Lightnings blazed out from her, and mercenaries cried out, reeling in the shadows and dropping their weapons.
“You heard the Bard of Shadowdale,” Sharantyr cried, standing up in her saddle. “Turn back to Essembra, in peace!”
As they stared at her, the ghostly head of Syluné drifted forward, its pale glow reflected back from swords and armor all around. She added briskly, “Battledale holds manors in plenty left empty by the Zhents. I’m sure their rightful owners would be happy to sell them to you. Those who are adamant in their determination to press on will, before this day is out, find themselves sharing a grave with me.”
That was all the Sembian band needed to see and hear. They wheeled their mounts in hasty terror and fled from the ghostly female head that flew toward them trailing long, silvery hair. They galloped south as fast as they could, leaving their wagons behind.
Belkram laughed aloud. “That was the easiest fight I’ve ever been in!”
Syluné turned. “Be not so quick to laugh; your work is just beginning.”
“It is?”
“These wagons must be taken up the Stone, turned around there, and driven back to their owners, wherever they may flee to. I’ll fly ahead to Essembra to get us enough drovers.”
“Flying around like that? They’ll flee just like all these hardened warriors here did!” Itharr protested.
“Not the Harpers,” Syluné replied without turning. “The wagons, gentlesirs.” She flew away down the road like an arrow shot from a bow.
Belkram sighed. “Why do we always get the sweat work, eh?”
“You’re Harpers,” Sharantyr reminded him sweetly. “Such unpleasantness provides meaning and purpose in your lives.” Itharr shot her a grin, and she added, “You should be grateful: many folk never find meaning or purpose in their existence.”
“Huh,” Belkram grunted, climbing up onto the boards of the foremost wagon. “Why can’t they all come and do this for us, then?”
14
High Evenfeast
at Low Rythryn
The falcon winged frantically southward, trailing feathers in reckless haste as no real falcon would dare do—and growing new ones as no real falcon could hope to do.
Storm followed in its wake. Her fly spell thrust her steadily on through the air. She kept low above the trees so she might survive her tumble to the ground when the magic failed or went wild, and to make sure the falcon could not veer off or descend suddenly without her seeing just where it went.
The falcon’s flight was southeast over the forest until Essembra lay on their right. Once past the town, it heeled westward, passing south across the road to Sembia and the outlying farms of Battledale, heading for the distant silver ribbon of the fast-flowing Ashaba, where it left the Pool of Yeven. Long before it got there, the falcon turned north again, flew a little way, and dived suddenly to earth.
Storm hurriedly swerved behind a tree to avoid being seen; as she’d expected, the shapeshifter halted its descent to skim along the stone walls of an estate, and peered into the trees all around as it went.
The falcon completed its circuit of the walls. Apparently satisfied he was alone, the Malaugrym sank down beyond the wall.
Storm hastily flew nearer, working her way through the trees; she wanted to be inside the walls too, when her spell ran out. Even if this turned out to be a garden of deadly Malaugrym.
Beyond the wall was a cluster of towers, one of the many walled villas that rich Sembians and wizards had built for themselves. They were enclosed for safety against the monsters and brigands that roamed these lush wilderlands. The road past the gate would be one of the long, winding lanes that fed into Rauthauvyr’s Road just north of Blackfeather Bridge.
She dare not tarry or work her way along the wall to avoid detection; her spell would run out in moments. Darting over the wall, Storm found herself over deserted gardens and a small ornamental pond. She turned sharply to keep herself over dry land, and dived hastily down, righting herself to land feet first. It was good she did. She was well above the turf when her magic gave out, and she fell precipitously to earth.
“Once more to embrace the soft lips and bruising talons of adventure, friends,” she murmured to herself, quoting a ballad she had written hundreds of summers ago. She got up and dusted herself off.
The placid waters of a small garden pool showed her a rather fierce-looking lady in leathers, so she stripped off her clothes and sword, bundled them up together, and said a soft word over them.
