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Oath of Vigilance

Page 17

by James Wyatt


  “Good, because I think that’s all we have.”

  Shara found herself remembering her conversation with Uldane in the swamp ruins, discussing the day Jarren and her father died. She tried to remember the hours before the dragon attacked, the trek through the forest, the jovial banter that made up the fabric of their bond as a group, an adventuring party. They’d shared a rapport that was so hard to come by, but so easy to relax into. She still had it with Uldane, most of the time, but with Quarhaun—somebody always seemed to say something wrong, and somebody else felt hurt or took offense.

  She and Jarren had shared more than a comfortable rapport, of course. Even in the moments before the dragon’s attack, he’d given her one of his smoldering looks, and she’d brushed against him with a suggestive smile. By all the gods, how I miss him, she thought, wracked with the familiar ache of his absence.

  Quarhaun’s eyes seemed to be developing a certain smolder, too, and that left her … confused. Even more perplexing was the reaction his touch seemed to stir up in her, from the raw physical yearning to the damned schoolgirl blushing, which she wished she could just turn off.

  She rounded the first switchback in the road, and realized she’d been ignoring her own orders, walking up the bluffs with her mind on anything but the threat of ambush. She glanced back at Uldane and Quarhaun to make sure they were paying better attention, and the drow met her gaze with a sly grin. Ignoring him, she tried to clear her mind of her other thoughts and stay alert.

  Despite her best efforts, she found her mind drifting back to Quarhaun, thinking about that grin, his breath in her ear, his hand on her chin. She tried to also remind herself about his snide comments to Uldane, his outrageous attitude about the lizardfolk being expendable, and his apparent acceptance of bloodthirsty drow politics, but her mind kept coming back to the way his eyes lingered on her.

  When the demons leaped out near the second switchback, she was almost relieved.

  A good fight will get my blood flowing, she thought, and not so much to my brain.

  Then her thoughts fled entirely, replaced by paralyzing fear as the nearest demon, a creature of shadow and burning blood, tore into her mind.

  Roghar and Tempest rode toward Fallcrest on the King’s Road from the west. The late afternoon sun cast long shadows in front of them, and the forest that lined the wood was draped in a cloak of silence and darkness.

  “It’s awfully quiet,” Roghar said. He didn’t expect an answer—Tempest had spoken little on their long journey from Nera. At times he’d almost wished he’d been traveling alone. At least then, he could sing at the top of his lungs without feeling like he was disturbing someone.

  “It’s not right,” Tempest said.

  Roghar looked around in surprise at her reply. She was peering into the woods around them, a frown creasing her brow.

  “There’s an unnatural presence here,” she said. She met his gaze, and the anguish in her eyes drove his smile away. “It’s him.”

  “You can feel his presence?” Roghar said.

  “Not exactly. But I can feel the wrongness, all around. Can’t you?”

  Roghar closed his eyes and drew a deep breath through his nostrils. The smell of autumn decay and fresh earth filled his nose, but there was something more—acrid smoke, not the warm scent of hearth-fires but the sharp odor of destruction. He closed his eyes and reached for whatever sense could detect “wrongness,” and felt a warm tingling at the back of his skull. Then nausea seized his stomach and cold fear gnawed at his chest.

  “Oh, that wrongness,” he said, blinking.

  “We should ride,” Tempest said.

  From the look on her face, Roghar wasn’t sure whether she meant ride ahead to discover the source of the wrongness or turn around and ride away as fast as their horses could carry them. He cocked his head at her.

  “I don’t know if I can do this,” she said, slumping in her saddle.

  After their encounter with the cult of the Chained God in Nera, Tempest had stayed in bed for three days, sleeping—or at least pretending to sleep whenever Roghar came to check on her. Finally, he had forced her to look at him and argued the case that they should return to the Nentir Vale. If the demonic influence had spread as far as Nera, then it appeared they could not flee far enough to escape it forever. It was far better, he argued, to return to the Vale and confront it at its source. In Fallcrest, he argued, they had other friends who could help them, and the mention of Albanon seemed to finally start to sway her.

