Shivering, Basalt wondered when his uncle might emerge. The moon rose, and still there was no sign. The sky above him was velvet black and starry, and the air bitterly cold. The mountains rose so steeply that he could not even look forward to daylight warming this place. The young Fireforge clapped his hands to his arms and trotted in place to keep his blood moving.
Basalt knew he should have left for Hillhome before dark, for he had passed the two-day limit his uncle had set. If I wait just one more hour, he kept telling himself, maybe Flint will return. But Basalt grew more anxious by the minute. Again he looked down the stream at the tunnel mouth. From it he thought he heard the sound of a wagon approaching—it was about time for one to leave for Hillhome—but the noise grew louder and unfamiliar. Puzzled, Basalt cocked his head to listen closely. It was not the steady rolling rhythm of the wheels, but more like clomping feet. Many feet.
A chill of terror ran up his spine as from the mouth of the tunnel marched no less than one hundred mountain dwarves in full regalia. Each wore a steel breastplate, a helmet topped with a bright red plume, and sharp axes and daggers at their waists. After a word from the leader at their head, the mountain dwarves fanned out in all directions. Basalt watched as a detachment of twenty armed dwarves approached, wading through the two-foot stream, right in his direction!
Petrified, the young dwarf threw himself to the ground and curled into a small ball. What should I do? he groaned to himself. Should I run? Should I hide? Is this just a routine patrol, or are they looking for something? Or someone? Maybe they found and tortured Uncle Flint until he told them an accomplice was waiting outside! Even in his frantic state, Basalt knew that that was ridiculous. But with so many dwarves, they were sure to find him. Will they kill me like they did my father? Uncle Flint! Where are you?
Basalt bit at his knuckles, feeling like he was about to jump out of his skin. He couldn’t just sit there and wait for them to stumble on him. He turned and scrambled quickly up the narrow gully at the back of his hiding place. A few rocks tumbled down behind him, but he bit his lip and prayed to Reorx that the mountain dwarves would not notice.
“You there! Halt!”
Basalt heard the frantic call behind him, but he just kicked his legs higher and drove himself faster up the twisting gully. He was a good climber, and he knew he had some chance of outrunning them over the steep, craggy slopes.
A loud whistle blew. “The intruder! Get him!”
Basalt did not stop to look back. In the darkness, he was concentrating on finding hand- and toeholds in the dirt and rock, scarcely aware of anything else but his own labored breathing.
He reached a twist in the gully, but instead of following it, he spotted a ledge just above his head that flattened out for a short distance and led into the protection of some man-sized rocks. If he could just get to those rocks, he might have a chance of losing the patrol.
Drawing on strength he did not ordinarily have, Basalt flung himself up and onto the ledge. He broke into a run across the flat, gritty limestone shelf. Legs pumping wildly, he closed with the boulders and threw himself behind one to catch his breath for just a moment. He peered back down to where he had come from and saw no signs of pursuit. Hope blossomed in his heart, but he could not stop yet.
Keeping low, he zigzagged his way through the boulders and on up the mountain. The rocks gave way to a thick grove of pine trees, and he plunged headlong through them over a carpet of dried needles, uncaring of the low, stiff branches that slapped his face, leaving scratches on his cheeks. He could hear nothing but his own footsteps crunching brown needles and his heart pounding in his ears. The stand of trees ended abruptly, and Basalt ran headlong into a moonlit clearing. He skidded to a halt in the dewy grass, looked around, and then all hope died.
He had burst into a gathering of mountain dwarves.
The armed derro were equally surprised to see a hill dwarf in their midst, but they recovered quickly and surrounded him. Basalt counted eight—a smaller patrol than the one he’d dodged below—but, weaponless himself, he knew even one derro guard was more than he could hope to overpower.
“What have we here?” said one of them, stepping out of the circle toward Basalt. The derro’s corn-yellow hair stuck out at odd angles, and his unnaturally large eyes reminded Basalt of two pieces of cold black onyx. But the mountain dwarf’s skin was what was most disconcerting; its blue paleness looked translucent in moonlight.