They vanished obediently—at least that small magic had worked right; now for the next one. She checked that she still had the dagger in its sheath under her hair, at the back of her gorget band. These days, a lady never knew when she’d need a good sharp knife. The gorget itself, stuffed with coins, bore a chased design that was elegant enough to accompany the attire she planned. To it, then …
Standing nude above the pool, she worked a magic she’d not used in quite this way for years, creating an ornate off-the-shoulder gown that would pass muster in the most exclusive circles in Sembia, and elegant high sandals to go with it. Her silver hair would do as she bid it, so she gave herself a sleek fall of tresses over one shoulder, and an elaborate braid over her brow. ‘Twould do, indeed.
Taking a last look around to mark the place she’d left her gear, Storm strolled languidly across the gardens, eyes missing little despite her relaxed manner. She spotted the spatters of fresh blood beside a stone bench in a little bower, about where the falcon had landed, and wondered which inhabitant of the household was now a broken, unrecognizable boneless thing hastily buried nearby.
The Malaugrym awaited her somewhere inside these walls, all right. Storm strolled ahead as if no such peril was near, enjoying the gardens. A winding path girt with fragrant flowers took her to two small bridges that hopped from islet to islet across the large pond, to a terrace where stone urns stood in floral ranks along low, scalloped stone walls. Within those walls she could see folk moving—liveried servants.
Calmly she strolled up the path, ascending a broad stair to where a grizzled, monocled man of graying years and mustache was enjoying a row of flagons, each containing a different wine. He stared at her in amazement for only a moment before springing to his feet and saying, “Great lady, be welcome in Low Rythryn Towers!”
He bowed, offered her his hand, and indicated a vacant chair beside his own. “I am Lord Thael Sembergelt, once a battle commander of Sembia, but now lord only of this house. I am delighted the gods have brought me so noble and—dare I say?—beauteous a guest! Pray, make known to me your name.”
“I am Storm Silverhand, called by many the Bard of Shadowdale,” Storm replied with grave charm, “and I must tender my apologies for arriving uninvited. My spell travels brought me here unintentionally.”
“No apologies are needed, not at all! In truth, you filled me with delight, strolling up through the gardens like that as if you were some hidden nymph come to greet me! It seemed this house were showing me one of its treasures!”
“Gallantly said, my lord,” Storm said with a twinkle in her eyes. “I fear I’ve upset the calm tenor of your days. You must have few guests.”
“We see few welcome guests in these troubled times,” the old lord agreed gravely, offering her an empty goblet and silently beckoning a servant over. “But my house is honored by your presence. I heard you sing once in a tavern in Selgaunt, when you danced on a table for a room of weary soldiers. I’ll not forget that.”
Storm inclined her head in thanks. The servant, bearing a silver platter of decanters, glided to a stop between them.
“Pray take wine, Lady Storm,” the old lord said earnestly, leaning forward in his chair. “I dearly hope you can stay for evenfeast, or even grace us for a few days. My house is yours.”
“I would be delighted to dine with you tonight, my lord,” Storm replied, watching her host trying to keep his eyes away from where her plunging gown was designed to make him look, “and see the morning
sun rise with you. But as for longer, I cannot say.”
“I quite understand,” Lord Thael rumbled. He questioningly indicated the array of decanters.
“The glowfire, I think,” Storm said, and enjoyed watching the gnarled old hands unstop and deftly pour.
He placed the goblet gently before her. “You are my fourth guest this even! There seems to be much strife on the roads in Battledale just now; we seldom see so many travelers this far off the road. You’ll meet them at evenfeast.”
“We?” Storm asked, raising her glass in salute. “You have a family, Lord Thael?”
“Only a nephew, Oburglan,” Lord Thael said gruffly. “You’ll meet him, too.”
Guessing that the lord’s nephew was no family prize, Storm savored the delicate bouquet of the glowfire for a moment, exchanged smiles with her host over the rim of the glass, and sipped. Yes. She kept her face pleasant and drank the wine with apparent relish, trying to ignore the burning sting of the poison as it slid down her throat.…
She’d chosen the drink herself. Thael had poured it, a servant had brought it … ah, gods above, the Malaugrym could be anyone!
