by Ed Greenwood
They snorted in unison—and the Sage of Shadowdale held up one hand with a grin, drew a ring from his belt pouch, and announced, “Many minds, approaching fast. So we burn a bauble, as ye suggested. Thy typical wizard of war may be darned suspicious when he sees Royal Magician Ganrahast and his trusted Vainrence striding along a passage—but he’ll hesitate before he blasts them, I’ll wager.”
He frowned, there was a flash from inside his fist as the ring vanished, and a brief tingling sensation crept over them both.
Storm held up one of her hands. It had gone hairy. “Hmmph. Not an improvement, I must say,” she commented. “I get to be Vainrence, of course.”
“Of course. I’ll tender ye my apologies later,” El replied, turning back from the door that led into the overly bustling hall beyond, and seeking a passage he knew to be older, moldier, and usually quieter.
It was still all of those things and led them out into a dark and deserted room where disused furniture was shrouded in dust wraps.
“An old tablecloth of Rhigaerd’s, if I’m not mistaken,” Elminster murmured, peering at one of them. “Aye, there’s the stain where—”
“Hold, intruders!”
The shout from behind them was loud and sharp.
“Hold what?” Storm asked mildly, reaching out two rather eager hands—only to find that she was about to embrace several onrushing spear points.
“I thought I heard voices!” one of the Purple Dragons at the other ends of those weapons snarled excitedly.
An entire patrol of Dragons trotted forward, clanking and clanging as they hastily drew daggers or swords and rushed to menace the newly discovered perils to the Crown.
The Royal Magician and his Lord Warder Vainrence stood calmly waiting as a ring of glittering spears swiftly formed around them.
“Halt!” the patrol commander barked at them, unnecessarily.
The two immobile men exchanged glances with each other then turned to reply in laconic unison, “Aye, still halted.”
“Who—oh, by the Dragon!” The swordcaptain knew their faces and was suddenly looking decidedly ill. “M-my apologies, Lords!”
“Accepted,” Elminster replied with dignity. “Now continue your patrol, Swordcaptain. The enemies of Cormyr are, I fear, everywhere.”
“Closer than you think,” an angry voice said sharply. “Arrest them!”
The furious speaker strode into the room. “I’m Wizard of War Rorskryn Mreldrake,” he snapped, “and these two men are impostors, using magic to seem to be the Lords Ganrahast and Vainrence!”
Purple Dragons stared at him then swiftly and frowningly back at the two men standing quietly in the midst of their ring of spears.
“I have just now come straight from converse with those two lords—the real ones,” Mreldrake added, “and as you can all see, these two are dressed as the Royal Magician and Lord Warder were garbed a day back, not as they now are.”
The Purple Dragons stiffened, three of them—who’d evidently seen Ganrahast and Vainrence not long ago—starting to frown and nod.
The possibly false Vainrence cast a calm look at his companion, who shook his head ever so slightly before sighing and announcing, “Yon mage is mistaken, but in the interest of sparing the lives of diligent Purple Dragons, we’ll not resist. Obey your orders, Swordcaptain.”
“I … I shall,” that officer said grimly. “Seek to work no magic as we conduct the pair of you into the presence of some wizards of war who will then interrogate you. ‘Bring us anyone suspicious,’ they told me … and you certainly are.”
“No doubt. I also have no doubt whatsoever that when he hears of this, the king,” the possibly false Ganrahast informed the Purple Dragon darkly, “will not be pleased.”
“You tell the wizards that,” the swordcaptain replied evenly. “They may even believe you.”
CHAPTER
SEVENTEEN
WIZARDS GO TO WAR
Mreldrake gave the Purple Dragons a nod and an unpleasant smile and disappeared rather hastily back through the door he’d come from.
The swordcaptain looked at the two lords who might not be lords and pointed imperiously at another door, one that stood open. “Walk that way, saers. We’ll be escorting you—and won’t hesitate to make holes in you with our spears, so try nothing foolish.”
“I rarely do,” the possible Ganrahast impostor informed the man with dignity as they set off, the Dragons shifting position to keep their prisoners menaced before and behind by leveled spears.
