After a moment, Yarbro drew his sword and laid it across his lap. “We do nothing,” he said, sounding pleased with himself. “We’ll simply stay here and wait to see what they do.”
In a short time, the riders had approached to within about a hundred yards. Their dark clothing and coats of arms became clearly visible, and Cyric identified them at once. “Zhentilar,” the thief said flatly. “Probably just a wandering band. I doubt that they’re on any special mission. All that should concern them is staying alive.”
The dalesmen were tense and nervous as the riders approached. If they handled themselves properly, the dalesmen could avoid a conflict with the larger band. However, their frightened expressions and slightly quavering voices would probably give the hunters away no matter what they told the Zhentish troops.
The band of Zhentilar stopped about fifty feet from Yarbro, Mikkel, and Cyric. The leader of the company, a burly, black-haired man, rode forward a few steps. “I am Tyzack, leader of the Company of the Scorpions. These are my men—Ren, Croxton, Eccles, Praxis, and Slater.”
Each of the black-garbed travelers nodded as his name was called. They were all well tanned from days of riding, and their clothes were worn and dirty. After a quick scan of the company, Cyric could not help but notice that one of the “men” in the company, Slater, was actually a woman.
Tyzack crossed his arms, and there was an uneasy silence for a moment.
Cyric leaned toward Yarbro. “You’re supposed to respond,” the thief whispered. “And I shouldn’t be the one out front. It makes it seem as if I am in charge.”
Yarbro led his mount past Cyric. The thief eyed the hilt of the guard’s sword as he passed. Of course, Cyric didn’t dare make a move for the weapon with Mikkel still at his back.
The blond dalesman cleared his throat. “I am Yarbro … a hunter of the Dales. With me is Mikkel, and Cyric.” The nervous pause was far too lengthy to be missed by the Zhentilar.
Tyzack looked around at the barren fields surrounding the two parties and laughed slightly. “You’re a bit out of your element, huntsman. Are you lost? Unable to find your way back home?” A low rumble of laughter ran through the Zhentilar.
“They mock us,” Mikkel hissed in a hoarse whisper.
“Better that than attack us,” Cyric hissed to the fisherman.
The leader of the Zhentilar eyed the dalesmen for a few moments, then looked back to his company. Ren, a wiry, golden-haired young man, nodded, and Tyzack smiled. “Heading to Scardale, are you?”
“That’s correct,” Yarbro said. “And we are in a bit of a hurry, if you don’t mind.”
“Not so fast, dalesman,” Ren called from behind Tyzack. “Tell me, what is it you hunt? You’ve come a long way to track your game.”
Mikkel moved his horse past Cyric. “We only wish to be on our way,” the fisherman snarled. “Will you let us move along?”
Tyzack spread his arms in a flourish. “Was there ever any question?” The Zhentilar signaled his company to move forward. “I didn’t realize you required our permission.”
Cyric cursed softly. It was clear that the Zhentilar had no intention whatsoever of letting them go. I’d better make the best of the confusion, the thief thought to himself.
Yarbro turned to Mikkel and Cyric. “Ride on,” the guardsman said, the words catching in his throat. Yarbro and Mikkel flanked the thief as they rode toward the Zhentish soldiers.
As the companies came close to one another, Eccles, a wild-eyed Zhentilar with flaming red hair, spat on the ground in front of Mikkel’s horse. “I’d spit on you, dalesman, but it would be a waste of water,” the fighter barked as he got close to the red-skinned fisherman.
Mikkel stiffened in his saddle. “Zhentish dog!” he cursed bitterly.
“What was that?” Tyzack screamed, holding up his hand. The Company of the Scorpions halted.
“He called your man a ‘Zhentish dog!’ ” Yarbro said flatly and reached for his sword. The Zhentilar quickly unsheathed their weapons as well.
Cyric considered his position. Yarbro and Mikkel still were on either side of him. The Zhentilar were formed in pairs, with Tyzack and Eccles in the lead, followed by Croxton and Praxis, then Ren and Slater at the rear. There’s nowhere to run to, the hawk-nosed thief realized, and I have no weapons.
Eccles held a broadsword in his right hand and ran his left, with the reins wrapped around his wrist, through his red hair. The fighter trembled with rage. “Well, Tyzack?” the wild-eyed Zhentilar asked breathlessly.