As dusk came, Storm was still grimly trying to decide which of the folk of the manor was the shapeshifter. The servants came to call them in to evenfeast in the candlelit great hall of Low Rythryn Towers.
The waiting had been pleasant. Lord Thael, obviously enchanted with her, had treated Storm with all the courtesy he knew, discussed politics with a keen worldly interest, laughed appreciatively at her mimicry of dale lords, and gave a shrewd summation of the directionless self-interest that governed Sembia.
Now he escorted her to the best seat at the board, at his right hand. A lady of rank, Storm bowed as an equal to him, and endured a daggerlike glare from a thin and sour young man. Probably Oburglan, furious at being displaced at table in front of guests.
“Well met, gracious lady,” said Thael’s expressionless seneschal, Burldon Hawklan. “Even in this isolated hall, we have heard of the valiant deeds of the Bard of Shadowdale, and Those Who Harp at her command.”
Storm smiled back at him. “Minstrels tend to over-flower what they sing of,” she responded gently, “but I thank you for your kind words.” Hawklan bowed stiffly and took his place at the far end of the table; to Storm’s eyes, he was every inch a professional soldier—one who did not consider himself retired.
The other guests were less impressive. One was a smooth-faced, saturnine trader in spices and pelts from Ordulin by the name of Loth Shentle; the second was a young and handsome priest of Tymora from Selgaunt, Dathtor Vaeldeir, who professed to be very excited at the chaos now reigning over the Realms; and the last was a grim and dangerous-looking man, Thorlor Drynn, introduced to her as a trade envoy of Hillsfar.
The dinner was excellent, consisting of roasts of just about everything that could be roasted, smothered in a variety of gravies and sauces, with spiced greens served as garnishes. And wine, of course … much wine.
There was poison in her goblet again. Storm took a certain dark amusement in the fact that she could go on drinking it all night without ill effects because of what Mystra had made her into. She let her eyes wander up and down the table, wondering which of the eyes meeting hers belonged to a shapeshifter—and how soon it would be ere the Malaugrym grew restive and attacked.
The conversation began with talk of trade difficulties in these lawless times, and came around to unreliable magic and priests rendered helpless or mad and the Fall of the Gods. At that point Thael declared he’d heard enough about gods and their doings, and diverted talk to the future of trade in the Moonsea lands and the Dales, and the difficulties Zhentil Keep’s aggressive nature was causing to all traders.
The grim envoy of Hillsfar spoke up. “For my part, my lord, we in Hillsfar are resolved to meet force with force. For too long the Zhents have taken advantage of the absence of strong nearby opposition to force their will on other folk and territories not their own—in fact, to behave little better than the brigands we universally detest.
“I do not speak of the times they raise armies and march on one of us—which, by the way, seems to happen at least once a spring, ruining harvests—but of their open attempts to control how and where ore is brought out of Glister, and anything at all out of Daggerdale. They try to dictate where and when ships may sail the Moonsea, on what terms we must all trade in the region … and even if we may trade at all with their rivals Cormyr and Mulmaster.”
“Bullies will always be with us, sir—if not one, then another,” Loth Shentle said smoothly. “The trick is to anticipate their moves and take trade advantage of the side effects; a shortage of food here, rising prices of scarce items there …”
“As a fur dealer, you profit well out of Zhentil Keep’s aggression, aye,” Thorlor Drynn said coldly. “It has kept the prices of furs falsely high these ten years or more.”
“I deal with the world as it is,” Loth Shentle replied easily, “not as others might wish it to be.”
“Yes, yes,” the priest of Tymora said excitedly. “Deal with what the gods hurl your way, taking chances whenever you strive for something that is not the most obvious or easy!”
“But surely, my lords,” Storm said quietly, “one should not accept the world as it is. Deal with it, yes—but strive always in one’s dealings to get something in return, to make the world give a little … to nudge it in the direction of one’s dreams.”
Loth Shentle snorted. “I dream of vaults full of coins, Lady Storm,” he said wryly. “Have you any that you can yield unto me?”
