Finder's Bane

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Finder's Bane Page 11

by Kate Novak


  “We would have found you without her,” Jas argued.

  “A promise is a promise,” Joel insisted. He looked over at the paladin, who had remained silent the whole time. “Holly, surely you see my point. You’re a paladin. Your word is your honor.”

  Holly spoke softly. “I went along with you, but I did not give my word as you did. I could not. She was a priestess of Bane, Joel, a sworn enemy to my lord, Lathander. Besides, you could have been enchanted. I think you must have been. I can see no reason otherwise for you to make so foolish a vow. And a vow that is made under the duress of magic is not valid.”

  Joel remembered the urge he’d felt to accept Walinda’s first offer. He was certain he had overcome whatever power the priestess had used. “I was not enchanted!” he insisted.

  “Maybe not magically,” Jas said with a smirk. “You could have been seduced in the usual way. The bitch has more than her share of curves under that armor, even if she’s rotten at the core. I saw her bat her eyes at you and cling to your sleeve, Poppin.”

  “You’re mad,” Joel said.

  “No. Just realistic,” Jas retorted.

  “I made a vow in the name of my god to aid her until we escaped,” Joel said.

  Jas huffed with exasperation. “Fine,” she cried, and she pointed back toward the northeast. “Go back and rescue her. I won’t stop you. The cultists have probably already chopped her up for dinner, but maybe you’ll get lucky and find a piece or two.”

  Joel blanched with anger. Then he remembered the flying ship. He sighed. He was wasting his time arguing about his honor. Neither Jas nor Holly would concede. Still, for the insult Jas had given him, the bard couldn’t resist the temptation to tell the winged woman what he’d seen. At the very least, it would wipe the smug look off her face.

  “That won’t be necessary,” he explained. “I saw her flying ship approaching the Temple in the Sky. Whoever summoned it up there has probably already rescued her.”

  It was Jasmine’s turn to go pale. “Bloody hell,” she whispered, “Now I may never get it back.”

  “Get what back?” Joel demanded.

  “The flying ship,” Holly explained. “It was Jas’s. It can fly—um—all sorts of places.”

  “Whoever or whatever is at the helm is learning how to use it faster than I thought,” Jas said. “If they figure out how to go beyond the sphere, I’ll be stranded here, and they’ll have the run of space.”

  “Well, there’s not much you can do about it now,” Joel said. He tried unsuccessfully to stifle a yawn. “We should all get some rest for a few hours before we press on.”

  Jas yawned, too. “That’s the first sensible thing you’ve said since we’ve met,” the winged woman noted. Wrapping her tattered cloak around herself, she lay down on the ground.

  Joel looked over at Holly.

  “You rest first,” the paladin said. “I’ll keep watch.”

  The bard’s chivalry collapsed beneath the weight of his fatigue. He nodded in agreement. He unloaded all the weaponry he’d taken from the cultists’ armory before he lay down. He fell asleep without another thought.

  The sun had risen and climbed a good two hours into the sky when Holly woke Joel to take watch. Jas was still sleeping. The paladin had shot a couple of rabbits with the crossbow and skinned and cleaned them with Joel’s dagger. She left them by a tiny fire for Joel to cook.

  While he worked, the bard’s mind reviewed all that had happened the night before, pondering if there was anything he should have done or could have done differently. By the time the rabbits were finished roasting, Jas woke up. The two shared the first rabbit in an uncomfortable silence.

  Finally Joel said, “I’m sorry for the loss of your crew. I understand how you feel about Walinda.”

  Jas nodded an acceptance of his condolence. “You didn’t know her like I did,” she said.

  “Well, I knew enough,” Joel admitted. “But I wasn’t charmed, like you thought—magically or otherwise. There was something else that made me trust her. She risked everything to do her god’s bidding. She was completely faithful to him. When she swore an oath in his name, I knew she would keep her word. And she did. She helped me find Holly, and she didn’t betray us.”

