by Keith Strohm
“You are finished!” Taen shouted at the chanting witch. “By the will of the wychlaran and the blood of my father, it is over.”
The half-elf raised his sword and moved to attack. He gathered his arcane power, but rather than cast a formulaic spell as he had done for most of his life, Taen channeled that energy, used it to speed his limbs. The world slowed around him as he gathered speed.
The crone backed away slightly to her left and shouted, “Die, you fool!” as she brought her ruined eye to bear upon him. A black beam of power shot out once again, but this time Taen leaped to the side, avoiding it. A section of the cavern floor sizzled and popped for a moment before completely disintegrating before his eyes.
Another beam lanced out at him, but this time Taen tumbled behind a long-toothed stalagmite that took the brunt of the attack. Without hesitation, the half-elf sent arcane energy surging through his sword; bolts of force leaped from the blade’s tip to strike the crone. She shrieked and fell backward, turning as if to run toward the back of the cave.
Taking advantage of his newfound speed, Taen ran to the side, intercepting the haggard witch before she could reach the circle of light that had just opened in the floor behind him. Her one good eye widened in disbelief. She raised a skeletal hand toward the half-elf and spit forth the words to another spell.
Taen didn’t wait for her to finish. “For Cormanthor,” he cried in Elvish before leaping through the air, “and for Marissa!” Like a living spear, he hurtled toward the witch and, focusing all of his energy, drove his sword deep into the crone’s empty eye socket. The witch wailed in agony as the blade bit true, knocking both of them to the ground. Black power erupted from the wound, cascading around both of them, spinning and twirling like a mini whirlwind. Taen could feel the energy burning at his already battered body, but he did not let go of the sword that impaled the now-dead crone. His agony intensified as the ebon power covered him completely.
The walls of the cavern faded, until everything, at last, was darkness.
EPILOGUE
The Year of Rogue Dragons
(1373 DR)
Taenaran stood silently in the sunlight.
All around him, the vale teemed with life. The full-throated song of wild birds filled the air, while the undergrowth stirred with the patter of tiny furred feet. A small breeze blew across the wooded vale, redolent with the rich scents of summer. The drone of bees, their bodies bloated with pollen and tossed by the wind, rose up from the lush vernal landscape.
Taenaran might as well have stood in a bare stone room, devoid of windows or doors. He felt the touch of the sun—its warm fingers sliding across his skin—distantly, as if in a memory or some long-ago dream of summer. He took in the heady fragrance of the wind without regard to its vintage, each breath mechanically drawing it into his lungs. Deep inside, he wished nothing less than to break that machine, to still its implacable, torturous rhythm.
Grief had hollowed him out, made of his heart a tomb—full of dust and shadow and a longing so deep it reached to the very marrow of his bones. Marissa was dead, yet the half-elf no longer felt anger or bitterness over his weakness, the brokenness that had caused her to die. He had become a true bladesinger now, a master of his father’s art—his own art. The red-hilted blade given him by Aelrindel hung comfortably at his side. In the storm-wrought demesne of an evil witch, Taenaran had finally become true forged, made whole for the first time in his life.
At what cost?
Behind him, he could hear Roberc’s dour muttering and the answering rumble of Borovazk’s voice. Taenaran’s two companions had remained with him during the long months spent in the witches’ care, and they had followed him here, offering their strength and friendship for the final leagues of his journey. In truth, the bladesinger remembered little of the aftermath of their battle with the witch. His memory of those final moments lay in ruins. From what Borovazk and Roberc had told him during time spent resting by the hearthside, Yulda’s own power had consumed her in those last moments, burning away her body—and the half-elf’s flesh would have followed had Borovazk not pulled him free.
The two had tried to awaken him, plying him with healing potions, salves, and other unguents, but to no avail. He was, according to Roberc, deader than a Cormyrean soldier after a tenday’s furlough.” They had resigned themselves to braving the mountains in winter when a contingent of witches had appeared in the cave. The breaking of the Staff of the Red Tree had caught their attention, and Yulda’s death had shattered the arcane barriers surrounding her demesne. Within moments, the witches had teleported the wounded and tired group back to the Urlingwood.
