by Ed Greenwood
Wincing, Pennae reeled back out of that room leaning on a long poker-and, when she had to, on her sword, too.
Gods, but she was as weak as a bird.
A child’s toy bird, made of glued-together feathers…
Rellond Blacksilver staggered stiffly along a back hall of the Palace, clutching his ornamental court sword as if it reassured him.
In truth, it did. For a long time now his mind had been a wallowing, swirling fog, betimes crushed beneath great cataclysms of bright lights and roaring sounds, but now… now bedeviled only by unsettling gnawing feelings… through which he fought to fling to the one thought that had been his for as long as his faltering memory served him.
He was here to kill King Azoun on sight.
“Highknight,” a familiar voice rumbled, as a hand the size of a shovel shook her. “Lady Highknight.”
Her jaw and neck ached horribly, and her head rang like a temple bell. That stlarning, grauling brute Falconhand! How dare he?
This was what came of Azoun’s willful generosity. Though she’d benefited from it greatly-from that first tryst across his saddle to the training he’d made sure she got to the rank she now held-she’d warned him of it.
When he aided the disloyal, dangerous, and unsuitable, it was a weakness that could bring down the Dragon Throne.
Some backcountry thickneck of a ranger saves his life in a sword-brawl, and he gives the lad a charter, and a free hand at gathering the dregs of the countryside to go rampaging around with drawn swords, lording it over the law-abiding! Well, she’d put paid to that soon enough. Rangers tracked poorly when beheaded.
“Highknight?” the Doorwarden rumbled again, his shaking making her jaw shriek its pain through her skull. It must be broken.
She put a hand up to it to keep her talking from doing worse damage-could her jaw fall off, if she opened it too wide? — and managed to mumble, “My thanks, Baerem. Let me lie still for a bit. I must rise in my own way.”
“Lady Tarlgrael, are you hurt?”
“No,” she snapped, “I’m… all right, yes, I’m hurt.”
It galled her to waste a precious healing potion on a broken jaw, but gods above, this hurt! Not that she’d felt pain all that often, since her training had ended. She was too good with a blade for that.
She fumbled at her belt, found the vial she’d need, teased it forth, and almost spewed her guts with agony when she momentarily forgot her injury enough to try to do as she always did: pull the cork with her teeth.
Fighting down nausea in a red mist of pain that had her curled up and mewing like a cat, and hulking Baerem rumbling anxiously over her, she managed to twist the cork off with her fingers and let cool, soothing relief trickle down her throat.
Almost immediately she felt better, good enough to sit up-gaining an approving roar from Baerem, bless him-and rekindle her anger.
She was going to have that ranger’s neck-right now, not even taking the time to comfort Baerem or work with him at the winch to raise the dungeon door again.
The great iron barrier had split up the intruders but, so far as she could tell, crushed none of them, and its raising could wait until she’d downed Florin Falconhand and some or all of his Knights of Myth Drannor. She’d been told once which king had caused the barrier to be built, to wall off the lone way down into the Palace dungeons and prevent prison breaks, but there were no prisoners to keep safely penned up anymore.
There were just intruders stalking around the cellars of the Palace who should be prisoners, forthwith-or corpses.
Smiling, utterly unharmed now, the Lady Tarlgrael opened her eyes and held out her arms to Baerem, who reached down with that gentle deftness that still surprised her, to cradle her shoulders and ask anxiously, “Are you well again, Highknight?”
“I am, Dread Doorwarden of the Palace of the Dragon,” she told him formally, eyes flashing fire as she stood up, stretched like a cat in her dark leathers, and added, “And I will be even better when I’ve slain the man who escaped us both. Florin Falconhand must die.”
War wizards were apt to be a snappish, sour lot, but this one was worse than most. The young wenches generally were; they all seemed to think they had to prove their cods larger than any man’s.
First Sword Brelketh Velkrorn was interrupted in this less than happy thinking when the very war wizard he was measuring turned and glared back over her shoulder at him, fair tresses swirling. “Dragons,” she snapped, beckoning imperiously. “To me!”
