and began squirming furiously. Akabar had never heard Alias
make such a noise before. The sound completely broke his concentration.
Fortunately, he had not yet begun his spell, so it was not ruined and wasted.
"What's wrong?" he shouted crossly.
"There's something," Alias cried, her features distorted with
terror. She gulped air far too quickly, "Something on the other side. It's
got my arm."
What could terrorize a woman who's stood up to dragons, earthly titans, and
man-eating kalmari? Akabar wondered as he peered at the wall. The blue light
had dimmed considerably. All the mage could make out beyond the translucent
bricks was a vast shadow.
As he watched, the warrior woman's body lurched forward, dragged deeper into
the wall by her arm. Now she was embedded to her right shoulder plate.
"Oh, gods," Alias whined. "Gods, gods, gods, gods," she
moaned over and over, as though she were pleading with heaven.
"Hold her tight, Dragonbait," Akabar barked. "I'm going to
try to dispel now."
Akabar resumed his stance and began to intone his spell. The rise and fall
of his voice became an eerie melody superimposed over the warrior's panicked,
repetitious rhythm.
Dragonbait strained between the trapped warrior and the wall. Even if his
restored strength proved sufficient to counter the slow, steady force that
sucked her through the barrier, Alias feared they might only end up tearing her
in half. Equally bad was the possibility she would end up the instrument that
crushed the life from the lizard before he was willing to sacrifice her.
Akabar finished his disenchantment spell by unlacing his fingers with a
flourish to scatter the magical energies across the surface of the wall.
Sun-yellow motes sparkled toward the wall, which was now the dark blue shade of
a sky about to rain.
The motes struck the wall and hissed like sparks falling into water. The
blue light grew even dimmer as the bricks grew opaque. Alias managed to pull
her leg completely free and her arm came out up to her elbow. The half with
sigils still remained buried.
Dragonbait, unprepared for the success of Akabar's spell, was dislodged from
his position between Alias's trapped foot and arm, and he stumbled to the
floor. He scrambled to his feet, grabbing her about the knees, but the entity
on the other side gained the advantage with a sudden tug.
Alias gave one last inhuman scream before her boots slid from the lizard's
grasp and she fell through the wall like sand in an hourglass.
The wall went completely opaque, and the sigils on Dragonbait's chest ceased
radiating light. The lizard and mage were left alone, bathed in the now-feeble,
yellow glow of the finder's stone.
Dragonbait picked up the glowing crystal and struggled to his feet. Tears
streamed down the lizard's cheeks.
Akabar stared at the wall in disbelief. He ran up to it and pounded on it
with his fists. "Give her back!" he screamed. The string of curses he
began issuing rang down the corridors and echoed back, drowning out the ones he
finished with. The wall remained smooth and hard. If Dragonbait's sword had only
managed to scratch its surface, Akabar's bare hands weren't going to bring it
down.
"You!" the mage growled, turning to the lizard. "This is your
fault." He hurled his words like a mad monk throwing shurikens. They spun
with poisonous, deadly precision, unconcerned whether or not they caused harm.
"She came here after you. You should have held on to her. You lost her. We
could have saved her, and you lost her. What kind of accursed beast are you?
Who pulls your strings?"
With each accusation, the mage took a step toward the exhausted, grieving
lizard until he had backed him against the wall and was standing over him nose
to muzzle. Akabar screeched at the top of his lungs, "Answer me or, I
swear, I'll wear your hide as sandals!" He reached down to grab the
creature by the shoulders.
He never got the chance. Dragonbait used the finder's stone to smack the
mage on the side of the head. The Turmishman staggered back and stumbled over
the lizard's sword.
Dragonbait walked up to the mage and bent over him to retrieve his sword.
Standing, he snarled down on him. His unblinking lizard eyes narrowed as the
mage began to intone a short, deadly spell.
The Turmishman's spell and the lizard's leap to attack him were both
interrupted when the ground shifted beneath them. Akabar forgot his spell and
Dragonbait sprawled across the floor. They both looked back at the wall. The
blue glazing from the bricks began to crack and flake away.
The lizard rolled away from the cascading shards of brickwork while the mage
crab-crawled backward, keeping his eyes on the destruction. The glazing
sloughed completely off, the brick beneath crumbled to dust. The red-colored
mortar remained suspended in air for a moment and then crashed to the floor in
a cloud of dust.
In the light of the finder's stone, it looked to Akabar as if a second wall
stood just beyond the first, only this wall was composed of garbage, rotted
plants, and turned earth. And bound in the center of the wall was Alias, her
eyes closed, her body still. Her arms and legs were pinioned beneath coverings
of moss and moist plant roots. Beneath the wet lichen covering her right arm,
the runes pulsed like an evil, blue heart.
Akabar cried out, but Alias did not stir. She was unconscious. Just above
the warrior woman's head, in the garbage wall, a human eye opened. Then, to the
left of Alias's head, a feline eye opened, followed by a third eye above that,
as large, milky, and deep as a dragon's. A fanged mouth opened to the right of
Alias's right hand. A sharp hyena bark filled the room.
Tendrils shot out from the base of the wall-thing, and with these it began
to drag itself forward, a rotting juggernaut. More tendrils oozed from
slime-dripping pores, wet and thick tendrils, ending in mouths filled with
sharp fangs.
The mage scrambled through the spells he had memorized. All he could think
to try was another magic missile. He was struggling to calm himself so that he
could begin chanting when a scaly arm grabbed the collar of his robe and
dragged him down the passage and around the bend.
Akabar jerked away from the lizard's claws and knocked his arm away.
"Was this your plan, beast," he spat, "to sacrifice her to that
thing?"
Dragonbait's face twisted into a deep scowl, and Akabar thought the lizard
was going to hit him again. Instead, he pointed around the corner, back toward
the living wall.
It had become a wave of pungent rot. Fresh green shoots sprouted over it,
and it moved with surprising speed, already having lumbered over the spot where
Akabar had been standing only a moment before. New taproots shot out every
second, and brownish slime oozed from beneath its flowing bottom. Alias
remained asleep, entranced, trapped against its leading edge.
"So, you've saved me," Akabar shrugged. "How do we get Alias
back?"
Dragonbait scowled again and pointed up.
Akabar had no better plan, so he allowed himself to be tugged back through
the passages, looking behind every few yards to see if the wall of slime was
still following them.
It was. The wall lumbered along like a mastodon, its bulk filling the
corridor, oozing into different shapes to fit the narrower corridors. Its
multiple mouths were babbling now, each inhuman throat finding its voice,
wheezing through rotted pipes too long ignored.
The mage and the lizard finally reached the secret door from the stairs into
the garbage midden. The stench of human waste was strong, but fresher and more
alive than the dead-rot that followed them. The door had resumed whining,
trying to overcome the rocks Alias had jammed in its path.
Dragonbait began kicking the stones away.
"No!" Akabar shouted, trying to push him away. "You can't do
that! She'll be trapped in there with that thing!"
The lizard shoved him across the platform toward the stairs and kicked the
last stone from the door's path.
The mossy barrier slammed shut.
"What have you done?" Akabar screamed.
Suddenly, Akabar gasped, breathless. Sharp pains laced through his chest
like needles running beneath his skin. His lungs labored for air.
Dragonbait pointed upward and began climbing the stairs.
"Damn you!" the mage shouted up the steps from the platform.
"I may be a greengrocer, but I know better than to abandon a friend! I'll
die before I abandon her to that thing, you coward."
Directly behind him, the wall with the secret door exploded and the great,
oozing mass surged into the pit. The stone platform began to collapse under its
great weight, but the corruption cascaded downward still babbling from
innumerable mouths. Now, the squealing cries were chanting in chorus.
In voices ranging from frog piping to deep, resonant tongues as ancient as
the great elven forests, the word repeated over and over was
Moander.
The Turmish mage blanched and fled up the stairs.
19
Moander's Resurrection and Mist's Return
Dragonbait was waiting for Akabar halfway up the stairs. The lizard's
breathing was fast, but nowhere near as labored as the mage's. Akabar staggered
up the stairs with his hands clutching his chest. The pain there had changed
from sharp needle pricks to a deep, crushing sensation. His face was drenched
with sweat. His shoulder and back ached.
"Why?" he gasped, his furor burned out by the fire in his lungs,
"why did you let her die?"
Dragonbait made a quick dismissive shake of his head such as an adult might
use to warn an overbearing child. Then, noticing the perspiration dripping down
the Turmishman's anguished face, the lizard reached out to take his shoulder.
Akabar retreated from his grasp. "No," he insisted. "You go
ahead. I can't run. Muscle cramp," he lied. "If it climbs up the
walls, maybe I can slow it, maybe have a chance still to free her. Go!"
The mage collapsed in a heap on the stairs.
Dragonbait slipped past Akabar a few steps lower and knelt to get a better
look at him. He put the finder's stone down beside him and reached out with
both clawed hands. He laid his palms and fingers over the slime-spattered robe
covering Akabar's chest.
The smell of woodsmoke enveloped them. A small aura of light flared around
the reptile's claws. Nowhere but in the blackness of this pit would Akabar have
been able to see the light the lizard generated. A feeling of warmth and relief
spread out from Akabar's torso.
Akabar stood and the pain in his chest, back, and shoulder was gone. He
stared at the lizard in confusion.
"Who in Gehenna are you?
What are you?"
But Dragonbait's attention was fixed on the pit. He stared over the edge of
the staircase into the earth's depths. Akabar tried to adjust his eyes to the
darkness to see what held the lizard's gaze. A bright, blue light shimmered in
the depths. At first, Akabar thought it might be the moon reflected in water,
but the sky above the pit was dark.
"Alias!" he whispered excitedly. 'She might still be alive. Look,
the light's coming closer."
The light was indeed approaching them, the blue light shed by the sigils on
the warrior woman's arm, but it was not Alias propelling herself upward. The
bottom of the pit, a mass of rot and oozing garbage, was rising up the shaft.
Alias was just a tiny human figure pinned to the muck.
Dragonbait pointed up the stairs and nudged Akabar to climb in front of him.
The mage nodded and ascended without further argument or complaint. When he
reached the top, he was only mildly winded. The pain had not reasserted itself
with the exertion of the climb. He turned around to check on the lizard's
progress up the stairs.
Having judged the speed of the monster to be less than their own, Dragonbait
now took his time, turning back often to study it. Is he some sort of tribal
shaman? Akabar wondered. What other secrets has he kept hidden?
Akabar peered back down the pit. Far below, the oozing mass that had
kidnapped Alias was still crawling up the sides of the midden. It rose like
lava in a volcano and had already regained the height of the ruined platform.
The titanic effort of hauling its vast bulk did not seem to tire it. If
anything, it seemed to be moving faster now.
"Don't move, mooncalf," a strange, rough voice ordered. Then it
shouted, "Captain!"
Akabar looked up from the pit. Ten feet away, a single soldier was sitting
on the pile of rubble about the midden. He was wrapped in a faded red robe, and
a red-plumed helmet lay beside him, next to an overful bucket of kitchen waste.
He held a loaded crossbow aimed at Akabar's chest.
Dragonbait's head rose over the rim of the pit. He ducked back quickly, but
it was already too late.
"No good, pigeon," the soldier barked toward the pit. "Bring
your carcass over the side, or we'll push your buddy in."
Akabar watched Dragonbait shove the finder's stone into his shirt and
sheathe his sword across his back, though the soldier did not have his line of
sight and could not have noticed. The lizard scrambled over the edge with both
his hands held out before him. He positioned his body between Akabar and the
crossbow.
The mage had always assumed that in the event of Alias's inability to take
charge, he would be the next leader. Obviously, Dragonbait did not agree. He
took responsibility for their safety and put himself at the greatest risk.
The captain and four more fighters strode through the ruins toward the
midden. Two carried lanterns and handheld crossbows. The rest were armed with
short swords, drawn and ready.
"I got me some looters," their captor announced. "Or maybe
spies," he added. By the brightening of his face, Akabar could see that
this thought had just entered the man's head. The glee it brought him indicated
that there was a bounty paid on spies.
Akabar looked to Dragonbait. Leader or not, he would need an interpreter. He
stepped forward to stand beside the lizard as the captain approached.
Dragonbait stood motionless, but Akabar could sense the lizard's tension. The
fragrance of violets wafted from his body. The mage could smell his own sweat.
Dragonbait glanced meaningfully at the pit and back at Akabar, raising his
scaly brows. If he could stall the soldiers, they would soon be too busy
dealing with an ancient god to bother with two stray adventurers.
"I am no looter, but a mage of no small water," Akabar announced
to the captain. "I have important information for the commander of your
unit."
"No small water," mimicked the crossbowman who'd discovered them.
"Sounds like a southerner," one of the other soldiers said.
"Don't like southerners," the first one said. "They lie and
stink."
The Red Plumes captain held up his hand, silencing everyone. "Who are
you, and what is your information?" he asked Akabar.
Akabar could not keep from glancing at the pit Using the lumbering garbage
pile of a god as a diversion would not work if Moander engulfed them before
engaging the Red Plumes. "Let us go to your camp, where I will tell
you," he said, trying to keep his voice steady.
"You'll tell me here and now," replied the captain, "or your
bodies will be lying at the bottom of the pit."
The bottom of the pit may be here any minute, the mage thought nervously.
Aloud he said, "There is something very dangerous in this pit. A threat to
you and everyone else in this city. It climbs out even as we speak. You must
fetch fire, oil, and powerful mages, quickly. We might still repel it."
The captain chuckled. "Our mages are asleep, southerner, resting after
a powerful contention with the forces of Zhentil Keep. It would not be worth
your life or mine to roust them. Your story sounds to me like a looter's tale,
but it will not help you escape the noose. We have firm laws against looters.
But I'm sure you know that."
"No," Akabar replied. "I do not." He looked around at
the ruined city. "I wasn't even aware there was anything worth looting in
this pile of rubble."
"I'll bet," the captain said, smiling with amusement at Akabar's
cool denial. "However, ignorance of the law is no excuse. The Hillsfar Red
Plumes are here at the request of the Yulash government in Hillsfar. On their
behalf, we are authorized to hang all looters. No exceptions."
"I can understand that," Akabar said. "Please," he
pleaded, "let us move away from the edge of this pit."
The captain surveyed the mage and the lizard. For the first time that evening,
Akabar missed the presence of the glib-tongued Ruskettle. By now, the dratted
halfling could probably have convinced the captain to organize a full alert,
the mage mused, were she here and not snoring away at camp. He wondered if he
would ever have another chance to scold her for her laziness.
Finally, the captain made up his mind. He motioned permission for Dragonbait
and Akabar to move away from the pit. The crossbowmen kept their weapons
leveled on the prisoners. The captain, having apparently sensed and caught
Akabar's and Dragonbait's nervousness, moved away from the pit first, though he
tried to appear calm and unperturbed as he leaned on his weapon. The other two
men rested their swords on their shoulders.
The two adventurers moved cautiously through the rubble, away from the edge
of the pit, until they stood with their backs against a half-toppled wall.
'"Try again, looter," the captain ordered. "I'm sure you can
come up with a better story than a pit fiend."
Why is it one's friends will believe one's lies, but one's enemies are
incapable of recognizing the truth when one speaks it? Akabar pondered. He knew
better than to back-track. "Sir," he said urgently, "as one
civilized man to another, I assure you, there is indeed a horrible creature in
that pit, no mere fiend, but an ancient god."
"I've heard of you 'civilized Southerners'," their discoverer
said, "you're baby-killers, every man-jack of you. Worship gods darker
than those who squat at the Keep."
Either bards are spreading the tales about baby-killers in every society,
Akabar thought, or they're neglecting their duty to disabuse people of these
absurd notions.
The captain, not quite as obtuse and single-minded as his subordinates, gave
an order to a crossbowman. "Soldier, take a look down the pit. The rest of
you, watch this pair. If they so much as sneeze, skewer them."
The crossbowman climbed over the rubble to peer down into the pit.
"Looks fine to me," he insisted, holding the lantern over his head.
"Kinda full. We're going to have to find another dump soon. Hey, there's a
body in there, a wo—"
The crossbowman never had a chance to finish his sentence. A slimy tendril
whipped up over the edge of the pit, wrapped around the man's neck, and yanked
him over the edge. The sickening crack of shattering bones followed.
The monster crested the rim of the pit and then rose above it. It had used
the slimy refuse of the midden to increase its size and its stench was
overpowering. But more hideous were the thousand singing mouths, some pitched
gratingly high, others grindingly low, some smaller than a babe's, a few the
size of a dragon's maw, all lined with gleaming, sharp fangs. In the center of the
mass facing them, clustered around the immobile form of Alias, a set of
mismatched eyes scanned the soldiers.
"Fire!" the captain shouted, flinging his own lantern at the
beast. The glass shattered and the burning oil spread out over the rotting
decay. It smoldered briefly, but the waste that made up the creature's body was
too wet to ignite. Crossbow bolts disappeared into the garbage, but did not
seem to cause much damage, except for puncturing an eye. Three more eyes opened
around the injured eve, staring cross-eyed at the thick, green ichor oozing
from it, then turned their attention to the fighters.
The mound of rot and refuse towered over its attackers. Wet tendrils, as
thick as broomsticks, dripping with mire, lashed out from the body and struck
three of the soldiers, including the captain. They were all dragged screaming
into a different large, open maw, feet first. The Abomination bit each man in
half before swallowing.
Dragonbait clutched at Akabar's robes, pulling him toward the city wall. Akabar
tore loose from the lizard and planted his feet firm. "Look," he
said, unable to tear his gaze from the horror that was Moander, "I'm sorry
about what I said before. You were only doing what you thought best. Now you
have to go get Ruskettle. Go get help—Elminster or Dimswart. The Harpers—anyone
you can find. This is more than we can handle. I have to stay and try to free
Alias."
Dragonbait shook his head.
"It's no use arguing. I'm not leaving. There's no sense in both of us
risking our lives. Someone has to warn the world." Akabar did not bother
to consider that Dragonbait had no voice to raise such an alarm. He shoved the
lizard toward the city wall and moved toward the battle, circling to keep in
sight the "face" of Moander that held Alias.
Dragonbait loped from the pit. He stopped a short distance away and turned
to watch the battle.
The Abomination of Moander, singing its name, tore through the ruins,
overrunning the camp of the Red Plumes. Akabar screwed his eyes shut and
muttered, fast and furious, the opening lines of the spell. When he opened
them, the beast had turned back toward the pit to clean up the stray humans it
had left behind. It was almost on top of him, its fanged mouths smiling and the
eyes that clustered about Alias all fixed on his body. Akabar aimed his spell
square on those eyes.
A pool of light blossomed across the god's "face." The eyes turned
a blind, milky white or shut tightly to shield themselves from the brightness
cast over them. Akabar grabbed a tendril and hauled himself up the hulking
body.
When he reached Alias's side, he drew his dagger. He began hacking furiously
at the roots which bound her to the monster. The blinding light would not last
long, and he did not stand a chance once an eye spotted him.
There was movement along the garbage hulk. Akabar looked down to discover
the source of the disturbance. Dragonbait was using the jagged teeth of his
sword to saw through the thicker tentacles entrapping Alias.
Annoyed but not surprised, Akabar shouted, "You should have followed my
orders." Dragonbait finally got one of Alias's legs free and moved up to
work on the restraints about her arm, but he suspected he was fighting a losing
battle. Tendrils were regrowing already, and Akabar had to slash them back, keeping
him from making any progress toward liberating the swordswoman.
An eye opened near Akabar's hand. He stabbed it and it shut up, tearing
yellow ichor. Below him, a large branch, as thick as a boa constrictor, reached
for Dragonbait. Shouting a warning, the mage launched himself over Alias's body
and kicked the lizard to the ground. The tendril caught the mage's wrist and
snaked up his arm. At its tip was a venomous-looking flower shaped like a
great, yellow hand that groped blindly toward the mage's head.
Dragonbait watched in shocked horror. Akabar shouted, "Run, damn you,
run!" before the foul blossom curled over his face. Akabar was dragged
into the heart of the pulsing mass. Tendrils grew over Alias's body.
Dragonbait fled toward the city wall. The heaving monstrosity shambled after
him, swords and half-eaten bodies stuck out at all angles from the boundaries
of its oozing flesh. There was no sign of the mage. The light Akabar had cast
was fading, and only the hot blue glow from the warrior woman's buried arm
revealed her position.
Diving through a hole in the city wall, the lizard curled himself into a
tight ball and rolled down the slope of the mound with reckless speed. A shower
of brownish vines and tendrils shot out after him but fell short of their mark.
Shouts came from the far side of the wall—more mercenaries alerted to the
Abomination's presence. The whine of missiles, ordinary and magical, reached
Dragonbait's ears.
The lizard stood up and dashed down the mound. At the bottom, he turned to
check on the monster. The city wall, already weakened from vears of abuse,
began to give under the pressure of the god's bulk. Part of its body oozed over
the wall, crushing beneath what it could not push aside.
Dragonbait turned again and ran toward their camp, chased by the shrieks of
the soldiers dying in the city. He did not weep for Akabar; all his tears had
been spent on Alias, and he had no time to make more.
*****
Olive Ruskettle turned in her sleep and moaned softly. A shadow passed
through her usual dreams of wealth and fame and food and wine. Phalse's face
appeared briefly, his head split by that unhalfling-like grin, followed by a
recurring nightmare—her abduction by Mist. Panicked horses neighed over the
rushing sound of the dragon's wings. The dream was so real that Olive's
sleeping form curled into a tight ball and pulled the covers over her head.
Then something poked at her, a swift, sharp shove. Alias, Olive guessed,
demanding that I take my turn at watch.
"Go 'way" Olive grumbled, clutching the covers more tightly about
her. "It's the lizard's turn. Let me have five more minutes. Tops."
"Five more minutes," an agreeable voice rumbled. "Then I will
fry you where you sleep."
Olive's eyes shot open. Very slowly, she turned over to find herself looking
square in the steaming face of the not-so-honorable Mistinarperadnacles.
"Boogers," the halfling whispered. She scanned the campsite for
the others.
There was no sign of them. They were gone—all three of them. Dead already?
Olive puzzled. Without a fight?
The tethers of the horses had been pulled up, but the twisted, half-eaten
form of the purebred chestnut, Lady Killer, lay not far away.
The dragon followed her gaze. "Yes," Mist purred, "I had a
wee bit to nosh before waking you. I get so crabby trying to talk to people on
an empty stomach. The temptation to eat them wears on my nerves, you see."
Steam poured from the creature's nostrils, engulfing the halfling.
Olive coughed back a breath of the noxious vapor.
"Now," the she-dragon demanded, "where is the lawyer?"
"Lawyer?" Olive squeaked, trying to gain her mental footing. How
could the others leave me like this, unguarded, in so much danger? Of all the
inconsiderate behavior!
"The woman who knows the old ways," said the dragon. "The
warrior. I understand she travels with a pet mage and a lizard-creature."
Olive's heart leaped. They were still alive! Somewhere. They can rescue me!
Aloud she said, "Gee, they were here a little while ago. Maybe they—"
Her hand fell on Akabar's parchment map. Squinting in the moonlight, she could
just make out writing on the back, but not what it said. Cautiously, explaining
her every move to Mist in detail to avoid any sudden incinerations, the
halfling drew out and lit a candle from her pack. She read the message to
herself.
"A clue?" Mist asked hopefully.
"Yes," the halfling nodded. "See?" She held the map up
to the dragon's left eye.
"And what does it say?" Mist inquired.
"You don't read Common?" Olive asked meekly, afraid of offending
the vain beast.
"1 prefer the more visual arts," the lumbering creature said with
a defensive snort. "Theater, sculpture, bards."
How about opera? Olive wondered. She held the parchment in front of her and
read aloud: "'Had a vision. Off to Zhentil Keep. Follow soon. Hugs,
Alias?'"
"Are you certain? There don't seem to be that many words to me,"
Mist said, her eyebrows raised in suspicion.
"She uses a lot of abbreviations. Like scribes, you know," the
halfling replied.
"Do your friends usually leave you behind just because you sleep
late?" the dragon asked.
"Well, you see, they knew I was a little reluctant to go to Zhentil
Keep. I would have preferred visiting another city, like Hillsfar. I guess they
didn't feel like waiting fur me to make up my mind to join them or not."
Mist raised up on her rear haunches, stretched, and yawned. Then she settled
back down. "You have no idea the trouble I've gone to to find the two of
you," she said. "Matter of honor and all that."
Olive couldn't have said what came over her, but some demon inside of her,
tired of being pushed around and bullied, prompted her to ask rudely, "You
mean you've brought us the chest of gold you promised us?"
Mist's eyes narrowed into slits. "Before I rush off to deal with the
Zheeks for your friend's hide, I think a little late lunch would be in
order."
The demon within vanished. "Oh," Olive said, "you wouldn't
want to do that. Flying on a full stomach, you'll get cramps. Besides, you'll
need someone to help you negotiate with the Keepers. They're a terribly
bureaucratic bunch. Forms, red tape, memos. They could give you the runaround
for days. I can be terribly useful in cutting through the paperwork, and you
know how entertaining I am. Remember the good times we had together in the
cave—er, lair, I mean, your home."
"I do," the dragon agreed with a smirk. "And I must confess
that the desire to reclaim you, my little, lost trophy, motivated me almost as
much as my desire for revenge." Mist paused a moment before asking,
"You've heard of singing for your supper?"
With a gulp, the bard nodded.
"Well, with me, you must sing or become supper. I might just spare you
... or not."
Ruskettle sighed. Repressing all the smart remarks that came to her head,
she reached for her yarting.
20
Dragonbait's Feint of Honor
The smell of blood caught Dragonbait's attention a hundred yards before he
entered camp. He dropped to all fours and crawled forward cautiously. By the
campsite was a huge dark mound. The massive shape was easily ten times greater
than the upended wagon that had shielded the whole party. As the lizard drew
closer, he heard singing.
The voice was Ruskettle's, but it was unusually uneven. It rang out strong
and sweet for a few lines, then wavered helplessly for a half dozen notes
before regaining its tone. Olive sang the tune Alias had taught her way back in
Cormyr, the song about the fall of Myth Drannor. Here on the battle-strewn
plain, in the dark, with fear so obviously in her heart, the song took on a
poignancy Olive might never have been able to give it before a human audience.
The lizard crept closer still, using the wagon as cover. Once he was
crouched behind the wagonbed, he looked back toward Yulash. The eastern sky was
developing the sickly glow of sunrise through fog, but Dragonbait didn't need
the light to pick out the great hulk of Moander. To the lizard's sight, the
Abomination stood out against the mist-chilled fields, warmed as it was with
the fresh blood of its victims. It was heading south toward the Elven Wood.
Dragonbait turned his attention once more to the matter close at hand. He
peeked around the edge of the wagonbed and instantly recognized the monster
that crouched like a great cat at the bard's feet.
A lair-beast, a very big lair-beast, Dragonbait concluded, ducking back
behind the wagon.
He sniffed at the air and recognized the monster's scent. Alias had gone
into this creature's den and brought out the halfling. Even from the back
tunnel, his sensitive nose had been able to pick out the dragon's scent, and he
had rankled at the swordswoman's order to stay outside while she went in to do
battle.
Mist's great tail wrapped around the camp, trapping the halfling in a ring
of crimson.
Dragonbait sighed inwardly. This was a very inconvenient time to have to
fight a lair-beast, he thought. If he died, there would be no one left to help
Alias, but he needed Olive's help. There simply wasn't time to find new allies.
He climbed to the top of the wagonbed so the halfling would be able to see
him without alerting the dragon.
Olive's voice quivered with exhaustion. It wasn't easy being so frightened.
When she spotted Dragonbait, she almost shouted out the next lyric, but years
of training stepped in and she was able to repress her excitement before she
gave away the lizard's presence.
Her voice grew in strength as she sang the final verse. A plan was beginning
to form in the back of her head. She had seen the lizard in combat, and he
wasn't bad. With her brains and his brawn, she might just have a chance. She
finished the song with a flourish.
The dragon let out a great contented sigh, steam pouring from her nostrils.
"That is a new one. You must have learned it since we last parted, or were
you keeping this little gem hidden from me when you stayed as my guest?"
"A good bard is always picking up new pieces for her repertoire,"
the halfling replied evenly. She stretched and asked, "So, have you
decided to eat me now or wait until you find Alias of Westgate?"
"I am of two minds," Mist answered, standing up to stretch
herself. She turned around like a cat trying to decide the most comfortable
position. Dragonbait dropped behind the wagon not a moment too soon. When the
great wyrm had settled herself back down, in nearly the exact same spot as
before, Dragonbait climbed back up the wagon to watch the proceedings.
"Two minds," Mist repeated. "On one hand, your talent would
be a great loss to the world. On the other hand, artists don't usually become
really famous until after their deaths. I would be doing you a favor by
allowing you to satisfy this peckish feeling in my belly."
"But then I couldn't help you find Alias," the halfling pointed
out calmly.
"No," the dragon admitted, "but then, neither could you
escape to warn the foul-tongued wench. You see my problem." A long,
lolling tongue slid out from between Mist's jaws and licked at her two
protruding upper fangs.
"Yes," Olive admitted, her eyes riveted to the great, forked organ
until it withdrew back into the dragon's mouth. "It sounds as if you've
already made your decision."
"You're right," Mist said as rivers of drool began to slide down
her chin hairs. "I think a light meal is definitely in order before I
resume the hunt."
"Sounds appropriate to me," the halfling agreed, reaching into her
shirt as if to scratch an indelicate itch. "I guess I have no choice,
then."
"Not really."
From his perch atop the wagon, Dragonbait crouched forward, ready to leap on
the dragon and save the strangely acquiescent bard.
Olive withdrew her hand from her shirt and presented a small, stoppered
bottle. "Have you ever heard of peranox?" she asked.
"It's some human poison, isn't it? It's supposed to smell like
cinnamon, I believe."
The halfling nodded and unstoppered the bottle. The scent of cinnamon
immediately drifted to her nostrils. Mist sniffed and no doubt caught a whiff
of it, too.
"Yes, a human poison." Olive nodded as beads of perspiration began
rising on her forehead and cheeks. "And a halfling poison as well. Fast
acting. Deadly. What I have here will kill me. It may kill you, too. Though of
course I don't know the correct dosage for a beast your size."
"Such a desperate action."
"These are desperate times." Olive rose to her feet, using the
tiny vial as a shield. Now, work up to this slowly, Olive-girl—you can't afford
to miss any steps, she warned herself as she prepared to use the same legal
arguments she'd learned from the swordswoman. "You don't think much of me,
do you?" she asked the dragon.
"Beg pardon?" Mist replied in confusion, her eyes never leaving the
bottle in the halfling's hands.
Dragonbait unsheathed his sword, but remained perched on top of the wagon.
The poison stand-off could not last long. Eventually, the dragon would just
decide she wasn't hungry enough to ingest a poison-laden bard and simply
incinerate the halfling. Yet, Dragonbait could sense Olive was preparing some
other cunning plan. It might be worth the risk to let the halfling play her
hand before trying to battle this lair-beast myself, he decided.
"Were it Alias the human you found here with me, what would you have
done? Sat down and demanded four or five songs as you tore apart her favorite
horse?"
"I'm sorry," Mist said. She nodded toward the remains of Lady
Killer. "Was this a friend of yours?"
"It was Alias's horse," Olive snapped. "But that's not my
point, is it? You wouldn't have made her grovel before you."
"No," Mist admitted. She thought carefully for a moment. "I
would have killed her directly, using flame and fangs and claws and every other
weapon at my disposal."
"Ex-actly!" the halfling said. "You wouldn't waste your time
while ..." Olive caught herself. She'd been about to say, "while she
waited frantically for reinforcements to arrive and rescue her," but that
was too close to her own situation. Mist might sit up and look around, ruining
the lizard's surprise. She gulped and then continued, "while the night
passed, demanding more songs like a drunkard at an inn calling for more
mead."
"Well, if you're offended by my sparing your life, I can correct
that." The dragon's smile revealed nothing but sharp teeth, all the way
back down her mouth.
"Offended," Olive mused. "Yes, that's the word. Offended. My
honor, small though it be, has been besmirched. I see no remedy but a Feint of
Honor."
"Feint of—" The dragon reared up, accidentally knocking the wagon
with her shoulder. The upended wagon overturned, sending Dragonbait sprawling
backward. The lizard landed on all fours and pressed himself tightly against
the ground.
Meanwhile, Mist rocked back and forth, issuing a loud braying that Olive
could only assume was laughter. The halfling shifted to the left somewhat to
keep the dragon's attention away from Dragonbait's position.
How did he ever get a stupid name like Dragonbait? the bard wondered as she
caught a glimpse of the lizard stalking forward. I just hope its not prophetic.
When Mist had quieted some and fixed her gaze back on the halfling, Olive asked
testily, "Are you quite through?"
"Dear child," the dragon chuckled, "do you take me for a
fool? Being foiled once this year by a warrior schooled in the old ways is
enough. To be taken in yet again, by a halfling, would be unforgivable."
"There you go insulting me again." Olive thrust out her chest and
brought the bottle close to her, determined to spill it on herself. "I
challenge you, O Mistinarperadnacles, to a Feint of Honor!"
Again the dragon brayed. "You have missed your calling, small one.
Comedy, not music, is your vocation."
"We settle terms next," Olive persevered despite Mist's attitude.
"I suggest three hits, no flames, no claws, little bitesies. Any friends
that happen along are welcome to join in the fray."
Mist rose up on her hind haunches. Steam began to curl out from between her
great fangs. "Little fool. There is one small portion of the Feint of
Honor of which you are no doubt ignorant. It must be issued by a good fighter
and true. You are no fighter, you are not good, and I doubt, little bard, that
you are true. You are beginning to bore me, and so you must die."
Just then, the sun broke through the mists and the dragon became a great,
dark shadow outlined with an aura of light. Olive was certain she had met her
doom. She took a deep breath and closed her eyes tightly. She wondered if her
end would be the agony of fire or, should Mist be willing to risk the effects
of peranox, the pain of razor-sharp teeth.
When several heartbeats had passed without a violent attack on her person,
the halfling, still holding her breath, popped open one eye. She was ready to
close it at a moment's notice should the dragon attack.
But her view of the dragon was blocked by the body of Dragonbait. The lizard
stood before Mist, brandishing his toothed, diamond-headed sword.