Despite the severity of his injuries, Taenaran had begun to heal under the watchful eye of the hathran assigned to watch over him. In the days and tendays that had followed, physical pain receded, leaving only the emotional scars of his loss. Even so, Taenaran had known that Borovazk and Roberc were grieving as well, and when the numbing emptiness rose up within him, the bladesinger took to the deer paths and hidden trails crisscrossing the Urlingwood, not wishing to inflict his own grief upon his companions.
Tendays had turned into months as winter vented its fury upon the land and the first bright moments of spring burst forth from the snow-covered earth. Still, Taenaran had stayed within the thickly forested Urling, not really sure what held him there, and Borovazk and the halfling remained with him. They drank and diced, hunted and fought as friends will, but by some unspoken agreement they stayed by Taenaran’s side.
Finally, as the snow cover began to melt in earnest, Mahara, leader of the wychlaran, had approached Taenaran with the two fragments of wood that were all that remained of the Staff of the Red Tree.
“Please pardon my interruption,” she had said softly. “You and your companions are welcome to remain in the Urlingwood for as long as you like. It is the least of the kindnesses we can offer you. Deep though I know your grief to be,” she had continued, “I was wondering if you would do us one last favor?”
There was little Taenaran could have said at that moment, so conflicted was his heart. Instead, he had simply nodded his head.
“We are humbled once again by your kindness,” Mahara had replied and had reached forward, offering the burned wooden fragments to Taenaran. He had reached out gingerly, as if the splintered ends would blister his fingers. He had tried not to think of Marissa as he held the ends in his hands.
“These fragments must be returned to the Red Tree,” the witch had continued. “Normally one of the hathran would make the journey. However,” Mahara had paused for just a moment, “the telthor have asked specifically for you to return the remains of the staff.”
So Taenaran now stood in the center of the Red Vale, with the elemental tree looming ahead of him—pushed once again on a quest not of his choosing. He drew in a deep breath then sighed it out before turning to his companions.
“Well, my friends,” he said, “thank you for making this journey with me, but I would ask that you let me carry the fragments to the Red Tree by myself.”
The half-elf could see Roberc’s frown deepen. Both the grizzled halfling and the hulking Rashemi ranger exchanged a look, but both ultimately nodded their agreement.
“Well, you are pretty damn close to the end of the journey, so I suppose we can let you go,” the halfling began with a throaty chuckle. “Not even you could mess this up, Taen!”
The chuckle became a hearty laugh as Borovazk slapped the bladesinger’s back with a meaty hand. Despite the grief and sadness of the past few months, Taenaran felt a smile begin to creep upon his face.
“I’ll shout if I get into any trouble,” he replied good naturedly then set off down the path.
Mirth and good humor vanished quickly as he drew nearer to the Red Tree. Its ancient profile interrupted the broad swath of piercing blue sky and warm spring sunlight, brooding over the surrounding landscape like some elemental giant. Taenaran could feel its power emanating from each branch and leaf tip, a deep strength
that flowed from its ancient roots, tapping into a magic deeper than any he had ever experienced. It was as if the mystical Red Tree were somehow more “real” than anything else around it—including him.
Long, thick branches blew softly in the wind, enveloping him in its vernal embrace as he walked beneath the Red Tree’s cool shadows. A surge of anger crested through him, and it was all he could do to keep the memory of Marissa kneeling beneath the Red Tree from overwhelming him. Taenaran hated this land, loathed every mile of its rugged landscape, for what it had taken away from him, yet he also loved Rashemen fiercely, with a strength that nearly stole his breath away. This land and its people had given him something he had never hoped to receive—himself.
Tears ran down his face as he knelt finally beneath the boughs of the Red Tree and laid the remains of the Staff of the Red Tree against its ancient, splitting trunk. A stiff wind blew up, sending broad leaves fluttering at its touch. Taenaran felt for a moment as if he were surrounded by giant serpents.