The trio of Purple Dragons kept their faces carefully impassive as they trotted forward, all of them privately wondering just what, here in the back halls of the Palace, could be so stlarned exciting that their presence was so urgently required-and why War Wizard Tarlauma Hallowhar felt the need order them around so dramatically.
“That man! He imperils the Crown! Look you, how he clutches his sword, his strange demeanor? Take him! I want him alive, mind!”
The veteran Purple Dragons looked along the line of her lancelike pointing arm at a lone man stumbling slowly toward them, down an otherwise deserted passage.
“Yon’s Rellond the Roughshod!” Telsword Briarhult told her. “A peril to every lass who catches his eye, yes, but not to the king or Vangey-and I think even he has wits enough not to lay lecherous hands upon Queen Filfaeril!”
He shook his head, the three Dragons turning away as one, but Hallowhar put a firm hand on his shoulder and hissed, “ Look! Look now!”
The Dragons sighed, turned, and beheld a courtier rushing up behind Blacksilver, calling softly, “Rellond! Rellond, there’s a room I wanted you to see, remember? And I promised to polish your sword. Give it here and I’ll get started on it, the moment we’re settled.”
Bravran Merendil’s voice trembled. He hoped that’s how a courtier would talk, because that war wizard and no fewer than three Purple Dragons were standing farther along the passage staring right at him. Somehow, he had to get Blacksilver-gods, the man must be little better than the shuffling undead by now, with the mindworms gnawing away but no one using them to compel him-turned around and locked in a storeroom somewhere until the revel was done. Thank the gods he hadn’t gotten around to poisoning Blacksilver’s sword yet.
“ You, ” Blacksilver grunted, recalling Merendil befriending him and buying him drinks in a tavern. Drinks he was now certain-as much as this haze drifting through his head would let him be certain about anything-had been drugged. He drew his sword to give this Merendil pup what he deserved.
Bravran sprang back, plucking forth a dagger from within his jacket, and called, “Help!”
The three Purple Dragons exchanged weary looks and strode forward, War Wizard Hallowhar right behind them. Blacksilver stalked after the courtier, who was backing away, his face frightened and pale.
“Blacksilver!” Telsword Briarhult barked. “Sheathe steel, or face arrest!”
Rellond Blacksilver lurched around to face the Dragons, growling in anger.
“ Enough, Blacksilver,” the young mage said crisply, the self-important arrogance in her tone making the Dragons wince-and Rellond Blacksilver charge, sword sweeping up to hack and hew.
“Still no Florin,” Jhessail said, clawing open yet another door. Darkness behind it; the silent dead darkness that meant a room that held no life.
“Not even a pinch of Florin here, either,” Semoor said, letting his door swing shut. “Have you found any, Doust? Even a little piece?”
“ Enough sour jesting, Wolftooth,” Islif growled, from ahead. She was tirelessly plucking open doors and peering at the rooms beyond, while muttering more and more angrily about how much time was passing.
Doust considered a thought, and then shook his head and kept silent, judging it an inauspicious moment to remind Islif that each passing breath brought every mortal a breath nearer their last, and the inevitable waiting grave.
With the unspoken ease of long experience, the three Dragons drew their swords and spread out, to face the enraged noble with a wal
l of parrying war-steel. They didn’t expect War Wizard Hallowhar, having goaded Blacksilver into this, to do anything useful about dealing with him-wherefore they weren’t disappointed.
As the fray of furiously clashing steel began, Tarlauma Hallowhar stood staring thoughtfully past it at the courtier, who had backed well away and was now sheathing his dagger inside his jacket, looking up at her rather guiltily as he did so.
Tarlauma frowned. Many courtiers openly bore small belt-knives, and were allowed to do so, but a dagger like that? Carried in concealment?
Shaking her head, she spread her hands and carefully started to cast a spell on the distant man, who had started to turn away. When he saw what she was doing, his eyes blazed-and then he launched himself down the passage at her, running hard.
Telsword Briarhult calmly stepped back and away from his parrying of Blacksilver, to stand between the war wizard and this onrushing madwits of a courtier, his sword raised and ready.
War Wizard Hallowhar finished her spell-a mindwalk, aimed at this courtier with the knife-and stared into the man’s eyes to begin her plunge into his mind.