Olive could not believe her eyes. He's going to defend me. But Dragonbait
remained motionless before the dragon. What's he doing? Praying? It's too late
for that, she decided, crouching down and edging away from the lizard. Mist
ignored her. The dragon's amber eyes were locked with the lizard's.
Why aren't they attacking? Olive wondered. Neither creature moved. Her
curiosity overwhelmed her good sense, and Olive stood watching the two
combatants.
Banks of steam evaporated off Dragonbait's neck and chest. Olive found
herself suddenly thinking of baking bread. Then she realized it wasn't a stray
thought; she smelled hot rolls, fresh from the oven, begging to be smeared with
butter and jam. The halfling's mouth watered. It was, after all, time for
breakfast.
As the dragon and lizard engaged in their battle of wills and the daylight
grew brighter, Olive became aware of the additional damage Mist had wrought
while the halfling slept. The ground about the campsite and where the horses
had been staked was all torn up, plowed by the dragon's claws. "And I
slept through it all," Olive muttered in a daze.
Then Mist rumbled, "Well challenged, noble warrior. What are your
terms?"
Olive stared flabbergasted at Dragonbait. Mist understands him? After all
the foolishness I went through to try to communicate with him, he talks to a
dragon first. That figures. They're both lizards.
But even more astonishing to Olive was the polite manner in which Mist
accepted the lizard's challenge. She treated him with a courtesy she hadn't
bothered to use even when Alias fought her.
Mist continued to watch the lizard, nodding occasionally as though taking in
some point or other, though the halfling could not hear a sound from
Dragonbait. Is he some sort of telepath? she wondered. No. Then he would have
talked to us in our minds.
Finally, Mist said, "An interesting tale. Yes, agreed. Maximum damage.
If you win, I'll help you take on this abomination you describe. But after the
beast is killed, our deal is ended. If I win, you shall tell me where to find
Alias before I slay you and your ally."
"Brandobis!" cursed the halfling. His ally—that's me. Where does
he get off forfeiting my life? She did not take into consideration that there
was little else Dragonbait could do if he lost the battle.
Her first instinct was to flee. She reached down for her pack, but as she
picked it up, that idea curdled like blood in her mind. The thin platinum coins
in her pack clinked together, reminding Olive of her deal with Phalse. She wore
the tracking ring on a chain around her neck, near the ring that detected magic.
If she abandoned the lizard now, she might not be able to find the warrior
woman, and Phalse's friends would believe she had reneged on her agreement and
deal with her accordingly. But if Dragonbait won, he would take her right to
Alias.
How do I get into these messes? Olive sighed. She wracked her mind for some
means of helping the lizard battle the dragon.
"We start at three," the dragon explained. "One . . ."
Dragonbait went into a crouch. Olive wondered if she could loft the poison
into the beast's mouth.
"Two . . ." Mist said, unfurling her wings. In the sunrise they
were the color of human—and halfling—blood. The dragon flexed her rear legs and
leaped into the air, hovering with a massive beat of mighty wings.
"Three!" Mist roared, as Dragonbait dodged beneath her.
Mist breathed fire—a short, spitting flame that divoted the earth where
Dragonbait had been standing. The lizard was beneath the dragon, but Mist
lashed out with her tail, batting him forward, once again in her sight.
She's playing with him, the halfling realized and began desperately
searching through her pockets for something to help. The poison? No, she might
need that for her own use later. Besides, she'd never get it up that high. The
coins weren't enough to bribe a dragon. Her halfling short sword and daggers
would be useless against that great hulk.
The blow of the dragon's whiplike tail separated Dragon-bait from his
weapon. He dodged another small spit of flame and leaped on the lost sword. As
he did so, the hovering dragon swooped, snagging his shirt. The shirt ties were
already torn off though, and the lizard managed to slip out of the garment. He
fell to the ground with a thud, rolling back toward his weapon.
Mist landed with her paw on top of his leg before he could reach his blade.
She moved her head very close to him and smiled broadly, gloating.
"What's this, little dragon-warrior?" the dragon mocked her prey.
"I think I've seen these markings before on your mistress. Are you a
matched set? A pity to break you up."
The bard gasped. Dragonbait was branded with the same blue sigils as Alias.
Only his were set in a ring.
A ring! Olive thought excitedly. Brands just like Alias! Olive pulled the
chain out from beneath her shirt and slipped on the magical detection ring. She
ran toward the battle, twisting the ring and pointing her finger at Dragonbait.
The azure sigils that marked Dragonbait's chest exploded with a satisfyingly
brilliant light.
Mist pitched backward as the sapphire fireworks exploded in her face.
Reflexively, the dragon raised her front paws to her eyes, tossing her prisoner
through the air. Dragonbait spun about like a trained acrobat, landed on his
feet, and ran toward the dragon's rear haunches.
As Mist pawed at the motes of light dancing before her eyes, she flapped her
wings desperately, churning up clouds of dust. The mighty breeze caused
blankets and cloaks to flutter about like theater spirits and sent equipment
packs rolling over, scattering their contents through the camp. Mist roared,
and steam gushed from her mouth.
Dragonbait swung his sword two-handed, biting deep into the monster's thigh.
Mist gave a shout and pitched forward. Olive sidestepped just in time to avoid
being struck by the dragon's jaw as it hit the ground.
Raising her neck, the dragon fired blindly, torching the overturned wagon.
Her neck snaked, spreading the flames in a wide swath. But Dragonbait had
dodged beneath her head, preparing to attack her opposite flank.
The dragon began batting her wings again, trying to take off. Dragonbait
jabbed his sword into her left wing. The backward curved teeth caught in the
flesh and tore a huge, flapping gash in the membrane.
The red dragon crashed to the ground once again. Olive had been waiting for
this chance, and she ran toward the huge head. Her sight now cleared, Mist
opened her mouth, preparing to bite the brave but foolish halfling into two
tidbits. The bard turned and dodged away from the beast's maw, but not before
she managed to toss in, at point-blank range, the opened bottle of peranox.
The bottle cracked beneath the snapping jaws, sending shards of poisoned
crystal deep into the dragon's mouth. Dragonbait struck Mist again, opening a third
wound along her belly. The dragon spat and flamed, trying to drive the poison
from her mouth.
Mist rolled over in the dust like a flea-bitten dog tormented by
insignificant invaders. She flamed at the sky until nothing but heated air
escaped her innards. Dragonbait made one last gash in her neck, then dashed
away, scooping Olive up in his arm and running from the camp—ten, twenty,
thirty yards before he stopped. Then he turned to watch the dragon as it tossed
and twisted in agony.
After five minutes, the thrashing stopped and the huge, crimson monster lay
still in the dirt. Dragonbait pushed Olive to the ground and pointed as though
he were ordering her to stay. He crept warily back toward the dragon. Unwilling
to miss this historic moment, Olive followed disobediently after him.
They halted a few feet from Mist's head. She was still breathing. Drooling
sweat ran from the corners of Dragon-bait's mouth, and Olive had a stitch in
her side from her short attack-run. Still, there was no doubt they had won. She
wondered if Mist would really obey Dragonbait now or try to deceive him the way
she had Alias.
She turned to the lizard, touching his scaly arm shyly. "Thank you for
saving me," she said.
Dragonbait bowed his head politely.
"You can talk, can't you?" Olive asked.
The lizard felt for his belt pockets, where he had put the talis deck Olive
had given him. But the pouch he reached in was torn along the bottom seam and
now completely empty. Dragonbait shrugged.
"Boogers," Olive said. "You know what happened to Alias, but
you can't tell anyone."
"Nonsense. He's told me already," Mist said, popping one eye open,
but remaining otherwise immobile.
Dragonbait raised his sword, and Olive caught a strong whiff of tar. Mist's
eye closed and she whispered, "Yes, I surrender, dragonling. I apologize
for judging you by your raiment. You win. I will honor our agreement." The
dragon sighed and opened her eyes. "Bard, you don't have any more of that
putrid-tasting potion, do you?"
"Oh," the halfling lied, "about six or seven more jars. Large
jars. Why?"
The dragon closed her eyes. Dragonbait snarled, and the eyes opened again.
"I said I give up. You win. Just keep that peranox away from me. I think
I'm going to be sick."
Ruskettle suddenly realized she was shaking, though whether from aftershock
of the battle or the thought of a violently ill dragon, she did not know.
Slowly, like a drunk recovering from her first hangover, Mist reared up her
head, flexing the damaged leg and torn wing. "That tears it," she
said. "Literally. I won't be able to fly for a year. Sorry, but I can't
very well help you if I'm damaged. What say I just let you go and I trek my way
home?"
Dragonbait snarled again. "Only a suggestion," Mist muttered,
laying her head back down on the ground.
The lizard moved back toward the torn wing, grabbed a handful of it on both
sides of the tear, and pulled it toward him like a seaman about to mend
sailcloth. He ran his fingers along the tear, and the torn webbing began to
mesh. A faint, yellow glow emanated from the wound as it healed. Olive caught
the scent of woodsmoke. Dragonbait restored about half the damage along the
trailing edge of the wing, leaving a few spotty holes.
"Thank you," Mist sighed without lifting her head, obviously
relieved of some pain.
Ruskettle looked at the lizard in confusion. "How did you do
that?" she demanded. "Where is Alias? And who are you, anyway?"
Dragonbait jerked his head from Mist to Olive. Mist appeared to concentrate
on the small lizard for a few moments and then began to "translate"
his silence. As the dragon spoke for the opponent who had defeated her in
combat, Olive's eyes widened and her jaw dropped.
"I don't believe you," she told Mist. "You're making this all
up. It's impossible!"
"No one could make up so improbable a tale," Mist sniffed.
"Not even you, bard."
Olive fixed her attention on Dragonbait. The lizard was already gathering
the party's belongings that were still salvageable from the destruction Mist
had wreaked on them.
Olive planted herself firmly before him and demanded to know. "It's not
true what she said, is it? You can't be what she said. You're a lizard!"
Dragonbait looked down at the halfling without expression, holding her eyes
with his own unblinking ones. Olive grew nervous beneath his gaze because she
realized Mist had told her the truth. He really was one of them. Though he
hadn't seemed like one of them before, there was no other explanation for all
his actions.
"It's true." she squeaked.
Dragonbait nodded.
Boogers! Olive swore silently. How do I get into these messes? More
importantly, how do I get out of this one?
21
Moander's Puppet and Mist's Pursuit
Alias stirred beneath the moss-stained roots, and her mind crawled back from
the lands of darkness. She twisted once, then again, straining against her
bonds.
She recalled the passage through the wall of enchanted masonry. It had felt
like an immersion in a cold mountain lake, chilling her skin and knocking the
wind out of her. When she had finally gasped for air, there was a spongy mat
against her face—a fragrant glove of pungent, vegetable smells which had
reminded Alias of mushrooms in butter sauce gone bad in the summer heat.
And then she knew nothing. It was like the dark emptiness that preceded her
appearance at The Hidden Lady.
When Alias awoke, the exposed portions of her skin were chilled and slightly
wet from the fog. She had no idea how long she had slept, or what had happened
while she did, but her adventures in Cormyr and Shadow Gap, and the
conversations at Shadowdale, all remained crisp and clear in her memory. If
anything, they felt more real than the adventures she'd experienced before she
had received the deadly, cursed tattoo.
Finally, she opened her eyes to glare at the curse scrawled across her arm,
only to find it trapped in a blanket of green fibers. She tried to shake loose,
but her arm was held fast. She tried to move her left arm, but that limb was
also pinned down by the same sort of damp, slimy blanket.
Alias tried kicking. Her legs were trapped, too. She wriggled and thrashed
and bucked, but a wet root, as thick as her arm, held her to the ground.
Whenever she moved, the tendrils moved with her. She sensed one of the bonds
tearing, but new shoots sprouted immediately to replace it.
Frustrated, she looked around. She lay on an odd collection of garbage, bog
peat, sickly green vines, and large moldy roots. At the edge of her vision she
spotted something clean and white jutting out from the greenery. Alias recognized
it as a human bone.
She felt the pile of boggy vegetation shift as though it were moving on a
great wagon. She was lying on a ledge at the leading edge of the pile, about
fifteen feet from the ground, but she could see no horses or oxen ahead.
A pile of dead leaves shifted by the right side of her head. As she watched,
a single, green tendril burst through the rotting vegetation. At the tendril's
tip was a pumpkinlike pod The tendril swiveled toward her, and the pumpkin pod
opened like a flower. At its center was a great, weeping eye, trapped on all
sides by jagged, spined teeth.
The sight touched some memory buried within Alias, a memory she wished had
stayed buried. She screamed.
The pumpkin pod closed up, startled or frightened by her reaction. The
tendril withdrew into the refuse pile.
Alias swallowed with some difficulty, keeping her eyes fixed on the spot
where the tendril had sprouted. When it did not reappear, she began to look
around again, though her eyes kept returning to that site every few seconds to
make sure her ocular companion had not returned.
The mound was passing over terrain that resembled the plains about Yulash.
The sun was on her left and there was a thick, dark line of green across the
horizon straight ahead.
If that's the rising sun, we must be heading south out of Yulash, toward the
Elven Wood, she thought. Unless I've slept for days again—then we could be
anywhere.
The sound of something moving through the garbage made her realize she and
the wretched tendrils were not alone. Three figures appeared at the corner of
the mound-men, moving in a matching stride like soldiers. A vine trailed behind
each man, attached somewhere to his back.
The man in the center cast a long shadow on her and blocked out the sun, so
she could only make out his silhouette at first. The sun shone through the
light robes he wore—revealing spindly legs, but a powerful torso. He wore some
sort of helmet. She could not make out his features, but by his bearing she
knew he was Akabar.
The men who flanked the mage were dressed in moldy, torn battle gear. They
moved stiffly as they picked their way through the garbage.
"Akabar?" she said softly, but the figure did not respond.
"Akabar? What's going on? Cut me out of this stuff."
"I'm afraid I must inform you," the lean figure began in the roundabout
speech of the South, "that I am not your Akabar." He broke rank from
the two soldiers and knelt beside her head.
He was Akabar. He had Akabar's face, marked with the three blue
scholar-circles on his forehead, and Akabar's square-shovel beard, and the same
sapphire earring which marked him as a married man. His dark eyes, though, were
completely fogged over in gray and patches of listless white swirled through
them. The thing Alias had mistaken for a helmet was a cap of vines that pressed
suckers against the mage's forehead and into his ears. Dried blood flaked
around the suckers.
Her breath came in short gasps as a scream tried to claw its way up her
throat. She found the strength to ask, "Who are you?"
"I am Moander," said the thing that was Akabar, "the most
important being in your world."
In a smooth, gentle motion he lowered his body into a cross-legged sitting
position and waited for his prisoner to stop squirming. Having exhausted
herself in a futile effort to pull away from the mound of garbage, Alias
finally lay still. She turned her head away from Akabar's body and kept her
eyes squeezed tight, "Oh, gods," she moaned.
"Just a god, singular," Moander replied. "The only one that
matters. Hold on, you have something stuck to your chin. Let me get it."
Akabar used the sleeve of his robe to dab at a fleck of garbage near Alias's
mouth. He used too much pressure and pushed her head backward into the spongy
bed of compost. It was as though he were unaware of his own strength.
"There. Much better. Now we can talk."
"You're not Akabar," Alias whispered, still trying to convince
herself, but not wanting to believe it.
"Not really, no, but I'm all the Akabar you're going to get for a
while. Might as well make the best of him. By rights, he should have died of
fear, being the first human in this millennium to behold my godliness. How he
survived I'll never know. But that kind of luck shouldn't be tampered with, so
I left his body in better shape than the others. Look."
Alias felt shambling footsteps through the boggy ground and looked past
Akabar's body at his companions. One's neck was ripped open, and his face was
pale and ghostly without its lifeblood. The other had no face at all, only a
slab of pummeled, bloody meat. Both had tendrils rigged around their bodies,
moving them like puppets.
Alias felt her stomach heave and twist, but it was overridden by a chill,
clammy terror. Her body trembled and she began to hyperventilate.
"There, there," Moander said, using Akabar's hand to smooth her
hair. "I just brought them as an example of what I could have done to your
friend. I'll send them away now."
Moander gave no verbal command and made no physical gesture, but the
shambling corpses retreated around the side of the hill of garbage. Alias
stared at the passing plains. After a few moments, she grew calmer. "Who
are you really?" she asked.
"As I said before, I am Moander. Though that is a lot like calling a
newborn prince the king."
Alias swung her head and stared at the stranger in Akabar's body. He
imitated the mage almost perfectly, his pose, his gestures, the tone and
cadence of his voice. But the smile was wrong. It was an exaggerated, forced
smile—as if someone had pinned the corners of his mouth.
"Are you ... I mean, is he . . ."
"Dead? Not really. He's gone, for all intents and purposes, but his
soul and mind are still around, locked away in some corner. Rather like a man
poisoned by a Jit snake, who lies in fever dreams, not waking, for weeks. You
still have Jit snakes around here?" He paused, tilting his head as if
listening to an unheard speaker. "No, I guess you don't anymore."
He rested his milky gray eyes on Alias and sat quietly, as if waiting for
her to ask him another question.
Alias only stared at the passing scenery, so Moander continued. "In
this case, if I were to let the mage go, he would awaken. But he cannot break
my control, and I will control him until he is no longer useful. And this one
is so incredibly useful. I needed his mouth and mind to talk to you. Of course,
I could have linked up with you, but you are far too valuable to risk that.
Besides, he is so very amusing."
Moander giggled. "I can't begin to tell you all I'm finding in his
mind. It's like being in a great mansion, with new surprises behind every door.
Here are memories of his wives, and here is you calling him a greengrocer, and
here is a good piece of history of the South. Gods below, so much has happened.
I've been out of touch for too long!"
"Out of touch?" Alias taunted. "I thought gods were
omniscient."
"Well, normally that would be true. Gods stretch through a number of
different planes, with different levels of power in each. This part of
me—" Akabar's hand motioned to the pile of garbage which towered over
them— "you might call the Minion or Abomination of Moander. More than a
thousand years ago, back when Myth Drannor was a major power, the cursed elves
banned my spirit from this world by imprisoning this part of me in my own
temple."
A weakness crept over Alias's spirit. This vast garbage heap was her enemy,
and not only did it hold her prisoner, but it waved her friend before her eyes
like a puppet.
"Soon, when this part of me arrives at the new temple my worshipers
have prepared, and I gather even more worshipers to my fold, I will grow strong
enough in this world to command the powers that gods are endowed with. Had I
been in full control of my powers when my spirit was finally able to return to
the Abomination, I would have left a pit where Yulash stood and ascended into
the heavens to mete out punishment to those who banished me."
"But in the meantime, you're pretty weak. Relatively, I mean."
Moander cocked Akabar's head like a hanged man. "Relatively. But I have
plenty of stored life-fluid in this form. More than enough to reach my
worshipers, pop the heads off a few sacrifices, and make demands on the
populace. I'm conserving my strength by traveling this slowly so that I can
have enough energy to indulge a whim."
Alias stared at the approaching forest, wondering if the sludge mountain
that was Moander would break up when it hit the trees or flow around them.
Moander gestured with Akabar's hands toward the trees which held Alias's
attention. "My first stop is Myth Drannor According to your friend's mind,
all the elves have deserted their capital. I've got to make sure. If it's true,
at least I can dance on the rubble. From there we'll continue south until we
reach Sembia. I love the way your friend thinks in terms of maps and trade
routes. He is so useful."
"And once we've reached Sembia?"
"Ah, curiosity, my servant. A good sign. We'll cut southwest through
Sembia toward The Neck, between the Sea of Fallen Stars and the Lake of
Dragons, and just hop in the water. Scum, like cream, floats. We shall sail
triumphantly to our new home.
"Which is?" Alias asked. She already had a strong suspicion, but
she had to know for sure.
"Westgate, of course. Where we built you."
*****
The trio of non-humans climbed higher into the sky, keeping well above the
range of the catapults of any surviving Keepers or Red Plumes.
"Why so high?" Olive bellowed in Mist's ear.
The dragon let out a puffing grumble, "What?"
"I said, what are we flying so high for?" The halfling grasped the
ropes which Dragonbait had fashioned into an impromptu saddle.
The dragon rumbled between deep puffs of air. "Can either" (long
breath) "fly or talk." (Long breath.) "Try singing" (long
breath) "while you're running hard." (Long breath.) "Hang
on."
The dragon ceased flapping, locked her wings in a gliding position, and
began to circle the city, her wings catching the thermals rising from the
mound. Olive looked back at the dragon's great batlike membranes. One wing
still showed a pink line from the recently healed tear.
Dragonbait, who sat where the dragon's wings joined her body, had done the
healing. According to Mist, the warrior lizard communicated with his scent
glands, so he could not "speak" as they soared through the air. The
wind would carry away the perfume of his words. But he made his desires known
quite effectively by prodding the great wyrm with his sword.
"You were saying," Mist prompted the bard, now that she was able
to breathe normally, her labors eased by the helpful warm air.
"Can't you fly any lower?" Olive asked.
"Do you want to catch a ballista-bolt in the crotch?"
When Olive did not answer immediately, Mist said, "Thought not. Trust
me. I know what I'm doing. Besides the danger below, this is the best place to
gain altitude. And I need altitude to soar after your lizard's Abomination.
Flying, especially with passengers, isn't easy."
"Looks like they've made a ruin of it," the halfling commented on
the city below.
"Human wars tend to do that," Mist replied curtly. "When I
lived in this area, I heard of Yulash's destruction five, no, six times. Some
group or another is always on a crusade or war of liberation. Merciless
killing, cloaked by the niceties of civil tongues. They are a race of lawyers,
these humans. I wonder how they survive."
"My people wonder the same thing."
An idea rose to the surface of the halfling's brain. "Say, O mighty
Mist. I was wondering . . ." Olive trailed off, leaving the question hang
for a moment. Based on what she knew about human and draconian nature, the
halfling calculated some odds before continuing.
The dragon banked and, catching another updraft, began to rise again.
"Yesssss?" she prompted.
"Once you've fulfilled your bargain with Dragonbait and freed Alias,
you're going to attack her."
"Is that a question or a statement?" Mist's voice was low and
guttural.
Olive glanced over her shoulder at Dragonbait, but the lizard was twenty
feet away and couldn't possibly hear their conversation. His attention was
focused on the ground below. "Well," Olive noted, "you haven't
been very, uh, successful the last two times out of the paddock."
"If memory serves, you aided in my defeat both those times."
"My point exactly," Olive said. "And next time you'll have
both Dragonbait and Alias to deal with. Now, if, my services were suddenly
available on your side of the dispute . . ." Again she let her voice trail
off.
For several moments, the only sound was the rush of the wind. Finally, Mist
said, "Why the shift in loyalties?"
The halfling considered how much she wanted the dragon to know. The game
I've been playing for Phalse has become too dangerous, Olive thought. I'd have
no trouble fooling Alias. Dragonbait, however, is not so easily deceived.
To Mist Olive simply said, "Let's just say I do not trust our
companion. He has misrepresented himself and that makes me uncomfortable. I'm
not sure I want to continue traveling with him much longer."
"But you still want to rescue the woman."
The dragon was no dotard, Olive realized. "Yes," she admitted.
"I want to rescue Alias. You might wish to reconsider which warrior has
done the most to earn your vengeance. If you decide on the lizard rather than
the woman, you will find yourself with an ally."
"I see."
"Besides," the halfling added, "Alias has a lot of enemies.
She is bound to get her comeuppance sooner or later."
The dragon banked again, then spoke. "I'll take your suggestion under
advisement. Speaking of His Righteousness, turn around and see what he
wants."
The bard twisted in her makeshift saddle. Dragonbait was banging on the side
of Mist's neck with the flat of his blade. Having caught the bard's attention,
he pointed southward.
"I think he wants you to get on with the hunt. He's pointing
south."
"Everyone thinks they're an expert."
"I imagine he thinks he's the boss," Olive replied slyly.
Mist's neck stiffened some, and she remained silent. She banked again and
began to glide away from Yulash.
"Can you see the monster's trail from this height?" the halfling
asked.
"Bard, I can see field mice from this height."
"Um, I guess I meant, could I have a look?"
Mist turned her head ever so slightly so Olive could peer down at the
ground. Yulash looked as though it would fit in the palm of her hand. Four
roads stretched away from it, east, west, northeast, and northwest, but far
wider than the roads was a path of crushed vegetation and broken copses of
trees heading south by southeast.
"Just how wide is that trail?" Olive asked, unable to judge size
from such a distance.
"About fifty feet. Though it seems to be growing the farther south we
go," Mist mused.
"This Abomination must be huge," the halfling cautioned.
"Think you can handle it?"
"Not handle a shambling mound with a gland problem?" Mist sniffed.
"So far you've only seen me in action in Feints of Honor. Unfettered by
conventions, I am a force to be reckoned with."
"You fight dirty," Olive translated.
"That walking garbage heap will want a bath when I'm through with
it," Mist bragged.
The bard smiled. She turned to look at Dragonbait. He kept his eyes fixed on
the plains.
"Does he have a name? Besides Dragonbait, I mean."
"Indeed," the dragon answered. "But it doesn't translate
well. I much prefer Dragonbait. It's so appropriate."
Without the thermals rising from Yulash, Mist was forced to pump her wings
to preserve her altitude. The conversation with the halfling ended as Mist
conserved her breath for the exertion of flying.
Far in the distance, on the southern horizon, a line of green marked the
Abomination's destination—the Elven Wood.
22
Moander's Revelation and the Rescue Attempt
"You really don't know, do you?" Moander asked with Akabar's
tongue. Carefully it rearranged the merchant-mage's face. Placing a hand
against his cheek, it dropped his jaw, mimicking a look of extreme shock.
"I don't know what?" Alias asked, but even as she spoke, some
notion stirred deep within her consciousness like a serpent that had slumbered
heavily and was only now rising, rising quickly to strike at unwary prey—her.
"You carry my sign," Moander said in Akabar's cheeriest voice.
"And you have done me a great service, so I should return the favor. It
will help pass the time, and, I think, upset you."
"First, understand this," Moander said, using the formal words of
a southern scholar. It pointed one of Akabar's fingers at her face. "You
are a made thing, no different than a clay pot or a forged sword or some
creeping bit of gunk in an alchemist's lab. Is that clear?"
"I don't belie—" Alias began, but the serpent notion sank its
fangs deep into her heart. Beneath the mossy blankets her branded sword arm
responded with a sympathetic ache.
"Yes, you do believe me" Moander insisted. "Now that I have
told you, you cannot resist the truth. Golem. Homonculous. Simulacrum. Clone.
Automaton. All these things come close to describing what you are. But not
completely. You are a new thing, for the moment unique. A fake human, but to
all appearances the real thing. You are an abomination cloaked in the manner
and dress of the everyday."
As a mage and scholar, Akabar would no doubt have recognized the words
Moander used to describe her, but to Alias most of them were gibberish. She had
a notion they involved arcane rituals of the type that made her not only
non-born, but inhuman as well.
"Now, know this," it demanded. "Your spirit is enslaved in
the prison of that body, and that body is a puppet. A puppet made of meat, you
might say, in much the same way as is the body I use to speak with you."
To dramatize its point, Moander lifted Akabar's elbow into the air, leaving his
forearm and hand to droop, and slouching his other shoulder downward so he
resembled a marionette supported only by a single invisible thread.
Alias's mouth opened and closed, but she could think of no retort. Moander
continued its lecture without acknowledging her distress.
"Now, golems and automatons follow a set pattern, invested into their
make-up at their creation. These patterns are usually very rigid, no more
complicated than 'guard this room,' or 'kill the first man to enter.' Useless
rot, entirely too limited. No creativity or resourcefulness or initiative.
"But you," his tone lowered with pride, "you were built
differently. It took many hands to create you. My followers allied with mages,
thieves and assassins, a daemon of great power, and . . . well, the other
hardly matters. With your deceptive appearance you can allay suspicion and
travel at will until you have fulfilled your patterns—traveled all the paths
set before you."
"Paths?" said Alias. Her chest felt tight, as though she were
being crushed by the mad god's words. Each claim it made struck a resonant
chord inside her, leaving her unable to deny what the god said. She choked back
her screams, determined not to show this monster her helpless rage.
"Yes, paths or patterns, whose eventual outcome will be the accomplishment
of some goal set by each of your makers. Rather than simply issue you some
rigid order, we set you on a course whereupon you would achieve these goals
without knowing what they were, or even, once they were achieved, that you had
done so. You could commit theft, espionage, sabotage, murder, and never know
why or for whom, not always remembering, other times believing it to have been
your own idea."
They've made me a damned thing, Alias thought, like the bowl that carries
poison or the sword that deals a death blow. She pressed her nails into her
palms and once again began breathing too fast.
"The goal set for you by my last few followers was to seek my prison
and release my Abomination form so that my spirit could return to this world It
was my life energy, summoned and collected by my followers, that brought you to
life, you see, so that you, the non-born child, could free me."
"I'm not a child," Alias snapped.
"But, of course vou are. It was the first day of Mirtul when my
followers summoned my life energy and you began breathing. Only a month and a
few days. So you see, vou are but a child. Yet even so, you are my greatest
servant, mv liberator, an honor many before you have died for.
"At first, when the lizard arrived, I nearly perished with despair.
(Well, not really, just a figure of speech.) When I saw his markings and sensed
his determination to pass through the wall, I thought he was you. I sucked his
life energy nearly dry trying to pull him through the wall. But I suppose being
hatched counted as being born to the cursed elves who imprisoned me. He could
not pass through the wall, and hence he could not help me pass through it. I
thought all my plans had failed utterly."
Akabar tilted his head, an action Alias suspected was Meander's way of
sifting through the mage's mind. The gray swirls in his eyes thickened and
circled more quickly.
"Of course. That's what the saurial was doing there. Omniscient gods,
indeed. Your magical friend has figured it out for me. He really is so
amazingly useful. The last step in your manufacture was never completed. It
required the blood sacrifice of a pure soul to secure the shackles on your
spirit. Those bumblers down in Westgate chose the saurial, got careless and let
it escape, and it took you with it. You've been wandering around ever since, a
great spell primed to explode, requiring only the last enabling component—the
death of the saurial. Those incompetent idiots! I can tell mankind needs me
desperately."
"Saurial?" Alias asked. She was not certain who Moander meant, but
she had an uncomfortable suspicion.
"The lizard your mage friend thinks of as Dragonbait. The creature was
marked, just like you were. That explains what it was doing trying to pass
through the elven wall that imprisoned my body. The saurial was following your
patterns. And you've been able to draw on its independence, because the two of
you are linked until its death. But don't worry, we'll take care of that
shortly."
Another wave of anger swept over Alias, anger now mixed with anguish. Then
I'll be damned for sure. Something created by the evil sacrifice of my friend.
Of my friends, she amended, realizing that not only Dragonbait's life was
forfeit. Akabar was almost as good as dead. I'm not even human, she thought. I
had no right to their aid and friendship, and now I've doomed them.
"Oh, Akabar," she whispered to his body, hoping some part of his
mind was aware of what she said. "I'm so sorry. I should never have let
you get into this mess."
But if the mage could hear her, he gave no indication. Moander's control
over him was complete, and at the moment Moander wasn't even paying attention
to her. The god was using Akabar's form to stare at the line of trees that they
were fast approaching. Already the mound of refuse, now quite dusty and grass
covered from its passage through the plains, was pitching and weaving from
running over small trees and bushes near the edge of the prairie. As it
engulfed and absorbed this green matter, the Abomination grew into a small
hill, already as high as the trees on the fringes of the Elven Wood.
Apparently satisfied that the Abomination could control the forest, Moander
used Akabar to return his attention to his prisoner. "The most amazing
thing is that, despite your premature debut into society, most of your patterns
still held. You attacked a man who sounded like the king of Cormyr, no doubt a
goal of the Fire Knives. And then you came all the way north, just to free
me." Akabar's finger stroked her cheek. "When you are returned and
fully tamed, you will be my perfect servant."
Alias kicked and struggled futilely in her bindings. She knew she could not
escape, but like a bird beating against the bars of a cage, instinct made her
frantic. What Moander suggested was worse than slavery. The god and its
followers and allies would turn her into an unthinking mechanism, with only the
illusion of life and the sketchy memories of some woman. Where had they gotten
the history she thought had been hers? Fairy tales? Or was there an original
Alias who lived her life before, then died to become her?
Alias stared at the vine-draped form of Akabar, and oddly enough, the
crudeness of the god's method of control soothed her anguish and helped her
regain her composure. Moander could never have created me, she thought. Neither
could the blundering Fire Knives, not even with the help of the mages who
created the kalmari and the crystal elemental. They're all quite powerful, but
despite all their claims, none of them could have made my mind or my spirit or
my personality. She shoved back the horrible weight of evidence. The
Abomination is lying, she decided. After all, isn't that what abominations do
best?
When she had ceased struggling again, Moander continued. "Telling you
all this has been most amusing. The news makes you unhappy, doesn't it? Of
course, the others will want to purge your memory of everything I've said.
After all, the best assassin is one who does not know she is a weapon, since
she, or you, could then withstand all manner of telepathic prying. You do not
register as a constructed creature, and after the sacrifice of the saurial, the
runes on your limb will be hidden from view so that no one, not even you, will
ever suspect your . . . eh? What's that?"
They reached the tree line, and Meander's now fungous form began uprooting
the nearest trees, plowing them under and adding their mass to its own. But
what drew the attention of the god was the huge shadow that blocked the
high-noon sun. Akabar's head jerked upward just as a bolt of fire shot from the
heart of the darkness. The flame tore a huge gouge in the mound's side,
instantly igniting the fresh timber Moander had recently accumulated.
Akabar screamed and pitched forward into muck next to Alias. His cry was joined
by a chorus of hundreds of fanged mouths which suddenly opened in the mucky
hillside, all piping the same horrendous scream. Alias gagged on the smell of
the smoke from burning offal.
The shadow dove below the tree line for a moment and then circled back. Now
able to watch it without the sun in her eyes, Alias could tell that the shadow
was a dragon—one of the great red wyrms reputed to haunt the north country. As
it closed in for its second attack, the swordswoman spotted two riders mounted
atop the beast, one on its head, the other a greenish lump between its wings.
It can't be. Can it? Alias wondered, not daring to believe her eyes. But
they saw true. Her friends rode atop the red dragon, and the red dragon looked
strangely familiar.