The black-haired leader of the Company of the Scorpions casually looked over his shoulder at his band. “Kill them all,” he said calmly.
Fingers digging into the mane of his horse, Cyric prepared himself.
“You’re dead men!” Eccles screamed as he kicked his horse into motion. “Dead men!”
Cyric had leaped from his mount before the first blow was struck. He landed on the ground near Croxton, a red-bearded man with a flat jawline and thick, bushy eyebrows. The Zhentilar’s lips curled back in a grimace as he saw Cyric fall, but he ignored the thief and rushed at Yarbro. As he raced past the guard, Croxton struck the young man in the face with the back of his mailed hand. Yarbro fell backward off his horse and landed beside Cyric. The thief saw seething hatred in Yarbro’s bloodshot eyes.
Slater, the only woman in the ranks of the six-member band of Zhentilar, produced a crossbow and leveled it at Mikkel’s face. She was no older than Midnight, Cyric realized as he watched her take aim at the fisherman, yet her features were as battle-worn as any man’s he had ever seen. Her eyebrows had been completely shaved off, and her brown hair was cut short. Lips that might have been full and sensual were dry and cracked. She bit one side of her lips as she smiled and prepared to kill the fisherman.
Eccles rode past Mikkel and slashed him across the arm with his sword. Croxton and Praxis flanked Cyric and Yarbro. It was clear that the battle was over.
“Wait!” Ren yelled. “Where’s the fun if we merely slaughter them? Let’s give them a fighting chance … and then we can slaughter them!” The golden-haired Zhentilar turned to the company’s leader. “Well, Tyzack?”
“I have no objections,” the black-haired soldier said, a wolfish grin crawling across his mouth. “What do you propose?”
Ren pointed to Mikkel with his sword. “Get off your mount, dalesman.”
The fisherman did not move. Ren leaned forward on his horse and pointed to Slater, who still had her crossbow trained on the red-skinned dalesman. Ren smiled, revealing a mouthful of rotted teeth. “If I tell her to wound you, it might take days for you to die. I’m about to offer you a chance to live.”
Yarbro wiped the blood from his mouth. “Get off the horse, Mikkel. Let’s hear what they have to say.”
All eyes turned to Mikkel as the fisherman slowly dismounted and sat on the ground.
Taking advantage of the distraction, Cyric slowly started to creep backward, away from the hunters. Then a high-pitched whistle caught his attention. The thief looked up and saw that Slater had aimed her crossbow at his heart. She nodded toward Yarbro, and Cyric moved back to the young guard’s side.
“So, the coward would leave his friends behind,” Ren growled as he turned to Cyric. “I imagine your own skin is the one you value the most.”
“Of course,” Cyric hissed softly.
“By Bane’s black heart!” another of the Zhentilar exclaimed. “A dalesman who speaks the truth!” The speaker was Praxis, a sandy-haired man with steel-gray eyes who towered over Cyric and Yarbro on his horse. “Perhaps we can have some sport from this after all.”
“This is no sport!” Eccles snarled, nervously running his hand through his hair. “Dealing with dalesmen is only sport when it takes place in the arena.” The wild-eyed Zhentish soldier turned to Cyric. “Do you know what we do to ‘honest’ dalesmen like you in the arena?”
As he looked into Eccles’s eyes, noting the tinge of madness that lay behind them, Cyric suddenly thought of
a way out of this dilemma. “I know a good deal about Zhentil Keep,” the thief said, narrowing his eyes. “I was born there.”
Both the dalesmen and Tyzack screamed “What?” at the same time. Cyric smiled a half-grin and nodded slowly. “I am an agent of the Black Network. These dalesmen held me prisoner and would be most happy to see you kill me.”
“Prove it!” Ren snapped. “Tell us something only a Zhentarim agent would know.”
“What I can tell you depends on your level of clearance for covert matters of state,” Cyric said softly. “Not the tone of your voice or the number of threats you hold over me.”
Mikkel cursed softly and shook his head. Yarbro was not so calm about the “revelation.” The blond dalesman rose to a crouch and screamed, “You filthy liar!” Before anyone could act, the young guard launched himself at Cyric. “You were a spy all along!”
Croxton grabbed Yarbro by the hair and lifted him off the ground when the dalesman tried to wrap his hands around Cyric’s throat. “That’s enough from you!” the red-bearded soldier shouted, then tossed Yarbro to the ground.