  It had taken all of Roghar’s powers of persuasion, but he’d finally convinced Tempest that no other course of action would ever bring her peace and close out that chapter of her life. And so they had ridden for weeks from the old capital out to the frontier of the fallen empire, where the nightmare had begun.

  “It’s the only way,” he reminded her, as gently as he could given the harsh reality of her situation.

  “Remember your promise,” she said, meeting his eyes.

  Roghar nodded slowly. The only way he’d been able to convince her to come to Fallcrest was by swearing a solemn oath that if she ended up possessed or infected in some way by the vile red liquid, he would kill her without hesitation. He wasn’t sure he could actually carry out this promise, but he had sworn it and so he supposed he must.

  But he earnestly hoped he wouldn’t have to.

  Apparently satisfied, Tempest coaxed her horse back into motion. Roghar spurred his black stallion ahead of her, turning over in his mind the significance of the nausea and fear he had tasted.

  The road wound around the base of Aranda Hill to come into Fallcrest from the north. Roghar recognized the point on the road, just ahead, where they would come out of the curve and be able to see straight down the road to the Nentir Inn. He called it the homecoming spot, the point where he always announced that he’d arrived. The thought of the inn made his body ache with longing for a soft, warm bed and a real dinner.

  He kept his eyes fixed on the road ahead, and a grin of excitement spread across his face as he neared the homecoming spot, but he closed his eyes in the moment he reached it. “We’re home,” he said with a sigh, then opened his eyes.

  The Nentir Inn was in flames, pouring smoke into the sky.

  Tempest rode up beside him and stared with him at the wreckage of the inn. They exchanged a glance, then together spurred their mounts and galloped down the road. Even before they reached it, Roghar could see that they were too late to do anything. The building was an empty husk already, withered beams and posts standing above blackened fieldstone. A moment later, he realized that no one was fighting the fire—no one was even watching the inn burn down.

  “Tempest, wait,” he called, reining in his horse.

  “What?” She slowed, but didn’t stop her chestnut mare. “We have to help!”

  He shook his head. “There’s no help for it now. I think it’s a trap.”

  She looked at the inn and back at Roghar, then came to a stop. He caught up with her and pointed at the burning inn.

  “There’s no one there,” he said. “Where’s Erandil?” The half-elf Erandil Zemoar had built the Nentir Inn only a few years ago. “You think he’d let his new inn burn down without even watching it? Where’s the watch? Where are the spectators drawn to the disaster like moths to flame?”

  “You’re right,” Tempest said. “That is strange. But a trap?”

  “I think someone lit the fire in hopes of drawing people here to fight it.”

  “So what do we do?”

  Roghar thought for a moment, then dismounted. “Leave the horses,” he said. “Once we clear the forest, we make a wide circle around the inn and see if we can catch whoever is lying in wait.”

  Tempest slid out of her saddle and nodded. “Let’s do it.”

  Roghar took her reins and led both horses off the road, where he draped the reins around a low tree branch. It would keep the horses in place for a little while, but if he and Tempest didn’t come back, they’d free the
mselves eventually and find their own way to safety. He patted his stallion’s flank and left the horses.

  They hugged the forest rather than walking along the road, alert for any sound among the trees, but not even a squirrel or bird rustled in the leaves as they drew closer to the burning inn. Tempest signaled a stop just before the road left the shelter of the woods, then she drew the afternoon shadows around herself in a concealing cloak and stepped to the edge of the trees.

  The inn had its own fire apple orchard, and two small farms shared the clearing on this part of the river’s west bank. The road ran straight to the inn and then forked, with the left branch crossing the Five-Arch Bridge into Hightown and the right passing the farms before winding down the bluff toward Aerin’s Crossing.