"Here comes the rescue party!" shouted the high, childlike voice
of Olive Ruskettle, as Mist dropped down to strafe the Abomination yet again.
Akabar stood up again and focused on the dragon. His eyes glowed a burning
coal white, though his face wore a calm, deadened expression. From the mage's
mouth came a low-pitched muttering interspersed with the sharp gutturals and
clicks of magic words summoning power to the speaker. Alias tried to kick at
Akabar's form, hoping to knock him from the mound or at least spoil his spell,
but the Abomination had not been so wounded that it loosened its tight hold on
her. Her struggles were useless.
The mage's body wheeled about, keeping the dragon in view just as she began
making her second pass. A blinding flash of energy sprang from Akabar's
fingertip and caught the wyrm in the belly. The dragon jerked her head back and
bellowed, almost knocking Ruskettle from her head.
At the same time, great vines shot up from the surface of the Abomination,
with great force as if fired from concealed ballistae. At the ends of the vines
rode the decaying forms of the Red Plume mercenaries whom Moander had consumed.
Some still wielded their weapons, while others tried to grapple the dragon's
with their bare hands.
Most of the arching vines fell short of their mark, and the sickening thuds
of dead flesh hitting hard ground sounded through the forest. Two vines
succeeded in entangling the dragon, one in the middle of the neck, the other
near the base of the right wing.
Akabar muttered another spell, and a trio of magic missiles sizzled through
the sky with unerring precision, striking the purplish plates over the beast's
heart.
The former Red Plumes closed on the dragon's passengers as the tendrils they
had ridden upward spun about the beast like spider's silk entrapping a fly.
Dragonbait skewered the man approaching him.
The god-possessed corpse thrust itself farther unto the lizard's sword and
grabbed at Dragonbait's shoulders, attempting to knock him off balance.
Dragonbait lashed out with a powerful kick, removing his sword, and sending the
corpse spiraling down to the ground. The lizard chopped loose the vine
entangling the dragon's wing.
The dead man that had arrived on the vine about Mist's neck crawled toward
the halfling. The vine began dragging the dragon closer to the mound of refuse.
Mist bucked, almost dislodging her passengers, but did not succeed at
tearing the binding about her throat. With her wings she began sweeping the air
before her in great gusts. The loose matter atop Moander spun away in a
whirlwind of stinking rot, and the puppet Akabar was driven to his knees, the
spell in his throat spoiled by the assault.
More tendrils trailed up the single, thick root that bound the dragon like a
hangman's noose.
Moander turned Akahar's body around to face Alias. "Say good-bye to
this puppet, servant," Akabar's voice instructed. "1 can afford to
lose this tool, but not you."
The mossy ground began to rise around Alias, as the supporting roots beneath
her withdrew. She struggled as she sank into the heart of Moander. She screamed
when the leaves and rotting fungus began covering her, but another porous,
spongy mat of moss covered her mouth. She gasped for air and pungently scented
vapors flowed into her lungs. Within moments she was asleep.
Dragonbait, alerted by the warrior woman's shout, and seeing that she would
soon be beyond reach, leaped from the dragon's back.
Fifty feet separated the dragon from the oozing god, and a number of fanged
mouths at the end of tendrils had finished their snaking climb up the tether
about the great wyrm's neck. Olive was trying to fend off these horrid little
maws and dodge past the rotting soldier's corpse that blocked her attempts to
cut the tether.
A fall from fifty feet to hard ground would have snapped even Dragonbait's
legs, but where he landed on Moander, over the spot where Alias had
disappeared, all was soft muck. Akabar turned to face him, but hesitated for a
moment. Tendrils were already beginning to twist upward to ensnare the
lizard-creature.
Akabar spat out the guttural words of another spell. Unaccountably the spell
dissolved, but Moander did not waste energy registering its confusion on
Akabar's face. The tendrils wrapping around the lizard hesitated, unsure about
attacking the creature with the same markings as their valued prisoner. Without
Moander's command, they were unable to come to any conclusion, and Moander's
attention was elsewhere.
Meanwhile, the bard was losing her battle at the dragon's head. The mouths
had succeeded in taking several little bites out of her, she could not get past
the corpse of the Red Plume mercenary, and Moander continued drawing in the
great flying wyrm with a slow, inexhaustible force. Already the distance
between dragon and god had been halved, and white flecks of spittle dotted the
dragon's lower whiskers.
Olive was reminded of halfling children fishing for bats with light, durable
twine and live moths as bait. For some fool reason, this halfling is on the
bat's side, she thought, even though the bat is losing.
Mist twisted her head so that her chin rested along the thickening vine.
Opportunistic tendrils immediately laced themselves into the dragon's whiskers,
then began trying to crawl into the wyrm's mouth to suffocate her.
Dragonbait faced the possessed Akabar. A sea of tendrils ebbed and flowed
around the lizard, still waiting for Moander to direct them, but Meander's mind
was fully occupied with controlling Akabar and dealing with the dragon.
Rivulets of sweat poured from the mage's face, and his robes were drenched
and rotting from his contact with Meander's innards. His head tilted to the
right as Moander sorted through his thoughts for a way the mage might deal with
the lizard. But there was only one weapon left in Akabar's repertoire.
The mage's hand drew out his curved dagger. "Kill me, or die
yourself," Moander challenged with Akabar's voice, now a gasping
death-rattle. "You lose in either case, don't you, pure one?"
Dragonbait crouched, then leaped, using his overlong sword as a vaulting
pole. As he sailed over the mage's head, Akabar's dagger caught in the side of
his leg and remained there, twisting out of its wielder's hand.
Wounded, the lizard made a sloppy landing. The scaly flesh around his eyes
crinkled in pain, but he spun his oddly shaped, toothed sword over his head and
sliced at Akabar from behind.
The outer diamond tip of his sword struck at the back of the mage's neck
right where the sucker-tendrils clustered in a main bundle before they trailed
back in a thick vine to Meander's heart. Most of the cluster was severed neatly
without a scratch on the mage's scalp. Dragonbait put his foot against Akabar's
back to keep him in place and yanked the remaining vine-bundle from Akabar's
head.
Just then, Mist breathed a mighty exhalation of flame and brimstone that
caused her belly to flex deeply inward. The fire traveled down the side of the
tether about her neck and turned the side of the god into a jungle inferno. The
wet vegetable flesh alighted again, and the outer layers of the snare vine were
reduced to ash.
Akabar's and Meander's mouths screamed, but their voices were no longer in
hellish synchrony. They were separate entities. Akabar fell to his knees,
gasping, his hands clutching the wounds made from the sucker that had been
ripped away. The tendrils surrounding him and Dragonbait wavered and then
closed in.
The lizard grabbed the mage by the arm and yanked him to his feet. He lopped
off a few more tendrils on the living mound, tugged the mage with him, and
jumped.
Warrior and Turmishman tumbled down the slope, resisting the impulse to stop
their fall by grabbing hold of the overhanging vines and tree stumps that stood
out from Meander's lower flanks. They fell in a heap at the base of the
monster.
Moander burned and crackled. Plumes of acrid smoke billowed up from his
body. Moander tired of this battle—it was dangerously exhausting his life
energies. The Abomination desired a retreat, but if he loosed the dragon, the
beast might yet find the strength to breathe again and destroy the god's
earthly form. The tendril snaring the dragon was almost burned through. Moander
had to damage the wyrm first, and damage her badly.
The god played out an additional length of the tether vine. Mist felt the
line slacken and, believing in her exhaustion that the line had finally broken,
pulled back with a frantic beat of her wings. She succeeded in snapping the
line even more taut. Moander gave one last great pull, and the weakened vine
snapped apart.
Mist, with the halfling clutching for dear life to her ears, pitched over
backward and crashed among the trees.
The huge god-hill, burning and mostly blind, shifted one way then another
before plunging deeper into the forest. Smaller trees were plowed underneath,
but now Moander flowed between the larger trees, unable to snap them.
Dragonbait pulled Akabar from the Abomination's path. The mage oozed blood
in scarlet ponds from half-a-dozen shallow head wounds. He moaned softly and
began to cry.
Dragonbait pulled the mage's curved dagger from his scaly calf and examined
the gash. His hands glowed softly in the dim woods, and the cut grew less deep
but did not close completely. His healing ability exhausted, Dragonbait tore
his ragged new shirt in two to use as bandages.
Akabar sat in a shocked silence as the lizard bound his head wounds. He did
not respond to the warrior's touch or his tug on his robes or his prodding. He
would not move. Dragonbait slung his sword over his shoulders, hefted the
Turmishman in both his arms as if he were a child, and began moving in the
direction of the dragon's crash. The time had come to regroup his forces, such
as they were.
23
Akabar's Recovery, Moander's Offer, and the Second Rescue Attempt
When Akabar awoke it was dark, and the light of a nearby fire played across
the ground. The firelight glittered on the scales of an immense dragon. The
bulk of the beast lay in shadow, but Akabar could see Dragonbait napping,
curled up on the great beast's snout. The rune-marked lizard had a green bandage
tied about one of his legs. Between the mage and the fire loomed a huge shadow.
The towering form knelt before him, holding out a huge silver flask.
"Drink this," Olive said, pushing the flask to his lips.
The draught tasted horrible, but Akabar let it slide down his throat. His
mouth felt like he had been eating dirt, and his flesh crawled with a cold,
clammy feeling, as if he had been immersed in water too long. He looked down
and saw he was naked, save for a couple of halfling cloaks knotted around him
for warmth.
"My . . . clothes?" the mage puzzled. His voice was reedy, as
though he'd been singing or shouting for hours.
Olive motioned to the fire, "I'm afraid what was left wasn't worth
keeping. Dragonbait thought you were dead, so we didn't bring any of your spare
clothing." Her eyes brightened. "I emptied your pockets, though, and
I brought your spell books." She pointed to a backpack near his feet.
"What happened—oh, gods," the mage moaned as his memory came
rushing back. There'd been a fight in Yulash, then something hulking and
oppressive had sat in his mind like a spider in a web. He wondered if this was
how Alias felt after being forced to try to kill a priest and then the
Wyvernspur noble.
"Take it easy," Olive said sharply. She was an impatient
ministering angel. She put both her hands on his shoulders to hold him down,
though the mage had made no effort to rise. "The short version is, after
your little adventure in Yulash, Dragonbait came back to camp to get my help.
When you three had gone. I was left alone to deal with Mist, who chose that
moment to drop in. You remember Mist from Cormyr? Right. Anyway, I subdued her
by the old codes, and the three of us went after you and Its Ooziness."
Olive paused for breath and to let what she had said sink into the Turmish
mage's fevered brain. Then she started again, "Unfortunately, Its Ooziness
mopped up the floor with us. Misty got slammed around pretty bad, but with me
at the helm the old girl managed to damage the Abomination. It ran away from
us, not the other way around. Though we did get knocked out of the sky.
However, the luck of the halflings was with me, and I managed to land on a Red
Plume mercenary's corpse. You sliced up Dragonbait a little before he could
rescue you." She paused and then concluded reluctantly, "We didn't
get Alias."
"Alias," muttered Akabar, trying to rise against the pressure of
the halfling's hands. "She's still prisoner!"
"Reign in your horses," the halfling ordered. "You've been
out for about eight hours. Another few won't make that much difference in
catching up to that slithering compost heap, but it will make us all stronger.
Dragonbait needs his beauty sleep so he can finish healing you and Misty. She
snapped some wing bones when she fell, and she needs to restoke her furnaces
before going into battle again. You need to study your spells. Drink
more."
Akabar took another swig of the drink Olive offered and made a face.
"Is this a healing draught?"
Olive shook the flask and giggled. "Some call it that. It's spiked
honey mead. Last of my stock, too."
Akabar felt his empty stomach rise, then settle. So much for the halfling's
skill as a nurse. "You say Dragonbait healed us. He did that before, when
we were running from the Abomination in Yulash."
Olive nodded. "Yes. Turns out the little sneak's a paladin among his
own people. He's been keeping it secret, but healing us when we weren't
looking. Seems I can't trust anyone these days."
"A paladin?" Akabar murmured. "How do you know?"'
"He told me," Olive said. She dropped her voice to a whisper
before going on. "Not only did he keep his profession secret all this
time, but he can communicate. He doesn't use real words like you or me. He puts
out scents, like a perfume shop. We can't understand him because our little
noses aren't refined enough, but Mist can. He talks to her and she translates,
and then he confirms what she's said by nodding his head. So you see, he does understand
everything we've been saying."
Akabar shook his head to clear it. The halfling sounded angry, but the mage
could not understand what had upset her. "So?" he asked.
"So!" Olive exclaimed, then dropped her voice to a whisper.
"We have a lizard paladin who's too haughty to try communicating with us
until an evil dragon comes along. This paladin has been traveling with us and
spying on us for two rides. Doesn't that make you the least bit angry?"
"Saurial," Akabar mumbled suddenly, letting the word linger in his
memory. A dark shadow hovered there, the residue of the Abomination's visit to
his mind. "Moander said Dragonbait was a saurial."
''Moander—that's the creeping crud?" Olive asked.
Akabar hesitated like a swimmer hovering at the edge of cold water. He
wanted to forget the evil that had been inside him and used him so vilely. But
he needed the information Moander had inadvertently left in his mind. He
plunged in.
"Moander is a god. Or a piece of god. An old piece, kept in storage
beneath Yulash, until Alias let him out. He's taking her to Westgate, via Myth
Drannor."
Akabar's body began to shake violently.
"What is it?" Olive demanded. "What's wrong?"
"Gods, it was like . . . like having some disease that rots everything
but your mind and leaves your body shambling around. I was conscious, but I had
no control. I couldn't speak. I couldn't see. I could hear things in my head,
Moander's thoughts, and Alias speaking, but I was tied and gagged in the
darkness. And .. . and . . ." He looked up at the halfling. "I
stabbed Dragonbait, didn't I? You said I did. I remember. I was trying to kill
him."
"Apparently, he doesn't hold it against you. He carried you back here
and used the shirt off his back to bandage you."
Akabar felt along the bandage on his head, glancing at the lizard lying on
the dragon's snout.
"I wounded the dragon, too, didn't I?" he whispered.
"Less said about that the better," Olive suggested. "It took
all my eloquence to convince Mist you were included in the bargain for our protection
until Alias was freed. She only relented because we need all the firepower we
can muster.
"So Its Ooziness is a god, eh? Another thing our lizard friend
neglected to mention."
"Saurial," Akabar corrected again. "Why are you suddenly so
annoyed with him? He's saved our lives."
"No. He's saved your life. I can take care of myself." Olive did
not bother to mention that she'd be digesting in Mist's stomach now if not for
the lizard. "I don't need a sneaky, spying, goody-two-shoes wheedling his
way into my trust."
"What makes you so sure he's a spy?"
"Use your brain, greengrocer" Olive snorted. "What else would
a paladin be doing traveling with us? You're a merchant, and I'm halfling scum.
And Alias—think! She tried to murder a priest and someone she thought was the
king of Cormyr and then she let loose an evil god. Dragonbait sneaked off just
when we were in the most trouble, and now he's dragging us along on a suicide
mission. He says it's to rescue Alias, but suppose he's really just interested in
killing Moander? His type doesn't really care about our problems."
"I suppose," Akabar replied. His eyes were looking a little
glazed, and Olive could see that he wasn't really concentrating on her words.
"Akash, what is wrong with you? You aren't listening to me at
all."
Akabar shook his head and spat. "Some mage I turn out to be. I can't
get us the information we need, I don't even notice that a member of our party
can heal, and I'm at my fighting best when I'm controlled by an insane
abomination. You shouldn't have bothered to rescue me."
"Don't be stupid," Olive chided. "You have your health, your
mind, and your money—all the blessings, as we half-lings say. You can't blame
yourself for what happened. It's not as though you were trained to fight old
gods."
"Or anything else, for that matter," Akabar added. "You and
Alias are right, I'm a greengrocer. This has been my first real adventure not
tied to the logical, reasonable flow of trade and money and safe, secure
routes, and I've botched everything. I thought that with all my learning I
could take on the world, but I've failed. I'm useless."
"Look, Akash, adventuring isn't as logical as columns in an account
ledger. You can't learn about it from books. You have to experience it to know
what to do. You'll get the hang of it eventually. And you haven't been
completely useless. If it weren't for you, Dimswart would not have known to
send Alias after me, and she never would have met Mist, and then we'd be
fighting this Moander alone."
"That is a rather tenuous recommendation of my talents."
"Well, then, consider the fact that you saved us all from being
poisoned."
"What?"
Olive grinned slyly. "If I had to do the cooking, we all would have
died from indigestion."
Akabar did not respond to her little joke, so the halfling rambled on.
"Look, what I'm trying to say is that eventually you'll learn to think
like an adventurer. Then you'll really be a force to be reckoned with. Who
knows, you may even teach us a thing or two. Reason may make all the difference
between our success or failure, and nobody else in this group has as much of it
as you do."
Akabar remained silent, and Olive worried that the mead might have been too
strong for him, "Anyway," she said with a shrug, "I sort of like
having you around. I sort of like you."
A tiny smile played across the Turmishman's lips. He sighed deeply. "I
sort of like you, too," he replied. "Do you have any more of that
mead?"
While Akabar took a long pull on the flask, Olive asked, "So, what
about him?" Ruskettle jerked her head in the direction of the sleeping
reptiles. "Dragonbait the Cereal."
"Saurial," Akabar corrected, yet understanding how Olive felt.
Guilty, no doubt. It was one thing for Alias and himself to recognize the
halfling's pettiness, selfishness, and thievery, and overlook it in the
interest of party unity. But it was quite another thing to have one's actions
silently watched and, no doubt, judged by the likes of a paladin. Akabar
himself wondered with acute embarrassment what the lizard thought of him and his
constant failures.
"Saurial," Olive said, finally getting the pronunciation correct.
"He's kept a couple of major secrets from us. He could be hiding a lot
more."
Akabar caught the blue glimmer of the runes shining on Dragonbait's chest.
Unbeknownst to Olive, she was late trying to raise Akabar's suspicions against
the lizard. Since yesterday, the mage reflected, I've battled him twice, lost
both times, and then discovered that he was trying to save my miserable hide.
Something he's rather in the habit of doing. And though the halfling was right
when she pointed out it was highly unusual for a paladin to travel with an
adventuring group with their . . . character, the Turmishman found it
impossible to believe that the saurial meant them any harm.
"After he helps us get Alias back," Olive said, ignoring Akabar's
pensive look, "I think we should find a way to ditch him. Alias won't like
it, but it'll be for her own good."
"No," the mage said. "If he keeps his own counsel, that's his
business. If my account balances, then so does his."
In Olive's eyes Akabar saw the look of a merchant who had decided it would
be in her best interest not to drive too hard a bargain. She shrugged.
"You're probably right. There's nothing to worry about. You rest. We'll be
moving out in the morning, and this time we'll squash Its Ooziness. I'll be
tending the fire, not that difficult a job considering all the deadfall Big Mo
left in its wake. Been a dry summer, too—wood catches easy."
"Ruskettle?"
"Yes, Akash?"
"Would you please hand me my books? I think I'd better start studying.
Like you said, we'll need all the power we can get. Even mine."
*****
Alias woke in a dim chamber deep beneath Moander's surface. All around her,
patches of slime gave off a sickly green light. The glow from her sigils was
brighter and purer, and to study her prison she held her arm out as a lantern,
for she was no longer bound by mossy shackles.
The chamber was round and lined mostly with moss, except where moisture ran
down its surface, nourishing the patches of luminous slime. She dug into the
side of the wall with her fingers, but beneath the spongy moss she discovered
an impenetrable mesh of thick roots and tree branches. She tried pulling the
moss away in other spots, but found no weaknesses in her cage. The air was
close and heavy with the smell of rotting leaves but quite breathable.
She still wore her armor and her leather breeches, but her cloak had begun
to disintegrate so badly that it could no longer be tied on. She had lost her
sword somewhere in Yulash, and her shield and daggers were missing, probably
stripped from her person by the tendrils while she slept— knocked unconscious
by Meander's sponge mosses.
Trapped like an alchemist's mouse, she thought. Then she decided, no, more like
a broken machine crated in a cushioned box for the journey back home. She
remembered all that Moander had threatened would be done to her in Westgate.
Her memories would be wiped out again, her spirit smothered somehow. She
shuddered.
Then she snarled in defiance. But what could one do to a god? Spit in its
eye before it crushed you?
The wall across from her rippled. Chunks of moss dropped away, and a huge
hand, palm upward, thrust into the chamber. It was woven, like wicker, of tree
limbs. In the center of the palm a ball of light glowed with a swirl of gray
and white. Alias thought it was some sort of eye, and she wanted to back away
and hide from it.
Then the ball spoke. Two voices blended, one the highest alto, the other the
lowest bass, with no middle range between the two. The essence of Meander's
voice.
Alias remembered the swirling gray and white that had covered Akabar's eyes
when the god had possessed him. She wondered if this ball was the true face of
Moander.
"Hungry?" asked the voice. "Eat."
The wall moss peeled in another spot, and a pair of tendrils thrust in her
shield covered with half a dozen high-summer apples and a dead, uncooked
yearling boar.
Taking a deep breath to steady her nerves, Alias walked over to the shield.
The hole it had been pushed through was already rewoven shut. Her stomach
rumbled, but she waited until the tendrils retracted through the wall before
she reached for the apples. She backed away from the boar. It looked like it
had been throttled to death.
She strolled back over to the palm and crunched into an apple. Without
really expecting an answer, she asked the glowing ball, "How long have I
been asleep?"
"A day," the ball replied, pulsing in rhythm with its words.
"Going slow. Woods thicker than once were."
"That's a problem? Some god you are!" she mocked it.
"Only so much life energy. Must husband carefully Could fly or
teleport, but would hurt. Find more power Myth Drannor. Move slow till
then."
"You're not as fluent," Alias noted aloud, "without Akabar.
Where is he?"
"Dead. See?"
A hole opened by her shield, and a pile of bones was thrust into the
chamber. Alias dropped her apple. The bones sank into the floor again.
"And the others?" the swordswoman whispered.
"All dead."
"Oh, gods." Alias dropped to her knees.
"Just one. Me," Meander's light reminded her. "Have
offer."
Alias hugged her arms about her shoulders.
"If you slay other masters," the voice said, "their sigils
will erode and you will work for me alone."
"Then I'll have to kill you all," Alias growled defiantly.
"Without me, no purpose, no life. Besides, cannot slay me. Have tried
and failed. Think, I will help."
"Go to hell."
"Abode not hell—Abyss. Prefer it here."
Alias laughed at the creature's transparent bid for power. "Why should
I help you get a monopoly on my . . . services?"
"You are now puppet of many. Can be servant of one. Serve me, greater
rewards—wealth, freedom."
Alias held her hands over her ears to block out the Abomination's voice. The
tips of her fingers touched the eagle-shaped barrette in her hair. Though
muck-encrusted, the silver pin unsnapped without crumbling.
"Think. More freedom yours than others enjoy. Be my high priestess. Be
my—" The voice stopped, and the chamber swayed, and the walls vibrated.
"Will return," the voice promised. Again the chamber swayed.
"Think about offer."
The woven wood palm began to retract into the wall.
Something's attacking it, Alias realized. For a brief moment, she considered
Meander's claim that without her "masters" she could not exist. It
didn't matter, she decided. Despite the Abomination's promise, she knew she
would never be free while it lived, and her freedom was all she wanted. Better
to be dead than its servant, and this could be my only chance to escape, she
thought.
It was an outside chance, but having been held helpless and frustrated all
through the last battle, she could not let the opportunity to injure the
Abomination slip by. She plunged the pin of the barrette into the sphere.
The ball was as hot as a bonfire and singed Alias's fingers. She yanked her
hand back, but Meander's "hand" lay still on the floor.
A high-pitched wail filled the chamber, followed by a deep rumbling. The
swaying motion of the room turned to a severe rocking, like a ship in a storm.
Alias, her shield, the apples, and the dead boar were tumbled from one side to
the other. The swordswoman curled into a ball and wedged herself in tightly
between the floor and the hand.
Spit in the god's eye, she thought, sucking on her fingers, for all the good
it will do you. The sickly glow of the slime grew dimmer until it was finally
extinguished. She was left alone in the glittering sapphire light of her cursed
brands.
*****
"I think it knows we're here," Akabar declared.
The lizard, seated in front of the mage on the back of the great wyrm,
growled in agreement. Pressed close beside him, Akabar caught a whiff of
fresh-baked bread. Now that Dragonbait's means of communication had been rubbed
in his face, so to speak, the mage realized that he could catch the saurial's
more excited outbursts. The lizard had to, in effect, shout with his scent
glands for a human to notice the smells. Akabar was beginning to piece together
some sort of pattern between scents and sense. He berated himself for not
having figured it out before—but then he hadn't figured out anything else
correctly either, so far.
Dragonbait had awakened them all before dawn. Previously clownish and
servile, the saurial had been transformed by the crisis into a sergeant major.
First he healed all the wounds about Akabar's head. The mage noticed the
woodsmoke scent that had surrounded them the last time Dragonbait had cured
him.
"That's the smell of your healing prayers, isn't it?" the
Turmishman had asked.
The lizard had nodded and given him a friendly squeeze on the shoulder. With
a stern look he prompted Akabar to study his spells by jabbing his fingers at
the mage's tomes. He patted and pushed Olive into packing their meager gear,
while he used his skill to reknit the cluster of bones that held Mist's wing
splayed out in flight. Lastly, he'd closed the gash Akabar's dagger had put in
his own leg.
Akabar watched guiltily as the saurial performed this last task—guilty both
for having caused the damage, and for taking his concentration from his
assigned task to watch it repaired. Dragonbait worked in the glow of the
finder's stone Alias had dropped. It was hard to see the glow of his hands as
he healed his flesh, but now that Akabar knew what to expect, he would never
miss it again.
Now, as they rode the dragon toward battle, Dragonbait held the finder's
stone in his lap, although the sun had already risen. He still wore a kilt of
sorts about his loins and one of Alias's cloaks wrapped around to keep out the
wind, but he no longer bothered with a shirt. He left the runes on his chest
exposed for the world to see.
Akabar wore one of the lizard's shirts and the makeshift kilt the halfling
had fastened together out of her own cloaks. Olive wore a bright yellow cloak
and looked, seated on the dragon's head like a flashy helmet.
When Olive had shouted a warning and they'd first beheld the Abomination,
the monster-god was deep in the heart of the Elven Wood and still moving,
albeit slowly. It had grown considerably though. The midden mound that had
exploded out of its Yulash prison now stood seventy or more feet in height—a
hill towering over all but the most ancient gnarled oaks and duskwoods.
Its composition had changed as well. Human rot no longer figured prominently
in its make-up. Instead, huge trees and crushed shrubbery were rolled into the
hill. It still had an oozy, wet appearance, but now the ooze came from extruded
sap and damp underbrush.
The mound seemed to become aware of them as soon as they spotted it, for it
began to speed up.
Mist circled from a safe distance. The forward edge of the moving hill was a
sharp angle, literally plowing its way through the forest.
As they flew toward the front of the Abomination, a volley of black-barked
trees shot out from the hill, trailing long streamers of vines. The god was
trying the same tricks as before, only now he was using fifty-foot duskwoods
instead of zombie soldiers to weight his snare vines.
The larger size of the missiles and the redundancy of the attack made it
easy for Mist to dodge the assault. The catapulted trees fell in the tangle of
woods, smashing down other trees and carving huge divots where they landed.
"Any sign of Alias?" Akabar shouted to Dragonbait.
The saurial shook his head. Just as Akabar suspected. If Alias was in the
mess, she was probably well hidden beneath the surface, something they had
discussed before they left camp, with Mist translating.
The dragon continued to circle Moander without attacking. The mound fired
another volley of tree missiles. Once again, Mist dodged them with ease, until
a particularly large one passed in front of her face. She pulled up suddenly,
as if alarmed; and plummeted toward the ground. Moander lost sight of her
behind the tree line.
Moander chuckled with the arrogance of a god. It might have considered
telling Alias of the failure of her friends if only it had not bragged of
killing them earlier. It trained some of its eyes in the direction the dragon
had gone down, while it continued its crawling march south. Myth Drannor, and
the powers held within, awaited it.
Dragonbait exchanged positions with the halfling and sat on Mist's head. He
kept the party waiting in the clearing where Mist had landed for a quarter of
an hour. The lizard could sense the distance between them and the evil god.
When he gave the signal, Mist rose and, skimming low over the trees, circled
away until she had reached the tree break Moander had left behind. Along this
trail she made her attack run, moving in on the god's rear.
"They're going to have to call this 'Moander's Road,'" Olive
shouted to the mage as she took in the devastation.
Akabar nodded wordlessly, awed by She destruction around them. Moander
apparently no longer needed to absorb more bulk; it just plowed up the great
trees, pushing them aside and leaving them to die on the forest floor, half
buried by the great mounds of dirt it also overturned.
The dragon flew on unfazed by the rape of the Elven Wood. She kept her eyes
forward, ignoring the great trench beneath her and the shattered trees at her
flanks.
The mage closed his eyes, trying to shut out the sound of the heavy wings
beating, the rush of air on his face, and the rise and fall of the dragon's
back as she flew. He concentrated on his magic.
Olive nudged him and pointed. Akabar opened his eyes. Mist was less than
twenty yards from Moander. No duskwood bombards fired from the hill. The god
was oblivious to the dragon's proximity. Akabar allowed himself a brief smile
when he spied the mass of duskwood trees and deadwood woven into the
Abomination's mass, the perfect materials for their plans. His spell was
prepared; he awaited only Dragonbait's signal.
The lizard waved, and Mist rose above the hill, spouting a long, heavy
stream of fire as she did so. Like an assassin's knife, flames ripped into the
greenery where the creature's spine would be if it had one. Moander screamed
just as Akabar triggered his pyrotechnic spell. The red streams of the dragon's
breath exploded in a further cavalcade of twisting yellows, spiraling oranges,
and lancing azure blues. In the process of transforming the dragon's fiery
breath to explosive fireworks, Akabar's spell snuffed the upper flames issuing
from her maw, but the fireworks pierced deeper into the heart of the hill.
New shoots cropped up immediately to cover the scarred area, but Mist was
not through. As soon as she crested the top of the hill, she twisted and spun
about, her passengers tied and braced. As she dropped along the back of the
hill she breathed again, sending more flames into the open wound she had
carved.
Though his stomach had risen to his throat when he'd momentarily hung upside
down, the mage did not lose his focus. Another pyrotechnic spell speared the
god.
Moander burned. The hill, now composed more of harvested wood than refuse
and slime, blazed. Even better, Ruskettle and Akabar could spot great flames
shooting up through the coarse outer mesh of trees and brush, flames that
originated nearer the heart of the monster.
In her plant prison, Alias felt the air grow stuffy. The wails began to weep
thick, yellowish tears through the moss. She rose to her feet, but was knocked
back to the ground by a sudden sideways jerk of her enclosure. It seemed as if
Moander had decided to move her prison.
Moander halted and flattened out in an effort to draw more material into its
mass, perhaps in an effort to smother the flames. But as the halfling had noted
to Akabar the evening before, the forest was quite dry. Whatever the god drew
into itself just fed the fires more. And the duskwoods were renowned for their
fine burning resins.
Next the Abomination tried to contain the fire by creating a firebreak in
its body, splitting itself in two and leaving half of its mass behind. The
pyrotechnics had done their job, though. The fire was everywhere; there was no
escape from it. Flames curled out of the heart of the moving half of the hill
and, like a fire that's just been stirred, the blaze leaped higher and burned
hotter.
Mist had retreated, circling high overhead to evade any return attacks, but
when none seemed forthcoming, she swooped back to administer the final blow.
Akabar felt the dragon's chest swell with a mighty intake of air.
Before Mist had a chance to exhale, though, the top of Moander popped off
like a cork in a bottle. Startled, Mist pulled up sharply, wary of some new
type of attack. A pod twice the size of the dragon, but less than a tenth the
size of the god before they'd attacked it, shot out from the hill. Egg-shaped,
the missile tumbled end over end as it rose into the air. At the zenith of its
flight it righted itself and then swept southeastward in a blur of movement.
"Gold lions will get you good lunch that our woman is in that
thing," Olive shouted.
Akabar nodded. "Along with whatever passes for the consciousness of
Moander."
Dragonbait gave the dragon a sharp prod, and Mist took off after the pod.
Behind them on the ground below, the burning pile of trees that had once
been the Abomination of Moander spewed out a black column of smoke high enough
to be spotted in Shadowdale, Hillsfar, and Yulash.
Mist began to strain, flapping her wings faster to keep pace with the escape
pod. Akabar concentrated, then barked the harsh syllables of another spell and
pressed his hands against the back of the dragon. Summoned energies flowed from
his hands into the great wyrm.
Mist lunged forward at twice the speed. Her wings beat the air as gracefully
and as quickly as a bird's. The ground blurred in their vision, and they began
closing the distance between them and the pod.
"What did you do?" Olive gasped, her words torn from her mouth by
the wind.
"Haste," Akabar explained. "Dangerous for humans—ages them a
year. Can't hurt this creature, though. She sleeps longer than that after a
meal."
*****
Moander spoke again to Alias, but now with just a bass voice, rumbling
against a garbling background chatter that was almost unintelligible.
"Flying," he said after a garble. "Life energies low. Must
gate." Another long garble, then the bass voice surfaced. "Prepare
for transport. Damaged goods."
The last phrase struck Alias as something that Akabar might say, and she
fancied that some part of the mage's mind must have entered into Moander's
being and not just the other way around. Perhaps it was the mage's spirit
warning her to keep herself safe. The further deterioration of Meander's
communication skills gave her a burst of hope. Things apparently weren't going
well for the god. Maybe an army had attacked it, or a horde of powerful
adventurers.
The circular shell of her prison wall began to shrink. Mouths surfaced all
over the walls. Alias feared that Moander had decided to eat her rather than
see her rescued, but the walls began to spit out streams of thick, moist silken
strands. She was being cocooned.
Instinctively, she tried to beat back the rising mass, afraid it would
suffocate her. Would her "masters" find a way to make her breathe
again, she wondered. She was soon overwhelmed by the fiber. Covered from head
to toe, she could still breathe through the wrapping, but the air was stuffy,
and she felt as though she'd been buried alive.
The egg-shaped pod flattened till it looked more like a giant pumpkin seed.