“Well?” The derro poked Basalt in the chest with the point of a spear. “You’re obviously a hill dwarf,” he said, taking in Basalt’s freckle-tanned face, thin leather vest, and muddy old boots. “We don’t like finding hill dwarves near Thorbardin. What are you doing way out here?”
Basalt willed his knees to stop shaking as he ransacked his mind for a response. “I, uh, I was hunting!” he finished quickly, latching onto the idea. “I’m near Thorbardin?” He let his eyes go wide with innocence. “I guess I got so carried away that I didn’t notice where I’d wandered off to.”
“What are you hunting at night? You hill dwarves don’t see that well in darkness,” the derro said, eyeing Basalt skeptically. “And no weapons?”
“Raccoon,” the young hill dwarf supplied hastily. “You have to trap ’coon at night, because that’s when they come out of their nests.”
The derro appeared to be considering Basalt’s answer, rocking back on his heels, searching the hill dwarf’s face for deception. All he detected was fear.
The soldier’s eyes narrowed. “I saw your expression when you came through those trees; something was after you.”
Basalt nodded. “I was tracking a raccoon when I saw—” He thought about making up another lie about a bear, but decided to stay close to the truth so he didn’t slip up. “I saw another, bigger patrol of dwarves coming my way, and I panicked and ran.”
“He’s lying, Sergeant Dolbin!” said a voice from behind Basalt.
“Who cares? Let’s just kill the hill scum and move on!” said another.
“Yeah, we’ve got a lot of ground to cover tonight!”
Basalt could sense the circle drawing tighter around him. Suddenly, someone pushed him from behind. The startled hill dwarf stumbled forward only to have the butt of someone’s spear jammed into the pit of his stomach. He doubled over, unable to breathe, and another spear shaft thudded across the back of his neck. Gasping, he fell to the ground.
The ring of mountain dwarves erupted in laughter and taunts. “Look out, farm boy, the raccoons are after you!”
“Oooh, here comes one now!” Basalt saw a shape step forward and then felt his rib cage crack as the mountain dwarf’s heavy boot crashed into him. The force of the blow rolled him over in the damp grass.
“Get him up,” growled another. “I want to knock him down again.” Basalt’s head cleared for a moment as two pairs of hands lifted him to his feet. Someone slapped his face. He looked up just in time to see a hairy fist smash into his nose. Excruciating pain exploded in his skull as he tumbled over backward, landing in a heap on his left shoulder. The grass was cool and moist, but he also felt something warm and thick running across his ravaged face.
Basalt drew up his knees in an effort to stand, when something forced him back to the ground. A muddy, hobnailed boot pressed down on the back of his neck, grinding the side of his face into the earth. The night sky swam with colors before Basalt’s eyes as the dwarves pelted him with kicks and hammered his back and legs with the shafts of their spears. He bit his lip to still his screams, but he could not keep from squirming as the blows only increased. And then, suddenly, they halted.
Basalt felt someone grab him by the armpit and jerk him to his feet. He looked up through the blood streaming down his throbbing face and saw that it was the first derro who had questioned him, Dolbin.
“Now that my men have taught you what happens when you wander where you’re not wanted,” the sergeant said, holding fast to Basalt’s arm, “we’re going to have some real fun.”
&nbs
p; Basalt slumped against Dolbin in defeat; he hoped they would kill him quickly, for he had no strength or will to fight left.
Dolbin forced him to stand, then smiled condescendingly. “You’ll like my game—I’m going to give you a chance to get away!” Basalt perked up slightly, which was the response the derro sought. “Good, now you’re ready to listen.
“The rules are very simple,” he began. “We let you go, and then we try to catch you again. We’ll give you a one minute lead, of course, to make it sporting.”
Basalt’s right eye was swollen shut, but he looked up through his good one. “And if you catch me?” he wheezed, agonizing stabs of pain shooting through him from his bruised ribs.
The sergeant shook his head sadly and clucked his tongue. “You really shouldn’t dwell on ugly thoughts. But I will tell you what happened to a hill dwarf spy who got caught in Thorbardin just two days ago.”