After a few strides he added, “I require your name, Swordcaptain.”
“Yet will receive only disappointing silence,” came the prompt reply. “I don’t take orders from prisoners.”
The perhaps-false Royal Magician stopped and spun around to face the officer directly, ignoring the spears that thrust at him warningly. “In the name of the king,” he barked, “yield unto me your name!”
The officer hesitated.
“As you seem to be a stickler for orders,” Vainrence put in softly, “suppose you obey one of the standing ones.”
“We’re required to give our names to Dragons of superior rank, certain courtiers, and … uh,” the swordcaptain replied, wincing. “Ah, Lord Ganrahast, I am Paereth Vandurn. Swordcaptain Paereth Vandurn.” He regained his gruff confidence almost visibly, thrusting his chin forward. “So, who are the two of you—really?”
The prisoner who might or might not be Lord Vainrence thrust a spear aside with one hand to wag a disapproving finger at the swordcaptain. “You’re less than polite, Slamburn, and I’ll tell this war wizard so! Lead us to him!”
“I am not—,” the swordcaptain began heatedly, but he stopped as he saw smirks appear and as hastily vanish from the faces of more than a few of his men.
Drawing a deep breath, he managed a brittle smile and said, “But of course, Lord Warder. If you’ll kindly proceed through yon door, obeying the directions of the nice men in uniform holding the spears pointed at you, you shall have your opportunity to speak to a war wizard soon enough. For the greater glory of Cormyr, of course.”
“For some years,” Elminster informed Vandurn haughtily, “those very words have been mine to speak: ‘for the greater glory of Cormyr.’ ”
“Ahhh, good,” the officer replied heavily, his smile becoming decidedly desperate. “Very good. The door, now, is just this way …”
On the far side of the ring of spears from the swordcaptain, someone among the stone-faced Dragons snickered.
“Who did that?” Vandurn snapped. “Who? I’ll be requiring some nam—”
He broke off and fell silent just a moment too late.
The Royal Magician began the laughter, and the Lord Warder swelled it with hearty guffaws, but at least two Dragons joined in—and then they all did, mirth ringing around the passage.
With one exception. In the heart of it all, a certain crimson-to-the-ears swordcaptain clenched his jaws and silently steamed.
Talane. That name echoed like a curse in her mind, the chant of some dark seer desiring her doom … Talane.
One night, and she was undone. One night—no, less than half an hour—and her life had been shattered, her freedom gone.
She was caught in the ruthless talons of someone she didn’t even know.
Amarune felt exhausted. Bone weary. With a full night facing her.
Disheartened, the bards called it. When singing about someone else. She wished that was who felt that way, instead of her: someone else.
She pushed open the side door of the club and slipped inside. It was hours before she’d have to be up on that stage, but this was her usual routine, and what most Dragonriders’ dancers did: come early, soak in a long bath, dry off slowly in a warm room and have her hair done by Taerlene or Mrarie, eat a hearty meal, and then sink into a nice long nap. All of it behind the club’s closed doors, so she’d be safe inside, not having to run the gauntlet of leering admirers that would await her if she arrived later.
The d
ressing room was silent and empty. She frowned. Usually four or five of her fellow dancers who followed the same routine made it there before her …
There was something in her accustomed chair. A large sack, it looked to be. Laundry, dumped here by one of the maids, getting interrupted?
The door swung closed behind her with its usual slight squeal—and then her chair spun around by itself to face her.
Or, no—the man sitting in it had turned it with a kick, to face her and warm her with his easy smile.
No sack, after all. The Lord Arclath Delcastle was lounging in her chair.
“Well met,” he said brightly, his smile growing even broader.
Amarune was too startled to be polite. “What are you doing here?” she blurted.
“Waiting for you, obviously. I paid your fellow dancers some rather large sums to be primped at the Gilded Feather today, to leave the room clear for me. For us.”
The Gilded Feather was the most expensive pretty-parlor in all Suzail. Though it was only a street away, Amarune had never been inside it. Its noble patrons tended to sneer at mask dancers, and its staff did rather more than sneer.