  “She got herself caught. She didn’t deserve your help,” Jas countered. “She would never have made a deal with you if she didn’t think she had more to gain from it than you did. That’s how priests of Bane think. Everything is a power play to them. Especially the faithful ones. People don’t call them evil because they wear black. It’s because they hurt people and think it’s all right because they do it in their god’s name.”

  “Suppose Bane really did tell her to do those things. What choice would she have?”

  “She could find herself a new god,” Jas said, her voice rising in exasperation.

  “Would you do that? Leave your deity?” Joel asked.

  “I have as little to do with any deity as possible,” Jas declared. “In my experience, gods are nothing but trouble, and believe me, I’ve had some experience in that line. Don’t get me wrong. I respect them. All of them. But I try to avoid getting anywhere near their business. I’d advise you to do the same, but since you’re already a priest, I realize it’s too late.”

  Joel grinned. “You’re not the first to give me that advice,” he replied. “But like you said, it’s already too late. What are you going to do now?”

  “Well, I need to warn someone about my ship being captured by Bane’s folk. Someone nearby and powerful, who can shoot it out of the sky if he can’t help me get it back. Elminster used to live near here. Is he still around?”

  Joel nodded.

  “I thought I’d accompany Holly safely back to her home in Daggerdale first. If I recall my geography correctly, it’s on the way.”

  “If you’re using the road,” Joel said. “As the crow flies, you’re better off flying due south. I can see Holly back to Daggerdale if you’re in a hurry.”

  “Actually, I don’t usually fly overland very far. For one thing, it’s exhausting. For another, I like to stick to the beaten track. I’m too much of a city rat to survive in the wilderness.”

  “Me, too,” Joel said.

  “You, too, what?” Holly asked from behind them. The paladin had awakened and joined them beside the fire. She still looked tired, but the cheerful smile had returned to her face.

  “Jas and I were discussing how we were going to see you safely back home,” Joel explained. “But we need you to hunt rabbits and start fires for us.”

  “City folk,” Holly teased.

  “Just get us to Dagger Falls, and we’ll be in our element,” Joel said.

  Holly shook her head. “The Zhents have a puppet constable in Dagger Falls … Guthbert Golthammer,” the paladin explained. “He’s an idiot, but his second-in-command, a half-orc called Toren, knows his job. When you were unconscious, we passed through with the Xvim priest. We’ll be recognized as escaped prisoners. And Jas would be sure to attract attention. With those wings, she’d be dragged in on suspicion of spying.”

  “So what do you recommend, O most wise native guide?” Joel asked.

  “We skirt around the town,” Holly suggested, picking up a piece of roasted rabbit. “This far north, the farmers will be too afraid of Zhent reprisals to give us much aid, but they won’t turn us in. I can at least convince them to part with some waterskins and food. Jas can help us cross the River Tesh. Then we head for the foothills of the Desertsmouth Mountains. The Zhents don’t patrol that far west. Then we head south until Joel finds his trail to the Lost Vale. After that, Jas and I continue on to Anathar’s Dell.”

  “Sounds like a plan,” Joel said.

  Holly finished the remaining rabbit while Jas took to the air to scout out the lay of the land. When she returned, she reported they were still northeast of Dagger Falls. They needed to continue due west for several miles before they could cross the river out of sight of the town. They drank their fill from a str
eam before they began their trek in earnest.

  The day was fair and warm, and the terrain was not difficult. About noon, Holly risked knocking on a farmhouse door. As she’d predicted, the farmer’s wife looked frightened and didn’t offer any hospitality, but she did send her away with two waterskins full of milk and a big loaf of bread—things she could claim had been stolen.

  The three adventurers hurried away to put some distance between them and their benefactor. In the shade of some woods, they feasted on the handouts and rested about an hour. Then they headed southwest toward the river. They reached the water by nightfall and camped. Holly caught some fish for dinner.

  Jas took first watch and woke Joel after midnight. Other than a raccoon family raiding their camp for the discarded fish heads left from their meal, Joel’s watch was quiet. Holly, on the last watch, woke the other two before the birds began to twitter. “There’s something out there,” the paladin said. “Something is howling. It’s been getting closer.”

  Joel and Jas listened for a while. The howl came from the northeast. “Just a wolf,” Joel suggested.