  Tempest scanned the clearing and then waved Roghar forward. He moved as quietly as he could, but he was under no illusions about his capacity for stealth—his bulk, the weight of his armor, and the tendency of the metal plates to clank against each other despite their padding combined to make him easy to spot and especially easy to hear. He chose a path through the fields, aiming to pass close by the two farmhouses on the west side of the road.

  “You don’t want to keep to the shelter of the trees?” Tempest asked.

  “If they’re hiding in the farmhouses while they watch the road and the inn, maybe we can catch them off guard. At the edge of the woods, we’ll be too far away to see them.”

  Roghar felt the tension in every muscle of his body. This was not his preferred way to face danger—he would rather have charged at top speed toward an obvious foe, sword in hand and divine power at the ready. Sneaking around didn’t sit well with him, and waiting for enemies to reveal themselves made him anxious. Tempest seemed much more at ease, moving swiftly and all but silently through the fields, barely even making the corn sway as she passed. For all her earlier trepidation, she was facing imminent danger without a moment’s hesitation.

  They reached the first of the farmhouses without incident. Roghar peered in the back windows and found the home dark and apparently deserted. It seemed intact, though, so he doubted that attackers were lurking inside. After a cursory glance, he nodded to Tempest and they moved on.

  As they drew near the second farmhouse, Roghar heard the sounds of fighting—the clash of steel, explosions of magic, and a great deal of shouting. It was distant, coming from somewhere off to the south, roughly where the road wound down the bluffs. He looked at Tempest, and she smiled at him.

  “Sounds like your kind of fight,” she said.

  He returned the smile. “Let me make sure there’s nothing in this farmhouse, then we’ll see who’s in trouble on the bluffs.”

  “It’s the first sound of other living creatures we’ve heard in the last half hour,” Tempest said.

  Roghar nodded and broke into a run. Even before he reached the second farmhouse, he could see that it was the same as the first—dark, abandoned, empty. He signaled to Tempest and changed course, running full out toward the sounds of fighting. His body started feeling better at once, the exertion of the run soothing the tension from his muscles.

  As soon as he reached the bluff and looked down, he saw the fight raging—and recognized two of the fighters. “Shara!” he shouted. “Uldane!” His friends were locked in a struggle with dark figures of shadow laced with the same glowing red liquid that was becoming all too familiar. A white-haired, dark-skinned man in black leather fought alongside them, but it was obvious that he was using his last reserves of strength—and Shara and Uldane weren’t doing too well, either.

  Rather than wind his way carefully down the road, Roghar slid down the bluff with a yell, bouncing and rattling as he went but thrilling at the battle ahead.

  My kind of fight, indeed, he thought, smiling.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

  As Kri grumbled, arms folded across his chest, Albanon paid the princely sum of sixty gold pieces to the boatwright in exchange for a simple wooden rowboat. Calling plenty of attention to his own generosity, the boatwright threw in the oars and a coil of sturdy rope for mooring at no additional charge. Kri shook his head all the way as he and Albanon wrestled the boat out the door and down to the quay.

  “We should have paid a few silvers for a ride,” Kri said as they lowered the boat into the water.

  “But there were no rides to be had for silver or gold,” Albanon said, shrugging. “The money doesn’t matter.”

  “It should. A frugal nature is essential to the development of good moral character.”

  Albanon stared at Kri.

  “It is!” Kri protested. “Do you want to be one of those prodigal adventurers who returns from every expedition laden with cash and proceeds to spend every copper piece in a fortnight, drinking up the town’s supply of ale and enriching its thieves and con artists?”

  Albanon knew exactly the kinds of adventurers the old priest meant. He’d often sat in the Blue Moon Alehouse listening to their tales and dreaming of their adventures. In fact, he would have put Roghar and Tempest into that category before he got to know them. It didn’t seem like such a terrible life, as he thought about it.

  Kri continued his rant. “Do you think such people spend their days in careful study before carousing through the town at night? Do you think they’re prepared for the dangers they face, the dangers that threaten the world? How long do you suppose such adventurers tend to live?”

  “N-not long, I suppose.” A brief, glorious fire burning in the night.