Cyric withheld a smile. He could have blocked Yarbro’s attack in any of a number of ways, but he chose to wait, hoping the Zhentilar would come to his aid. Although he despised the idea of allying himself with scum from Zhentil Keep, Cyric knew that it was far less objectionable than lying in the middle of Featherdale with his throat slit.
Tyzack dismounted and strolled toward Yarbro. “He was your prisoner?” the black-haired Zhentilar asked, his voice low and threatening.
“Why else would I have been unarmed?” Cyric said from Tyzack’s left. The thief rubbed his neck, trying to make the dalesman’s attack look far more serious than it was.
“Shut up,” Tyzack growled as he turned to Cyric. “No one’s talking to you … not yet, anyway.” He turned back to Yarbro. “So tell me, dalesman, is it true?”
Yarbro hung his head. “I should have killed him the moment I saw him!” the guard hissed.
The thief smiled. “Yes,” Cyric said. “That’s probably true.”
Yarbro started toward Cyric again, but both Croxton and Praxis thrust their swords between the dalesman and the thief. “So why was he your prisoner?” Tyzack asked gruffly as he grabbed Yarbro by the back of the shirt and whirled him around.
Yarbro wrenched free of Tyzack’s grasp and turned to glare at the thief, anger narrowing his eyes. “That scum murdered six royal guardsman in the Twisted Tower of Shadowdale,” the young guard snarled. “Then he helped two convicted murderers, the mage and cleric who killed Elminster the Sage, to escape from their executions.”
Cyric wanted to scream in exultation. The idiot guardsman was making him look better and better to the Zhentilar with each word he spoke!
A murmur ran through the Zhentilar. “So, you’re from Shadowdale,” Croxton hissed. “You should have told us that first. We would have killed you on the spot and not wasted any time on you.”
Tyzack frowned and held up his hand to silence his company. “I’d heard that Elminster was dead. But … where are these other criminals?”
“Yes,” Slater chimed in. “We’d like to congratulate them!”
The muscles in Yarbro’s face twitched, and he glared at the woman with the crossbow. “They escaped,” he mumbled after a moment. “Bane’s assassins, riding nightmares, rescued them.”
“Don’t tell them anything more,” Mikkel said, shaking his bald head. The fisherman’s earring dangled against his cheek.
“So you’re a spy for Lord Bane, is that it?” Tyzack asked as he turned back to Cyric.
“Aye,” the hawk-nosed man said flatly. “I was a thief—”
“Once a thief, always a thief,” Slater brayed, her voice thick and raspy. She chuckled at her own attempt at humor, although no one else seemed especially amused, least of all Cyric. He had run from his past for years on end and finally thought himself free of it. Now it seemed that the only way to save himself was to embrace what he had denied for so long.
Cyric frowned and continued. “I apprenticed to Marek, an important member of Zhentil Keep’s Thieves’ Guild. He trained me as a spy.” The thief looked around at the Zhentilar and saw that they were all listening to his words closely, waiting for him to slip up.
Tyzack raised a bushy black eyebrow. “Marek, eh? I’ve heard the name. An older man?”
“That’s right,” Cyric said.
“What information did he uncover, thief?” Eccles asked as he shifted nervously in his saddle. “What did he tell you?”
Cyric laughed. “It is hardly likely that I would ever reveal important information to someone like you.”
The wild-eyed Zhentish soldier growled, and Tyzack moved close to Cyric. The thief silently calculated how quickly he could take Tyzack’s weapon from him. As he stared at the black-haired Zhentilar’s sword, a glint of sunlight reflected from Slater’s crossbow. Not quick enough, Cyric realized, and he relaxed his stance slightly.
“Telling us now might be the prudent thing to do,” Tyzack said softly. “Especially if you’re concerned with your own survival.”
“No,” Cyric said coldly. He turned to the other Zhentish soldiers and said, “My words are for Lord Bane alone. It was the Black Lord himself who gave me my orders. I will reveal what I have found only to him.”
The Zhentilar mumbled among themselves or silently fidgeted at the thief’s proclamation. At least I raised the stakes at the right time, Cyric thought. Now they’re afraid to kill me.