It tore through the sky. Along its trailing edge, half a hundred eyes opened at
once to watch the advancing dragon. Moander had husbanded its energies
carefully. But either the god had miscalculated or dragons had become faster
during its imprisonment. Moander weighed its options. Its last desperate bid
for escape was to use magic—the most costly method of travel.
They were still far from the ruins of Myth Drannor, but Moander could sense
the siren song of the old city's dormant power, still humming away deep beneath
toppled buildings and battle-scarred halls. With its godly abilities, Moander
reached out and began syphoning off the magical energies of the dead elven
kingdom.
The god channeled this energy directly into its spell. At the forward point
of the pumpkin seed a blur of purple appeared, then stretched about the seed
like a thin mist.
Mist, the dragon, was close enough for her passengers to make out the
crawling glow that began to envelop the pod carrying Alias. Akabar was trying
to figure out what it could be. A protection device, perhaps? Or-
He never finished his thought, for once the glow completely covered the pod,
it began to shrink. Like a street magician's trick, there was nothing left in
the purple cloak Moander had wrapped itself in, nothing to keep the cloak from
collapsing in on itself.
A Turmish curse escaped Akabar's lips before he explained, "That's a
gate between worlds."
Olive looked around in a wild-eyed panic.
"We've got to pull up," the mage insisted. "If we pass
through that cloud, we could end up anywhere."
Both halfling and mage began to thump the sides of the dragon, trying to get
her attention. When she turned back to look at them, they mimed pulling back on
imaginary reins to symbolize their need to halt.
Mist turned her head forward again. Dragonbait kept his head turned to watch
Akabar and Olive signaling him to stop the dragon. Dragonbait shook his
reptilian head. He leaned over Mist's forehead and made some motion Akabar and
Olive could not see. When he sat back again, Dragonbait held the finder's stone
over his head.
Mist sped toward the purple cloud that dotted the sky low over the Elven
Wood and dove in. Like the god preceding them, they were obscured from view.
The shouts of the mage and the bard died away. The cloud dissipated slowly, as
though reluctant to give up its form.
24
Battle over Westgate
This is like riding up into a maelstrom, Olive thought as they plunged into
the purplish fog that had swallowed Moander, though she could not honestly say
she had ever done so. The purple fog became a long, gray tube—the oozing wake
of the god's passage from the forest north of Myth Drannor to wherever it was
heading.
Floating castles and statues danced along the edges of the tube. Ruskettle
noticed that Alias's finder's stone, which Dragonbait now held high over his
head, shone a beam before them that stretched all the way down the tube to
illuminate the retreating rear of the mad god.
Moander disappeared in another purple fog. They plunged after it, were
buffeted by a second stomach-churning whirlwind, and suddenly burst into bright
sunshine in a clear blue sky.
Below them to the left was a bustling, walled city of some size—a sea port.
The green-blue water told Olive that she was looking at the Inner Sea. The
shape of the harbor and the seven peculiar hills outside of the city walls
identified their destination as Westgate.
*****
Giogioni Wyvernspur let out a deep sigh of relief as he topped the last rise
on the road from Reddansyr and surveyed the city of Westgate and the land
surrounding it. Since his narrow escape in Teziir from the sorceress who so
resembled the sell-sword Alias, Giogi had been moving overland, first by
carriage, then on horseback.
From his vantage point, the Cormyrian noble took in the plain, which ran
along the sea coast. Covered with the same rich, slick grass as the hills
bordering it, the greenery of the plain ran right to the stock and caravan
yards scattered around the city wall. A ring of seven mounds lay south of the
city just east of the road on which he traveled. All seven hillocks were
crowned with old ruins—stone circles of druids and temples of more sinister
cults.
"Now this," he informed the horse he now rode, Daisyeye II, ''has
been a much more pleasant experience than my last trip on horseback. That
ended, you see, with the death of your namesake, the first Daisyeye, followed
by a singularly unpleasant interview with a dragon—an incident that will stick
in my mind as long as, if not longer than, the nasty affair of losing Aunt
Dorath's pet land urchin."
Giogi sighed again. He had been expecting to be waylaid by any of the
hundred thousand brigands, bandits, dark powers, and orc bands that were said
to lie in wait just beyond the borders of the civilized world. Yet, despite all
the expected awfulness, his trip overland had been relatively peaceful.
About time I had some good luck, he thought, pulling off his wide-brimmed
hat and letting the wind rustle through his hair.
At that moment the crash of a powerful lightning strike echoed all around
him. Daisyeye II reared on her hindquarters. Directly overhead a great rend
appeared in the sky. Through this a huge rock jettisoned into the world.
Giogi reigned Daisyeye in tightly to avoid being spilled onto the road. He
might have been better off patting the beast and whispering soothing words, but
his eyes were glued on the rocketing projectile. It looked like a rotting
basket, with masses of greenery hanging from all sides. Along its trailing edge
it spurt out jets of blue flame.
With a piercing howl the gash in the sky began to close. Then a red dragon
burst through the hole overhead, pursuing the "basket." The dragon's
appearance was Giogioni's first indication of just how big the lump of decay
really was.
The head of the dragon chasing the basket shone with a yellow light. Giogi
squinted. The yellow light seemed to be coming from a figure riding between the
dragon's ears. Then the Cormyrian noble noticed the dragon's color.
"No. it can't be," he whispered to himself. But his heart sank
with the certainty that it was indeed Mist.
If Giogi had remained on the hilltop observing the dragon, he might have
noticed the other figures on her back; he might even have heard the eerie chant
that rose from one of the mounds just south of him, but Daisyeye II decided
she'd had enough. She plunged uncontrollably down the hill into the high grass,
taking the young Wvvernspur with her.
*****
Akabar kept his eyes glued to Moander. Blue flames spurted from the god, but
the mage recognized that the flames did not originate from the damaging fires
they had set within the monster. They were some means of propulsion. Somehow
the monster's temporary occupation of his mind had left the mage with more than
just the memory of the words he'd been forced to say to Alias or the evil deeds
he'd been maneuvered into performing. He understood the means of the
Abomination's flight, and while he admired its cleverness, he shivered with
horror at the reminder of what the god had done to him.
Moander's vast godly knowledge, however, was not going to aid in its escape.
The dragon, under the effects of Akabar's spell of haste, was still gaining.
The god arced downward toward the seven mounds outside the city walls. Then it
halted, hovering over one of the hills. Great red stone plinths shaped like
fangs curved inward about the crown of the hill. In their center burned a
bonfire. Olive spotted tiny figures moving about the hilltop. From this
distance the figures looked no bigger than ants.
Moander let a drop of slime fall away from its body. The slime oozed like a
water drop slipping along a strand of spider silk, then it hung ten or so feet
before splattering on the ground. The ant-sized figures were on it in a second.
"It's delivered Alias to its followers," Akabar shouted.
The halfling nodded. "We have to land and rescue her."
The mage shook his head in disagreement. "We have to finish our battle
with the god first," he said.
"Are you crazy? We could be killed. I want off this ride, now,"
Olive insisted.
Akabar's eyes glittered with vengeance, and the halfling realized she wasn't
going to get anywhere trying to convince him to help her down. Fortunately for
her, it wasn't up to him. "Dragonbait!" she hollered, "Alias is
down there! We have to land and help her!"
But Olive was not to discover whether the lizard paladin was more concerned
with the warrior woman or destroying Moander. Moander took the decision out of
his hands. Once it had unloaded its passenger, the god launched itself toward
them.
Mist banked sharply, and the mass of fungus, slime, and forest rocketed past
them. The sudden movement caused the halfling to lose her grip on the safety
rope. She would have fallen to her death if Akabar had not seized the hem of
her skirt and pulled her back. Olive suddenly was not feeling hungry—the human
equivalent of feeling frightened out of her mind. Mist completed her banking
maneuver by turning about to face Meander's return charge.
This time, however, dodging the god was not so easy. As it streaked toward
them Moander increased in size. In its approaching side a great maw opened,
lined with duskwood tree trunks sharpened to fanglike points.
The Jawed God it was sometimes called, Akabar remembered. But how did it
grow without absorbing more mass? he puzzled. It was now four times Mist's
size, and the open cavity could swallow the dragon whole.
Mist struggled to gain altitude. She managed to rise above the gaping mouth,
but a tree-weighted vine shot out at her, entangling her neck and her wings.
The dragon beat her wings furiously, but she was held fast. More red vines,
pulsing like blood veins, snaked up the snarevine.
Cursing, Olive drew her dagger, preparing to cut any plants that came her
way. She turned, thinking to offer Akabar her sword, but to her surprise he
began chanting another spell. She thought he had exhausted the last of his
magic on the enchantment to haste the dragon. Apparently he was getting better
at the game. He looks worn, though, Olive thought, noticing the lines in his
face, deeper and more plentiful than when they'd first met in Cormyr. He was
beginning to look like a real wizard, she decided.
With furrowed brows, the Turmish mage completed the last sharp syllables and
tossed a handful of iron powder over the dragon's scales. The metal filings
sparkled in the air, causing Mist's whole body to glow.
The struggling dragon's scales shifted beneath them. The halfling grabbed at
the safety ropes, but they snapped away, as did the majority of the vines
tethering Mist to Meander's form. Olive gripped at a scale, but it was
difficult to grasp as it grew in size. Akabar, she realized, had enlarged the
dragon with his magic.
"Should even the odds," the Turmishman said.
Mist, using her back claws, slashed open Meander's side. A foul vapor burst
from the god's wound, and it screamed. The air smelled like a swamp.
Mist jerked her head up, breaking the last cord holding her near the god.
The suddenness of her movement sent Dragonbait bouncing high into the air. With
a gasp Olive tugged on Akabar's kilt and pointed at the lizard.
Akabar was already aware of the saurial's plight. He stood up nimbly on
Mist's shifting back and stretched out his arms. In each hand he held a single
feather. He incanted fast and furious and then fell from the dragon's back.
Reflexively Olive grabbed at the mage's ankles. She'd forgotten she was no
longer anchored. The pair of them, mage and bard, plummeted toward the ground.
As Akabar pulled out of his dive and began to fly upward, he became aware of
the halfling's weight. Would he be able to carry her and Dragonbait? he
wondered.
The saurial had begun arcing downward. He'd lost his grip on the finder's
stone, but still clutched at his sword. Akabar flew upward to intercept him.
Drat the halfling, the mage thought as he struggled to reach the saurial. He
would not be able to cross the horizontal distance between himself and
Dragonbait before the lizard fell past him. If Olive had not tagged a ride, he
could have done so with ease. As it was, he was forced to angle down, arms
forward like a diver.
Dragonbait fell with his arms spread open, presenting the most resistance to
the air. Akabar did not think the saurial was the least panicked, but he was
willing to bet the air around Dragonbait smelled of woodsmoke.
Behind the mage, Olive swore loudly and profusely. She had no idea how to
present the smallest profile when flying, so she slowed the mage's movements
even further with the resistance of her body in the wind. Akabar offered his
own prayer that he would reach the saurial in time.
The flying mage's path intersected the free-falling lizard's about thirty
yards from the ground. By then Dragonbait was plummeting like a comet, and
Akabar's tackle hit him with so much force that something gave in the mage's
shoulder and the saurial's ribs. The trio of wizard, halfling, and lizard was
too heavy to remain in flight long. From their mid-air impact, they lofted in a
very low arc, before they began to sink earthward.
They landed in a dell between hills. The ground was soft, but littered with
boulders. The threesome rolled and slid, lost their grip on one another, and
fell apart. Akabar kept flying after he lost the added weight. He pulled up and
landed smoothly on a large rock. He touched his shoulder gingerly; the flesh dimpled
inward and his wrist and arm buzzed with a thousand tiny needle-pricks. A
dislocated shoulder, he realized, almost intrigued with the injury.
The halfling, with the luck endemic to her race, had skidded to a stop in a
particularly soft, boggy area. She rose to her feet completely uninjured but
quite slimy, smeared with mud and grass stains. Dragonbait needed to lean on
his sword to rise to his feet.
Akabar turned his attention to the battle between the now-gigantic Mist and
the monstrously swelled Moander. The Jawed God had increased its size once
again and regained its hold on the red dragon. The two behemoths tumbled in
midair, though why they did not crash was yet another mystery puzzling Akabar.
Mist's wings were too entangled to fly, and the blue flames that had propelled
the god through the sky were no longer apparent.
The air shimmered around them like heat rising from the desert sands.
Beneath the tattered shards of the god's body, which Mist had ripped away with
her claws, lay only great vacuities. The smell of fetid swamp Akabar had
noticed aboard the dragon reached his nose even on the ground.
Along Meander's side, a second huge, duskwood-fanged mouth split open. So
wide did the jaws part that the god resembled a giant clam.
Confronted with this new set of jaws, Mist began thrashing like a wild
beast. She was a great wyrm, one of the most powerful of her race, and much
enhanced by the Turmish mage's magic, yet, while her opponent seemed to be made
of nothing but that great maw, she was still flesh and blood. Then she
remembered she was also fire.
Mist breathed a long stream of flame from her bloody mouth and nostrils. The
fire plunged deep into the god's mouth. With a sudden horrifying insight,
Akabar understood the significance of the swampy smell, Meander's great but
empty size, and its ability to hover. The mage squeezed his eyes shut and
turned his head away from the battle.
A small star exploded in the sky over Westgate. The shell that was Moander
the Darkbringer and the curved figure of the dragon were black pieces of ash
against the blaze that consumed them. Mist's fire-resistant scales ignited, her
flesh became translucent, and her skeleton visible to any eyes unfortunate
enough to witness her demise.
A booming sound rolled across the plains. The three adventurers were knocked
from their feet bv the force of the blast. Ruskettle lay toppled in the mud
with her fingers pressed into her ears. The mage fell from his rock.
When Akabar looked up again, the star had faded, leaving behind the falling,
burning shards of the god Moander. The long, blackened body that had once been
Mistinarperadnacles Hai Draco spiraled to the earth. From the small valley, the
mage could not see where the dead beast landed, but he felt the ground shake
from the impact.
Akabar felt very tired. He prayed he had been right in his assumption that
the package Moander had dropped off on the hilltop had been Alias. A further
fear crept over him and tightened his gut. If Moander were indeed a god, they
had destroyed only its earthly incarnation—somewhere beyond the borders of
reality, it still lived. Should the Darkbringer find a way to return to the
Realms, the mage knew that he would be at the top of the god's list of enemies.
"So be it," the Turmishman muttered. The beast had invaded his
mind and made him a puppet. Now it was no more, destroyed by his hand, for
without his spells Mist would not have lasted ten minutes against the Jawed
God.
A feeling of intense satisfaction washed over Akabar. The feeling blended
with the knowledge that he had rescued Dragonbait and Olive from death by
flying them to safety. For the first time he was sure that he was more than a
greengrocer merchant who dabbled in spell-casting. He was truly a mage of the
first water.
Smoke rose in the sky from the direction of Westgate, and Akabar realized
that the dragon must have hit the city. He felt a twinge of sadness for the
beast. Evil though Mist had been, her evil had been no worse than that of a
selfish, monomaniacal old woman. Like a villain in a street pantomime, she was
all sneers and threats—her wickedness paled before the reality of the
Darkbringer. She died honoring her agreement with the saurial paladin—battling
and destroying a greater evil than herself.
Ruskettle should write a song, making Mist a hero, Akabar thought with a
grin. The old wyrm would've hated that.
"You waiting for the moon to come up, Akash?" Olive snapped.
"We have a swordswoman to rescue, in case you'd forgotten."
Akabar shook his head, clearing it of his self-congratulations and
melancholy meanderings. Dragonbait, his hip bloody from their rough landing,
and clutching his ribs where Akabar had intercepted him, stood beside him. The
lizard was reaching for the mage's shoulder to heal it first. Akabar moved away
from him, cradling his bad arm with his good. He clenched his teeth against the
pain.
"No!" the Turmishman insisted. "I can walk at least. You
should take care of yourself first,"
Dragonbait paused in protest, but he was not about to argue with the mage's
new determination. He used the last of his healing power on his injured side,
then the three of them set out to find Alias.
25
Alias's Escape
While Alias's companions chased Moander over the Elven Wood, through the
magical gate, and above the countryside surrounding Westgate, the swordswoman
lay still in her dark cocoon. The cushioning about her did little to reassure
her. Blood rushed in her ears as her prison rocked and swayed, spun, and
finally turned over and over.
Alias's nostrils flared. The mossy smell of her prison blended with the
scent of swamp gas. She gagged and coughed, but was unable to avoid breathing
the noxious vapor. She began to feel weak. Perhaps Moander did not realize the
gas would damage her. Perhaps it would kill her by accident and the other
"masters" would not be able to resurrect her.
That idea brought a peculiar comfort to the warrior woman. Her isolation had
accomplished what Moander's words had failed to do. Alias despaired. She'd
caused the death of her friends. Her only real friends, as far as she knew,
since her relationship with the Swanmays and the Black Hawks had been nothing
but imaginary stories given her by her makers. She wasn't even human, had never
had a mother, was non-born. And soon she would be nothing but a trinket for evil
forces to fight and intrigue over. She would become their unknowing puppet,
forced into actions she had not chosen—a mockery of life, like a skeleton or
golem. Better to die, she decided without feeling, her heart numb.
She wondered, though, whether there would be an afterlife for the likes of
her. In the dark cocoon, she whispered, "Do I even have a soul?" She
sighed. "What difference does it make?"
What difference does it make? she wondered. I'm alive. I enjoy being alive.
She relished the satisfaction she'd felt when she'd defeated an enemy in
combat, the contentment that settled about her when she sang, the camaraderie
she'd shared with Dragonbait and the others. She'd made her own friends, real
friends. She'd proven herself an adventuress, even if she was only a month old.
And somehow, she had found the will to deny her would-be masters.
"Even if it isn't a natural one, I have a life of my own," she
announced to the darkness—and to herself.
Heartened by her declaration, a new determination to live sprang up in
Alias, coupled with an assurance that she would somehow defeat everyone who had
branded her and reassert her free will.
"Moander!" she shouted uncertainly, not knowing if the god could
hear her. "Moander!" she hollered louder. "You're killing me! I
can't breathe! You have to let me out of here!"
Her prison made one more gut-wrenching turn. Her ears popped. Then the foul
air in her lungs was driven out by a sudden impact against the bottom of her
cocoon.
Her bindings were torn. She blinked in the sunlight. The air was fresh and
warm. Half a dozen hands reached down to pull her from the moist, silky mass
that entangled her. Despite her wooziness, Alias spotted the tattoos inscribed
in all their palms: mouths full of jagged teeth.
Dizzy from her travel, her muscles atrophied from her imprisonment, and
still weak from the effects of the gas, Alias could not resist as the people
pulled her to her feet, no doubt prepared to transfer her to another prison,
more conventional perhaps, yet equally inescapable.
Alias looked around. She stood by a bonfire in the center of a circle of
giant, inwardly curved fangs carved of red stone. Around her were two dozen men
and women, their faces hidden in the cowls of their robes. Their leader wore a
mask of white with a single eye painted in the forehead and surrounded by
teeth. A priest of Moander.
Alias gulped in deep breaths of air to fight her nausea and dizziness,
though she did not know why she bothered. Even if she managed to escape from
Meander's minions, she would still be a puppet. One of the minions snapped a
band of metal around her sword arm. The band was attached to a long chain of
cold iron.
Her legs gave way beneath her, and she sank to her knees on the dusty
hilltop. They would drag her off to her other masters, and she hadn't the
strength or the will to resist.
But instead, everyone ignored her. Their attention was fixed on the sky.
Mutters passed through the crowd, then
cheers.
Alias looked up with everyone else. At first, she did not understand what
she saw. Moander, the oozing god, bobbed in the sky, a great, swollen balloon
with jaws. Trapped in its tendrils was a red dragon. The beast flapped its
wings vainly, but could not resist being drawn into the god's maw. The pair of
monsters twisted and turned in the sky above a great walled city. The sea lay
beyond them. "Westgate," Alias whispered.
Suddenly, Alias knew that the red dragon was Mist. The Abomination had not
killed her. As a matter of fact, she looked bigger than ever beside Moander.
Alias's captors began chanting a prayer for their god's victory, though some
less pious or more excitable, continued cheering as though they were watching
two warriors wrestle in an arena.
Alias felt like cheering as well, though not exactly for the dragon. If Mist
were still alive, the warrior woman realized, then so might Dragonbait, Akabar,
and Olive be. Moander's failure to mention the dragon's survival gave Alias
reason to suspect he had lied about her friends.
Fury and hope surged within her and gave her strength. She assessed the
lanky man holding her chain. He was armed with a cudgel dotted with crude
shards of crystal. She was weaponless. But they made me a weapon, she thought.
She drew her feet up beneath her knees, remaining crouched near the ground, her
eyes fixed on her guard, waiting for an opportunity to attack.
The man's body shielded her vision from the brilliant explosion that threw
the landscape into highlights of white contrasted against shadows of the
deepest black. Alias stood up, but was immediately knocked to the ground by a
powerful, booming wind. All her captors fell as well, thrown like rag dolls by
the wind that ripped over the top of the hill.
A sudden pain shot up Alias's sword arm, as though the cold iron that bound
it had suddenly turned red hot. She ignored the ache and the burning star in
the .sky. Taking advantage of her guard's fall, she pulled the iron chain from
his numb fingers. The man lay staring sightlessly at her, blinded by the death
of his deity. Rising to her feet, she gave him a kick, knocking him out. Then
she stole the sharded cudgel from his other hand.
Moander's minions went to pieces. Some stared blindly at the sky like
statues, while many flung themselves on the ground and wept. Alias shot a
glance skyward in time to see the last bits of Moander drift down over the
city. A fell grin crept over her face. She spat good riddance to the god.
She slipped toward the far side of the hillock, but the priest in the white
mask rushed forward to intercept her. He caught a cudgel in the face. Blood
spattered from beneath the mask. The priest dropped to the ground.
Alias slid down the hill on the wet, slippery grass. At the bottom, she
circled the mound and began to make for the road that led to the city gates.
No pursuit seemed imminent from Moander's worshipers, but Alias was sure
that her respite was only temporary. If they did not hold her responsible for
the destruction of their master's earthly form, they would still consider her
part of their property. And without the power of their god behind them, they
would fight for any scrap left to them.
Tired of carrying the weight of the chain, Alias held her arm forward to
inspect the lock on the band. Perhaps she could smash or pick it open somehow.
She smiled with glee as she spotted the cause of the earlier pain on her arm.
Moander's sigil was gone.
Just as Moander claimed, death destroyed the bond each master had on her.
For Moander, that meant his material body in the Realms.
Death had cut the connection. But could she defeat the other four? Should
she? She remembered Meander's threat that without the purpose of her masters
she would not live. If she eliminated the rest, could she function without someone
pulling her strings? She didn't feel lessened any by Moander's death. Her heart
felt lighter, but she most certainly was not lost without his godly guidance.
A man's voice interrupted her thoughts. The sound came from the plain
stretched out before her.
"Now, Daisyeye," the man's voice said, "you've been a very
naughty girl, though I was afraid, too, the first time I met a dragon."
A wizard addressing his familiar, perhaps, Alias guessed. Cautiously, he
crept closer.
"But, you have nothing to worry about, even if that dragon was Mist.
The nasty old beast is dead."
With a start, Alias recognized the gold, green, and black markings stitched
onto the back of the man's cloak. The coat-of-arms of the Wyvernspurs. And the
voice was familiar, though its tone was somewhat braver than it had been the
last time she'd heard it. This was too great a coincidence. Yet, she could not
be mistaken. It was the same voice that had desperately tried to excuse its
faux pas of imitating Azoun IV. His name came easily to her memory, as though
it were engraved there by the voice of that nagging woman who'd begged him to
do the impersonation.
"Giogi?" Alias remembered, whispering the name aloud.
Giogi Wyvernspur leaped three feet, spinning around as he did so. A silver flask
flew from his hand, and amber liquid arched through the air.
"You!" he gasped. "The madwoman! I mean, the bard's
friend!" He dived behind his horse. "What are you doing here?"
"Just dropped in to borrow your horse," Alias replied with a grin.
She advanced carefully, looking to each side to make sure the young noble was
alone.
"My . . .'' the young man's throat went dry, "horse?"
Alias nodded and swung the chain manacled to her arm. "Do you have a
problem with that?"
"No! I mean, no problem. You probably have a good reason that I don't
need to know. Honest!"
"Don't fret," said Alias. "I'm not dangerous, just in a hurry
to get into the city." She patted the skittish Daisyeye's front haunch and
slipped her foot into the stirrup. "Just out of curiosity, what brings you
to Westgate?"
"Diplomatic mission," the Cormyrian noble lied. "Nothing
important. Just trade agreements. That sort of thing."
The warrior woman swung herself into the saddle. "You want your
gear?" she asked.
"No!" Giogi answered. "I mean, no thanks. If you're heading
to Westgate, maybe you could ... uh ... drop off my things. At The Jolly
Warrior. Just let me get. . ." He summoned all his courage to approach,
then fumbled in a saddlebag. Pulling out a large, official-looking document bearing
the purple dragon of Cormyr, he stepped back. "There," he said.
"All yours."
Alias looked down at him. He wasn't really dressed for hiking. "You
know," she said with a smile, trying to show no ill will, "two can
ride as well on a horse as one."
Giogi gulped. "No. I mean ... that is, you said you were in a hurry,
and I need the exercise, anyway."
"As you wish." She couldn't blame him. "I'll drop your gear
at The Jolly Warrior. I'll even make sure I don't stay there. Oh, and Giogi,
thanks. I'll make it up to you when I get the chance." With that, she
wheeled the horse around and set it trotting toward the road.
Giogi frowned after her. He'd come here at Azoun's request for the express
purpose of finding her, but he'd panicked when actually confronted with her
presence. Now I'll probably never see her again, he thought. Or poor Daisyeye.
He sighed and cursed his bad luck. Giogi began walking, head down, kicking
stones, and talking to himself.
"Yes, I'll let you ride with me, provided you behave. If you don't, I
shall be very cross. That's what I should have said."
He kicked a particularly large rock, which glittered as it danced away.
Curious, he chased after it. When it had stopped rolling, he lifted the great
yellow gem out of the high grass and marveled at it. Maybe his luck was
changing, he thought.
26
Reunion at The Rising Raven
Alias reached Westgate well ahead of her friends and, of course, Giogi, only
to find the city sealed. Persons without residence or official business within
were turned away from the gates by squads of guards, backed by crossbowmen on
the walls. She did manage to convince a guard to take Daiseyeye to The Jolly
Warrior and board her for, as she explained it, "a warrior who will arrive
from Cormyr on official business." She trusted the purple-sealed document
would get the young Wyvernspur past the guards.
As she stood by the gate, Alias could see smoke rising from the northwestern
section of the city. Other travelers told her that a dragon had crashed within
the city, smashing into a portion of the city wall, damaging some buildings in
the slums just outside the city and several of the Dhostar warehouses within.
The Dhostars, one of the powerful merchant families that ruled the city,
convinced the others to slam a seal down on the city's gates until the matter
was cleaned up.
Alias considered circling around to survey the damage from the outside, but
she was feeling worn from fighting and riding and dragging around the chain
attached to her arm. Besides, the inns outside the city wall would soon be
filling up with other travelers banned from the city. She decided she'd better
get a place to stay.
She remembered an old inn near the south gate: The Rising Raven. Perhaps she
could hock her eagle barrette as an artifact in order to pay for a room and a
bath. Used in battle against a god, she thought, holding the slightly melted
piece of silver up to the sun.
Her cheer faded some since she had no one with whom she could share her
joke. Even if Moander had lied and her friends were still alive, they were
still up north, hundreds of miles away—she would not see them for a long time,
if ever again. Already she missed them and felt lonely.
She was rounding the merchant yards of the Guldar family, when a familiar
but very hoarse voice bellowed her name. She turned and peered down the road
behind her. Three mud-spattered, bedraggled figures were waving their arms to
attract her attention.
"Akabar!" she shouted. The weariness dropped from her and she ran
to them, hugging first the mage, then the lizard, and finally even the
halfling. Olive bridled some, drawing back, more concerned with brushing
hardened mud from the front of her outfit.
"You're alive!" Alias blurted, beaming at them Olive looked as
though she'd been swimming in a swamp, Akabar was dressed in a ragged kilt, and
Dragonbait leaned heavily on his sword.
"You noticed," Olive grumbled. "We just chased you from one
side of the Realms to the other. Now we can't even get in the gates. Damned
forces of law and order."
"It's all right," Alias assured her. "I know a place outside
the city walls. They . . ." She almost said, "They know me
there," but she realized that they, like Jhaele of Shadowdale, would
remember nothing about her. "They have good food," she finished.
"I don't care about eating," Olive retorted. "I just want to
get clean. I feel like I've been swimming in a sewer."
Alias looked up at Akabar, wanting to apologize again for all the horror
he'd gone through because of her.
As if reading her thoughts, the mage said, "We can talk when we get
where we're going."
The swordswoman nodded. "Here, Dragonbait, give your sword a break and
lean on me for a while," she insisted, slipping herself beneath one of the
lizard's scaly arms and taking his sword in her other hand.
Akabar expected the proud saurial to refuse her help, but he accepted
Alias's close proximity and fussing like a cheerful child. Is it only the
identical markings that bond them together? Akabar wondered. Or something more?
Alias did not recognize the innkeeper from her previously
"remembered" stays at The Rising Raven. The inn was packed with
traders and adventurers. Even if it hadn't been so crowded, the innkeeper
needed only one look at the ragtag crew before he began shaking his head vigorously,
denying the existence of any vacancies.
Olive was the one who came to the rescue. Following the man across the
tavern room, she whispered something to him that Alias and Akabar could not
catch. Then she slipped him a coin. The innkeeper's hospitality brightened. He
led them from the inn, past the stable, to a warehouse with a small apartment
within. The quarters were cramped but clean, and the innkeeper promised to send
them hot water as soon as possible. Then he left them.
Dragonbait began to lay a fire in the stove, and Olive sat down in a corner,
resting her head on her knees, exhausted. Alias examined Akabar's shoulder and
grimaced.
"You've dislocated it, all right. How'd you do it?"
"Ran into an old friend," Akabar joked and tried to shrug. He
winced at the pain.
"I wonder what Olive said to the innkeep when she bribed him,"
Alias said softly.
"I wonder," Akabar replied in an equally soft voice, "where
she got the platinum coin she bribed him with."
Olive moved over to the whisperers. "You want to wear that to bed
tonight?" she asked Alias, nodding to the shackle about her arm. "Or
do you want me to pick the lock?"
While Olive was working on the iron bracelet, two footboys arrived at their
doorstep, one bearing a large copper tub, the other an ornate screen. They set
these down, scurried out, and then returned with a pair of buckets and an
oversized kettle. After setting the kettle on the stove and the buckets on the
floor, they pointed out the location of the well, should the adventurers desire
more water.
Olive declared the honor of the first bath and began setting up the screen
to block the tub from view. "I'm sure I won't be able to reach into that
well," she said to Alias. "Would you mind?"
"As soon as you get me out of this chain," the swordswoman
insisted.
"Oh, bother," the halfling grumbled. She banged the manacle once
with the end of the chain, and it sprang open.
"You have a really light touch," Alias teased. She grabbed the two
pails and set out for the water. Akabar followed.
"You won't be much good for hauling with a bad arm," the
swordswoman said as she poured water from the well bucket into one of the pails
she had brought.
"I am good for other things," said Akabar, unsmiling. "I am a
spell-caster as well as a merchant."
"We'll have to get a healer for that shoulder," she continued, not
understanding that she'd offended him.
"We've developed our own methods in your absence," Akabar added,
leaving Alias completely confused. His coolness hurt her. She realized that
even though she'd come to terms with not being human, accepted it, and was now
prepared to go on living, Akabar might not feel the same way about her. And if
her friends didn't accept her, who would?
An awkward silence fell between them.
Finally, Akabar overcame his pride—his usefulness was no longer at issue,
and they had more important things to discuss. "Alias, what Moander said,
what it made me tell you, what it made me do, the way it used me—I think I
understand how you must feel."
Alias finished filling the second pail and set it down beside the first. She
shook her auburn hair and stared at the ground. "It told me you were all
dead," she said, swallowing back the memory of the grief and horror that
had accompanied that moment. "It was lying then. It could have been lying
before."
Akabar was silent.
"What is it?" Alias asked. "Tell me," she demanded.
"I was in its mind, as well," the mage explained. "As far as
it knew, it was telling the truth."
"I see." She looked down into the well. Her reflection in the
water mocked her. Golem, homonculus, made-thing, that's how the mage saw her
now.
"It changes nothing, though," the Turmishman said. "You are
my friend, and I mean to help you, no matter how many gates we must pass
through."
Alias stretched out a hand and laid it on his good right shoulder, prepared
to tell him he must leave, that she would not have him facing any more danger
on her behalf, for the very same reason: he was her friend.
Before she could open her mouth, though, Olive, wrapped in a towel, called
out from the doorway, "Are you getting water or what out there? I'm
getting chilled, and the kettle's already boiling."
Alias grabbed both bucket straps and duck-walked the full buckets back to
their apartment. Akabar followed, cradling his bad arm and quietly cursing the
small, dirty halfling. She had been a nuisance since the day they'd met.
Once the bard was settled in her bath, soaking, and half-humming,
half-singing some obscene ditty to herself in the tub, Alias turned her
attention to Dragonbait's wounds.
The sigil of Moander had faded from the lizard's tattoo just as it had from
hers. Her glee at discovering this was soon squelched by the sight of his
wounds. There was a bloody half-healed gash on his hip, and he flinched when
she touched an ugly greenish bruise on his side, indicating a possible broken
rib. She offered him some warm compresses for the pain.
"We're going to have to get a cleric," she said again. "I
wonder if one will be available after the dragon's crash. Every time I turn
around, Mist's victims seem to be sucking up all the available healers. This'll
be the last time, though. How did you ever come to team up with her?"
Akabar sat down beside Dragonbait and gave him a gentle nudge with his good
arm. "Do you want to tell her, or should I?" Dragonbait made an
amused snorting sound.
"Listen closely. Mist followed us from Cormyr. She ambushed Ruskettle
while we were in Yulash, but Dragonbait subdued the dragon and convinced her to
work alongside them to rescue us. They rescued me first only because Moander
thought me more expendable. The god opened some type of magical gate from the
Elven Wood to here, and we followed the creature through it with the help of
your finder's stone. I think we lost that, didn't we?"