  Kri fixed him with a level gaze. “A true hero will light the world for ages, Albanon.”

  Albanon started. Did I say that out loud? he wondered. He half-expected Kri to answer his unspoken question, but the priest had returned to the work of coiling the rope.

  “I don’t think I ever imagined myself as a hero,” he said. “I just wanted excitement.”

  Kri looked up from the rope. “But you’ve grown up since Moorin’s death, haven’t you?”

  “I suppose I have. I’ve grown in so many ways.”

  “Nothing is holding you back now.”

  The thought quickened Albanon’s pulse. What might I accomplish now? What heights of power might I reach?

  Together they lowered the boat into the water. Albanon clambered down into it, then held the boat steady as Kri stepped in. Albanon wrangled the oars into position and pushed off from the quay, out into the dark water.

  “Do you suppose there are demons in the water?” he asked Kri.

  “Use your senses.”

  Albanon blinked in surprise. “I didn’t even think of trying that outside the Feywild.”

  “Magic flows through the world as well. It might not be as strong or as vibrant, but it’s there.”

  Albanon stopped rowing and closed his eyes. He felt it immediately, a current of power that ran through the river, as real as the current of rushing water. Kri was right—it wasn’t as strong as what he’d felt at Sherinna’s tower, but with a deep breath and an effort of will he was able to sense the weave of magic and the bright spots that marked his place and Kri’s in that weave. No dark tangles of demonic power stood out in his view, but he noticed something different about Kri’s brightness, a different hue or tone to it that he couldn’t quite define.

  He opened his eyes and found Kri staring at him.

  “What did you see?” the priest asked.

  “I believe the river is safe,” Albanon said, looking away from Kri’s penetrating eyes.

  “Not if we go over the waterfall.”

  Albanon looked around and saw the torches lining the Five-Arch Bridge much closer than they had been. He started rowing again, fighting against the current to take their little boat away from the bridge and back on course toward the island.

  “Can you see the island?” Kri asked.

  Albanon nodded.

  “That’s good. I can’t see a thing out here.”

  “Eladrin eyes.” For some reason Albanon started thinking of the mural’s depiction of Sherinna in
her power and grace, the opalescent blue orbs of her eyes shining with wisdom. “Kri, who inducted you into the Order of Vigilance?”

  “I had two teachers. The first was a paladin of Pelor named Channa. She was killed while trying to reclaim Gardmore Abbey from the orcs that hold it now. So a knight named Harad completed my training. The members of the order were more numerous then, so it was not difficult to find a new teacher.”

  “How many generations of teachers and students have passed down Sherinna’s legacy?” Albanon asked.

  “That’s not easy to measure. Sherinna, along with Brendis and Miri, taught eight disciples, the founding members of the order. One was an eladrin who taught an eladrin student who only died a decade or so ago—so that’s only two generations. Traced back through Harad, my lineage is more like six generations.”

  “I wonder what she was like.”

  “Sherinna?”

  “My grandmother, yes.”

  “Well, I would imagine that she was something like your father and something like you.”

  Albanon tried to imagine what such a person might be like, searching for the qualities he most admired in his father—his magical power, his authority—and what he thought were his own best qualities, his adventuresome spirit and his loyalty to his friends. He decided that Sherinna had led her little adventuring band with a firm but compassionate hand, that her magic had proved the decisive factor in their many battles, and that Brendis had harbored a deep but forbidden love for her.

  Smiling at the image he’d constructed, he steered the rowboat into a little cove on the island. He handed the oars to Kri, picked up the coil of rope, and jumped for the shore, falling a few feet short and landing with a splash in ice-cold water up to his hips. Bracing himself against the cold, he waded to dry land and pulled the boat close, coiling the rope around a large rock. He held out a hand to help Kri to shore, then worked a simple magic cantrip to dry his clothes.

  “Welcome to the Tower of Waiting,” Albanon said.

  “Excellent. I hope the demon is still here.”

 

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