“Dreams are just that: dreams. Warriors must deal with the real world, with all its harsh brutalities and cold truths,” the seneschal said.
Storm turned to look down the table. “I do not see the gulf between dream and reality, Sir Hawklan. We must fight Zhents because they actively pursue their dreams. In Shadowdale, we have fought them army to army, not merely poison in flagons”—she looked up and down the table, but saw no telling expression in the faces turned to her—“and daggers in the dark. Seven open battles these past ten summers. We should all pay very great attention to dreams.”
Thorlor leaned forward. “Well said, Lady. I’d say the lords of Zhentil Keep have done quite well in their dreaming. Voonlar is already their vassal town, the Citadel of the Raven, which was to belong to us all, is firmly in their grasp, and Teshwave and Yûlash lie in ruins because of them … to say nothing of the harm done to the once-proud cities of the Moonsea North, Daggerdale, the Border Forest, and west along the trade route to far Waterdeep.”
“Aye,” their host said gruffly, setting down his heavy flagon. “There’s a dream: the trade route from here across half Faerûn to the Sword Coast. An awesome undertaking, however base the motives and bloody the doing. What say you, Nephew? You once told me you wanted to see Waterdeep.”
“I wonder at what tolls I’ll have to pay,” Oburglan said sullenly, “if I wait for the Black Gauntlet to finish this trade route. I heard there was a Zhent takeover in Loudwater—and some dealings in Saerloon, too … something about a lady sorceress.” He looked across the table. “What do you know of this, Lady Storm—as a sorceress yourself?”
Thael turned a look of reproof on his nephew, brows bristling, but Storm smiled across the table at the resentful young man. “I’m hardly a sorceress, Oburglan, though I can cast a spell or two. I leave that to my more capable sisters. As to what befell in Saerloon, the sorceress who seduced those merchants and turned them to stone statues was an agent of Zhentil Keep. Over the years I’ve never found such tactics to have lasting success.”
Someone chuckled, well down the table, and Oburglan’s eyes were murderous as he raised his flagon to cover his mouth.
“Stone statues do furnish a garden, though—as Burgusk of Selgaunt found,” Loth Shentle joked.
“Not this garden,” Lord Thael rumbled. “I’d be too afraid of the spell wearing off and discovering I’ve got some mad Netherese sorceress at the
far end of my pond—and more: that she’s furious and happens to have a spell or two that can level mountains! What would I say to her, eh?”
“Care to dance, my lady?” Dathtor suggested. There were roars of mirth.
“How about: my name is … and my ransom is forty thousand pieces of gold?” Loth Shentle suggested.
“No, rather: my name is … and my next of kin are …” Thorlor put in.
Lord Thael looked at the only woman at his table, and his chuckles died away. “I forget that you have freed folk from stone, Lady Storm. What did you say to them?”
Storm looked into her glass, and answered, “I usually told them where they were, that I meant no harm, and what year it was. They always wanted to visit the privy after that.”
That innocent and truthful observation brought a general shout of laughter.
When it started to die Storm added, a twinkle in her eyes, “But if I met the Netherese lady you mention, I’d probably say: I’ve had mornings like you’re having!”
Everyone hooted, even Oburglan. Storm mused briefly to herself about the effects of too much wine on folk—it made them laugh, or cry, or rage all too easily. She plunged the table into awed silence by adding, “The only memorable Netherese mage I did meet was a man, and his body had withered away to almost nothing … so he tried to take mine.”
“Gods,” Hawklan mumbled after a very long moment had passed. “How did you escape?”
Storm shook her head. “I’m sorry,” she said gently, “but that’s a trade secret I keep as close about as any merchant guards his own. Ask Mystra to tell you—it is hers to reveal.”
Oburglan sputtered. “That’s right!” he protested. “Say something like that, then turn all mysterious!”
“Oburglan!” Thael rapped out. “You speak to a great lady; do so civilly, or leave this board.”
His nephew’s face flamed, and he brought his goblet crashing down. “Right, then—” he began, placing both palms on the table to shove himself upright.
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