Dragonbait nodded and looked down at the ground, apparently ashamed at
having mislaid Alias's property.
"Then Mist shook us loose; whether intentionally or not I could not
tell. She died fighting the old god."
Alias held up a hand. "You said Dragonbait subdued Mist and convinced
her to help. You mean Olive . . ."
"Not the halfling. Dragonbait. He can talk, but not in ways that we can
understand. He uses—"
"Smells," Alias guessed, remembering the heavy odor of violets she
had detected in Meander's temple in Yulash.
Akabar nodded. "Mist understood him. And he has no trouble
understanding us. You know from Moander, of course, that his people are called
saurials."
"Yes," Alias said, remembering. "It also said something about
him being a pure soul—he was intended as a sacrifice to enslave me
somehow."
"He's more than that," Akabar explained. "He's a paladin in
his own world, much like the ones you have up north. He can heal in the same
fashion. So you see, we need only wait a few days and he can make both of us
good as new."
Alias looked into the lizard's yellow eyes. "You healed me when I came
out of Mist's cave with my chain mail fused?"
Dragonbait nodded without expression.
"And when I hurt my arm smashing the crystal elemental with your
sword?"
Again the saurial nodded.
"You sneaky devil," Alias said with a grin.
My feelings precisely, Olive thought behind the screen, but she did not give
away her eavesdropping.
Alias, however, meant the words as a compliment. Dragonbait hung his head,
though, ashamed of his deception.
"You had no idea, did you?" Akabar asked.
"No."
"You don't seem very surprised."
Alias shrugged. "I have evil assassins, evil mages, evil gods, and evil
who-knows-what-all chasing me. Why shouldn't I have a guardian paladin?"
Then it occurred to her why not. So far, Meander's words were a secret
between her and Akabar. She did not think Dragonbait knew. Akabar would not
give her away, but it would not be right to keep Dragonbait with her, risking
his life for her. She was just a thing. She was fully intent on sending her
companions away, out of danger, and now she had the means of driving the
faithful lizard from her side.
The idea of losing Dragonbait's tender concern left an ache in her heart,
and the thought of losing his protection left her more than a little afraid.
Don't be stupid, she tried to convince herself. You've taken care of yourself
all of your life. You can do it.
Then she remembered that that just wasn't true. She'd only been born last
month, and all that time she'd had the lizard as a nanny. How could he not
know? But if he knew, why did he stay? No doubt he'd been fooled like Akabar
into having pity for her.
I'll have to leave them, and I'll have to leave without telling them, she
thought. She ran her hand down the smooth, pebbly scales of Dragonbait's arm.
Aloud, she said, "I just want you to know how much I appreciate you.
Everything you've done." She could not resist—she hugged the lizard again
and then turned and hugged Akabar. "Both of you."
"Well," Olive said, stepping out from behind the screen.
"Nice to know you're safe and appreciated, isn't it?" The bard was
dressed in a pink robe, with scarlet pants beneath. Her yarting was strung
across her back, and a pouch hung on her belt. The expression on her face was a
mixture of jealousy and disapproval.
"I appreciate your friendship, too, Olive," Alias assured her as
she walked toward the screen. She knelt before the halfling and reached out to
hug her as well.
The bard stepped backward, almost toppling the iron tools stacked by the
stove. "Please, don't," she snarled, holding up a hand. "You're
filthy dirty, and this is my last clean outfit. And halflings don't hug.
Hugging is a problem when you're the size of most human children. So no
hugs."
"I'm sorry, Olive," Alias whispered.
Ruskettle glared at her for a moment, then announced, "I'm going to try
to get into town. Get some gear for us, see what rumors I can pick up about
Meander's people and all your other 'pals' down here."
Akabar broke in, "I've been to Westgate before. I think I might have
better luck getting past the gate guards."
"You're decked out in borrowed halfling gear," countered
Ruskettle. "They won't take you seriously. I'll get something suitable for
you to wear. And, no," she waved aside Alias and Dragonbait, "I work
better alone. Especially considering you two are probably wanted by someone or
something in Westgate." She strode to the door and then turned back,
looking at Akabar.
"One more thing. If I can get a healer to come out here, I will.
There's no sense in you living with the pain until he gets enough beauty sleep
to fix you up."
She left the room, slamming the door behind her.
"Was it something I said?" Alias asked Akabar. "What's gotten
into her?"
Akabar remembered how annoyed Ruskettle had been by the saurial's deception.
Apparently, it would take the halfling longer to overcome her anxiety.
Dragonbait hissed at the closed door, and the scent of freshly baked bread
wafted from his body.
*****
Ruskettle strode east from The Rising Raven, her short legs still
complaining about the earlier long walk to the city. If the dragon had crashed
to the north and west, then the guards would be at their weakest at the south
and east. The river gate would be her best bet.
The halfling's ears burned, and she was positive that her
"friends" were talking about her in the warmth of their warehouse
apartment. She had been the one to provide their shelter, yet everyone still
fawned over Alias, fought for Alias, and chased through the nine hells for
Alias, while she, Olive, had been abandoned with a dragon. And for what? It
wasn't like they got any money for what they did.
And to top it off, Alias was so bloody perfect. Like a doll. You wound her
up and she rescued people or slew monsters or sang perfectly beautiful songs.
And her luck was incredible. Not even a halfling had that kind of luck. She'd
been kidnapped by a god— a god, for god's sake!—and she'd escaped, and Akabar
and Dragonbait and the dragon had slain the god for her.
The lizard-paladin was another problem completely. The halfling's thoughts
wandered back a number of years to an ugly incident in the Living City. She'd
been at a bar when some holy fighter, a human paladin, rose unsteadily to his
feet, pointed a worn knuckle at her, and shouted, "Thief!" No one
doubted him; no one believed her. The fact that she had another's purse in her
hands did not help her situation, but she had managed to escape. Since then, she
walked carefully around such beings, beings who could look into a person's soul
and tell if he was good or evil. That scared Ruskettle. It wasn't fair. And now
it turned out that one of these snooty law-and-order types was a member of
their party. She felt the saurial's eyes on her all the time, judging her and
weighing her worth.
Olive ground her teeth. Now she was going shopping for the warrior-woman,
her pet paladin, and the mage. Even Akabar had a tendency to treat her like a
child or a thief. He was the hero of Alias's rescue, his spells made the
difference, while it had been the lizard's skill in battle that had recruited
Mist in the first place. But she, Olive, had been useless. And Akabar would
have left her on Mist's back, left her to die, when he flew off to rescue the
paladin.
Part of her mind refused this interpretation, knowing full well that
everyone had good reasons for doing what they did. But the small part of her
mind was easily ignored. What difference does it make? she thought. Sooner or
later, Phalse's friends were going to show up and take Alias away.
"I could use a drink," she muttered. "Better yet, several
drinks."
She was just passing the Vhammos yards, its paddocks jammed with horses and
caravan oxen, when suddenly someone addressed her. "Hello, Lady
Olive."
Ruskettle was startled. Perched on a fence post was a short, familiar
figure. He was dressed in sunburst yellow taffeta, fashioned into the costume
of a Vilhon Reach merchant. His smile stretched nearly ear to ear in an inhuman
mockery of the humanoid form.
"Phalse!" Olive wondered if the pseudo-halfling could read minds.
"A Fortune. Well met."
"A fortune and well met to you, dear lady. You've surprised me. I did
not know you were bound for Westgate. May I accompany you into the city?"
Ruskettle nodded, and Phalse hopped down from his perch. He paced the
halfling as she walked. "The river gate?" he asked.
"However did you know?" Olive grinned pleasantly.
"Thinking like a halfling, my lady," he answered. "I must
repeat, I am astonished to see you here so soon. Were you involved with the sky
display earlier?" He waved an arm toward the seven mounds south of the
city.
Olive's eyes narrowed. "Maybe," she replied coyly, but she
wondered how he could possibly know that.
"Maybe—that's a straight answer from a halfling. I take it the human
woman is with vou?"
Ruskettle shrugged her shoulders. "Maybe" She had the
uncomfortable feeling that her time with Alias was going to end much sooner
than she'd expected.
Phalse smiled. "I see. Will 'maybe' be the answer to my inquiries about
your other traveling companions, the mage and the lizard?"
"Maybe." She wondered what the pseudo-halfling's interest was in
Akabar and Dragonbait.
"I think you and I should have a drink," he said. "Several
drinks."
The small couple approached the gates, where a squad of soldiers was posted,
checking credentials. Phalse took Ruskettle's arm gently, and they strolled
through gates, into the city, completely unchallenged.
"I'm impressed," the bard said, jerking her head back at the gate
guard. "What's your secret?"
Phalse winked one of his peculiar blue eyes. "Clean living. Let's find
a nice, quiet bar with private booths and low ceilings. I have a deal that I am
certain will interest you."
"As long as you're buying, I'm all ears." Olive moved a little
closer to Phalse, and he tightened his grip on her arms.
*****
"Well?" Alias said, pursing her lips.
"Gone," Akabar replied. He'd been peering at the swords-woman's
arm and the saurial's chest with a tiny magnifying glass. "The surrounding
pattern hasn't just covered up its sigil, the sigil has disappeared
completely."
"Do you think the sigil might return if Moander gets another body in
the Realms?"
"I'm afraid that's a possibility," the mage sighed.
They were all cleaned up now, wrapped in towels and blankets while their
clothes dried in the late afternoon sunshine. Dragonbait had played nurse,
helping Akabar with his bath, a service that had made the Turmishman mildly
uncomfortable, but which he had accepted gratefully since his only alternative
was Alias's help. In the meantime, Alias had fashioned him a cushioned sling to
cradle his arm until Dragonbait could repair it properly.
Akabar leaned back on the room's lower bunk. "So where does this
development lead us?"
"Into more hot water. We're just outside the city where Cassana and the
Fire Knives are supposed to reside. I have a hunch that our mystery bull's eye
sigil owner resides here as well. And now that we've exploded a very large calling
card over their city, odds are they know we're in the area."
"Maybe they'll reconsider their actions and leave us alone. We
destroyed one of their partners already—the god."
Alias shook her head. "No. They'll just become more ruthless, Akabar, I
want you to go home to Turmish—take Olive and Dragonbait with you. Being near
me is too dangerous."
Akabar asked, "What good do you think you can accomplish alone?"
"Find these people," said Alias, "Talk to them. They need
Dragonbait to put their plans into motion, so they won't be able to control me
as long as he's safely hidden somewhere."
"They could always just brand another victim to sacrifice."
Alias shook her head again. "I don't think that would work. Remember,
Moander said I drew my independence from Dragonbait, that we're linked until
his death. They won't kill me; they've even taken precautions to see that I'm
not injured. But all the rest of you are targets."
Akabar harumphed. "They haven't shown a tendency to talk before. Bully,
threaten, and battle, yes, but never talk. They won't negotiate with you. As
far as they're concerned, you're no better than a horse, to be owned and ridden
and slain as need be. If they already have you in their sights, it will be that
much easier for them to accomplish their ends. All they'll have to do is search
out Dragonbait. Running and hiding won't do us any good."
"Maybe not, but if you stay here you're at risk. Please, Akabar,"
Alias pleaded. "I don't want to see you killed."
"There are worse fates. You and I both know that."
Dragonbait knocked on the side of the bed, summoning their attention. Using
a charred stick, he drew on the flagstones the four sigils he and Alias both
wore and also the unholy symbol of Moander.
"Yes?" Alias prompted.
Dragonbait pointed to Alias and himself and then scuffed out the flaming
dagger—the mark of the Fire Knives.
"Yes, we beat the assassins," Alias agreed. "They weren't
very tough, were they?"
He pointed to Alias and himself and Akabar and then scuffed out the sigil that
might or might not still belong to Zrie Prakis, the sigil of interlocking
circles. Then he pointed again to himself and Alias, drew an inverted tear drop
with a mouth and scuffed it out along with the insect-squiggle of Cassana's
mark.
"We beat the crystal elemental and the kalmari. The kalmari belonged to
Cassana?" the mage asked.
Alias nodded. "She told me in a dream. You dreamed the same thing,
didn't you?" she asked the saurial.
Dragonbait nodded. He pointed to Akabar and rubbed out the unholy symbol of
Moander like he was squishing a bug. Alias noted that the paladin gave all the
credit for the god's death to the mage. Then he pointed at the three of them
and splashed water from the kettle onto the flagstone.
Akabar laughed. "He's right, you know. Between the four of us we've
defeated everything your would-be masters have thrown at us. If we remain
together, we can defeat the lot of them."
"Only if you continue to cooperate," a sharp female voice said
from the doorway, "and if we do not. But your little demonstration this
afternoon persuaded us to unite."
Alias, Akabar, and Dragonbait leaped to their feet, their eyes fixed on four
people who had entered their cottage apartment. Three men, dressed in black
leather, and the woman from Alias's dream in Shadow Gap.
"Cassana," Alias breathed.
The woman lowered her hood. Her chin was sharper, her features older, her
hair longer and better tended, but her features were Alias's. She might have
been her mother. "Yes, Cassana. I've come to take you home, Puppet."
Favoring his good leg, Dragonbait sprang for the upper bunk bed for his
sword, and Akabar began chanting a spell. Alias grabbed a poker from the stove
tools.
Cassana laughed.
Akabar's spell was disrupted as the floorboards beneath him erupted and
skeletal hands grabbed him from the hole and pulled him through the floor. He
disappeared with a scream.
A trio of daggers arched from the black-clad assassins, embedding themselves
unerringly in Dragonbait's hide. The weapons could not have caused much
damage—they were small and had struck only his shoulder, his arm, and his
tail—yet the saurial dropped like a sack of laundry. Poison blades! the swordswoman
realized.
With a cry of anguish, Alias charged the Fire Knives. She cracked one
assassin in the head with the handle of the poker, then rammed the tip into the
throat of a second. Snatching the sword from the scabbard of the third one, she
turned it on him instantly. He fell over the bodies of his brothers, staining
them with his blood.
Only Cassana stood between Alias and the doorway. She muttered no spell, nor
did she look alarmed. Alias hesitated uncertainly. Cassana applauded the
swordswoman's performance briefly.
"Very good. Puppet. Welcome home," the sorceress said, slipping a
slender, blue wand from her sleeve into her hand. "Now sleep."
Alias lunged at her foe. Cassana, the puppeteer, waved the wand, and Alias
collapsed at her feet.
27
Alias's Masters
When Alias awoke, her head felt as though molten lead had been poured behind
her eyes and her mouth was as dry as the sands of Anauroch. She blinked in the
dim candlelight that illuminated her room, a room in an inn like a hundred
others at this end of the Sea of Fallen Stars.
A moment of panic seized her. Was she being forced by the gods to relive all
her mistakes as some sort of punishment? No. This was not The Hidden Lady, nor
any other place she'd ever been.
She found herself placed on a bed with her arms folded like the dead. She
was not alone. Dragonbait had been unceremoniously dumped at the foot of the
bed and was sprawled out on his stomach. Akabar had been propped up in an
overstuffed chair across from the bed, his hands manacled by thick bands of
cold iron to contain his magical ability. She and the mage were still wrapped
in blankets, but Dragonbait was naked, like an animal.
Alias slid to the floor and knelt beside the saurial. He was still
breathing. She sighed with relief, and tears welled in her eyes. The poison on
the assassins' blades hadn't been deadly. Horrid red and violet bruises
speckled the green scales along his legs and torso. Why had they been so
vicious with him? she cried inwardly. She tugged the coverlet off the bed and
draped it over him, then shook his shoulder gently. He did not stir.
They'd been much kinder to Akabar. His shoulder had been snapped back into
place, though it still looked bruised and tender. A soft touch brought him
fully awake. He took in her concerned features, Dragonbait's body, the room
around him, all with a quick glance.
"What happened?"
"We lost," she replied. "They swept us up like dirt in no
time at all."
The mage frowned. He tried to stand up, but something had drained away all his
energy. He flopped back into the chair, clanking his chains. Pain radiated from
his shoulder. He sucked in air, trying not to cry out.
"It looks like we'll be with you through the bitter end whether you
want us or not."
The despair in his voice twisted Alias's heart. Stubbornly she tried to
renew his hope. "We're not all captured yet," she pointed out, pacing
the room. "Olive is still at large. We've gotten out of worse."
Alias tried the door. The knob did not turn, and an experimental slam with
her shoulder indicated that it was barred on the far side, as well as locked.
The window was not constructed to be opened and, being made of crown glass set
in a lead frame, could not be smashed out. The circles of glass would have let
in light, but it was dark outside. The prisoners had no clues as to their
whereabouts.
Alias bit her lip and stood in the center of the room, wracking her brain
for some way out. There was no chimney, the walls were brick, the floor and
ceiling solid oak.
Akabar rose shakily from the chair and staggered over to Dragonbait. He
tried to wake him first with gentle shakes and then, in frustration, with more
violent ones. Akabar looked at Alias and shook his head.
"Okay, masters," Alias said. "It's your move."
Her words received an immediate reaction. A portion of the wall near the
door became misty, then translucent, and finally transparent. Alias reached out
and touched it. It was firm and cool, like glass in the autumn. Taking a
gamble, she slammed into the clearing wall with her shoulder, hoping to break
through. The wall may have looked like glass, but it still felt like bricks.
Alias rubbed her aching shoulder.
Cruel laughter came from beyond the wall, and Alias caught sight of Cassana
seated on a raised throne on the other side of the transparent barrier. It
distressed Alias that the witch's features were so similar to her own. Will I
look like that, sound like that, be like that, in a few years' time? the
swordswoman wondered. She tore her thoughts away and concentrated on the two
other figures beyond the wall.
A male halfling in a flashy yellow taffeta costume sat at Cassana's feet,
playing with a wicked-looking knife. There was something bizarre about his
eyes—they had no whites around the irises, yet the pupils looked white. The
halfling smiled far too broadly, reminding Alias of the kalmari.
A skeletal figure in a brown cloak stood beside the throne, leaning on a
twisted staff. His face was hidden beneath the hood of his cloak.
"Hello, Puppet," Cassana greeted her. She was dressed in a rich,
flowing gown, worn off one shoulder. The white cloth glittered in the
candlelight like woven diamonds. A band of matching material circled her brow,
holding her auburn hair in place. She turned the slim, blue wand over and over
in her hands.
Alias's spine stiffened at the sorceress's address. The voice was so
familiar, but not because it was her own. Alias recognized the harsh, bitter
tones. She had listened to the voice before, and she had hated it then as she
did now.
An old, lost memory surfaced. She was rising out of a pool of silver
streaked with crimson. Cassana stood over her with that wand, laughing in low,
rich tones—the laughter of a vain woman, delighted to see herself replicated.
Alias bared her teeth in a tight smile. "Hello, Cassana. Or should I
call you Mother?"
Akabar now stood beside the swordswoman, his jaw slack, amazed at the
resemblance Alias bore to the sorceress.
Cassana gave a guttural laugh and shattered her illusion of being an older
Alias. Such a laugh could never come from Alias. It was a cruel, heartless
laugh, and Alias was neither of those things.
Akabar pointed at the tall form beside the throne. "That's the one who
grabbed me."
Cassana motioned lazily, and the skeletal figure reached up with age-rotted
hands and flipped back the hood of its cloak. Beneath lay a skull covered with
translucent, jaundiced flesh stretched like a drum head. Its features consisted
of a rictus-grin, a deteriorating nose, and ebony eye sockets in which sharp
points of light danced.
"Yesss," the undead creature hissed. "I reached up and snared
you tight, stopping your blood and freezing your muscles." The creature
flexed a skeletal hand, each finger bone sharp as a knife. "Yet you live,
petty wizard. But only because the Lady Cassana craves unblemished fruit on
occasion." The undead creature laughed, too—a hoarse. wheezing laugh
disturbingly familiar to Akabar. Try as he could, however, the Turmishman could
not place it.
Alias did, though. She remembered the laugh in concert with Cassana's. for
this thing had also been present when Alias had been "born." It had
laughed at the swordswoman's nakedness and helplessness—the same laugh that had
emanated from the maw of the crystal elemental summoned by the undead thing.
"Zrie Prakis," Alias whispered.
"Yes. I believe introductions are called for," Cassana said, her
tone as proper as a society matron's. "1 am Cassana. This male child is
called Phalse." The halfling looked up, and his too-wide smile grew even
wider. "And this, as you have guessed, is Zrie Prakis, formerly a mage,
now a lich. You've already heard, so I understand, of the grand passion he and
I shared that nearly ended in a fiery blaze. But I never let go of things that
are mine." She grasped the blue wand tightly to emphasize her point.
"Gentlemen," she addressed Phalse and Zrie Prakis, "you
already know our dear Puppet and the thing on the floor. The handsome
mage," and with that description her eyes seized on the Turmishman like
the talons of a hawk about a hare, "is Akabar Bel Akash, powerful in both
magic and cooking. Your peppered lamb is notorious even here, Akabar."
Akabar furrowed his brow in puzzlement.
For a third time Cassana laughed. "Come now, mageling, she mocked.
"Surely you did not expect us all to be as out-of-date and foolish as the
moldy old god you so amusingly destroyed? We have followed your journey, at
first in bits and pieces, but more steadily since Shadowdale.
"We decided to let you continue on to Yulash and free Moander. Once the
Abomination was loosed, it was only a matter of time before the old fool met
its fate—humankind has grown much in power since that garbage pile last reigned
here. The sooner we got it out of the way, the better. And with its demise we
need no longer worry about the bizarre schemes its followers had for you,
Puppet."
Alias wondered if Cassana had any inkling that Moander had planned the same
double-cross for her.
"Once Moander dropped you off in our back yard, it was child's play to
track you down and pick you up."
"You can track me," Alias said in a flat, emotionless tone.
"Well, to be honest, no. We were too clever by half. You see, your very
being is impregnated with a powerful spell of misdirection. You cannot be
detected by scrying, nor can anyone who travels with you. Since we did not
expect you to slip from our grasp, we never thought the misdirection spell
would pose any problem for us. A serious miscalculation on our part. One of
many, I'm afraid. But you can't create art without a few mistakes. The best we
can do is correct them in the future.
"Fortunately for us you were intelligent enough to wonder about your
brands. Whenever magic is detected on your arm it acts as a beacon to locate
you. We relied on our black-leathered allies to capture you in Suzail. Their
failure was almost our undoing. But by some stroke of luck you stumbled upon an
old haunt of Zrie's and revealed yourself to us again by displaying the magic
content of your brand. But, alas, you were also more than a match for the
heavyhanded methods of my love here."
At this, Zrie Prakis bowed deeply, and Alias could hear the skin stretching
and popping over his bones.
"And then, even more luckily, my kalmari spotted you coming through
Shadow Gap. It could be no coincidence that you continually alerted us of your
whereabouts. I knew you wished to come home to us, Puppet. So we made it easier
to keep an eye on you. We contacted one of your followers and planted a
tracking device on her. And, as I said before, once you came to Westgate,
finding you and defeating you was easy. A halfling's trick."
Alias felt as though the chilling fist of a frost giant had closed about her
heart. "No," she whispered.
Phalse motioned to a hidden figure, who edged cautiously into view. She was
decked out with the finest robes, glittering imitations of those worn by
Cassana. She looked like a little princess, a child-bride from the east. She
smiled sheepishly at Akabar and Alias.
Olive Ruskettle.
"Hullo, everyone," Olive said, nervous sweat beading beneath her
headband. "If I'd known you were in trouble—"
"Hush, child," Cassana interrupted. "You jumped at the
opportunity to help us, as any good halfling would." Cassana smiled at the
prisoners. "Gold coins weigh more than friendships. Now, mageling, I'll
give you the same chance that we gave the child here. You've been misled by the
false charm of this puppet. Forsake the slave and join its masters. I'm sure we
can find a use for you." Prakis put a possessive skeletal hand on
Cassana's bare shoulder, and the sorceress squeezed it affectionately to underscore
her point.
The fury building in Akabar's gut spilled out. "I'd rather roast in the
lowest hell—"
Cassana, with an angry frown, muttered something and motioned with her wand.
Alias backhanded Akabar in the jaw. Backhanded him hard with all her warrior's
strength.
The mage toppled backward, staring at the swords-woman. Her legs were rigid;
her fists clenched and unclenched in sharp, fast spasms. The remaining runes on
her arm writhed and glowed. Cassana's insect-squiggle shone the brightest of
all.
"Alias?" Akabar gasped as he rose to his feet.
"One chance is all you get," Cassana said, "for now. Hit him
until he is unconscious, Puppet." She motioned with the wand again.
Alias spun in place like a sentry and caught Akabar in the belly with her
foot. The air rushed from his lungs, and he collapsed. He tried to rise again,
but the woman warrior brought both fists down on the back of his neck, knocking
him from his knees so he sprawled out on the floor. The mage rolled on his
back, trying to ward off the rain of blows and kicks with his chains.
He froze when he caught sight of Alias's face. Her eyes burned with a wild
anger, and tears ran freely down her cheeks.
Gods! Akabar thought; Cassana is doing to her what Moander did to me. She
has no control of her actions, and she is even more aware of the evil she does
than I was. Pity for the swordswoman overwhelmed him, and he dropped his guard
completely.
A kick to his jaw plunged him into a spiraling blackness.
Cassana laughed as her puppet stood poised over the helpless body of the
Turmishman. "Look, Zrie," the sorceress said, "she's crying. I
bet I know who taught her that trick." With a second wave of the wand, the
sorceress returned Alias to unconsciousness. The swordswoman collapsed on top
of Akabar.
With a lazy wave of her free hand, Cassana signaled the lich. Zrie Prakis
let his spell elapse, and the transparent wall turned back into stone and
mortar.
Cassana applauded her little play. Olive sat in shock. Every hair on the
back of her neck, no, every hair on her body, had stiffened as she watched the
beating. The sorceress slid out of her throne and, beckoning the lich, headed
down the hallway. Phalse and Ruskettle fell in behind them, but dropped back to
confer in private.
"Did she have to . . ." Olive let the question dangle.
"She's a human," Phalse replied. "Humans tend to be cruel, as
we both know." He paused for several paces, then added, "You know she
did that for your benefit, as well as his."
"Oh?" The bard was certain that beating up mages had never been on
her list of entertaining events.
"Sure. She wanted to point out how lucky you are to be joining our
little family. Eventually, the mage will get the same message."
"And if he doesn't?"
"Sorceress Cassana is loath to use magic to get her way with a
man," Phalse explained. "But she will use it rather than damage this
Akash fellow beyond repair. I think she likes him."
Olive shuddered inwardly at the thought of what Cassana might have done to
Akabar if she hated him.
"She could have made the One kill Akash," Phalse pointed out, as
if reading the halfling's mind. "But she didn't."
Olive felt the return of the nervous sweat beneath her headband. She forced
the idea of money, lots of it, to the forward part of her mind. "You all
have different names for ... for her.''
"The One? Yes, I suppose we do. Another mistake to be corrected.
Cassana calls her Puppet. Moander's priest called her The Servant. The Fire
Knives called her Weapon. The lich calls her Little One, as if he were her
grandfather or something."
"Who called her Alias?"
"Not important," Phalse replied sharply. "Come, there's much
to done."
They were in a simple, two-story merchant's house just inside the city wall.
The cellar led to underground passages that delved under the wall and surfaced
in an abandoned ruin beyond. Upstairs and down were long hallways with rooms
jutting off them. The prisoners were being held in one of the upstairs rooms.
Nearing the top of the steps leading down to the first floor, Phalse and
Olive heard Cassana's voice below. She spoke in Thieves' Cant, which Olive had
no trouble translating.
"Grandfather, has the task been carried out?"
"All are cared for, milady," replied a thick, guttural voice.
"And you will take their place?"
"Aye."
"Morning, then, we'll complete the pact."
The sound of Cassana's gown swished off in one direction, while the cat-foot
patter of the one called "Grandfather' faded away in another. Olive
wondered where Prakis had got to. The undead magic-user could move more
silently than the most graceful halfling.
Phalse flashed Olive an impish grin. "You understand the Argot?"
He took the halfling's shrug as an admission of ignorance and explained,
"He was the leader of the Fire Knives, reporting the death of Moander's
surviving followers—all the ones that did not hurl themselves from tall places
at the death of their god. The Fire Knives will take the place of Moander's
minions at dawn when we seal the pact."
"When you make that final correction to the human woman," Olive
said.
"And when you receive final payment," Phalse added.
Yes, the halfling thought to herself. Try to keep your mind on the money,
Olive-girl.
*****
In Olive Ruskettle's estimation, the midnight dinner she was presently
sitting through was one of the most frightening events in her life. For sheer
terror, Olive thought, it rated somewhat above being discovered and accused by
that pig paladin in the Living City, but just below being swept off a wagontop
by Mist's dewclaw.
The dining room, a solemn, musty hall, was dominated by a huge oak table.
The windows were covered with heavy, black velvet drapes. Hundreds of candles
burned in candelabras, but the room was still dim.
Cassana, draped in scarlet satin that seemed to flame with brilliance,
dominated one end of the table. Rubies dripped from the sorceress's throat,
ears, and fingers. Prakis sat unmoving at the far end of the long table. He was
dressed in yellow robes of equal finery. Before him had been placed the mounted
bones of a goose, a haunting joke about his undead status.
Olive was seated midway down the table at Phalse's side. The halfling bard
kept a firm grip on her mind, trying to channel her thoughts away from abstract
ideas like cruelty, sadism, and perversion, and tried to focus on real objects,
like the food laid out before her.
In the food department Phalse put even the most gluttonous of Ruskettle's
race to shame. He wolfed down vast quantities of dark-roasted venison ringed
with stuffed mushrooms and the pickled vegetables carved into the shapes of
skulls. He also downed mug after mug of mead, motioning for refills by swaying
his goblet. Table was waited by silent men and women in dark tabards. Fire
Knives, was Olive's guess. Apprentice murderers.
Though Olive was quite hungry and the repast was delicious, the food sat
like a brick in her stomach. As out of place as the bard had felt among her
former companions-Alias with her perfect voice, Akabar with his learning,
Dragonbait with his virtue—here she knew she was the proverbial fifth wheel.
There's something else at this table, the bard thought, something that
outranks me. Power. That's why they've seated me beside Phalse instead of
opposite him. Olive imagined she could see the power rippling between her three
hosts—Cassana, the lich, and Phalse. The Fire Knives are servants, Olive
realized, nothing more. Phalse has his aura of charisma, an almost tangible
swirl of attraction. Prakis exudes all the authority of dry, dusty, ancient
tomes, and Cassana sits like a spider in the center of her web, aware of every
movement within her realm—Mistress of Life and Death. If these three ever get
into a disagreement, the bard decided, I don't want to be around to get caught
in the middle. I don't even want to be close enough to watch.
"So, what do you think of our little group, small bard?" the
sorceress asked.
Olive almost choked on her meat, unable to resist the idea that her new
allies could read her mind. "Well," she held up a finger as she
chewed and swallowed and gulped mead down to give herself time to phrase a
suitable reply. "To tell the truth, I was unaware of how successful your
alliance already was when Phalse offered me the chance to join. I understand
you were subduing my . . . traveling companions even as I was speaking with him."
She chose her words carefully, picking her way through the conversation as
delicately as she would pick the lock of a cleric's trunk.
"Yes, we broke into two groups," Cassana explained. "One to
check out The Rising Raven, the other to follow the lure of your ring. Prakis
or I would likely have relied on clumsy, human means to keep track of Puppet,
but Phalse, smart, wise Phalse knew that a halfling would easily topple to the
lure of power and gold. And how better to reward your faithful service."
Olive's mouth was dry, and she took another gulp of mead before she nodded.
"And so we have another member of our band," concluded the
sorceress. "A good thing, too, because our numbers are rapidly dwindling.
Moander is dead, the crafter useless to us, the Fire Knives thinned in rank. We
could use young blood." She emphasized the last word just a little too
much, leaving Olive with memories of the legends of vampires.
The silence hanging over the table was oppressive. Struggling to lift it,
the bard began to ask, "Crafter? Who's—" but before she could finish
Phalse gave her thigh a sharp squeeze. Olive almost jumped from her chair. She
turned to glare at him for an explanation, but he was busy draining his goblet.
Holding out his glass for a refill, he bestowed her with a wink from one of his
peculiarly blue eyes.
"I'm sorry," Cassana prompted. "You were saying?"
"Nothing. I was too wrapped up in your tale."
"Of course," Cassana replied. She began nodding and murmuring to
herself, and Olive wondered if Cassana had channeled too much of her power into
keeping up her good looks and let her mind go a little mushy. The sorceress's
head snapped up and she announced, "Now, the three of us will be very busy
for the next few hours, preparing for the ceremony to be held at dawn. But you,
Olive, were up very early this morning, before dawn. And since then you've been
a very, very busy little girl. You must be exhausted. Take a nap, and Phalse
will send for you."
Whether it was the suggestion, the food, or the long hours and miles between
Yulash and Westgate, Olive suddenly felt very weary. She swayed in her chair,
trying to shake the cobwebs from her brain. Phalse put a hand out to steady
her, his grip like iron.
"Now that you mention it," the bard said, not bothering to stifle
a yawn, "I'm dead on my feet."
"Good. Prakis my pet, why don't you take the small bard up to Phalse's
room for her nap?"
"I would prefer—" Phalse began to protest, but Cassana cut him off
with a motion of her hand.
"You and I have some private matters to discuss," the sorceress
insisted.
"Just how private do you intend to get?" Phalse bantered.
The lich rose silently and stood behind the halfling's chair as she tumbled
from it. She staggered from sudden exhaustion, then began weaving her way to
the staircase.
Cassana laughed behind her, calling out, "Sleep tight, little
one." When the lich had maneuvered the bard up the first flight of stairs,
the sorceress turned her cold, hard eyes on Phalse. "Well?"
"She's scared witless, but that's understandable," Phalse replied
in the halfling's defense. "But it's a rather delicious sort of terror,
don't you think?"
"She seems a bit unstable. She'll sleep through the ceremony. When she
wakes, her former allies will be dead or under our control. The choice will be
easier for her once her options have been limited. I would prefer it, though,
if you would use her and get rid of her tonight," said Cassana.
Phalse flashed his inhuman smile. "I'll slay her myself if you
similarly dispose of your lovers, including the Turmite."