“There,” he said through clenched teeth. “I have done my gods-damned duty.”
He was tired of fighting the grief and the sadness, tired of the emptiness that he felt inside. With this last request of the wychlaran completed, Taenaran knew that it was time to leave Rashemen. Where he would go next, the bladesinger hadn’t a clue, but he suspected it would be far from here.
He was about to stand up when the wind blew hard again, this time nearly knocking the half-elf to the ground. He closed his eyes against the sting of dirt and pebbles brought on by the strange wind, and when at last the air stilled and he opened his eyes once more, Taenaran’s vision swam before him. He struggled to his feet, reaching out to the gnarled trunk of the Red Tree to steady himself. When the bladesinger’s hand touched the bark, he felt a stinging shock. Instantly, his vision cleared, but what he witnessed nearly drove Teaghean to his knees once more.
Marissa stood before him, windswept hair blowing wildly in the wind, gazing at him with her eyes slightly squinted. He remembered that look upon her face, but he never recalled her looking that beautiful. Everything about her radiated joy and contentment.
“What is going on?” he asked of her in a voice that shook with emotion.
Marissa didn’t respond. Instead she lifted her hands and brought them toward Taenaran’s face. The bladesinger took a step toward her then stopped suddenly, as he realized that something was definitely wrong—the druid’s lost hand had somehow regenerated.
“What are you?” he asked, suspicion tingeing his voice with a harsh undertone. “Does the Red Tree mock my grief? Have I not done enough for this gods-blasted land?”
The figure of Marissa shook her head sadly and reached out her hands once more. Taenaran didn’t resist as slender fingers stroked his cheek. Her touch was light, like the kiss of a soft breeze. He felt the slightest shock as her fingertips made contact with his skin.
You are not being mocked, my Taenaran. It really is me—well, mostly me anyway.
The bladesinger’s eyes widened in wonder as Marissa’s voice echoed in his mind. He thought about what she had said, and it became clear to him—especially given what had occurred on their journey through Rashemen.
“Somehow you’ve become a telthor, haven’t you?” he asked.
She smiled. Yes, my dear Taenaran. The spirit of this land has accepted my service. Imsha used the last of her essence to travel to the Urlingwood and see if she could detect the traitor among the othlor. I have taken her place.
Grief for her passing warred with the happiness that came with knowing somehow Marissa had found a new kind of life.
Please do not be sad, Taenaran. I don’t regret a moment of what I had to do in order to save you and the others. I would offer myself again in a heartbeat. Now I will always be here to protect and serve a land I have come to love as deeply as I loved you.
Taenaran fought back tears and reached up to clasp the hand Marissa still held to his cheek. He nearly sobbed as his own hand met no resistance, passing through her form as if he had reached out to grab the wind.
Please—shed no more tears. My time with you is drawing to a close. There is much work that still needs to be done in the wake of Yulda’s treachery.
“Perhaps I should remain here and help the wychlaran tie up loose ends,” Taenaran suggested.
Marissa reached out with her other hand and placed it softly upon Taenaran’s shoulder. Rashemen owes you a great debt, but there are other places in Faerûn that need your help.
He wanted to protest, to explain that he could do the greatest good here in Rashemen, but he knew deep down that it wasn’t the truth. He was a bladesinger now—a vessel for the art of his people. There were many elves who would need his help and perhaps—one day—he would even find himself returning home, so Taenaran simply nodded in response.
Please watch over Roberc and Borovazk, Marissa continued, and make sure they don’t drink too much firewine!
The bladesinger laughed at that, but his laughter soon caught in his throat as Marissa’s figure began to fade before his eyes.
I must go, Taenaran. Please know that I will always be here when you need me. Thank you, my love—for everything. With that, Marissa disappeared, fading completely from view.
Slowly, Taenaran turned toward the Red Tree and bowed profoundly. “I love you, Marissa.”
