The Swordsheath Scroll

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by Dan Parkinson


  “And I have your oath of allegiance?”

  “You have it.” The Hylar nodded. “I welcome you home to your kingdom, Derkin Lawgiver.”

  “I have not accepted a crown,” Derkin snapped. “Only a regency … or, as an ancestor of mine once put it, I’ve agreed to be chief of chiefs.”

  “Why not be king?” Dunbarth gazed at him, puzzled. “All of Thorbardin is ready to bend the knee to you.”

  “I will not be king of a divided nation,” Derkin said. “I will govern, but not rule, until I know that Thorbardin and Kal-Thax are truly united … and know in my own heart that I can rule wisely.”

  “Then be chief of chiefs until you’re sure,” Dunbarth urged. “I can accept that.”

  For the first time in five years, the Great Hall of Audience was packed to capacity when the Council of Thanes assembled there. And for the first time in a century, the great chamber rang with cheers and applause as each order of business was done. Tap Tolec was named to the Council of Thanes, representing Thane Theiwar, and Dunbarth Ironthumb’s title was amended on the scrolls, from representative to chieftain of Thane Hylar.

  Solemnly, then, the ancient scroll embodying the Covenant of the Forge was produced and read aloud. Following the reading, a single amendment was proposed by Jeron Redleather. The amendment was to delete the passage allowing government by decree only in times of emergency. Such an amendment was necessary to allow for appointment of a regent … or for the coronation of a king.

  The old treaty was amended by unanimous vote, and Derkin Lawgiver was appointed Regent of Thorbardin to the cheers of tens of thousands of dwarves. As the applause echoed through the great chamber, Helta Graywood entered and walked down the ramp toward the dais, followed by several brilliantly cloaked dwarves carrying an ornate chair. It had once been the chair of state of a human prince, Lord Sakar Kane of Klanath.

  Helta directed the dwarves as they set the chair in the center of the dais. Then she turned, suddenly embarrassed by the tens of thousands of pairs of eyes watching her every move.

  “It’s … ah, this is Derkin’s chair,” she explained. “He has grown fond of it, so I had it brought along.”

  Derkin chuckled in surprise, and some of the chieftains smiled. In the gathered throng, a moment of puzzled silence passed, and Helta glared around at the huge crowd. Then, placing her fists on her hips, as her husband so often did, she snapped, “Well, a regent can’t do everything standing up, you know!”

  The regency of Derkin Lawgiver in Thorbardin lasted for thirty-six years. During that time the war of conquest waged by the Daltigothian Empire against the elves and humans of eastern Ergoth finally dragged to a close, with no real victors. The war never again spilled into the dwarven lands, but dwarves were involved in it. Because of the scheming of a Theiwar named Than-Kar, Thorbardin had been demeaned, and the Hylar Chieftain Dunbarth Ironthumb returned to the field several times with Hylar warriors to assist the elves in their battles.

  By the time the war finally ended, the western elves were well along on the development of a new elven culture—in truth a new nation—in the land of Qualinesti. Thousands of them also had joined with dwarves in the continued building of a city in Tharkas Pass—Pax Tharkas.

  In the thirty-first year of his regency, Derkin Lawgiver left Thorbardin for a time to travel to Pax Tharkas. There he met with the elf leader Kith-Kanan, to formally adopt a permanent treaty between the dwarves and the elves. Joining in the solemn ceremony were the two chief magistrates of Pax Tharkas, the elf Selanas Prill and the dwarf Talon Oakbeard.

  The treaty formalized the alliance between dwarves and elves, and dedicated Pax Tharkas as a living monument to that alliance—and to all those who had died in the cause of it.

  The treaty was called the Swordsheath Scroll.

  It was the last time Derkin Lawgiver would ever leave. Five years later, he became the first king of Thorbardin—a Thorbardin that was no longer confined to subterranean caverns sealed from the world by impregnable gates, but was now a mighty nation, spanning the mountain lands of old Kal-Thax, from Pax Tharkas to the Thunder Peaks, from Sky’s End to the Anviltops—a nation full of dwarven places like Stoneforge and Barter, Herdlinger and Firestone, Redbluff and Split Crag—a kingdom where those who chose the open sky lived as Neidar and those who preferred the comfort of stone lived as Holgar, with the great fortress of Thorbardin as capital of it all.

  Derkin the Lawgiver reigned as king in Thorbardin for one hundred and twenty-three years. He was succeeded by his grandson, Damon Stonetooth, who decreed that he and all future kings would be known both by their own names and by a “throne” name, honoring the first of the dwarven kings.

  The name was Derkin.

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Author Dan Parkinson, an integral member of the DRAGONLANCE® team, has built a steady readership among TSR fans, while attracting new readers through his books for other publishers. A resident of Lake Jackson, Texas, Dan is a prolific author whose work ranges across several genres. For TSR he has written Starsong, the DRAGONLANCE novel The Gates of Thorbardin, and the first two books in the popular Dwarven Nations Trilogy.

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