He seemed wild with terror, almost frothing as he sprinted down the passage, right at Briarhult’s waiting blade. At the last moment he plucked and threw something else from within his jacket-a little cloth finger-bag, thongs dancing wide open the way he’d just pulled them-right into the Purple Dragon’s face.
It burst on the bridge of Briarhult’s nose, flooding the air with a cloud of black dust that had the familiar acrid smell of darkrun pepper.
Briarhult slashed blindly at empty air. The courtier flung himself aside, shoulders bouncing hard off the passage wall, and then stepped forward in the lee of the swinging sword and slashed at Briarhult’s face, just catching his cheek.
Telsword Chorn Briarhult slumped bonelessly to the floor in an instant.
War Wizard Hallowhar gaped in astonishment at what she had just started to perceive of Bravran Merendil’s racing thoughts: treason, on the part of this heir of an exiled noble house, with his mother smiling behind him…
That was as far as she got ere Merendil’s knife slid hilt-deep between her ribs, and Faerun whirled away forever.
Lady Tarlgrael idly sliced empty air with her sword as she stalked along yet another passage. She liked the heft and feel of favorite war-steel in her hand, and she was looking forward to using it. Soon.
Sound traveled oddly in these passages, but over the years she’d learned where some of the echoes carried. She slowed at one such place-and froze to listen intently when she heard faint murmurings, and a muffled bang. Then another.
Doors closing, and voices. Down here where there could quite likely be courtiers and servants conferring or stowing things, or even dragging forth extra chairs and tables-but not without someone contacting the duty guardian on this level. Her.
She stalked forward, knowing those sounds had to be coming from around that corner, up ahead.
“Lady Highknight,” she murmured to herself, starting to smile, “may you enjoy good hunting.”
War Wizard Hallowhar crumpled to the floor like a discarded cloak, and the courtier who’d felled her turned in frantic haste and fled-less than an armlength beyond the Purple Dragon blade thrust out to bar his way.
“Kaerlyn, get him! ” the ranking Dragon snapped, sweating under Rellond Blacksilver’s swift and deft bladework. The rake had seemed but half alive when stumbling along, moments ago, but he seemed like Toril’s greatest swordsman now! Gods preserve!
Frantically First Sword Brelketh Velkrorn caught Blacksilver’s blade on the quillons of his own, the length of a finger away from its plunging into his face, and fought to hold it back. Blacksilver laughed coldly and then stepped back-and deftly drove his sword into an exposed-for-an-instant gap in the armor of the telsword trying to get past him and chase down the courtier.
Telsword Arnden Kaerlyn groaned, twisted in a vain attempt to parry as Blacksilver’s blade pulled back, dark and wet with his own blood-and then went down with a startled squeal as the noble feinted at his face but then thrust in again at the same spot, far deeper.
Leaving First Sword Velkrorn staring over Blacksilver’s shoulder at the distant figure of the courtier turning a corner, and vanishing.
“Damn you!” Velkrorn roared-as the noble’s blade came back at him again, whirling and darting in a web of bright thrustings that had him parrying frantically. He threw himself to one side of the passage to force Blacksilver to turn, hoping to drive him into a stumble-and the moment the noble turned to engage him, he hurled himself back again.
The third time, it worked. Blacksilver swayed, waved his free arm wildly to try to keep his balance-and Velkrorn caught the noble’s blade on his own, forced it to one side, got one boot around behind Blacksilver’s leg, and shoved hard.
Well and truly tripped, Rellond Blacksilver went over backward, arms waving helplessly, and crashed to the floor. Velkrorn jumped on him, slamming both knees down hard, one on the noble’s sword arm and the other in his stomach.
Winded, Blacksilver twisted in agony, straining for breath, his sword clattering beside him. Velkrorn punched him in the face and then in the jaw-twice-thrice, slamming the noble’s head repeatedly against the passage floor until it finally lolled loosely, and he was sure Blacksilver was truly senseless.
The courtier was long gone. Disgustedly Velkrorn examined Telsword Kaerlyn. Also senseless and bleeding heavily-badly wounded but still alive. For now.
Briarhult, however…
“Dead,” Velkrorn muttered grimly to himself. “From a scratch that shouldn’t have even slowed him.” The telsword’s lips were bluish.