Cassana pouted "You'd deprive me of my pets?"
"You'd deprive me of mine."
The two glared at one another, locked in a contest of wills. Then slowly,
both began to laugh.
*****
When the halfling collapsed on the second landing, Prakis bundled the
childlike bard in his yellow cape and cradled her in his arms, carrying her to
Phalse's opulent bedroom. He lay the halfling woman on the satin coverlet and
leaned in close to her face, muttering a few words. Then he touched her on the
forehead and shoulders.
Olive sat bolt upright, her eyelids flying open like pigeons startled by a
temple bell. "What!" she gasped, then cringed away immediately from
the mockery of humankind hovering over her.
"Hush," the death's head rattled. "I've cast a spell on you
to counteract the magical suggestion Cassana the Cruel used to make you
sleep," Prakis explained. His voice sounded windier than before, as though
suddenly it was a greater effort for him to speak. "How do you feel?"
"I feel... I feel like I've slept for a week. Did I miss the
ceremony?"
"No, only a few minutes have passed since you left the table. But my
counteractive spell will give you energy now for hours. I woke you to make you
an offer. Have you killed?" the lich asked. The red points of light in his
eye sockets were suddenly still like a magical light.
"Killed? Of course. Easy as falling off a log."
"Can you do it again?"
"Uh . . . sure. Who do you want killed?"
"Cassana." The red pinpoints in the skull's eye sockets danced
again.
"Wait a minute. I thought you and she were . . ." The halfling
groped for polite words. "Close, I guess."
"1 am Cassana's tool, her pet, much like you are—or will be—Phalse's
pet, if he gets his way. The wand that controls the Little One also controls
me. The farther I am from the wand, the more dead I become. Cassana keeps the
wand on her person at all times, and when she travels too far away, I die
entirely, only to come back as a shambling form when she returns. She is literally
the sun my world revolves around."
"But your symbol is on Al—the Little One."
"My power over death was needed to bring the Little One to life, so I
was allowed a small measure of control over her, but Cassana is the ultimate
puppet master, pulling both our strings."
Up close to Prakis, Olive could see the deep blue stitchery of long-dead
blood vessels and smell the fetid stink of the corpse's breath. He did not need
to breathe, save to work his speech organs, which gave his voice an odd,
mechanical quality.
"But why do you need me?" Olive asked. "Couldn't you just
strangle her or something and take the wand?"
"No. That would not work. Cassana the Cruel is very clever. She has
bound up her life energies into the wand so that, as long as she holds it,
nothing the Little One or I do can harm her. She knows my hate; she knows the
wand is all that stands between her and death by my hands. She loves knowing
this—it thrills her."
"So you want me to steal the wand?"
"Yes. Then I will kill her"
"Um, just out of curiosity, how?"
"With this'" the lich thrust forward his staff of dark wood.
"I am still permitted to wield this. It is a staff of power. Do you know
what it can do?"
Olive nodded, remembering the lay written in honor of Sylune. The river
witch had used the same kind of staff to blow herself and a marauding dragon to
kingdom come. The halfling didn't want to be anywhere near Prakis and Cassana
when they finally ended their "lover's quarrel."
"No offense, Prakis, old bones, but what's in this for me?"
"Your freedom and your life."
"Oh?"
"Phalse considers you his property now. Surely you must realize that, as
charming as he appears, he is no halfling."
"What is he?"
"I don't know. Not even Cassana knows, and that is not a good sign.
Furthermore, Cassana does not like you. She never could stand any competition,
no matter how small. And she is superstitious about halfling luck. She really
sent Phalse after you to make sure you did not interfere with our capture of
the prisoners. When Phalse's back is turned, she will slay you, gut you, and
use your body as a vessel for her kalmari. Once you've helped me take care of
Cassana, I will rid you of Phalse's company."
Olive gulped. "These are good reasons, but, um ... I don't suppose you
might offer me any other incentives?" She was terrified of angering the
lich, but how much could it hurt to ask? she wondered.
Prakis laughed, genuinely amused. "I can see why Phalse kept you. You
have a greed for life that must astound even him."
"Well, life is short, as you discovered, and it makes sense to get all
you can out of it. The best things in life aren't free, you know."
"I did know that once. Cassana has amassed a great deal of wealth
hidden in the cellars beneath this house. Besides selling and leasing her
monsters, she skimmed a good deal off the top from the funds the Fire Knives
poured into the project of making the Little One. Whatever you can carry away
on a pony is yours, unless—perhaps you could remain here with me and the Little
One, a member of our family."
The thought of living in the same house with a zombie Alias revolted Olive,
but quite a bit of gold could be loaded onto a pony.
"You have a deal, but first, as a gesture of trust—tell me, who is the
crafter?"
Zrie Prakis's red eyes stabbed at the halfling for several moments. He must
have decided the knowledge could do him no harm, because he told her. "He
is—he has no true name. He gave the Little One a mind, a life, the name Alias.
But he feels he's been damned for it."
"But he's still alive?"
The lich nodded with a crack of his neck bones. "Cassana the Cruel
hates to cast aside her pets. He is prisoner in the cellars. But he is quite
mad."
Olive decided to agree with the lich for now. Glibly she asked, "When
do we start this revolution?"
"Use the time when we're at the ceremony to lace the house with traps.
Lay in wait and ambush. Now, mime your sleep while I prepare the prisoners. And
do not give yourself away, or I will be forced to slay you myself." The
skin over his forehead wrinkled the slightest bit as he made an attempt to
threateningly raise eyebrows he did not possess.
Then he drifted from the room, silent except for the creaking of his bones.
Olive leaned back in the bed and closed her eves, and the energy the lich
had channeled into her did indeed keep her from falling asleep. Unfortunately,
it also made her restless. Her mind kept flipping through her quickly
diminishing options.
She turned on her side, away from the door, and thought harder. Though she'd
been wishing for Phalse's friends to show up and take Alias, she'd felt a pang
of disappointment when she'd learned they'd already captured the swords-woman.
Her second meeting with Phalse had not left the bard with as charming an
impression of the pseudo-halfling as their first had. Strangers always looked
friendlier sitting behind a stack of coins, Olive realized. His offer of great
power had sounded amusing accompanied by fine Luiren ale, but Olive had never
really been interested in power.
Especially not if it meant watching people getting beaten to a pulp.
While she'd been drinking with Phalse, Olive had formed some half-baked
scheme of joining the alliance in order to discover by her own means—stealth
and cunning—the identitles and intentions of Alias's foes. In her mind, she
would then have reported back to Alias, revealing how she had succeeded where
the book-laden mage would not and the scaly paladin could not. That would have
impressed them.
But the plan had backfired drastically, and now she was trapped, a little
spider in a larger spider's web. She could think of only three options: Escape
somehow and flee, living in fear of retribution; find a wav to free the others
and fight; or join the alliance for real, submitting herself to whatever Phalse
and Cassana had in store for her.
She did not consider the lich's plan. It was entirely too dangerous. Cassana
would fry me like a banana, Olive realized, if I came within twelve inches of
her wand.
Olive didn't much care for the idea of sticking around. Besides disliking
her role of low woman on the totem pole, an alliance with these people was very
risky business. Their partners had a habit of dying off.
Olive granted that she was greedy and ambitious, but these people were cruel
and hateful and perverse—no act of hers could ever bring her to their level of
perdition.
Still, despite herself, and despite Prakis's warnings, she felt drawn to
Phalse. He had treated her with courtesy and rewarded her with more cash than
anyone else had in a long time. He understood her halfling heart.
The door creaked open behind her and then closed. Someone tiptoed over to
the bed. The bard snapped her eyes shut, and began breathing shallowly with a
melodic semi-snore.
A small hand touched her knee, and Olive shifted slightly to cover her
startled movement. Small fingers danced up her thigh and then cupped her
breasts. After a moment or two they withdrew. It wasn't until the door opened
and closed again that Olive realized she'd been holding her breath.
She sat bolt upright after Phalse's retreat, gritting her teeth against a
scream. She scratched one option from her list. She couldn't stay here. She
would escape—with or without the others.
28
The Crafter
Olive crept about the room, slipping some of the more pawnable and valuable
items into her backpack and her pockets: ivory combs, a silver mirror, crystal
perfume vials, a gold wine goblet. After scavenging for half an hour she
noticed sounds of greater activity in the hallway.
Olive crept over to the door and pressed her ear against it. She could hear
men in the hallway, panting as if from strenuous labor, accompanied by a
dragging sound. Olive peeked out the keyhole. Two Fire Knives were hauling
something behind them. Olive caught sight of a scaly, green arm— Dragonbait. A
thumping noise came from the staircase— they were being none too gentle with
the saurial.
Two more assassins flicked by the keyhole, carrying Akabar by the arms and
legs. Cassana's new toy, he was given preferential treatment. He was not
thumped down the steps. Olive heard Phalse say, "Leave him in the cell
next to the crafter's."
Last of all, Zrie Prakis floated by with Alias cradled in his arms. He
paused by Olive's door, blocking her view. Olive heard a bolt sliding across
tlie door.
She waited until all noise in the hall had ceased and no sounds came from
the stairway. Then she tried the door.
Prakis had unlocked it for her. The bard poked her head out of the doorway.
The house was silent. After closing and bolting the door to Phalse's room
behind her, she crept down the hallway and tiptoed down the stairs. She dashed
through the entry hall. The front door beckoned her. She twisted the knob, but
it was locked.
Olive reached into her hair and drew out a pick, but before she began
working on the bolt, she noticed a blue line drawn across the threshold, with
three interlocking circles sketched above it. A magical ward—one of Prakis's.
Was it the type that warned the designer something had crossed over it, or the
kind that disintegrated into dust whatever crossed over it? There was no way
for Olive to tell.
"Boogers," Olive muttered. "What's the matter? Don't you
trust me, Prakis, old bones?"
Dodging into the dining room, the halfling slipped behind the heavy
curtains. The lock on the large windows was easily unfastened, but another blue
mark was scrawled along the window sills. Grinding her teeth in annoyance,
Olive dashed back into the entry hall and up the steps. There was a window in
the upstairs hallway, but it, too, was warded.
Zrie Prakis had made sure she would stick to her side of the bargain. He'd
unlocked her cell door, but he was not going to let her escape from the prison.
As she saw it, she had one chance. Unlocking the door to Phalse's room and
slipping back inside, she examined the window within. Unguarded. The wards must
have been a last-minute thought on the lich's part, and he had neglected to
come back to Phalse's room to set one there.
Olive climbed out onto the window sill. The roof sloped away gently. She
would have an easy time slipping down to the gutter—a perfect halfling's
footpath—and walking along that until she found a rain spout to slide down. But
what then? she wondered as she sat with her feet dangling over the roof tiles.
She'd have to find another adventuring group to travel with, one that could
help protect her from Phalse and family should they decide she was worth
chasing.
Finding a new party wouldn't be easy. Alias and Dragon-bait were perhaps the
finest sword wielders she'd ever seen, and Akabar had helped destroy a god, and
the three of them had been defeated. Of course, she hadn't been there to help
them out, she consoled herself. She wondered idly if her presence would really
have made a difference. According to Prakis, Cassana had been concerned that it
might have. Is it possible, Olive wondered, that Cassana put me to sleep
because she was afraid I might interfere somehow in this ceremony to remove
Alias's will?
Although Phalse had not told her, Olive knew the ceremony would involve the
sacrifice of Dragonbait. Alias had said something about it to Akabar the day
before, back at The Rising Raven. The loss of the paladin would not have made
too much difference to the halfling before yesterday. Yet Olive had to admit,
he hadn't done her any harm so far, and his death would seal the fates of Alias
and Akabar.
Akabar would remain in Cassana's clutches, not something Olive would wish on
anyone, certainly not on Akabar, whom she liked a little.
Alias was another matter. Olive found it difficult to like someone so
perfect, but she felt more guilt about abandoning the swordswoman. For one
thing, Olive realized, I owe her for rescuing me from the dragon and saving my
life. She let me join her party, and she shared her songs with me. She stole my
audience once, but she'll never do that again. After the ceremony she'll
probably never sing songs again. Without a will she'll be a zombie, and zombies
don't sing. All those lovely melodies and haunting lyrics would be lost to the
world. That would be a crime, Olive sighed.
Not that people like Cassana, who liked kidnapping, torture, and murder,
would care about such a loss to the musical world. Of course, I'd be just as
responsible if I didn't do anything to stop the witch and her merry band, Olive
acknowledged.
Jump, Olive-girl, the halfling told herself, before you wind up doing
something you may regret later. The halfling could not get out of her head the
image of Akabar being beaten and the sound of Dragonbait's head hitting each
step as the Fire Knives dragged him downstairs.
But the thought of Alias never singing again was even worse.
Olive swung her feet back into the building, jumped to the floor, and left
the room. The upper hallway was still empty, but she heard men's voices coming
from somewhere below. Pausing to listen, she noticed great drops of red dotting
the steps below her. Blood. Akabar's or Dragonbait's? she wondered. She
followed the red spatters down the stairs.
The voices were coming from the kitchen. The trail of blood went through the
entry hall in the opposite direction. Olive tracked it to an alcove that
featured a particularly obscene statue of an overly endowed succubus.
The trail ended in a pool of blood at the base of the statue, as if the
prisoner had been left there for a moment. Olive made a "tch" sound.
Why didn't they tell the world there was a secret passage here somewhere? she
scoffed.
Footsteps and voices approached from the dining room. Olive ducked behind
the statue of the succubus.
"—unfair. That's all I'm saying," the first protested.
"Unfair doesn't mean a thing to Her Ladyship," the second voice
argued. "We don't have the seniority, we don't have the clout. The rest
get to play clerics and gods in a few hours. We don't rate. So what?" Here
the speaker's words became incoherent as his mouth was occupied with chewing
and swallowing, "—prefer raiding Her Ladyship's larder to standing outside
in the cold and damp. What?"
"Something by the dungeon door. Watch."
Olive's intestines cramped uncomfortably. Of all the stupid things—I've
chosen the exact spot they're heading for!
A soft footstep then a second crept closer to the alcove. If the situation
hadn't been so serious, Olive would have giggled at the picture of a burly
human trying to creep like a halfling across the floor. She didn't even need to
guess how close he was, she could feel the floorboards shift slightly under his
weight. Pressing her back against the wall, she thrust against the statue's
pedestal with her feet.
The top-heavy statue rocked, then toppled from its pedestal. The crash of
stone against stone blended with the sickening thunk of flesh and bone being
crushed by a great weight, as the succubus claimed the life of the first Fire
Knife. The stonework ran with fresh blood.
The other Fire Knife, a grossly overweight human with a stubby short sword
in one hand and half of a melon in the other, had been standing ten feet away
when his partner had met his demise. His eyes were wide with shock, but he
approached the pedestal. Olive slipped out of the alcove to face her attacker.
"Murr," muttered the Fire Knife. Whether this was the name of some
god or his late companion, Olive did not know. "Ya just a girl. C'mon,
kid, I'll make it fast. We'll just lock ya up until . . ."
The halfling didn't wait to find out how long she'd be locked up. She
dropped to one knee, grabbed a piece of the broken statue, and threw it.
Clunked square in the forehead with a succubus breast, the assassin rocked back
on his heels. Olive grabbed the sword from his dead partner's hand and charged.
The Fire Knife dropped the melon and swung his blade downward. Olive dove to
the right, and the steel blade sparked off the stonework, sending a ringing
peal of doom through the hall and up the stairs. The assassin whirled and
slashed in a cross-cut. Olive dipped her head slightly, and the blade swiped
over her. The man's reflexes were trained in battling opponents his own size.
Olive slipped inside his guard and thrust his partner's short sword upward
in the all-too-ample space between his leather jerkin and his belt. The blade
sank deep into the flesh. Blood welled from the wound. The Fire Knife stepped
backward, but Olive moved with him like a bulldog, wriggling and twisting the
sword.
The assassin grabbed at her hair with his left hand, but before he could
take advantage of his grip, he gurgled and collapsed on top of his enemy. It
was several moments before Olive could get any air into her lungs and wriggle
out from beneath her vanquished foe.
Blood stained the entire length of her gown.
"Like falling off a log," she muttered to herself. "Nothing
to it. Done it lots of times." She tried to pant more quietly, listening
for others. If anyone else was still in the house, they would have heard the
fight.
There was no other sound but her labored breathing.
She returned to the pedestal and began exploring its carved edges for a
catch to open the secret door. Badly rattled, her fingers ran over the surface
for almost three minutes before she managed to press just the right bit of
fluting. The wall in the back of the alcove slid open, revealing a spiral
stairway leading down.
Stealing a torch from a wall sconce and the obese assassin's short sword,
the bard pattered down the steps. The air grew chill and damp as she descended.
At the bottom, a passage was cut deeply into the bedrock. The passage was
lighted by a magical glow issuing from statues of demons mounted on the
walls—magical light that did not flicker, but shone in steady red beams from
the red glass eyes and in white fans from the tops of their heads. Along the
right side of the passage were three archways blocked by cage bars. The passage
continued on, lit by a pearl-like string of red and white lights.
Beyond the first archway lay an empty cell, clean but for a dark red smear
streaking the back wall. The second cell caged a mass of rotting cloaks and
blankets. Akabar hung in the third cell, the chains of his manacles attached to
a hook in the ceiling. The Turmishman's toes dangled three inches from the
floor. The assassins had left him in the cold and damp with nothing but a sheet
wrapped around his waist. His face was puffy and discolored. Blood trickled
from his mouth and welled in the troughs of four-fingered scratches across his
right cheek and chest. Ruskettle could not remember Cassana's nails being
particularly long. Then she recalled the sharpened finger bones of Zrie Prakis,
and shuddered.
"Akabar," she hissed, wondering if there were any other Fire
Knives left behind to guard the prisoners. She searched the bars for a door or
a lock, but they ran from ceiling to floor without a break.
"Akabar!" she said louder.
In the cell next door the mound of furs and cloaks stirred. Olive started
and watched the pile closely. A man's head poked out. His hair and beard were
shaggy and black, with splotches of gray and white. His eyes were blue and
rheumy. His face was lined with cracks of old age and cold. Cocking his head he
chirped, "Hullo."
Olive cast a glance back at Akabar, but the mage had not moved. "Uh,
greetings. You must be the crafter. Are we alone here?" she whispered.
"No," the crafter said, shaking loose the furs and cloaks. He rose
slowly to his feet, and his legs wobbled as if he'd been bedridden for a long
time. He wore a tattered tabard that must have once been purple and green, but
was now faded to gray and yellow. "There's a new prisoner next door,"
he replied, pointing toward Akabar's cell.
"I mean, are there any guards?"
"Let me check. GUARDS!"
Olive toppled backward in shock. Scrambling to her feet, she sought
desperately for a bolt hole. She could run farther down the corridor or back up
it. The crafter's cry echoed back to her from both directions, but the sound of
human feet did not follow it.
"Sorry. No guards. I think they're away. That way." The graying
crafter pointed farther down the passage.
Prakis warned you the fellow was mad, Olive-girl, she berated herself.
Obviously, he wasn't joking.
"Where are the locks?" she demanded.
The crafter's eyes became sharp points. "There are no locks here."
"How did they put you in there?" "Through the bars."
Olive cursed. She didn't have time to play riddles with crazy people.
"Must you be so cryptic?"
"As long as I'm here, yes. Otherwise, I'd shed light on the subject for
you."
Olive considered continuing down the passage to search for Cassana's hoard
and then leave when she'd found enough treasure to keep her in flight for a
year. But the hoard might be similarly barred, and who knew how many Fire
Knives were stationed to guard the end of the tunnel?
The light from her torch, dropped when the madman had bellowed, fizzled out
and died. Only the magic light of the demon statues illuminated the corridor
now. Light. Shed some light on the subject, she thought. What was the subject?
The bars. Of course!
It took the halfling several tries to climb up the smooth walls. Reaching
behind the head of one of the demon figures, she found a glass sphere, cold as
ice, but with a magical light that shone with more brilliance than any candle
or torch. Olive withdrew it gently and jumped down.
She held the light in front of Akabar's cell. "Nothing's
happening," she growled, putting the sphere down to retrieve her sword.
"Why should anything happen?" the madman shrugged. "You're
just standing there."
"So I am," Olive nodded. She stepped forward—and passed right
through the bars.
"Hey, that's great. Thanks," she called back to the crafter. She
set the sword on the floor and checked on the mage's condition. He was still
breathing, but she would never be able to lift him off the hook. She might have
tried climbing up the mage's body and picking the locks on his manacles, but
the wrist bindings had been welded, not snapped on.
"Need some help?" a voice beside her asked. Olive whirled around
and would have skewered the speaker if he had not so agilely sidestepped her
attack.
The halfling gasped. The crafter stood next to her in Akabar's cell. She had
set the glowing sphere down in such a position that it had shed light on the
bars of his prison as well. He held the globe now in one hand.
"Keep back," Olive ordered, brandishing her sword.
The crafter's lips curled up in a wry smile. His eyes were now clear and
piercing. He stood straighter and looked stronger. "If I keep back, how
are we going to get your friend down?" His voice was now firm and
reasonable.
Olive wrinkled her brow in puzzlement. "You're not mad."
The crafter harumphed. "So I have always maintained."
"I mean ... well, you're different than you were a moment ago."
"The cell I was in works a spell of enfeeblement on its
occupants."
"Oh." Suddenly remembering that the crafter was still one of
Alias's would-be masters, Olive took another step backward and held out her
sword. "Why should you want to help?"
"Look, are you going to stand there all day demonstrating your
incompetence with a short sword, or climb up on my shoulders and unhook this
unfortunate southerner?"
The halfling frowned at the insult, but the crafter had a point. She sighed and
set her sword down behind her, then approached him cautiously.
The crafter stooped, set the sphere of light on the ground, and made a
foothold for her with his hands. Olive put her hand on his shoulder and stepped
up. He was a big man, as tall as Akabar, and even broader at the chest. She
climbed nimbly to his shoulders, and he stood up smoothly.
"When I lift him, you detach the chain," he said.
Once Akabar had been released, Olive scrambled down the crafter's back.
Cradling the mage in his arms, he carried him from the cell and set him on the
ground outside. Olive followed with her sword and the sphere of light.
The man frowned at the mage's wounds. "Can you heal?" he asked
Olive.
"What do I look like? A paladin?"
"Upstairs there's a bureau in the dining room. It's trapped, but
there's a small button along the base that deactivates it. Unless Cassana has
changed, there will be a number of potions there. Fetch them and some clothing
for this one and come right back. Oh—and leave the sword."
Olive obeyed without question, suddenly relieved to not be making all the
decisions. She was back within fifteen minutes, laden with the potions,
Akabar's spellbooks— which had also been in the cabinet—one of Zrie Prakis's
robes, two kitchen knives, and a sack of food.
The crafter was seated by Akabar's side, using the sword to scrape away his
ratty beard. His face was deeply careworn, like a general who'd been at war too
long or a king's wisest but least heeded adviser.
He rummaged through the tablecloth that served as a sack, pulled out two
potions, and mixed them together to form a gummy poultice, which he smeared
over the cuts on Akabar's chest and face. Akabar moaned, but the wounds began
to close. The crafter slipped the rest of the potions into his tabard pockets.
"His wounds will take about an hour to heal," the crafter said. He
turned a stern eye on Olive. "Now, who is he, and who are you, and how did
you come to be in this foul place?"
"He's Akabar Bel Akash, a mage. I'm Olive Ruskettle the Bard. I'm
trying to rescue Alias the Swordswoman from Cassana, who is trying to enslave
her—"
"I know all about Cassana's business with Alias," the crafter
interrupted. "Who are you really?"
"I told you. This is Akabar Bel—"
"I mean you, halfling. You cannot be a bard."
"I beg vour pardon?"
"I said, vou cannot be a bard. You might use it as a cover for your
other activities, but you cannot be one. There are no halfling bards."
"Well, vou are very much mistaken," Olive huffed. "I am a
halfling, and I am a bard. I sing, play the yarting and the tantan, compose
music and poetry, and weave tales."
"That makes you a troubadour or a minstrel. Your skill may be such that
you can impress and entertain people, but to be a bard you must be trained.
Without training, the power of the calling will never be yours. And I know,
better than any three of my colleagues and better than any sage, that no
halfling has ever been trained."
"And how would you know?"
"Because I am a bard. The Nameless Bard."
"The Nameless Bard? Just what's that supposed to mean?"
"It means they took away my name. In much the same way that barbarian
kings wipe out the wives and children of their enemies, they banned my songs
and erased my name from history—and from my own mind."
"You mean Cassana?"
The Nameless Bard laughed. "Hardly. It would take a power far greater
than hers to overcome even a single melody of mine."
A flash of inspiration struck Olive. "You wrote the songs Alias sings.
You're her Harper friend."
The Nameless Bard turned a piercing look on the halfling. Olive grew
uncomfortable beneath his gaze and turned away. "Didn't mean to pry,"
she mumbled.
"I remember a bard, a true bard, named Ruskettle. Olav Ruskettle. Had a
bad gambling habit. Would have staked his own mother on the roll of a die. I
suppose by the time you ran into him, he had nothing left but his name."
Olive glared at the Nameless Bard. "He was situated very comfortably as
a tavernkeeper in Procampur. He couldn't gamble away the tavern—his wife held
the title."
"So he offered you his name."
Olive shrugged. "He couldn't play anymore—lost his right hand. His
voice was beginning to fade."
"So you accepted. Loaded dice?"
"No!"
"Very well. You won the name fair and square. But all the rights,
privileges, and immunities thereunto appertaining, you never earned."
"Just because humans don't recognize a halfling's talents doesn't mean
they don't exist."
"Did you even try applying to a barding college?"
The halfling was silent for a moment. "No," she admitted.
"Why not? No, don't answer me. I'm really not interested in your
excuses. Answer to yourself. Now, tell me, would-be bard, how did you come to
be a companion to the swordswoman, Alias?"
Olive bridled some at the title, but she needed the Nameless Bard's help to
free Alias. She began with Mist's abduction of her from the caravan in Cormyr,
then explained how Dimswart had come to hire Alias. She described their battle
with the crystal elemental, the disastrous brawl at the wedding, all that
Dimswart had discovered about the sigils, and the destruction of the kalmari.
She began slowly and nervously, like a schoolchild asked to recite, but she was
not naturally a taciturn person, and her tale flowed smooth and clear by the
time she described the events in Shadowdale.
To her own astonishment, she told the truth about her dealings with Phalse.
She knew the story would not make much sense if she left out crucial elements.
She related all Akabar had told her about the events in Yulash, how Dragonbait
had subdued Mist, the battle with Moander, and finally how all of them came to
be captured by Alias's enemies, the others by force, she by stupidity.
Olive had never had such a polite and riveted audience in her life. He
interrupted her tale only once, when she was describing how Cassana had made
Alias batter Akabar.
"You say she wept?" the true bard asked.
"Of course she wept," Olive said. "Akabar is her friend, and
the witch was using her to pulp his flesh. I could see the streaks her tears
left on her cheeks and the dark spots where they landed on the floor. Cassana
thought it was pretty funny and made a stupid joke about it. She said, 'Look
Zrie, she's crying. I'll bet I know who taught her that trick.' Then she used
her wand to knock Alias out."
The true bard's lower lip quivered for a moment. He clamped it shut.
"Finish. Quickly. Your friend is coming around."
Olive told how Cassana had put her to sleep, and the deal Zrie had offered
her. "He unbolted the door for me. There were only two guards upstairs. I
killed them and came down here looking for Akabar."
Akabar awoke slowly. Though weak, he was still strong enough to grab
Ruskettle by the throat and throttle her. The Nameless Bard pulled the mage's
hands away with his own sure grip.
"You've signed her death warrant, you greedy, little bitch!"
Akabar shouted.
"I think there has been a misunderstanding," the Nameless Bard
said calmly. "Your friend was using a ruse to win your enemy's
trust."
Akabar's eyes squinted with disbelief, but he could not fight the strength
of the true bard's hands.
Olive felt a rush of gratitude toward the bard. She had told him the whole
truth, that her reasons for accepting Phalse's offer had been as much for greed
as for a desire to play at espionage, but he had given her the benefit of the
doubt.
"Look, Akash. I came down here to get your help to rescue Alias."
That much was half true. "If you'd rather go back to your cell and wait
for Cassana . . ."
Akabar spat on the halfling's gown.
"He's very emotional," she explained to the crafter.
"Look at me, Akabar Bel Akash," the Nameless Bard said. The power
of his voice drew Akabar's eyes unwillingly from Olive.
"Do you want to rescue Alias?"
Akabar took a deep breath, almost a sob. "Yes."
"So does this creature. So do I. Contain your anger. It is a waste of
your energies. You should know that."
Akabar took another deep, slow breath. He relaxed his muscles. The true bard
released his wrists.
"Who are you?" Akabar asked.
"The Nameless Bard."
"Nameless? No one is nameless."
"They took his name away," Olive explained.
"Who?" Akabar asked.
The Nameless Bard sighed. "Eat," he said, motioning toward the
food that Olive had taken from Cassana's larder. "You'll need your
strength very soon. I will tell you my story while you dine."
Akabar noticed his books in Olive's bundle and motioned for them. Olive slid
them to his side. She remembered how he had asked for them after being freed
from Moander and took this as a sign that he was prepared to carry on—and put
the past behind him—at least for now.
"You have no doubt heard of the Harpers," the Nameless Bard began.
"They were established in the north long before you were born. Their
members are primarily bards and rangers, though not limited to such. All are
good and true men and women devoted to preserving the balance of life, opposing
all that threatens the peace of the Realms, protecting the weak and innocent.
You might recognize them by their small silver pin of a harp and a moon.
"One of their number was a bard, a master of his craft, with a voice
and a memory like polished ice. A creator of songs that could move people to
action, or calm them to slumber. None heard his music but that they were
impressed. The bard himself was often astonished by his own skill and wished
for all his works to be preserved for eternity.
"Yet songs are so easily changed, their lyrics tampered with, their
melodies maligned. The bard's own colleagues had done this to his works,
substituting a phrase to suit a particular audience, quickening the tempo to
end an evening's entertainment sooner. Or simply forgetting a line. And though
such things are only natural, the bard was obsessed with preserving his works
as he'd intended them to be sung."
"Prickly sort, wasn't he?" Olive asked with a tiny grin.
The corner of the true bard's mouth turned up in a half-smile. "We all
have our faults.
"Rejecting human singers as the preservers of his art, he turned to
mechanical means. Paper and stone would not suffice—the written word could not
convey the meaning as well as spoken words, and written notes describe only the
melody, not the spirit of the music. And paper and stone can be destroyed. Even
magical attempts to reproduce his music dissatisfied him. They could not
demonstrate the full interaction of the bard with his audience.
"Finally, he determined a mixture of these methods that would fulfill
his requirements. A human shell, unwilling, even unable, to stray from the
original rendition, a repository for his tales and music that could render them
unto generations."
"Alias," Akabar said.
"Alias?" Olive chirped.
"Alias," the true bard said. "The price to make such a
creature, however, was very great, involving dealing with powerful mages and
extra-planar powers. The price was also horrible. It would cost the life of a
noble innocent, both pure and true, by brutal means.
"The master bard, with his apprentices, men and women of lesser power
but great talent, tried to create this shell on their own. The attempt failed,
costing one assistant his life and another her voice, so that she was silent
for the rest of her shortened, painful days.
"Many men and women of the Realms might have shrugged off such a
tragedy. But the Harpers considered themselves better men and women and were
horrified by what the bard had done. They summoned him to judgement.
They stripped him of his name, stole it from his memory. His name being a
given thing, this was easy to do. But knowledge discovered is like an efreet
let out of a bottle: it cannot be forced back in. The struggle to discover it
makes it part of the discoverer's soul. They could not destroy the knowledge in
him. They feared he would try again, or pass the knowledge to another. So they
could not let him go free, yet they would not slay him, for he was one of their
own, and they did not want his blood on their hands.
"They decided he would have to be imprisoned, but no ordinary prison
would do. They could not risk his ever passing on the method he had developed.
So they shackled and exiled him beyond the bounds of the Realms, in the lands
where reason fails and the gods roll like storm fronts across the sky. All his
songs, his words, and his ideas were expunged in a sweeping attempt to cover up
what he had achieved. Those who knew his songs were told to sing them no more,
and such was the respect and fear of the Harpers in those days that many
complied.
"So that which the master bard feared most came to pass: the songs he
sought to preserve were dead things, unremembered in the Realms. The Harpers
had been thorough, indeed. The newer members know nothing of the story. Only
the old remember the tale."
"So how did you escape?" Akahar asked.
"Some vestige of the tale survived. A scrap of a letter I'd written to
an apprentice fell into Cassana's hands— something about how my human shell
could be made indistinguishable from the real thing. Cassana went to great
lengths to track me down. She put a bounty out on an old Harper and tortured
him for the information on my whereabouts. I hear he did not submit until she
began torturing other creatures as well.
"I knew none of this when her allies completed a bridge to my place of
exile. If I had not been half mad with loneliness and grief for the death of my
songs, I might have seen through Cassana's unholy alliance immediately. But
Cassana used her sweetest manner, and Phalse played on my desire for retribution.
Zrie cloaked himself in the illusion of a living mage. I was not told of the
F'ire Knives or Moander or Phalse's master.
"I gave up all my secrets, and they helped me build Alias. Later, I
learned that the money for the project came from the Fire Knives, and that
Moander provided the life energy needed to start Alias breathing. Cassana
provided the body, Zrie the power to keep death from her, and Phalse's master
the power to bind a soul in her."
"Dragonbait's soul," Akabar breathed.
"The saurial, yes."
"And you taught her to sing," Olive said.
"Oh, more than that. I spun her entire history, her thoughts, her
feelings, her beliefs. A full personality that could interact with others. She
was to be my redemption, my justification, of all I had done. I wanted to be
sure that no one could see the beauty of my achievement without forgiving the
evil means I used to accomplish it.
"But my allies had their own purposes, something I should have realized
when each gave her a different name. I named her Alias because I could not give
her my own. All I wanted was for her to live in peace and sing my songs.
"Then they branded her and the saurial, which Phalse's master had
provided as sacrifice to give her a soul, and I understood they intended her to
be a slave.
"I argued with Cassana, and for the first time she showed me her true
nature. She'd left the empty space in the brand to represent me—another of her
cruel jokes. I walked out on her and came down here, for this is where Alias
and Dragonbait were being kept. I tried to convince myself to destroy Alias
rather than bring her into this world bonded to so much evil."