“Us?”
Gods above, no. Trapped by the mysterious Talane, and now this.
Oh, he’d been nice enough to her, and all nobles were crazed, but … stlarn it, she and probably most of Suzail thought the prancing fop Arclath Delcastle preferred men in bed and admired women merely as diversions.
But it seemed as if he was going to turn out to be another nightmare. One of the “obsessed” who stalked dancers and made dangerous nuisances of themselves until they had to be dealt with. Not that dealing with noble heirs was easy.
Well, farruk the Purple Dragon, she was going to deal with him, right away! It would cost her lots of forgone coins in the years ahead, but—
Whether or not it dissuaded him, she was going to beat the natal innards out of him! He’d be a laughingstock if he went to the Robes about her, so the worst that could happen would be her arrest—which would at least get her away from the spying of Talane and out of that bitch’s reach, and perhaps win her a little time to think of a way to flee that trap.
Without another word or wild thought, Amarune set her teeth and went for him, hands like claws and knees ready to drive in hard and see if she could dent that ridiculous codpiece he was wearing.
“Lady!” he said reproachfully, ducking and twisting with surprising speed—and lashing out a hand to ensnare one of her wrists.
Successfully. Gods, but he was strong!
She clawed at him with her free hand, catching a nail on something.
“Lady,” the lordling panted, wriggling like an eel under her, his free hand grabbing at hers, “I don’t want you to misunderstand my—uhh!—motives. I’m not here to—ah!—assault your—uh!—charms!”
He caught hold of her other wrist. With a shriek, Amarune slammed herself down on him, pelvis riding his belt buckle bruisingly, so she could get close enough to bite him. And managed it. Hard.
He roared out a less-than-coherent curse of pain as she wrenched her hands free and clawed at him again, raking at his face.
“Easy, wench!” he snarled, slamming a forearm across the side of her head hard enough to twist her half off him into dazed darkness. “I might need some of these limbs in the years ahead, you know!”
“You should’ve thought of that—,” Amarune panted at him as light and sound came back to her in a throbbing rush that left her head ringing, and she tried to claw at him again viciously, “before you—”
“Sat down in a chair in an empty room, after paying for the privilege?” he snapped. “Stop this! By Tempus, lass, leave off! I just want to ask you—uhhh!—some questions!”
“Oh, like how many of your friends will I pleasure for a cut price? Or will I let Lord Delcastle’s pet hired wizard give me feathers and a tail for the night, so you can ride a peacock at last? A peacock on a peacock? Hey?”
Right out of breath from that outburst, Amarune had to put her head down, shuddering, to snatch air as they struggled. Under her, the noble straightened one arm and thrust her up and away from him.
Gods, he’s strong. If he really loses his temper …
Amarune twisted, slapped at him, and tried to jerk free all at once—and Delcastle’s hand slid from a tight grip on her shoulder to a good hard grip on her left breast.
Farruk! That hurt!
“Sorry!” he blurted hastily, letting go. Amarune backhanded him one across the face as hard as she could, then used her other hand to do it again, rocking the chair.
“No,” he groaned as she slammed an elbow into his ribs, “not those sort of questions! H-heed me, lass! You—unhh—you were listening to all we said, my friends and I, when you were dancing for us! Whom did you tell?”
“Tell what?” Amarune snarled into his face. “You think I’m some sort of spy?”
“Yes, but I need to know for who—uh, whom! The nobles behind the murders at the palace?”
“What?” Amarune lost her temper utterly, sheer rage almost choking her. “You think I—”
Words failed her. Shrieking, she clawed Delcastle’s belt dagger out of its sheath and stabbed at him, the blade going wide as his forearms slammed against hers in a desperate parry. Before she could try again he’d clutched her dagger wrist, fingers tightening this time.
Sobbing in pain—he was crushing her wrist, he was crushing it!—she flung all of her trembling weight and strength behind trying to drive it down into his throat, before …
Just as Delcastle kicked out desperately, trying to make the point of the dagger miss the throat it was just about to slice—the door banged open.