He turned to the war wizard. Stone dead. Her eyes were staring at nothing, her skin glistened with a sheen of sweat, and her lips were very blue.
First Sword Brelketh Velkrorn rose, trying to think of a suitable curse. Snatching up Blacksilver’s sword, he hurried off to find the nearest alarm gong.
Chapter 24
IN THE NAME OF THE KING
There have been good kings, and careless kings, sots and madwits and tyrannical bad kings, yet all their villainies pale against the sheer number of injustices and follies done by others in the name of the king.
Mallowthear Stelthistle, Idle Notions of a Sage published in the Year of the Mace
"Hear that?” Islif snapped, inclining her head toward a message-pipe. A faint thunder-the clamor of hundreds of excitedly chattering folk-was spilling from it. “The revel’s beginning, or soon will be. We’re running out of time.”
“Before you ask,” Jhessail said, “I haven’t a spell to make us all fit in yon pipe and soar up it. If we’re ever going to get out of the stlarned cellars, ’tis stairs we’ll be using.”
“Those stairs are still missing,” Semoor said. “And the same paucity of relevantly helpful magic afflicts Doust and myself. So it’s going to be the old way.” He lifted one boot and waggled it, in case any of his fellow Knights had forgotten what “the old way” was.
By their weary expressions, none of them had. “We could open more doors,” Doust said, “if Pennae-”
“ Yes, holynose,” Islif replied, a little testily. “And we could save the realm if the king and queen and Vangerdahast all came strolling up to us right now. But they won’t. Waste not my time with ‘ifs.’ ”
“That,” a sharp and cold woman’s voice said out of the darkness, “sounds like a herald’s cue. I am none of the three you seek, but I know who you are: intruders. Throw down your weapons, in the name of the king!”
The woman striding down the passage toward them might have been a larger, more muscular version of Pennae. Her leathers and boots were glossy black, and her faced looked as sharp and forbidding as the sword gleaming in her hand.
Yet she was sleek, and moved like a tavern dancer. Set against to her grace and curves, Islif Lurelake looked like a man. A red-faced, work-stained farmer, with her smudged face and tangled hair.
“You invo
ke the king’s name too?” Islif shook her head, taking a step nearer the approaching woman. “Why don’t you throw yours down, at the same time, and we’ll talk? I’m seeking the king, as it happens, and the queen too. Not to mention Royal Magician Vangerdahast and two fellow Knights of ours, who got separated from us down here by some sort of falling iron barrier-”
The woman in leathers lifted her voice to override Islif’s. “I believe I heard myself give you a clear command, brigands!”
“Say not ‘brigands,’ but ‘Crown-chartered adventurers and Knights of the Realm,’ ” Islif corrected her sharply. “And I do believe I heard myself offer you a suggestion.”
They stared bleakly at each other in silence for a moment before Islif added calmly, “As far as I’m concerned-as you haven’t bothered to identify yourself-your authority doesn’t apply to us. I see a woman in leathers, alone, running around down here in the dark with a drawn sword in her hand; obviously a thief or hired slayer. So I believe I’ll now command your surrender, in the name of King Azoun of Cormyr, fourth of that name.”
“And Queen Filfaeril, our personal patron,” Jhessail added, stepping to one side so as to cast spells freely.
“And have you proof of this patronage?” The woman sneered, putting a hand on her hip, among all the sheathed daggers and pouches there.
“Have you a name at all, to be asking us such things?” Semoor Wolftooth asked sharply. “We’ve met with Purple Dragons high and low-and war wizards, likewise-and seldom encountered such lofty arrogance. Being highnosed with strangers is my failing. You’re not an Obarskyr… so who are you?”
“Rarambra Tarlgrael, Highknight of Cormyr,” the woman with the sword snapped, her eyes flashing fire. “Personally sworn to Azoun; a friend and more to me, not just my king.”
“Behold me unsurprised,” Semoor murmured. “Is there a woman south of, say, Jester’s Green that Az-”
“Speak no treason!” Rarambra snarled at him. “And I say again, in Azoun’s name, lay down your arms, Knights-if you are Knights-or I’ll proclaim you traitors and treat you accordingly.”