Basalt’s heart lurched, and he felt near to fainting from his wounds. But he forced himself to listen to Dolbin’s next words.
“How shall I say it?” Dolbin tapped his chin in a mock-sympathetic way. “I’ve got it! He’s been relieved of the burden of being a hill dwarf!” His men hooted with laughter.
Flint’s dead. Dolbin could only be speaking of Flint. The news dashed Basalt’s last flickering hope and left him more numb than the pounding he’d just taken. He was distantly aware that Dolbin was addressing him.
“—won’t ruin the game by giving up already, will you? We’d make death doubly painful for a poor sport,” he warned. The derro roughly shoved Basalt through the circle of dwarven soldiers. The hill dwarf fell, struggling again to his feet while the soldiers kicked and jeered at him. Dolbin squeezed Basalt’s right shoulder hard and pointed him to the edge of the clearing opposite where he’d burst in.
“Go!”
Basalt felt his legs moving with a will of their own, and he found himself half-staggering, half-running toward the trees.
“Remember, we’ll be right behind you!” Dolbin yelled, and his men broke into laughter again.
Basalt stumbled past the edge of the clearing and barely avoided tripping on an overgrown log. He rushed forward, heedless of his path, and more than once crashed into a shadowy tree or lost his feet in a tangle of creepers. Desperately he wanted to stop and rest, or stop and listen for sounds of his pursuers, but he knew he could not—if he stopped, he might never move again. He also knew that he would never hear anything over the sound of his own lungs heaving against his bruised ribs or the blood pounding in his ears.
He ran blindly and nearly senseless, until suddenly the ground gave way beneath him. He stepped out into nothing, and silvery blackness rushed past him. Less than a heartbeat later, Basalt splashed into an ice-cold stream. His throat wanted to scream even while his mind fought to keep control. His chest felt as if it were wrapped in iron bands.
In panic Basalt clawed his way up the muddy bank and lay there shivering, his courage spent. The tiny bit of strength that remained was completely occupied in keeping Basalt from weeping openly. But he swore he would not cry, not even if the derro found him there and chopped him to bits on the spot.
“I know Flint wouldn’t cry,” he sputtered through clenched teeth. But he could not stop the tears from flowing, for his agony, for his fear and desperation. For his Uncle Flint.
After a few minutes, Basalt hiccupped to a stop. He could hear the sounds of the forest again. His teeth stopped chattering, and the ringing subsided in his ears. He crawled a few yards away from the stream and toward a thicket. There he lay, waiting for the pursuing derro.
Basalt listened for several minutes, but heard nothing. Could they have lost my trail? he wondered. But he knew that made no sense. Used to life underground, the derro could see even better than him in the dark, and they weren’t frightened out of their wits either. He had certainly left a trail that even a child could follow. So where were they?
Either they are toying with me, or … or they didn’t follow me at all, Basalt thought. Strangely, the first possibility did not frighten him, but the second made him angry. Basalt reflected on the humiliating beating, remembered his bruises and shattered bones, and felt the cuts and scrapes suffered during his wild flight through the forest. He was nothing but a joke to these derro, first a punching bag and then a frightened rabbit to be chased off.
The shame was almost more than he could bear. Exhausted beyond endurance, broken in body and spirit, Basalt lapsed gratefully into unconsciousness.
Flint plunged down the steeply angled, rocky chute, tumbling head over heels, slamming from side to side. He fought to gain some control over the plummet, but could barely discern up from down. Jagged edges of granite tore at his flesh and clothing as his hands groped desperately for anything to grip. Suddenly his short fingers slapped against something long, thin, and hard, and instantly they locked around it. The dwarf growled in pain as his hand slid along the knobby shaft. Dirt and rock rained down on his head as the sudden weight on his handhold loosened sections of the wall. Daring to glance up, Flint saw he had caught an ancient tree root, half buried in the wall of the pit. He clamped his fist around it tighter and clung to the exposed root with all his might and desperation.