He rose up once more, wiping a few stray tears from his eyes before turning back toward the path that would lead away from the Red Tree and ultimately away from Rashemen. As he walked forward, Taenaran felt the hollowness of grief begin to fill with gratefulness and with the warm memories of Marissa’s presence in his life. It was as if a stone had rolled away from the dark tomb of his heart, letting in sunlight and air. It was enough that Marissa’s life hadn’t ended in darkness and pain. It was enough that he had seen her once more—and she was happy.
It was more than enough.
Slowly, Taenaran, bladesinger and hero of Rashemen, walked down the path toward his friends.
Behind him, the raucous cawing of an albino raven echoed throughout the vale.
An excerpt
The Knights of Myth Drannor
Swords of Eveningstar
ED GREENWOOD
Horaundoon scowled into his scrying orb. A tightlipped, crestfallen Florin strode through the streets with the two loudest Sword wenches at his shoulders, heading back to the Lion. There—and there—and there, too—behind them, the watch spies followed. Last, the Martess lass followed the watch agents.
It was enough to make the Zhentarim smirk, yon little parade. If he hadn’t been so hrasted annoyed, that is. The lad seemed to have thrown off much of the influence of the mindworm, even before Myrmeen Lhal spurned him! But how?
Florin peered around the busy taproom, fire rising in his eyes. There was the table, right enough, with the tavernmaster’s apron spread across it to—
“Tavernmaster!” he called, letting some of his anger show. “Where are my friends, who were here with us? Did the watch—?”
“Nay, my lord,” Aviathus assured him, bustling up to them. “The way of it is: they conferred, heads together—your friends, I mean—and then the hard-faced woman—ah, forgive me …”
“Forgiven,” Pennae said quickly. “Out with it, man!”
“I, uh … yes, well … she led them out. All but the two swordsmen, who sat right here for a time—long enough to empty a talljack of firewine between them and eat a skewer of roast bustard each—ere they went behind yon curtains and then out, with Kestra and Taeriana.”
“Who,” Jhessail asked flatly, “are Kestra and Taeriana? As if I can’t guess.”
The tavernmaster’s head bobbed.
“Coinlasses, right enough,” the tavernmaster said. “And the best and cleanest in the business, let me tell you! Six seasons working here, and never a—”
“Out where?” Pennae snapped.
“Ah. Well, ’tis my way of speech more than ‘outside,’ really,” Aviathus said hasti
ly, pointing at the ceiling. “Faster than saying ‘up the back stairs.’ ”
Jhessail rolled her eyes, Florin growled, and Martess and Pennae both gave Florin “See? Someone else besides you” looks.
“We’ll go and look for them,” Pennae told Florin firmly. “A woman looking gives less offense, but can deliver more scorn to shame them back down here when they’re found.”
Horaundoon gasped, reeled, and shuddered. Sweat streamed down his face to drip off his chin. Four minds, now, two of them strong-willed and wayward.…
Riches, he promised Agannor and Bey, showing them chests of gleaming coins and coffers glittering with gems. Women, he promised, splashing their minds with ivory curves, dark and mysterious eyes, alluring smiles, and languid beckonings. Power, he promised, and each of the two Swords saw himself stride, a great-cloak streaming from his shoulders, through palatial rooms, hurling open doors by which servants hastily knelt, to emerge into a courtyard where white stallions in gold-plated harnesses awaited, then riding forth out of a soaring castle, as folk thundered acclaim from the balconies.…
All theirs, the sweating Zhentarim promised, if they but willingly served him.
More splendors he conjured and thrust upon their minds, burying them in banners, glittering courts, and beautiful courtesans on beds made of coins. He saw their mistrust, reluctance, and wary fears crumble and fade—loose black earth swept away before his cleansing flood, an onslaught that lay bare eagerness leaping up bright with hope, daring hope—
Agannor, he thought. Bey. Are you with me?
Their roars of assent were like raging flames in his mind, searing him even as his delight grew, and sending the hargaunt into wild, clashing chimings of alarm and excitement.
Horaundoon shuddered in pain and slumped over the table with his fingers trying to pierce its edge like claws. He smiled crookedly.