  Holly shook her head. “Wolves travel in packs. When one howls, the others answer. This is something traveling alone.”

  “A werewolf?” Jas asked.

  Joel held up his finger and listened to the howl again. Holly was wrong. There was an answer, a much more disturbing noise. The bard could just barely hear it.

  “There’s a horn. A hunting horn,” the bard told them. “Coming from behind us.”

  “What could anyone be hunting at this hour?” Jas asked.

  “Us,” Holly whispered.

  “Don’t they have better things to do with their time?” the winged woman groaned.

  “We need to throw their hound off the scent,” Joel said.

  “So we cross the river,” Jas said.

  “Not just yet,” Holly answered. “We need to lay a false trail.”

  They gathered up their weaponry and the waterskins and proceeded west down the river path. With only a tiny sliver of light from the setting moon to show the way, it was slow going. They splashed through two creeks that emptied into the river. At the third creek, Jas picked up Holly and flew across the river.

  While Joel waited for the winged woman to return, he planned the magic he might need for the day and prayed to Finder to grant him the spells. The howling grew so close that the bard became edgy and impatient. The birds had begun chirping, and the sky was beginning to lighten. Joel was just considering trying to swim the river when Jas finally returned.

  “What kept you?” he demanded.

  “Holly insisted I land far past the riverbank so they won’t be able to pick up our scent by following the water’s edge,” Jas explained. “Let’s go.”

  Joel wrapped his arms around Jas’s neck as Holly had. It felt awkward to have a strange woman wrapping her arms about his chest. Jas didn’t seem to be bothered by it. Joel was reminded of Walinda wrapping her cloak around him to hide from the beholder, but while the priestess had smelled of roses, Jas smelled of leather and sweat. Then they took off, and Joel could think only of returning to earth. Without wings of his own, Joel was terrified by the sensation of nothing beneath his feet.

  Jas landed in a meadow beyond an untended apple orchard. Holly was digging in the dirt with a sword around a scraggly plant with white flowers.

  “Are we going to hide in a tunnel?” Jas teased.

  Holly held up a small red potato. Joel and Jas joined the paladin on their knees. When they’d amassed several handfuls of the vegetable, they continued on their trek, following a deer trail.

  Shortly after dawn, duly warned by Holly to stay out of range of any spellcasting, Jas took to the sky to check out their pursuers. The paladin and the bard kept moving.

  By the time the sun had climbed over the Dagger Hills, coloring the Desertsmouth Mountains a brilliant red, Jas returned.

  “Well, there’s good news and bad news,” the winged woman reported. “There’s about a dozen of them on horseback. Didn’t spot any griffons, though. I’m pretty sure one of the riders is a priest and one’s a mage. They seemed to have figured out we crossed the river. They’ve turned back downstream.”

  Holly nodded. “The river is way too deep and fast for horses to swim. The only ford is below Dagger Falls.”

  “What’s the bad news?” Joel asked.

  “The hound we heard. It’s like nothing I’ve ever seen,” Jas said. “It walks on its hind legs like a man, and it’s as hairy as a werewolf and as black as soot. It’s also huge … bigger than a man. The river didn’t scare it. It jumped right in and started swimming across. The current carried it quite a ways downstream, but it came out on the opposite bank. That’s when I turned around and came back.”

  “We better keep moving,” Joel said.

  They made for the mountains, and the peaks seemed to grow reassuringly closer. They hadn’t heard the Zhent beast’s howl since they’d crossed the river, but the creature was on all their minds. Joel kept estimating in his head how long it would take for something to sniff them out, but the farther they traveled, the less worried he became.

  Holly traveled with the crossbow loaded, keeping an eye out for game. For lunch, they had two more rabbits with their potatoes. Since their fire couldn’t be the only one in the dale, they didn’t worry too much about anyone spotting the smoke. They rested for an hour in the shade of a line of trees bordering a stream. Joel had nearly dozed off when he thought he heard a voice say, “Listen.”

  The bard jerked awake. A howl reached his ear. He called out to Jas and Holly. The howl came again. Without any discussion, the three gathered their meager belongings and moved on.