The former Harper looked in the cell where Akabar had hung as though he
still saw someone there. Tears welled in his eyes. "I am too reasonable a
man to believe in miracles, but I suppose they must occur in spite of what I
believe. When we'd left her in the cell that evening she was breathing but
unconscious. Our calculations said she would not awaken until the saurial was
slain. He was very near death already. He had killed many Fire Knives in one
attempt to escape, and they beat him every chance they got. They'd left him
hanging by the same hook you occupied, mage.
"When I returned here that night, the lizard was lying on the straw,
wrapped in Alias's cloak. She had taken him down and was tending his wounds,
singing him a lullaby, like a child with a doll.
"I sneaked upstairs to fetch the sword I had bought for Alias and some
healing potions for the saurial. I also sought his sword, which Cassana had
given to me because I was the only one who could pick it up without pain. I
wasn't certain I could trust Alias with the swords. She was like a very little
child. So I gave her the potions and told her what to do with them. When the
saurial regained consciousness, I told him I would free him if he would help
Alias escape—that he must take her as far from Westgate as possible. He readily
agreed.
"I had to remain behind to cover their escape. An hour before dawn,
when we were all preparing to leave for the sacrifice of the saurial, Cassana
realized what I had done. She would have destroyed me that moment, but Phalse
ordered that I be spared. He thought I might know where they had gone, and he
interrogated me in his own fashion. I thought I was safe because I had given
the lizard no specific instructions, but I planted in Alias a great nostalgia
for Shadowdale. I wanted her to sing there. Phalse learned this, and that is
how he knew where to wait for you."
"That's where you met him," Akahar accused Olive.
The halfling shrugged. "You knew Alias wasn't human, but you never told
me." She turned back to the true bard. "Phalse let you live
then?"
"That was Cassana's decision. She changed her mind about destroying me.
She left me in this chamber, where my thoughts would wander and my strength
fade so I would grow more pliable. She wanted my help on other projects and . .
. my company."
"Piggish, isn't she?" Olive said. "Just think, Akash, you
could have been co-concubine with an ex-Harper."
Akabar fixed the halfling with a cold stare.
"Well," Olive Ruskettle said with a grin, "she may be a
witch, but I can't knock her taste in men—living ones that is. Shouldn't we be
leaving soon if we're going to stop this saurial sacrifice?"
"We wait only until moonset," the true bard explained, "To
avoid the patrols of Fire Knives."
"You've been babbling away in that cell for a month now. How do you
know when moonset is?" Olive asked.
The crafter picked up a drumstick and took a bite of the meat, chewed, and
swallowed before he smiled sweetly at her. "You forget, Mistress
Ruskettle, a bard never loses count of the measure."
29
The Sacrifice
When Dragonbait woke, he was tethered face up on a cold, stone slab with his
tail flattened uncomfortably beneath him. He flexed his claws, trying to cut at
the bindings that pulled his limbs toward the four corners of the stone, but
little metallic twanging noises told him the bindings were not hemp or leather,
but thin, steel wires. A dull ache warned him that the wire was slicing through
his scales whenever he moved.
He opened his eyes and, through the great fangs carved of stone that ringed
the hillock, saw that the sky was beginning to redden. Just beside the stone
slab, in the center of the tanged maw, was a large fire circle filled with
day-old ash. He had seen it from the air yesterday—the mound outside Westgate
where the worshipers of Moander had waited to receive Alias from their god. The
ancient and worn stone they had tied him to was lined with blood-gutters,
leaving him no doubt as to the stone's purpose.
Concentrating, he summoned his shen. Mist had come as close as she could
when she described him to the others as a paladin. From what he had gathered in
his short time on this world, he and his brothers had much in common with that
breed of fighter, and they had many of the same gods-given powers. But shen was
not quite the same as a Realms paladin's ability to detect evil. With it,
Dragonbait could determine all the myriad types of evil that preyed on the
soul, the absence of evil, and the grace that nourished the soul. He was also
able to judge the strength of a spirit.
The human mage's spirit had begun as an orb of dull yellow—weak, but without
malice or arrogance; a little greed, but not much. The change in him had been
astounding. His battle with Moander had strengthened his spirit a hundredfold.
His soul grew cleaner, though grace was something he had yet to reach for.
The halfling had changed little—a wavering spirit, colored with avarice and
ambition, heightened by pinpricks of petty, but deeper, nastiness. Her music
helped keep these things at bay, but recently not even that had halted a
growing smear of jealousy.
He would not ordinarily have searched two such as these, but the human
swordswoman had decided to travel with them, and he took his oath to protect
her very seriously. Her spirit was often so weak it frightened him. He was
afraid her spirit would falter, not only because he was duty bound to her, but
because her soul was touched with a midsummer sky blue of grace. He wanted to
preserve that.
Now, though, he admitted to himself that he had failed. The hill around him
ebbed and pulsed with an evil light. Soon, he would be killed, the
swordswoman's spirit would be quenched, and she would be turned to evil.
Evil climbed the hill in many bodies. Weak arid strong spirits mingled. A
double file of cloaked and hooded men and women entered the circle of stone
fangs. They split their ranks upon stepping into the circle and surrounded him.
Their dress marked them as followers of Moander and their leader bore the
faceless mask common to evil masters, even in the saurial's world.
But the worshipers handled their long robes clumsily and their voices
faltered as they sang, occasionally missing notes or forgetting the cadence,
only to pick it up again several beats later. Could they be imposters?
Dragonbait wondered They all had the feel of the assassins Cassana worked with—
The Fire Knives.
When the pseudo-worshipers of Moander, numbering two dozen, had formed a
circle about the perimeter of the hilltop, four figures in gaudy array stepped
into their midst.
First came the small, grinning form of Phalse. He was all in blue—a
sickening blue of decaying meat. His blue-on-blue-on-blue eyes shone with
anticipation. Dragonbait hissed, and Phalse smirked. Phalse had found the
saurial roaming the plane of Tarterus stalking demons. The pseudo-halfling had
captured the paladin and brought him to this plane so he could be slain to
enslave another.
Zrie Prakis entered second, decked in red robes the color of blood, trimmed
with dirty, bone-white edgings. He bore his staff of power like a ceremonial
weapon, ready to strike down any who failed to obey him. His movements were
filled with energy, though his atrophied muscles stretched and popped over his
bones.
The lich's liveliness was due to the proximity of his mistress, Cassana, who
strode in behind him. She was dressed in a strapless gown of shimmering green,
slit up the side. In her hands she turned the small, slender wand she used to
control her pets. She had a wicked, cruel smile.
Last of all, Alias entered the circle, moving more like the undead that
Prakis was than a living being. The puppet's body was under control of her
mistress. She was garbed in leathers split up the sides, the bare flesh
cross-tied with thongs which looped about silver button-hooks. Long, shiny
black boots with incredibly high heels covered her feet and calves. She wore an
ornate girdle at her waist, with the skull of some creature etched in silver at
the front. She had been given a chain shirt split open at the middle, baring
the flesh between tier breasts and offering any sword an easy target. Shoulder
plates of lacquered black, a red velvet cape, and a collar of black and silver
completed the showy, but impractical, ensemble.
In her hands she gripped Dragonbait's diamond-headed sword so tightly her
knuckles were white. Her face was drawn into a tight mask, the lines and vessels
of her neck standing out. Along her sword arm, the runes glowed with a hellish
light, creating a false blue dawn around her.
Dragonbait pulled at his metallic bonds, trying not to give his captors the
pleasure of seeing him thrash. The wires were too well mounted to give way,
though, and his wrists grew wet with blood.
Zrie Prakis stood at one end of the stone, near Dragon-bait's head, and
Phalse stood at the lizard's feet. Cassana took one side, and Alias, fighting
the pull of the runes, lurched to a position directly across from her. The
saurial understood all that was to happen. They would use Hill Cleaver, his own
sword, to slay him. If only he'd been able to reach the blade back at The
Rising Raven, he could have negated all of Cassana's magic and turned the tide
of the battle. Now the blade would shatter upon tasting his innocent blood and
two good things would be destroyed in a single blow. Three, counting Alias. If
all of this was not evil enough, Cassana was forcing Alias to perform the deed.
It was completely unnecessary to the ritual. The witch did it only to bring
pain and grief to her puppet.
Dragonbait looked deep into Cassana's eyes. She would permit no flower to
grow without her permission, and before Alias could bloom, the sorceress would
encase her in amber. A perverse curiosity prompted him to use his
shen sight
on her before he died, just to know what such evil looked like. The heat of her
soul caused him to flinch. Within was a black wall riddled with flaming red
cracks. Hatred burned deep in her and crackled between her, Zrie Prakis, and
Phalse. The lich, like a void, sucked up emotions, and beside Cassana he was a
vortex of hatred and fear. Phalse glowed like a city put to the torch by
invaders. His maliciousness ran the gamut of yellow greed, red hatred, and a
sickly green jealousy.
Cassana grinned, as if she guessed what the saurial was doing. She looked at
the sky behind Alias. The sun had almost cleared the horizon. The tops of the
sharp, tooth-shaped plinths looked as if they had bitten into something bloody.
The sorceress motioned to Phalse, who turned his back on Dragonbait. The
small servant motioned with his hands in an arcane fashion that seemed to deny
the existence of bones in his arms. They swayed back and forth like snakes.
Beyond him, a pinprick of light appeared, then grew. It began as a sphere of
multicolored magical force, then flattened, turning into a swirling pattern of
silver and red.
Dragonbait had seen this gate before. It was the passage to the Citadel of
White Exile, where he and Alias had been branded. Now, that passage had to be
opened again to draw power from the domain of Phalse's master. With it, they
would seal control over Alias at the moment of Dragonbait's death.
Dragonbait finally looked up at Alias; he did not want to grieve her, but he
could not help himself. Their eyes locked like pieces in a magical puzzle. Her
eyes were red-rimmed from exhaustion and evaporated tears. He used his
shen sight.
If he was going to die, he wanted to do so with his eyes fixed on the brilliant
blue of her soul.
Her spirit's glow was as slender as the flame from a single candle. It
flickered like a living sapphire. Yet on all sides rose a tide of darkness,
crackling with energy, forcing itself upward to smother the flame. The flame
blazed for a moment, but the forces surrounding it rose as well.
The chanting increased as Phalse worked his spells to control the spinning
disk that reached between the planes. The first tendrils of dawn caught Alias's
hair from behind and set it on fire, a glory of bright red against the newborn
sky. "Prepare to sacrifice the innocent'" the sorceress bellowed.
"Raise the blade!"
Alias hesitated and Dragonbait saw the candle's flame burn hotter. Cassana
made a pass with her wand, and the sapphire flame dimmed as if a smoked glass
chimney had been dropped over it. Alias raised her hands, clasping Hill
Cleaver's hilt, the blade pointed down at the saurial's chest. His own sigils
were now answering the dark siren call of their masters, and Dragonbait thought
his hearts would burst from the strain.
Through eye contact, he tried to plead with the swordswoman to fight, to strengthen
her will. He wished desperately to add his own inner strength to hers and fight
off the darkness. However, while his skill allowed him to see her spirit, he
could not encourage it. Silently he cursed his inability to communicate with
her.
Blue sparks arced between the sigils on his chest, and the runes on Alias's
arm responded in kind. The Abomination had told her that she drew strength from
him, but Dragonbait had not discovered how. Maybe, the saurial suddenly
realized, he had denied the evil brands for too long. Perhaps they could yet be
turned to good.
Deliberately, he channeled his will through the runes, trying to force the
light to arc higher. The sparks showered upward like water in a fountain, their
display mirrored on Alias's arm. Finally, sparks touched and interwove,
bridging the gap between sacrificer and sacrifice.
Cassana's voice sounded far off as she shouted, "Seal the pact!"
The darkness in Alias rose like bile, and the candle flame of her spirit
faltered. Then, feeding at last on the saurial's own, her flame strengthened
and grew in intensity.
Dragonbait shuddered. He felt as if he had just rolled a massive stone up to
and over the crest of a hill. Every muscle in his body spasmed. Now that the
stone had been given one last push, however, it rolled of its own accord.
Alias's flame grew hotter and brighter with each passing second. The well of
darkness began to harden and then crumble like drying mud. New surges of the
surrounding mass of evil rose, but they were repelled by the increasing blue
fire.
Alias hovered over Dragonbait, her muscles locked, her face almost serene.
Phalse and the Fire Knives impersonating Moander worshipers held their breath,
as would have Prakis, had he any breath to hold.
Cassana screwed her comely face into a twisted mask of rage—rage mixed with
a hint of fear that the made-creature should reveal a newfound strength.
Clenching her wand in her fist, she brought her hand up in a sweeping gesture,
yanking hard on the strings of her rebellious puppet in an attempt to force her
will on Alias.
Like an old leather thong stretched to breaking, something within Alias
snapped. She drove the blade down hard, but she leaped forward as she did so,
plunging Hill Cleaver not into Dragonbait, but straight through Cassana. The
diamond-headed tip protruded out of the witch's back, but there was no blood on
it.
The sorceress staggered backward, a look of shock on her face. Both Phalse
and Prakis stepped toward her, but she waved them off. Still clutching her wand
in one hand, she reached up to draw the blade from her body. Blue sparks danced
from Hill Cleaver where she grasped it. Sorcery kept her alive despite her
fatal wound, yet nothing could negate the power of the saurial's sword to
defend itself from the touch of evil. Cassana screamed and ripped the blade
from her. Very slowly, blood began to well up from the gash in her chest.
Her face contorted with pain, Cassana whirled the blade at Alias's throat.
The swordswoman fell backward, dodging the weapon, as Prakis and Phalse lunged
at her. She rolled from the lich's chilling touch. Phalse came at her with a
dagger as she rose to her feet. The pseudo-halfling caught one of Alias's boots
in the face and the Fire Knives at the edges of the circle began to converge,
prepared to bring Alias down by force of numbers.
There was a shattering explosion to Dragonbait's right, behind the kneeling
form of Cassana. A pillar of fire shot up from the base of one of the
sharp-toothed plinths, catching two Fire Knives. The great tower of stone
rocked, then toppled sideways.
A second and a third explosion followed, as screaming fanfares of fireworks
and smoke struck two more of the stone fangs, blinding anyone looking at them.
Dragonbait at once recognized the handiwork of Akabar Bel Akash, as the
southerner proved he was indeed a mage of no small water.
Then the saurial felt small hands creep across his body. He turned his head,
intent on biting them if he could. He caught himself when he spotted Olive
Ruskettle moving alongside him. The halfling carried a glass vial, from which
she poured a thick, greenish mixture on his metal tethers. The wires smoked and
gave off a deadly, acrid stench, but weakened immediately, as if suddenly
rusted through.
Dragonbait yanked at his bonds, snapping them in half as the halfling moved
to free his legs. Still caught up in the mild trance of his
shen sight,
the saurial could not help but notice that the halfling was purged of much of
her bitterness and her vacillating spirit burned with a strength of purpose.
A Fire Knife charged at Olive with a blade tipped with the-yellow ichor that
had felled Dragonbait in Westgate. The halfling dodged, and Dragonbait swung
his free foot with claws extended. His sharp, natural weapons sank deep into
the assassin's belly, and she fell backward, spurting a fountain of blood.
Dragonbait searched the circle for Alias. She was surrounded by Fire Knives,
but she had acquired one of their swords and two of the assassins already lay
at her feet. He looked in the other direction for Cassana, but she had
disappeared. The saurial slid off the sacrificial stone and moved to regain
Hill Cleaver.
Cold, bony fingers closed around Dragonbait's throat from behind, and an icy
chill flowed into his veins and crept through his body. Prakis laughed hoarsely
as his paralyzing touch began draining the saurial paladin's strength. On a
human, the lich's grip might have been impossible to break, but taking a
saurial from behind was not so easy. Dragonbait threaded his tail between
himself and the lich and used it as a lever to pry Prakis away from him. The
lich staggered back a few paces, then lowered his staff's tip at the saurial
and muttered something.
Prakis burst into a pillar of fire.
That was hardly the reaction Dragonbait had expected. He whirled around to
see who might have aided him. Standing atop the stone was a graying,
clean-shaven man in ragged garb. He pulled a small vial from his cloak and
flung it at Phalse, who was trying to take Alias from behind. Phalse saw the
missile and dodged. A Fire Knife behind him was not so lucky and became a human
pyre.
Dragonbait recognized the man. He had been the one who had demanded the
saurial protect Alias in exchange for his freedom. Dragonbait had seen him only
once since then, in Alias's dream in Shadow Gap—Nameless. Now he fought openly
on their side. The saurial took the briefest moment to study Nameless with his
shen
sight, but all he detected was a gray mountain against a gray sky. Neither
evil, nor good, but very, very proud.
Prakis laughed with the horrible mechanical vocal sounds of the undead and
walked out of the pyre that Nameless's potion had lighted around him. The
lich's clothes were ash, and his remaining skin a blackened ruin, crumbling
from the bones. Yet the pinpricks of light still danced in his eyes, and he
still carried his staff.
Alias had felled two more assassins, but they had tightened their ring
around her. She was closed in on all sides. One blade was deflected by the
tightly knit chain shirt, but another came perilously close to her head,
clipping some of her hair.
A bolt of lightning struck at Alias's feet, knocking her to the ground.
Action froze on the battlefield. Blackened Prakis grinned through fire-stained
teeth, swaying his staff of power back and forth, aiming it at Dragonbait, then
Ruskettle, then Nameless, making it quite clear that any sudden moves would
result in instant destruction. The remaining assassins stood guard around the
fallen swordswoman.
A red light shot up from one of the remaining stone plinths. Cassana stood
atop the pillar, one hand clutching her wand, the other gripping shut the skin
of her chest, as a modest woman would hold closed the front of a torn gown.
Dragonbait twitched, debating whether he could lunge for Hill Cleaver and put
an end to the mages' threats before they fried him to a cinder.
"Let this be ended," the sorceress shouted from her perch.
"Nameless, your little play is over. Phalse, take a sword and slay the
saurial and Nameless. I will keep Puppet occupied." She raised the wand
over her head. Dragonbait could feel a sympathetic ache as Cassana used the
blue wand to rack Alias's body with pain.
A shadow rose behind Cassana, snatching the wand and kicking the sorceress
off the stone. Cassana screamed a curse as she fell and landed hard on her
side. Zrie Prakis whirled with his staff, trying to set his sights on his
mistress's attacker. Akabar's flying form appeared for a moment above the stone
pillar, the wand grasped tightly in his hand, then he dodged back and forth in
an erratic pattern. Long lances of energy spat from the tip of Prakis's staff,
exploding just behind the mage in huge fireballs, but Akabar stayed just ahead
of their swelling blossoms of flame.
Dragonbait finally managed to grab his sword, but with Akabar in flight he
couldn't risk using Hill Cleaver to dispel magic in the area. Instead, he used
the sword to bite deeply into the lich, pulling ribs from the burned chest.
Prakis's fighting ability was still unaffected, though. He backhanded
Dragonbait with a swipe of his wickedly sharpened finger bones.
"Akabar!" Nameless shouted. "Throw the wand into the
disk!"
Dragonbait whirled about anxiously. It made the best tactical sense to
remove the wand from their enemies' reach, but would it ultimately prove their
undoing? What effect would it have on Alias?
Akabar swooped low to evade the lancing bolts of the staff of power. One
caught him in the leg, and he almost lost concentration and flight. He reached
his goal, however, pulling up at the last moment and flinging the wand into the
silver and red disk.
Three screams went up at once. Phalse shouted and barreled toward the disk.
Olive stood blocking his path, but he leaped over her and tumbled into the
vertical pool. He was swallowed without a ripple.
Zrie Prakis screamed and in screaming fell apart. With the wand thrust into
another plane of being, he could not tap the energy bound up in it that kept
him from death. He crumbled to dust. But in the moment before his spirit fled
from the bones that Cassana had "cherished," the lich cried out,
"Die, Cassana!" His hideous laughter was carried away on the breeze.
His staff of power fell to the ground. Dragonbait felt a sharp pain in his
chest, just as he had when Moander had died. Without checking, he knew that a
sigil had disappeared. He glanced at Alias, who was wielding a sword two-handed,
but if she felt Zrie Prakis's mark burn away from her arm, she did not let it
disrupt her combat.
Lastly, Cassana shrieked, for much of her own magic was locked up in that
wand. She, too, began to decay—her shoulders stooped, her skin became more torn
and ragged, so that she looked dressed in the tatters of her own dead flesh.
The sorceress's chest wound began spurting blood.
Akabar swooped down and plucked the staff of power from the battlefield.
Some of the Fire Knives, uncertain whether or not the mage could wield it,
began to move toward the perimeter of the circle. Dragonbait stood guarding the
rear, as Olive and Alias backed toward him. The saurial paladin now bid Hill
Cleaver to swallow any magic cast.
And not a moment too soon. The hag form of Cassana pointed toward the
saurial paladin and muttered. A bolt of zigzag lightning shot from her finger,
only to dissipate into a harmless shower of sparks.
"Kill them!" the sorceress shrieked to the remaining assassins, as
she struggled to her feet.
The Fire Knives regrouped and began driving the party back. Akabar could
only use the staff of power to strike their foes. Alias had lost her weapon,
and Olive stumbled as she moved. In the chaos and frenzy of the sword fight, no
more of the assassins had chosen to poison their blades. That was fortunate for
the adventurers; Alias was bleeding from half a dozen cuts, and Olive was
clutching at a jagged wound running down her side. Dragonbait risked taking his
attention from parrying a sword thrust long enough to look for Nameless. The
graying man dove into the silver pool. Like Phalse, he disappeared without a
trace.
The saurial felled an assassin closing on their left flank and chirped to
gain the swordswoman's attention. When Alias met his eyes, he jerked his head
toward the silver pool She jerked her head back indicating he must go first. He
growled. If he went first, Cassana could again use her magic to attack them,
but he couldn't explain this to Alias. He jerked his head indicating again that
she must go before him, but she shook her head seconds before she launched a
kick at an assassin's chin with her boot.
Minutes ago, she had no will power of her own, he thought with grim
amusement. Why does she pick now to be so stubborn? He caught her attention
with another chirp before he spun Hill Cleaver about and tossed it to her.
Alias caught the weapon, reclasped her hands about the grip, and spun to
decapitate an assassin who had lunged forward when her attention was focused on
the saurial. Dragonbait snatched up the halfling and loped to the planar disk.
The silver pool had already shrunk to half its original size. The swirls had
become solid rings and the portal now-resembled the bull's eye sigil of
Phalse's master.
Dragonbait plunged in, taking Olive with him. Alias and Akabar blocked the
portal. The Turmish mage brought the end of the staff up hard, cracking the jaw
of an assassin.
Then two withered hands, strong as steel, closed around the staff. The aged
face of Cassana, drooling and twisted beyond the limits of humanity, confronted
the mage. "You use it as a club," she lisped. "Now feel its full
force."
Alias slew another assassin with Hill Cleaver, but there were more than a
dozen left, and the effects of her wounds were taking their toll on her
reaction time. "Into the portal'" she ordered the mage.
"But the witch," Akabar protested, as Cassana began to intone
words of power.
"In!" the swordswoman cried.
Alias put her foot on Akabar's stomach and shoved the mage through the disk.
Akabar would not loosen his hold on the staff, and Cassana was dragged toward
the bull's eye. Akabar was lost to sight beyond the silvery glow of the portal,
but the haggish sorceress managed to plant her feet firmly on the ground and
hold her position. With the tendons of her arms popping from the strain,
Cassana began to pull the staff back from the portal.
Alias stepped halfway into the portal, straddling it with one foot on each
side of the planar gate. She brought Hill Cleaver down on the half of the staff
of power that jutted out from the disc hovering over the Hill of Fangs.
The blade cut through the ancient wood like an axe, and a multicolored
fireball blossomed out from the broken staff. Alias felt heat wash over her
body as the force of the explosion pushed her through the gateway, into the
lands that lay beyond. The shock wave caught the last pieces of Cassana's body
and the fire-ravaged forms of the remaining assassins, carrying them from the
top of the Hill of Fangs. The last curved and pointed stones toppled from their
moorings, and, for the second day in a row, a new star burned over Westgate.
30
The Citadel of White Exile
"Alias, are you all right?'" Olive asked, bending over the
swordswoman.
"I feel like I've been taken apart and put back together, with lots of
pieces missing," Alias moaned.
"That's a pretty sick joke," Olive chided. "Apt, but
sick."
"What do you expect?" A throbbing pain had filled her head, ner
flesh stung from half a dozen cuts, and she felt badly sunburned. She opened
her eyes, then shut them instantly, growling, "Well, that was a
mistake."
A bright white light seared her eyeballs, leaving blue dots dancing before
her mind even after she'd squeezed her eyes shut and covered them with her
hands. This was not the icy white of sun on snow or the ivory white of silk,
but the hot burning white of coals in the center of a forge.
Shielding her eyes, she ventured another look. The sky above was convoluted
whirls of white-whites and off-whites—hot matter and even hotter matter
swirling and twisting in a vain attempt to combine.
"This is where the gods roll across the sky like storm fronts,"
she muttered.
"What?" Olive asked.
"Nothing. Just a line from an old tale."
"Right," the haifling said, realizing just who must have told her
the tale. "You going to lay there all day?" she asked.
Alias sighed and sat up. Beneath her were gray flagstones shimmering in the
light of the white-on-white sky overhead.
Olive knelt beside her. The halfling's glittering white dress, a copy of the
one Cassana had worn to last evening' midnight dinner, was covered in mud and
blood.
To Alias's right, Akabar and Dragonbait were kneeling over a fifth
figure—the stranger who'd helped them fight the battle on the Hill of Fangs.
Alias felt a momentary twinge of jealousy that they were looking after the
stranger before they did so for her.
Don't be a fool, she told herself. For someone who's just fought two dozen
assassins, a witch, and a lich, and who's broken a staff of power, you're in
pretty good shape. You got off easier than Sylune did in Shadowdale. A pang of
grief went through her, though, as she remembered how the river witch had met
her end.
Is there a difference, she wondered, between the sadness that real people
feel and the sadness I was made to feel? What reason would any of my makers
have to make me grieve for someone like Sylune? None, she decided. I can think
for myself, and I can feel for myself. The "masters' don't have anything
to do with it.
Remembering the recent deaths of all but one of the masters, she looked down
to examine her sword arm. The limb still ached from the disappearance of the
top three sigils— Cassana's, Zrie Prakis's, and the Fire Knives'. All remaining
members of the assassins must have been wiped out by the explosion of Zrie's
staff of power. The arm that the sigils occupied had been overgrown with the
waving serpent pattern, but only the concentric rings of Phalse's master
remained. And the blank space that's left, Alias thought, remembering with a
shudder Olive's prediction that something might now grow there.
Alias tried to stand and stumbled to one knee. She was tired and battered.
She leaned on Dragonbait's sword, stood up, and looked around. They were atop a
very tall tower that thrust into the shining white sky. The crenelations of the
wall about them were curved and pointed like the stones about the Hill of Fangs
had been.
She looked down from the tower. It rose from a plain of shining, gray stone
that spread out in all directions as far as the eye could see. In a circle
about the tower's foundation, the stone was solid and unmoving, but just
beyond, the ground was cracked and shifting like a mud or lava flow.
"You know, Olive, I don't think we're in the Realms anymore."
She limped over to Akabar and Dragonbait. The stranger's faded garb was a
shredded mass of tatters, and his arms and legs were lacerated by a hundred
bites the size of large coins. Larger gashes lay across his forehead, chest,
and torso, and blood ran freely from his wounds. Olive came up beside Alias and
whistled in a low tone.
Dragonbait had the man's head cradled in his claws, and small, bright arcs
of yellow bridged the space between his hands and the man's face, visible even
in the bright light of the white sky. The smell of woodsmoke filled the air.
Before their eyes, the flow of blood ceased, and the wounds on the man's face
began to heal. The stranger's grimace faded and his expression grew' peaceful,
the deeper wrinkles smoothed from his weather-worn face.
Akabar moved swiftly and surely, tending to the damage that remained when
Dragonbait's healing powers were exhausted. The mage smeared a viscous, green
paste over the wounds not yet closed and bound them with strips of his borrowed
robe.
Alias knelt beside the mage and the saurial. "Who is he?" she
asked.
Dragonbait turned a curious stare on her, and Akabar said, "You don't
recognize him? Are you sure?"
Alias studied the face. He was familiar. Beneath the gray hair and the
wrinkled flesh was a man who must once have been very handsome, with a
well-formed figure. "Nameless!" Alias whispered.
She turned to explain to the others. "He was in my dream in Shadow Gap,
only much, much younger. Unless this is his grandfather or someone."
"You don't remember him from anywhere else?" Akabar prompted.
Alias screwed up her face trying to think, but she couldn't recall him. He
wasn't in her pseudo-memory and there was no other time that she could have
known him.
"Of course she can't remember him," Olive said with a sniff.
"She was just a baby then."
"What are you talking about?" Alias asked.
"You were just born—so to speak. He set you loose with Dragonbait to
look after you. You might say he's your father." Olive reached down to
touch her on her right wrist where the tattoo wound about the empty space.
"He's the Nameless Bard. Ring a bell?"
"The Nameless Bard," Alias echoed as she leaned back and thought
deeply. She knew that story, but hadn't associated it with Nameless from her
dream. She rocked back and forth as she recalled the tale in full and began to
really understand for the first time what she was meant to be and what she had
actually turned out to be.
Nameless opened his eyes, and, though his sight was mostly shielded from the
bright sky by the four adventurers surrounding him, he raised his hands to
shield his eyes. He scowled deeply and muttered, "Home again, home again,
jiggidy-jig."
Akabar and Olive exchanged glances. The halfling shrugged. Alias moved
closer to the old man.
When Nameless caught sight of the swordswoman, he tried to sit up, but his
remaining wounds caused him too much pain to do so. Dragonbail moved to support
his back, but Nameless waved him away. With some effort, he pulled himself to a
seated position, facing Alias.
He gazed at her bloodied, disheveled form and sighed. "You are
everything I intended—and more."
"You're the Nameless Bard," Alias replied, her tone even and
emotionless.
"Yes. Do you remember my tale? I did not put it in you, as I did the
other tales, but told it to you the hour you first woke, while we waited for
the potions to heal Dragonbait so you could run away with him."
Alias shook her head. "I don't remember hearing it. I only remember
it."
"What do you remember?" Nameless prompted her.
"It's the tale of a man with overweening vanity who betrayed his
scruples trying to complete a task he knew very well had the potential for
tremendous abuse."
Olive gasped and Akabar bit on his lower lip.
The color drained from Nameless's face.
"Am I wrong?" Alias asked.
A long moment passed. The cloudless sky flashed and crashed as a lightning
storm erupted overhead. The energy discharges cast sharp shadows of the party
on the tower roof's gray flagstones.
"How can you say that?" Nameless whispered.
"Sounds to me like she put her own interpretation on the story,"
Olive said smugly. "What do want to bet she tinkers with your songs,
too?"
In a defeated tone, the true bard said, "I've failed."
Akabar grinned, "True. You tried to make a thing, and instead you
created a daughter. In Turmish, we'd say you were blessed by the gods."
Alias smiled at the mage gratefully.
"Might even outdo her old man as a bard," Olive predicted.
Nameless looked up in surprise at the halfling. Obviously it had never
occurred to him that his creation might improve on his work. He was too proud
and too vain. "I gave you everything I could," he said.
"A false history, your songs, and no true name," Alias said
"I gave you a past so you would not feel alone and removed from those
you would live among, and my songs were all I had left. I set you free at the
price of my own freedom. When Cassana dragged me from my cell to distract you
in a dream, I tried to warn you. She controlled most of my words and actions,
but I did tell you how to defeat her kalmari."
"Yes. You did those things," Alias admitted flatly.
The true bard looked anguished. "But you still hate me."
"I didn't say that," Alias replied. A grin broke through her grim
expression. "Don't human children often disagree with their parents
without hating them?"
"Do vou think of me as your father .then?"
The swordswoman shrugged. "I don't know. You hardly gave me anything in
the way of a family in my memories. I'm not very practiced at feeling filial
affection. Do you think of me as a daughter?"
Nameless looked down at the flagstones for a moment before meeting her eyes
again."To be honest, no. At least. not until now."
"That's all right." She leaned forward and brushed her lips
against his wrinkled cheek. "I found myself two good friends, and you gave
me a brother."
"A brother—" Nameless did not understand at first. "Oh, yes.
Vou share the saurial's soul."
Dragonbait shook his head.
"You do. Phalse divided vour soul," Nameless told the paladin.
"You have half a soul each."
Dragonbait's eves squinted with displeasure. He extended two claws, pointed at
Alias and retracted one, pointed at himself and retracted the second.
"He should know," Olive said. "He's the expert on
souls."
The lizard nodded.
"You can't split a soul and get two souls," Nameless argued.
"Why not?" the halfling demanded. 'They're infinite things. If you
break them up, you still have two infinite things."
Akabar stared in amazement at the short bard.
"What?" Olive asked, uncomfortable in his case. "Am I wrong?'
"No," the Turmish mage replied. "I'm simply surprised at the
firmness of your theological argument."
"Halflings go to church, too, you know . . . sometimes."
Alias yawned. The exertions of the past month, the first month of her life,
were beginning to catch up with her. "This is all very interesting,"
she lied, "but what I'd really like to do is catch Phalse and his master
and take care of this last blasted sigil."
"But don't you see what this means?" Nameless said. "You
really could be human."
"So?"
"So?" the true bard exclaimed. "Doesn't that matter to
you?"
Alias shrugged again. "Dragonbait says I have a soul, and that means
I'm not a thing. I've already decided that the rest doesn't matter much. Most
adventurers aren't particularly fussy about whether you're human or halfling,
mage or fighter, and all the rest, just so you pull your own weight and remain
loyal to your party. Isn't that what you taught me?"
Nameless nodded, a little astounded that she had come to all these
conclusions on her own without guidance. Perhaps, as Akabar had said, his
endeavor had been blessed by the gods—better gods than Moander.
"So," Alias said, trying to steer the conversation to more
practical matters, "this is the Citadel of White Exile. It used to be your
home. Do you have anv idea where Phalse could be?"