Tyzack sheathed his sword and walked to Cyric’s side again. “Well,” the black-haired man said, “the Black Lord awaits us in Scardale, in the body of Fzoul Chembryl.” He paused and looked at the rest of the Company of the Scorpions. “You’ll have your chance to see him there, Cyric.”
The thief was both relieved and horrified at the same time. Not only was he being taken to the God of Strife, who would certainly kill him, but the god’s avatar was a man Cyric had severely wounded in the Battle of Shadowdale. The hawk-nosed man’s mouth went dry as he remembered firing an arrow into Fzoul’s chest at the Ashaba Bridge.
Tyzack moved away from Cyric and the huntsmen. The leader of the Zhentilar addressed his second-in-command. “Do you have a suggestion, Croxton? For our guests, I mean?”
“Let them fight one another to the death,” the red-bearded fighter snapped. “Whoever lives, we let go. But he’ll have to kill his friend first.”
“Splendid!” Tyzack roared and returned to his mount. Reaching into a pouch in his saddle, Tyzack withdrew a fresh red apple. The Zhentilar bit into the apple, his teeth piercing it to the core. He swallowed the bite and said, “We’ll include our new friend in the game, too. After all, a properly trained Zhentilar should have no problems dispatching these two sorry dogs from Shadowdale. What say you, Cyric?”
The thief looked at Yarbro and Mikkel, then nodded. If they have to die for me to go on living, even for a little while, that’s fine by me. “Just give me a weapon, and we’ll get this over with quickly,” he hissed. “But remember, Lord Bane will hear about this.”
“Hmmm,” Tyzack said and rubbed his chin. “I wouldn’t want you to get hurt, but …”
Eccles snarled and yelled, “If he dies, then he was lying in the first place! The Black Lord will protect him if he really is a loyal Zhentilar spy!”
The other Zhentilar nodded in agreement. “It’s settled, then,” Tyzack muttered. The black-haired man leaned close to Cyric and whispered, “It seems that this is the only game available to you, friend. I would urge you to play it out.” He paused for a moment, then added, “I won’t let you get hurt. Remember that in your report.”
Cyric looked at the company’s leader and nodded. “Clear these horses away and give us some room.”
Tyzack looked to Croxton. “Disarm the dalesmen.”
As the last of the horses was led away, the Company of the Scorpions formed a circle around the combatants. Mikkel began to back away from Yarbro and Cyric. �
�We can’t do this!” the bald fisherman said, his voice quavering with fear. “Please, Yarbro! Even if we manage to kill the spy, they’ll expect us to turn on each other. Then they’ll kill the survivor. We’ve got to fight them, not each other!”
Slater, still holding her crossbow, began to laugh. “Yes, come and fight us.”
Yarbro’s face was set. “Though you’ll likely kill me for it, I’ll not raise a hand against my comrade,” the guard said as he turned to Cyric. “But I’ll gladly see this one die before I rush to Myrkul’s realm.”
Moving toward Cyric, Yarbro reached out and tried to grab the thief. The dark, lean shadow of a man darted out of the way and moved past the young guard with ease. Yarbro cursed and followed. He reached for Cyric again, but again the thief avoided him.
“Look at them dance!” Croxton cried. The red-bearded fighter reached down and picked up Mikkel’s bow. He smiled a vicious grin, then tossed the bow into the center of the circle. “This should liven things up!”
Mikkel, who was closest to the weapon, quickly grabbed the bow. As Cyric dodged Yarbro yet again, the fisherman swung the bow at the thief’s head. Cyric ducked the fisherman’s attack, then lashed out at Mikkel with his empty, open hand.
There was a sharp crack as the bow snapped in half where Cyric had struck it. Mikkel looked at the weapon in confusion for a second, until the thief snatched the shattered bow from his hand and thrust the jagged wood into the underside of Mikkel’s jaw. The fisherman’s eyes flashed open wide and his knees began to buckle. Cyric reached down as Mikkel fell, grabbed the bow, rolled to his left, then sprang up into a crouch, facing Yarbro. The guard screamed something incoherent in his rage.
“Come on, dalesman!” Cyric urged, brandishing the bloody, broken bow. “I could shove this stake into your throat before you ever saw me move. Give up and I’ll make it easy on you.”
“You killed him!” Yarbro wailed.
“That’s the point, isn’t it?” Cyric said. “And I don’t expect you’ll put up any more of a fight.”
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