The blade missed its mark as the chair lurched sideways, giving Amarune a momentary glimpse of Tress looking horrified, with some of the club bouncers right behind her, before they all rushed forward.
A moment later, Amarune’s head rang from a furious slap. Tress tore the dagger away from her even as that blow landed.
“Are you mad?” the owner of the Dragonriders’ shrieked into Amarune’s ear. “D’you know what will happen to us—to the Dragonriders’—if you kill a noble? Girl, you’re fired—fired! Get out of here at once, or I’ll call the Watch and let this noble set the Black Robes on you!”
“A-a moment,” a battered Arclath groaned hastily from beneath Amarune. “Good Lady Tress, I fear you misunderstand. I paid this, ah, highly professional dancer to do this!”
Sudden silence fell, and the club bouncers stopped trying to haul Amarune off the man under her and hurl her bodily up at the waiting ceiling.
Tress stared at what she could see of Lord Delcastle, then at the panting, obviously furious Amarune atop him.
“Isn’t she a peerless actress?” Arclath managed to croak, waving his free—and bleeding—hand at the dumbfounded, on-the-verge-of-tears Amarune. “Superb, eh?”
Tress returned her stare to him, incredulity warring with disgust across her face. To hide her own similar expression, Amarune dropped her head to stare at the floor, her disheveled tresses falling over her face.
“You … you welcome being beaten and overmastered, Lord?”
“By the right high-spirited lass, yes,” Arclath assured the club owner almost eagerly, his bright smile returning. “My friends and I saw this one yestereve, and I knew she was the one for us; I came asking for her this morn, you’ll recall. Now, please believe me, I did not intend to imperil her position here, and she did not want to trammel the routine of this night’s mask dancing … wherefore we sought to transact the seeing-to of my needs here and now. Please accept my apologies for the misunderstanding and the upset this has caused. The arrangements—and therefore all fault—are entirely mine. I’ll happily pay for any damages; your dancer has been magnificent, far outstripping even my high expectations!”
Tress stared at him for a while longer before turning her gaze to Amarune.
“Is … is this true, Rune?” she asked in obvious disbelief, b
ut seeing the offered road out of this for them all.
Struggling not to cry, bewildered and seeing nothing but traps yawning on all roads she might choose ahead, Amarune managed to lift her chin and say, “Y-yes.”
Tress sighed a long sigh, closing her eyes for a moment, then gave a polite nod to the torn and bleeding noble in the chair.
“Please accept my apologies for the interruption, Lord Delcastle. Pray proceed.”
Without another word she ushered the half-grinning bouncers out, not seeing Amarune open her mouth and raise a hand to protest—only to freeze and stay silent.
When the door had closed again, Amarune glared at the man still beneath her and hissed bitterly, “So now you have a hold over me, just as you sought! What’s this all about, anyhail? What foolish game are you playing?”
“No game,” Arclath murmured, rising from the chair but with gentle courtesy holding out a hand to assist her in standing rather than being dumped on the floor as he did so, as if she were his equal.
When he faced her, however, standing very close to her so that their noses almost touched, his smile was gone.
“You were listening to us while we talked, my friends and I,” he murmured, his voice low and his eyes boring into hers. “Why? Whom did you tell what we said about the council—or will you tell?”
“No one,” Amarune hissed back scornfully. “Who would care?”
He regarded her thoughtfully. “I can call to mind a score of nobles who will be hungry indeed for every detail,” he said slowly. “How much will it cost for your silence?”
“Why do you ask?” she whispered bitterly. “Whatever answer I give, having me killed will be cheaper, won’t it? For a silence you can truly trust in?”
Arclath stared at her expressionlessly, then bent, plucked up his knife from the floor where Tress had flung it down, and handed it to Amarune, hilt first.
“I trust you right now,” he told her quietly, pointing at the dagger and then at his throat, before leaning forward to offer it, undefended. “Completely.”
They stared at each other, Amarune trembling—until she slapped his dagger back into his hand and snarled, “I need a drink.”