His feet met a rocky outcropping as he came to a stop. Expecting the rock beneath him to tear lose under the impact, Flint tightened his grip on the root as he tested the size of the ledge with his toes. To his alarm, it was only six inches deep, albeit three times his girth in width. He pressed his back against the wall and tried to think as he caught his breath.
What now?
That thought was barely formed in his head when something heavy crashed down around his shoulders, flailing and thrashing.
“Help me!”
Stunned and knocked off balance by the weight, Flint nearly lost his grip and tumbled over the edge, but blind instinct locked his fingers around the tree root. In spite of its tone of terror, he recognized the voice of the dwarven frawl guard, although he didn’t dare budge an inch to look up.
“I can’t hang on—” she squealed as she began to tumble off of Flint’s shoulders, windmilling her arms.
“Get your feet on the ledge!” Flint hissed. “Hug the wall!” Flattening himself even more, he grabbed her flapping arms in one hand and held them tightly while she scrambled for footing next to him. Flint guided her hands to the root and together they clung to it, panting from fear and exertion.
After a moment’s rest, Flint peered at the frawl. “What are you doing here?” he asked bluntly as he pressed his bleeding cheek to his shoulder. “Trip?” He coughed violently on the dirt in his throat.
“Hardly!” Perian shot back, not daring to move. “I was pushed in behind you by that swine-son, Pitrick. He’ll roast on a slow spit for this.”
“That’s assuming we get unspitted ourselves,” Flint responded. “Do you have any idea how far down the bottom is, or how to get out, or what exactly is at the bottom?”
“Of course not!” Perian snapped. “It’s a beast pit. No one comes down here exploring. No one comes down here at all with any hope of getting out.”
A noise from below froze her in place. Her eyes locked onto Flint’s.
“I heard it, too.” Flint shifted his position to get a better look down into the pit. The old mine shaft twisted and bent as it descended. After a few moments his eyes focused on what he thought must be the earthen floor approximately thirty feet below. As Flint strained to pick out any additional details, the noise—a sort of scuffling, he thought—came again. And a shadow passed below.
Still peering down, Flint asked, “What in the name of Reorx is that?”
“A killer,” Perian replied. “Beyond that, I couldn’t say. And I really don’t want to find out. I want to wait for my hands to stop shaking and then climb back out of here.”
“I don’t think that’s too likely,” Flint said, now scanning the tunnel above. “The sides of this pit are rough but crumbling. Trying to climb out is likel
y to send you plunging even sooner to the bottom. If we had something to dig handholds with, maybe we could work our way …”
Flint’s idea was cut off by a scraping sound from below, as if something of great bulk was being dragged across damp rocks. Perian released the root with one hand to clutch Flint’s shoulder instead. “I can see it—or something—moving down there,” she whispered. “There it is again!”
Flint blinked, trying to focus on the small patch of floor at the bottom of the twisting shaft. He could hear the sound plainly now. It was a dragging, sloshing sort of noise, punctuated with numerous clicks and slaps. Though vaguely familiar, he couldn’t quite identify it.
Until the smell reached them. With sickening thickness, the stench of rot and waste rose around them, filling the tunnel. Perian shrank back to the wall as Flint spat, trying to clear the taste from his mouth. “What is it?” groaned the frawl.
“Carrion crawler,” answered the hill dwarf. “They eat most anything, as long as it’s dead. If it’s not, all the better, they have fun killing it. They can climb, too, so I expect it will be coming up.” As if on cue, a section of pink and purple flesh passed across the pit floor. A moment later, an enormous green eye stared up at the pair. Glistening tentacles, each more than five feet long, circled a gnashing mouth filled with hundreds of grinding teeth. The head swayed back and forth, into view and then out again. All the while, the stench grew stronger and the noise louder.
“Look for big rocks, maybe we can drive it off,” advised Flint frantically, releasing his grip on the root to grope across the ledge and wall. Moments later he had a small pile of fist-sized stones at his feet. “It’s not much, but we might slow it down. Aim for its eyes. And whatever you do, don’t let those tentacles touch your skin.”
“What happens if they do?” whispered Perian, staring at the bobbing head.
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