  In the late afternoon, they nearly stumbled upon a skunk chomping on the rancid corpse of a deer. Holly and Jas pulled back, but Joel stood watching the creature for a moment, then began singing softly.

  “What is he doing?” Jas whispered to Holly, gesturing at the young priest.

  Holly shrugged and didn’t reply, afraid that any noise might alarm the animal. She wondered if perhaps Joel, a city boy, might not know what it was he faced.

  Joel finished his song. The skunk looked up at him expectantly. Joel began another song. Then he addressed the skunk in its own animal tongue.

  When Jedidiah had taught the bard to charm and speak to animals, they had practiced on a cat. “You should charm the animal first before speaking with it,” Jedidiah had explained, “because charming it gets the animal’s attention. Especially cats. They’re notoriously bad listeners.” With a skunk, Joel figured, charm was essential, since it kept the animal calm. The conversation with the skunk was similar to the one Joel had with the cat. Simple. Very simple.

  “This is my food,” the skunk said.

  “It’s your food,” Joel agreed.

  “Do you want some?” the skunk asked. It was, after all, enchanted by the bard.

  “No thank you,” Joel replied. “I’m just passing through.”

  “Too bad. There’s plenty of food here.”

  “Unless some bad creature comes and takes it away,” Joel agreed.

  “What bad creature?” the skunk asked.

  “Some big, hairy howling thing following me and my mates,” Joel explained. “Maybe after we pass, you should spray our trail. That will keep him away. Then he won’t steal your food.”

  “Good idea,” the skunk said.

  “I’m leaving now, with my mates. There is no need to be alarmed when we pass,” Joel said.

  “ ’Bye,” the skunk said, and returned to chewing on the deer carcass.

  Joel motioned for Jas and Holly to keep behind him as he passed the skunk. Both women crept past, holding their breath, keeping Joel between them and the skunk.

  “Don’t forget to spray our trail,” Joel called.

  “I won’t,” the skunk answered.

  When they’d put several hundred yards between them and the skunk, Jas burst out, “What were you doing?”
/>   “You spoke with it, didn’t you?” Holly guessed.

  Joel nodded. “You can never have too many friends in low places,” he replied with a grin.

  “Why did you speak to it?” Jas demanded. “It’s a skunk, for gods’ sake.”

  “I had to warn it about the big, hairy howling thing,” Joel explained. “It’s going to spray the trail behind us.”

  Holly laughed aloud. Even Jas grinned.

  The creature howled again, and their smiles faded. The adventurers continued on. They turned and twisted down several different animal paths and trudged along some streambeds, yet the howling didn’t seem to fade in the distance. After another hour of hiking with tired feet and the sound of the beast behind them, their nerves were beginning to fray.

  “Shut up already,” Jas growled back down the trail, as if the beast might hear her.

  “I wonder why it hasn’t caught up with us yet,” Joel muttered.

  “If it’s really some sort of hunting hound,” Holly said, “it knows better. It’s job is to harry us until its master gets here.”

  “But the riders had to detour to cross the river,” Joel remembered. “So it’s deliberately hanging back.”

  “Time to go on the offensive,” Jas declared.

  “I think so,” Holly agreed.

  Jas did a quick air foray to locate the beast. She returned in a very short while.

  “It’s rolling in the grass about a mile back, as if it were trying to rub something off,” the winged woman reported. “I think your little black and white friend got it but good.”

  “But not enough to put it off our scent,” Holly noted. “How interesting.”

  Quickly they planned their attack. Jas flew off with Holly, and Joel hurried back down the trail at a loping gait toward the beast. When he’d reached the hedgerow bordering the field where Jas had said he’d find the beast, he stopped and ducked down.

  Taking a deep breath, he began to sing Cassana’s lament from the opera Wizards in Love. He sang the sorceress’s part in falsetto, then shifted to the tenor range to sing the part of the whiny lich Zrie Prakis. As the bard went into the song’s finale, he knew the beast had taken the bait. He could smell the creature’s approach. Jas had guessed correctly. The skunk had gotten him.

 

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