"I abandoned the citadel to Phalse. Before I left, Phalse's master
built a bridge from here to his own realm, which Phalse uses to report to him.
It's in the courtyard below. Unless the little monster hides in one of the
tower rooms, there is no place else for him to go."
"Why not? Where does that plain lead?" Alias asked, pointing
across the monotonous expanse of gray below them.
"This place was built to be completely secure. Heft a rock into the
sky."
Dragonbait broke off a piece of flagstone and did as the bard had
instructed. The stone went up smoothly about fifty feet before it exploded in a
rainbow of fireworks against the background of the white sky.
Nameless explained, "Above us is the Plane of Life, called the Positive
Material Plane by sages. Any unprotected thing that enters explodes as every
bit of matter within it achieves its full potential and becomes a star. There
is no escape that way."
He motioned toward the gray expanse beyond. "We sit on the border
between the Plane of Life and the Plane of Gems, which sages call the
Para-elemental Plane of Minerals. Wordy lot, sages. Out on the Plane of Gems,
all unprotected living things are relentlessly turned into crystals of stunning
beauty and complete lifelessness. Phalse, as far as I know, has no protection
against either of these effects. The only way to this place are the two bridges
built by Phalse's master, one to his domain and one to the Hill of Fangs.
"You must be very cautious looking for Phalse. When I arrived, I was
attacked by one of his master's guard beasts-all mouths and teeth. And Phalse
still has Cassana's wand, which still has power over you."
Alias nodded. "What about Phalse's master?"
"None of us has ever seen him. Cassana sent someone through the portal
to his domain to find out about him. Her agent was returned in pieces. The
saurial can lead you to the other portal. Phalse brought him out of it. Your .
. . shell and his body were branded in the courtyard, then brought up here and
taken to the Hill of Fangs, and from there into Westgate."
"Will you be all right here alone?" Alias asked.
"Yes. The energy-wrought sky has certain healing properties. I will
wait here until I feel strong enough to walk. Then I will follow you."
"Perhaps, Alias, you should remain here, too," Akabar suggested,
"so that Phalse cannot use the wand on you."
"Look, Akash, whose battle is this, anyway? Phalse might try to use the
wand, but I've already beaten its power once. I'm not about to cringe from it
now." Then, in a more gentle tone, she asked Nameless, "Are you sure
you wouldn't prefer that we waited for you to heal?"
Nameless shook his head. "You don't want to give Phalse a chance to
call in reinforcements from the lower planes. If you defeat Phalse, you can
force him to call his master from his domain through the portal and deal with
him." He looked up at the saurial. "You remember the way?"
The lizard nodded.
Alias frowned a little, still dissatisfied with leaving Nameless alone.
Akabar thought to himself, she must care about him more than she knows.
"All right, Dragonbait. Which way?"
The saurial led them to a gap in the crenelations. A single set of stairs,
steep, narrow, and without a railing, wound along the outside of the tower. Alias's
frown grew deeper when she saw they would have to go down in single file.
"I'm going to go first until we reach a door," Alias said.
"May I borrow your sword just a little while longer, Dragon-bait?"
The saurial cocked his head in the manner that Alias usually assumed meant
he hadn't understood the question. Now she was beginning to believe it simply
meant he didn't want to answer the question. The fragrance of violets filled
the air. She held the strange weapon out, thinking he might be uncomfortable
allowing someone else to wield it.
"If you'd rather have it back, I'll understand," she said, but the
lizard shook his head and pushed her hand away gently, indicating she should
keep the blade.
When this is over, we're going to learn to talk together, she promised
herself. She started down the stairs, Dragonbait behind her, followed by
Akabar. Olive brought up the rear. The halfling sighed at the steepness of the
stairs, though their narrowness did not disturb her in the least. She trotted
down them casually. Akahar, however, pressed himself against the wall of the
tower and kept his eves on his feet.
Nameless waited until Olive's head disappeared below the level of the wall,
then counted to twenty before limping to the staircase, gripping his wounded side.
Half concealed by a large, fanged crenelation, he watched them descend. When
they'd entered the first door, the true bard started down the stairs himself.
He reached the first door and passed by it, continuing farther down the
staircase. His only hope lay in the possibility that the tower had not given up
all its secrets to its new owner.
On the ground far below, outside the tower's protective shell, a cloaked
figure lowered the hand that had been shielding his eyes from the sky's light.
Carefully, he removed the eye-cusps that gave him the sight of an eagle and
replaced them in the small egg that was their home. He sighed, and his breath
circled like fog through the transparent envelope that surrounded him. Then he
took up his staff and made his way over the broken terrain of gemstones to the
Citadel of White Exile.
When the companions had passed through the door, and Dragonbait had pushed
past Alias to scout ahead, he had left Hill Cleaver still in her grasp. Without
a weapon, the swordswoman was only a human of soft flesh and toolusing hands,
while the saurial felt quite confident with his claws and powerful jaws.
The passages were lighted by the stones of the wall, which shone from
within—a benefit of the citadel's position. Akabar was reminded of the light
that had come from behind the elven wall that had imprisoned the Abomination of
Moander, but these walls glowed with a rosy light that gave them all a ruddy
hue.
Thev passed through one chamber, then another. Both had held some furniture,
but recently had been stripped bare. The dust on the floor was disturbed as
though several heavy objects had been dragged across it. The small prints of
the pseudo-halfling crossed the rooms, as well as a set of large, heavier
boots, nearly giant size.
They came to a pair of doors made of crystal that, like the the walls,
glowed from within. The doors opened at a touch.
A large hall lay beyond. Dragonbait froze upon entering the room. It was not
arranged the way it had been more than a month ago when he'd been dragged
through it. There had been a long feasting table, and the walls had been
covered with banners of some of the Realms' older nations. The table and
banners were gone, replaced by twelve biers. Each funeral stand was occupied by
a body.
Alias's first guess was that the citadel's new inhabitants had turned this
room into a morgue, or maybe even a meat locker.
Dragonbait, already standing in the center of the room, spun about in
obvious confusion. A brimstone stench emanated from his body.
"Brandobas's Beard!" Olive exclaimed, already near enough to see
what useful things might be left on the corpses. "They're you!"
Uneasily, Alias walked closer to the bodies. They were all as similar as a
batch of bowls a potter might throw in a day. Each face had the same features,
some were thinner some wider, but they all had her features. Each face was
framed with hair some shade of red, from reddish black to strawberry blonde.
Their skin tones covered the spectrum from the pale flesh of the north to the
swarthy complexions of the south.
Their dress was more varied. A body in the heavy armor of Mulhorand lay
beside one in wolfhide robes and the headpiece of the far north. The sultry
slitted dress of a Waterdeep courtesan—something perhaps from Cassana's
closet—adorned a body one bier over from another dressed in the conservative
robes of a Moonshae druid. A weapon lay beside each, a mace or sword or sickle
or dagger. One figure, wrapped in black, was equipped with eastern weapons
whose uses were unfamiliar to Alias.
Yet thev were all her. Earlier models? Alias wondered.
Then she shook her head grimly. No, later improvements. How foolish to think
that they would stop at just one. A few minutes ago, when she'd thought herself
unique, she'd been certain she could prove her worth, justify her own
existence. But what if she was just one of a pack, a herd of Aliases to be
unleashed on the unsuspecting worlds?
She forced herself to stand closer to one of the bodies— one dressed as a
cleric of Tymora in robes of white trimmed with blue, with her holy symbol—a
silver disk—hanging on a chain about her neck. Alias fought back the queasiness
in her stomach and touched the body, grabbing the right wrist and turning it to
reveal the underside of the arm.
The pattern of serpents and waves was there, as motionless as a tattoo
placed on a piece of dead flesh. The only sigil in the pattern was the bull's
eve of Phalse's master. There was no blank spot at the wrist for Nameless. The
flesh was clammy, like clay.
Akabar came up behind her and put a hand on her shoulder. "Dead?"
he asked.
"Dead," she echoed, "or at least not alive. Or less alive
than me." She shook with anger. "This is all I was to them. A thing
to be copied over and over."
"Easy now," Akabar said, squeezing her shoulder gently.
"They're no more like you than a painting of you would be. If you want, we
can destroy them."
"No!" Alias snapped. "Whatever they are, I will not see them
destroyed. They're no more . . . evil than I am. I'm going to kill the last
master and lay them to rest that way."
Akabar stood silent for a moment, then nodded. "As you wish."
Alias could tell he was trying to determine if her reaction was a natural
one or another pattern, like her obsession to reach Yulash had been.
Olive shook her head, disapproving of Akabar's tone. Just like a mage.
Thinking too much with the head, not enough with the heart. Wonder how he'd
feel if we offered to burn up his brothers?
Dragonbait snapped out of his
shen state. He could not understand
what his senses were telling him about the women laid out before him. Each body
possessed a living soul, but the saurial could not sense a trace of a spirit in
any of them. Is that all that separates them from death—or birth? he wondered.
"Is the courtyard over there, Dragonbait?" Alias asked, pointing
to a second pair of crystal doors at the far end of the hall.
The saurial nodded.
Alias approached these doors and inspected them. They glowed in the same
fashion, but there was something different about them. They made her uneasy.
Then she realized why.
They drew her. As with the elven wall in Yulash, she could not resist moving
toward them. She wanted to open them. What she sought lay beyond them in the
courtyard.
She glanced at the others. Akabar pulled a small bundle from his belt,
fishing out spell components. Dragonbait took a two-handed sword from one of
the biers. Olive placed an ear against one of the doors. She pulled back,
rubbing her ear. "No noise, but it's very warm."
Alias took a deep breath as she reached for the door. She wanted to be
prepared to slam it shut in an instant or dodge aside if some horrible beast
came lunging out.
The door pushed open at a touch, revealing a large, open courtyard. To the
right and left, passages wove farther into the mazework of the tower. Directly
across from them, a balcony opened onto the splendor of the shimmering Plane of
Life. In the center of the court was a large pool filled with swirling patterns
of silver and red, like the portal on the Hill of Fangs. This pool was set into
the floor, though, and ringed with bluish stones.
A small form, dressed in shades of red and brown was seated on the stones.
He smiled a smile wider than any human or halfling could manage, and his
blue-on-blue-on-blue eyes glinted wickedly. In his hands he passed back and
forth Cassana's slender, blue wand.
"Welcome home, One," Phalse said. "I take it you have met Two
through Thirteen."
31
Phalse
Alias strode into the court, casting a glance to the right, to the left,
overhead. No assassins were hidden behind the crystal doors, no cage hung
suspended above. Olive moved to the right, Dragonbait to the left. Akabar held
back, slightly behind Alias, ready to cast in a moment.
Phalse remained seated on the portal stones, swinging his short legs back
and forth, playing with the wand like a child with a stick.
"Where is your master?" Alias demanded.
"Where is yours?" Phaise asked with a giggle.
From the rear, Akabar began to cast a spell.
Phalse pointed a finger at one of the blue stones near the pool. The stone
rose, hovered for a moment, then flew, as if propelled by an invisible sling,
across the room. Alias ducked instinctively and raised Dragonbait's sword to
deflect the stone, but she was not its target. It circled around the saurial's
blade and streaked past the swords-woman. Alias heard the brutal impact of
stone cracking bone. She half-turned. Akabar was kneeling on the floor,
clutching his forehead. Blood oozed between his fingers.
'None of that, now." Phalse waggled a finger at the mage reproachfully.
"Not fair at all to attack a poor, defenseless halfling."
"Zero for three," Olive said. "You're none of those
things."
"Something wrong, One?" Phalse addressed Alias, ignoring Olive
completely. "I thought you didn't like others doing your talking for
you."
"My name is Alias," the woman warrior retorted, striding toward
the little creature.
"You are One," Phalse said. "Two, Three, and Four are behind
the door. As well as Five through Thirteen. While I worked with the other
members of the now-defunct alliance, I was very careful to always refer to you
as the One, instead of just One. I couldn't let them suspect that I only
thought of you as the beginning of something far grander. Why make just one
weapon when you can make several? Especially if you have as many enemies as I
have."
Alias took a step forward, and Phalse waved Cassana's wand.
Alias stopped in mid-stride, as though she had walked into an invisible
spider web. Unlike Cassana's taut bonds, these were gummy. Phalse could wield
the wand differently than the witch had.
"Problems, One?" Phalse mocked her. "Cassana's toy still has
effects you haven't learned yet. She built for variability, you know. When you
were within her area of command, the wand made you her puppet, much like that
poor, undead fool, Prakis."
Olive and Dragonbait began to close on the small form, but Alias growled at
them through clenched teeth, "Back away. He's mine!"
Phalse laughed. "No, One, you have that backward. You are mine. If I
want you, that is. I think I prefer Two. She'll be much more tractable."
The shorter strands of Alias's hair were rising like serpents as she fought
the controlling force of the wand. Dragonbait remained in position, respecting
Alias's desire to resist the wand without help.
Olive was not so amenable to the idea. She drew out her daggers, but she
remained even with the saurial.
Alias felt as though she were pressing hard against a membrane, like the
skin of some gelatinous monster. She strained and the muscles in her legs
bunched, but she did not move.
"Now Prakis, he wanted you" Phalse said. "He really loved
Cassana—devils knew why. She put him through hell. When you came along, though,
I think he realized he could have his cake and eat it, too. You had all of
Cassana's charm, not to mention her once-youthful looks, and after the
sacrifice was made, you'd be pliable, too. Not one of Cassana's
characteristics."
Alias looked like a medusa, with the longer strands of her hair standing out
from her head. The strain of fighting the grip of the web was evident in her
face. Her forehead beaded with perspiration, her teeth clenched together, and
her eyes squinted—fixated on the pseudo-halfling's form.
Dragonbait gritted his teeth as he felt the familiar tug within his chest,
the call of Alias's sigils to his own. No stranger to discipline, he remained
in place.
He turned to look at the mage. He was still clutching his head, but the
bleeding had stopped. Akabar staggered to his feet. The saurial sensed
nervousness in the halfling and wondered if it would overwhelm her caution and
she would attack. Or bolt.
A movement along the wall behind and above the halfling caught Dragonbait's
eye. Two banners hanging along the sides of the courtyard parted ever so
slightly. Another player had arrived on the scene. Slipping into his
shen
state, the lizard caught the familiar feel of the intruder. He turned his
attention back on Alias's struggle.
"It's amazing, though, that all of them failed. Moander got you to free
it, but it was so enfeebled that a laughably small group brought it down. The
Fire Knives played their hand so badly that you only succeeded in throttling
some Wyvernspur fop. Zrie was never going to get you to love him. Only Cassana
was perverse enough to feel anything for him. And Cassana only used you to
taunt and bash her lovers. She had no concept of the forces she was unleashing
by trying to get you to kill your little lizard brother."
Phalse turned the wand over in his hands, batting his blue eyes. "They
all thought so small. Once they left me this citadel, I quickly duplicated
their work on a much larger scale. I needed their expertise to make you, One.
Creation is so very difficult. But duplication, that's another matter entirely.
It was child's play smuggling out the equipment used to create you, coaxing
Cassana out of a piece of her flesh, syphoning off a portion of the life
energies Moander contributed. That's why I chose this particular form.
Halflings make such good thieves."
Alias watched his eyes. Blue within blue eyes. Bull's eyes. "The last
sigil is yours," she said. "You have no hidden master, do you?"
Phalse broke into one of his widened grins, the corners of his mouth almost
touching in the back. "Very good, One. I led Cassana to believe that I was
just a servant. The ploy had its inconveniences, but it was much safer letting
her believe someone even more powerful backed me. I couldn't risk letting
Moander know we were partners. The old god and I are . . . rivals. As to the
sigil on your arm, don't think of it as the last sigil. As far as you should be
concerned, it's the only sigil—the only one that matters" Phalse stood up,
moved to the side of the circle, and waved the wand.
Alias felt her muscles bunch up against their will, trying to march her
straight ahead—into the pool of silver and red.
"Now, I have a small job for you. Pass through this portal and take
care of it. I wouldn't be stubborn about it, if I were you."
"Why not?" Alias growled, fighting the pull toward the bridge into
Phalse's domain. Along her arm, the single mark of the last master shone like a
beacon.
"Because then I shall be forced to sacrifice you and the saurial and
use Two in your stead. Two will be much more accommodating, anyway."
"I'll bet you made that same assumption about me," Alias said.
"You can't be sure, though, which is why you're trying to persuade me
instead of just forcing me."
"Oh, I'm sure. I've determined why you are flawed, and I know how to
prevent it in other models. You see, when we made you, we hadn't taken into
account the strength of the saurial's will. We needed a soul and a spirit for
you. The soul was easy to divide, but a spirit is supposed to have limits. We
assumed you would not come to life until we slayed the saurial so his spirit
could transfer into you, enthralled by our will, of course. Somehow, the
saurial found a way to create a spirit for you, broke off a shard, so to speak,
from his own spirit. You were able to draw on his stronger spirit whenever you
needed to. When I kill the two of you, I will take care that only enough spirit
flows into Two through Thirteen to animate them, without making them unruly."
"I still think you're bluffing;" Alias said. "I won't obey
your commands willingly."
"Oh, but you can't refuse, One. It's not just the wand that controls
you. You want to jump into the portal. You were made to jump into the portal.
Don't you sense how right it would feel?"
Alias gasped. The portal was what had called her into the room. Its siren
call was as subtle as Yulash had been, yet much stronger, like the compunction
to kill Winefiddle and Giogi. The patterns compelled her to find what lay
beyond.
"You see," Phalse explained, "through this portal lies a
second portal which leads to the Abyss. As you may know, my former partner,
Moander, resides there in its true form. Once vou step into a plane where it
exists, its sigil will return to your arm. Because you bear its mark and are
known to its minions as its servant, you will pass through to its domain
unharmed. Once there you will kill it. You will not be able to stop yourself.
You will rid the world of a great evil. a noble purpose. Just right for you."
"How would you know what's right for me, you monster?' A raging fire
ignited in her, hot enough to burn away the power that held her. "I will
not be controlled! I am my own master."
The wand exploded in Phalse's hand, and the cloud of shattered blue crystals
mixed with the blood spurting from his wrist. The last master screamed, opening
his mouth wide like tlie kalmari. Alias felt the invisible web dissolve: she
was free. She crossed the last few feet separating her from her foe, swung with
Dragonbait's sword, and severed Phalse's head neatly from his body.
The head flew two feet away, toppling in a bloodless arch while the body
collapsed like an empty skin. Alias circled warily. She wondered if it was only
a coincidence that Phalse's smile resembled the kalmari's, but no smoking
monster rose from the two halves.
Olive shivered, suddenly exhausted.
"Finally," Akabar said. "It's over."
Dragonbait shook his head.
"No," Alias said in a quiet, angry voice. "It's not.
Look." She held up her arm. It still bore Phaise's sigil.
Laughter rose from the floor, Phalse's laughter, loud and strong, issued
from the severed head.
"Foolish, foolish, One. You shouldn't make me angry." Phalse's
face leered at her from the disembodied head, and as it spoke it began to
change. The head expanded, puffing up like a balloon and rising several feet
off the ground, the laughter growing deeper and more malicious. Phalse's two
blue eyes merged into a single orb above his over-large mouth. Thick worms
snaked from his hair, and each worm ended with a fanged mouth shaped like a
lamprey's. Phalse had become a huge beholder, only with jaws instead of eyes.
This was the creature that had attacked Nameless, Alias realized, recalling
the multiple bites in the bard's body. It was Phalse all along.
The body's empty skin also began to inflate, turning into the naked form of
a large, sexless humanoid. The skin darkened to a shiny, reflective black. The
creature had only a sharp stump where the right hand had been blown off by the
exploding wand, but the left appendage sported a set of pincers.
Olive lunged at the beastly head with her daggers. A worm-appendage snaked
around her slender waist, lifted her from the ground, and sent her skittering
across the floor like a ball. She hit the far wall with a bone-wrenching crack
and did not get up again.
Akabar made a movement toward the halfling, but he was blocked by the
headless, shining black body It caught the mage firmly in its viselike pincers
and squeezed. Akabar screamed.
Dragonbait had started toward the beholder, but now spun about to rescue
Akabar. Using the sword he had borrowed from one of the Aliases, he hacked at
the beast. Chips of dark crystal flew from the monstrous torso, and it stopped
squeezing Akabar and began using him as a shield. The beholder used the pointy
stump of its right arm to spear at the saurial, driving him back.
"One," the head announced with its largest mouth, the rest of them
hissing as it spoke, "enter the portal now or die."
"Make me."
The beholder launched itself at her.
Alias put a foot on the well's rim and brought Dragonbait's sword up with a
sweeping cut, shearing off the mouth-tipped worms along one side. The head
turned and charged her again.
Alias dodged to the right, twisting and turning as she did so. Moander had
taught her that the best way to fight tendrils was to avoid them. She shifted
the sword to her right hand and drew a dagger from her left boot.
Phalse began his third charge at Alias's head. At the last moment he swooped
down and slammed into her knees The swordswoman crashed to the floor, losing
her grip on Dragonbait's sword and her dagger. Three of the lamprey jaws
clamped tightly on her thigh, while the oozing stumps of two others wrapped
around her leg. The beast began drawing her into its huge, central maw.
Alias grabbed at the stonework surrounding the portal and kicked at the
beholder with her free leg.
*****
Far above the fray, the figure behind the banner shook his head and reached
for the crossbow he'd retrieved from the citadel's depths. The tower's new
owner had not found the cache of magical items, scavenged during his exile.
Nameless drew a single quarrel from a slim case of dark wood. The bolt shone
in the dimness of the secret passage, illuminating his careworn face. With his
foot in the crossbow's stirrup, he wound back the weapon's spring until the
crosswire clicked into position. He loaded the shining bolt into the groove,
tight against the wire. Sighting along the top of the weapon, Nameless chose
the blue-in-blue-in-blue major eye as his target.
He hesitated as Alias pulled against the strength of Phalse's mouth-stalks.
Had he believed the gods still favored him, he would have prayed.
A hand jostled his shoulder, and Nameless accidentally set off the trigger.
The bolt sizzled as it left the crossbow but it flew wide of its mark, smashing
deep into the far wall, unnoticed by the combatants below.
Nameless turned in rage, expecting some dire beast. Instead, his blue eyes
met those of an old man dressed in dirty brown robes, and sporting a voluminous
beard which spilled out over his cloak.
"Elminster," Nameless growled.
"She must finish this battle alone, Nameless."
"So Phalse can kill her and do your dirty work for you?"
"So she can prove to herself, and to thee. that she is her own
master."
"She could die!"
A smile played across Elminster's lips. "I thought she was thy immortal
vessel, who could not be killed. Ye made her a powerful fighter. Will ye follow
her around until the end of thy days, rescuing her from every danger? What good
is she to ye as an eternal monument if she cannot defend herself from the
forces of the world?"
"But she's human. I ..."
"Care for her?"
"Of course."
"That's a first," Elminster said. "Now show it. Let her go
free."
*****
The deadly tug of war between Alias and Phalse continued. Alias felt as if
the monster was tearing her arms from her sockets. Her fingers were white from
gripping the rock, and her hold was slipping. The time had come to risk a
new-strategy. She pushed hard against the wall, toward the mouth-beholder.
Phalse tumbled backward with Alias on top of him. She kicked at the head,
but it was not like kicking a balloon, as she had expected. The head was as
hard as armor, and a numbing shock rang up Alias's leg, but Phalse's grip on
her slackened. She took advantage of the moment to draw her other boot dagger.
She slashed off the stalks that bit into her, leaving long trails of misty
blood in the air. She fell to the ground as Phalse floated back a few yards and
hovered.
Alias rose without taking her eyes from the head, brandishing her bloody
dagger. Dragonbait's sword lay on her right. She spoke, trying to cover her
movement as she edged slowly toward it.
"You're awfully quiet now, Phalse. Run out of threats and taunts?"
She noticed that her kick had dimpled its side.
"I'm listening—to the portal. Can't you hear it calling to you? Don't
you feel drawn into it?"
"You wish, Phalse," Alias said with a laugh. "You don't think
my sisters out there can do it, so you want me to believe I'm expendable. None
of them ever received the mark of Moander, did they? They can't get to Moander
the way I can, can they?"
"Not as easily as you, One, but they will try. I will send them, one at
a time, until one of them succeeds. You could spare them all of that pain and
agony. How can you resist the challenge?"
"Forget it, Phalse. You're not going to talk me into it."
Phalse's words, though, managed to split her attention between the beholder
and the portal, so she didn't notice Phalse's ebony body behind her until it
was too late. It struck her with a hard, powerful swing of its handless arm.
Alias fell to the ground like a sack, only a few feet from Dragonbait's
sword. The giant torso loomed over her with Akabar dangling from its claw like
a rag doll. Dragonbait lay motionless on the floor. Olive was still out cold.
Phalse's head laughed as it drifted until it fitted itself securely in the
depression between the ebony form's shoulders. "This torso was also a
prototype of sorts, both part and not part of me, useful as a carrier and
warrior. But not as good as you."
The united Phalse, body and head, bent over her, the sucker mouths opening
and closing in anticipation. Alias reached for Dragonbait's sword, grasped its
hilt in both hands, and swung it low, near the floor. The sword passed cleanly
through one of Phalse's ankles and chopped into the other. The body toppled
over, and Alias rolled away as Phalse separated himself from the fallen ebony
torso.
"You spoil all my fun," said the huge, bloated head. 'Now we must
end this." He charged at her.
Alias faked a stumble to one knee, and the head swooped lower, still moving
quickly. Alias leaped to her feet, stabbing with Dragonbait's sword as if it
were a dagger—right into the central blue eye.
Phalse hissed from all his remaining mouths, and Alias thought she had
beaten him, when suddenly several more mouth-stalks sprang from the head and
engulfed her. The large, lower mouth tried to bite her. She placed her free arm
in the space between the skewered eye and the mouth, try ing to remove
Dragonbait's sword, but the blade was stuck. She succeeded only in keeping the
awful main maw from snapping at her flesh.
*****
Dragonbait recovered his senses as Alias was grappling with Phalse's head.
This was her battle; she had asked him not to interfere.
The saurial staggered from the courtyard and into the former feast hall to
stand between the rows of bodies. He agreed with Alias that her copies should
not he destroyed.
The saurial thought back to the evening when he and Alias had been branded,
when his soul had been stretched and torn until Alias had suddenly become
possessed of life and a soul, and, unexpectedly, a spirit.
Just how did I do it? he asked himself. Was it my prayers, my stubborn
defiance of the evil around me, my acceptance that death was near?
*****
The forest of mouths encircled Alias, blocking her vision, and she and
Phalse spun about dizzily. Alias became suddenly aware that they stood on the
balcony.
Catching her foot against the wall, Alias twisted at the waist, slinging the
head about by Dragonbait's sword. She let go of the sword's hilt.
The torque created by her spin was enough to rip the mouths from her body.
Phalse's head went spinning from the tower with the sword still embedded in it,
Thirty feet from the balcony, Phalse and Dragonbait's sword achieved maximum
potential and burst into a ball of white light as bright as the recent
detonations near Westgate.
Alias shielded her eyes from the explosion with her arms and backed away
from the balcony. She felt a familiar burning pain on her arm. A welcome pain.
Phalse's sigil flared and vanished from her arm.
*****
A sharp pain on Dragonbait's chest broke his concentration. The air filled
with the scent of violets as the saurial realized the source of the pain.
Phalse was dead.
Suddenly, the twelve figures before him faded to shimmering, glassy outlines
and then vanished completely.
A last trick of Phalse's? the saurial wondered. He hadn't had time to learn
if he'd succeeded. Now he might never know.
*****
Alias swaved unsteadily and put her hand against a wall. Dragonbait stood in
the doorway between the feast hall and the courtyard. He looked disturbed but
uninjured.
Then Alias saw two figures bent over the bodies of her companions and she
leaped toward them. One of them turned toward her, and she paused.
It was Nameless, and he and his companion were smearing healing ointment
over Akabar's body. The other man moved toward Olive and told Alias,
"She's alive, too."
There was something familiar about the figure and voice, but Alias was too
weak to place it. She sank to her knees, chiding Nameless, "About time you
showed up." Then she allowed herself the luxury of collapsing.
32
The Tale Told
Elminster and Nameless smeared Alias with foul-smelling ointments and bound
her wounds. When she came to, Dragonbait was using his power to heal Akabar,
who had been the most grievously hurt. Olive had a nasty gash on her forehead,
but the old man who worked beside Nameless assured the halfling that if she
would only keep her mouth shut, her headache would go away.
Alias felt no pain, courtesy of the ointments, but she was bone-weary.
Akabar, who sat beside her, gave her a nudge and pointed to the old man.
"That one was talking to Dragonbait in Shadowdale," the mage told
her.
Elminster crouched beside Akabar. "I understand ye wanted to see me on
a matter of grave importance."
Akabar flushed with sudden understanding. "Elminster?"
"Really?" Alias said. "And I thought you were just a goatherd
who knew more than was good for me." She realized now that Akabar had
never actually spoken with Elminster.
"He's nothing at all like you described him, Akabar," she teased.
"For one thing, he talks funny."
"Have you ever considered keeping an appointment calendar?" Akabar
asked the old sage angrily.
"Yes," Elminster replied. "They make excellent tinder."
"You knew all about Nameless," Alias accused him. "You knew
what I was, didn't you?"
"I knew about Nameless," Elminster confessed sadly. "But I
was not sure about thee. Ye seemed too human to be the made thing he had
envisioned. In disbelief, I put off coming here to ascertain if the bard was
still safe in his prison. As they say, the wise aren't always."
"Aren't always what?" Olive chirped.
"Wise," supplied Alias.
Elminster nodded. "Got off my hindquarters fast enough when Moander was
unleashed, though. Took me two days to trek out here. I watched thy arrival on
the roof. New portal—must remember it."
"But you tried to get me to give up the songs, and I refused. You let
me go. You knew it was wrong to try to squelch Nameless's songs."
"Let's say I was uncertain. I was prepared to sacrifice them to a
greater good. Thy vehemence made me rethink the greater good. It was hard to
argue with a soul so pure."
Alias looked shyly at Dragonbait. If they'd given me a piece of someone
else's soul, she wondered, would I have succeeded in freeing myself?
"What will happen to Nameless?" she asked. "It's a little
late to keep him locked up to protect his secret. And you most certainly aren't
going to lock me up"
Elminster looked startled momentarily. "No," he agreed. 'That
would be unjustifiable. What he did may have been wrong, hut what we did may
not have been right. The time has come, I think, to review the matter."
"A second trial?" asked Nameless
'Perhaps," said Elminster. "If so, I will speak in thy
defense."
"As will I," Alias said.
Nameless smiled at her. "You really refused to give up my songs?"
"It was wrong to abandon them, and I knew it."
Something tickled the base of her wrist, and Alias held her arm up. In the
once-empty space a blue rose blossomed, shimmering among the stiller pattern of
waves and serpents.
Dragonbait clutched at his chest and looked down. The snaking pattern on his
green scales was replaced by a wreath of blue ivy.
"A sign of the gods' favor?'' Nameless asked the sage.
"It would appear so" Elminster agreed. He turned to Alias. "I
have closed the portal leading to Phalse's domain, so ye will be safe
here."
Alias could see that there was only water where the portal had been. The
sight of her reflection brought to mind the copies of her Phalse had created.
Struggling to her feet, she limped to the feast hall door.
"They're gone!" she cried. "What happened to them?"
Dragonbait shrugged his shoulders. The smell of brimstone rose from his
body.
"You hoped to lay them to rest by destroying Phalse," Akabar
reminded her. "It appears your wish was granted."
"Maybe they were never really there," Olive conjectured.
"Maybe they were just an illusion Phalse conjured up to use against you.
They must have vanished when you killed him."
"Perhaps," Alias whispered sadly. She could not believe either
explanation.
Elminster, detecting the scent of lemon and ham from the saurial's body,
cocked an eyebrow but said nothing.
"I think it's time to check the larder and see what goodies Phalse left
behind," Olive suggested.
"In the cellars of this place," Nameless said to Dragonbait,
"you will find a sword. I would be honored if you would accept it in place
of the one you lost."
Dragonbait nodded graciously.
Nameless knelt by the injured haifling, who still cradled her head in her
hands. "There's something I'd like you to have, too, Mistress
Ruskettle."
The halfling's eyes shone as she held her hand out. In it Nameless placed a
small, silver harp and crescent moon pin, the symbol of a Harper. She smiled up
at Nameless. "Really? For me?'' She pinnned the gift to her tattered gown.
"Thank you"
"That's going to raise some hackles," said Elminster quietly.
"Let it," Nameless said.
Elminster smiled at Akabar. "I have a gift for ye, Akabar Bel Akash, a
piece of advice perhaps more valuable than any magic item. It takes less time
to solve thy own riddles than to wait in Lhaeo's office."
Akabar grinned and nodded.
Nameless looked uncertainly at Alias. "I have no more gifts to give
you, yet I would ask for something from you."
Uncertainty gripped the swordswoman, a fear that Nameless would ask for
something she could not give him, or something she would not wish to.
"What is it?" she asked.
"I know of your birth," her 'father' said, "and Mistress
Ruskettle has told me something of your travels. But I wish to hear you tell
your tale."
Alias laughed with relief. Moving to the edge of the pool, she sat down and
beckoned her audience to draw close. Olive perked up attentively, eager to hear
the tale that would bring her fame throughout the Realms when she began telling
it herself.
"I woke in Suzail, in the land of Cormyr, to the sound of two dogs
barking. . . ."
As the three men and the saurial listened to Alias's beautiful voice, Olive
leaned back and promptly fell asleep.
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
KATE NOVAK grew up in Pittsburgh, where she received a B.S. in Chemistry
from the University of Pittsburgh. After getting married, she gave up laboratories;
her husband Jeff keeps her from starving while she pursues her writing career.
Her works published by TSR include pick-a-path, adventure gamebooks and game
modules. She is a Girl Scout leader and a fussy cat owner.
JEFF GRUBB, also a Pittsburgh native, was a civil engineer before being
kidnapped by Wisconsin leprechauns and put to work designing games and fantasy
worlds for TSR, Inc. His writing credits include
Manual of the Planes,
an AD&D® Hardbound supplement, and the FORGOTTEN REALMS™ Boxed Set. He is
currently serving as authoritative source, guardian spirit, and traffic cop for
the ever-growing Forgotten Realms. His wife Kate keeps him sane in all this.