The Orc King t-1

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The Orc King t-1 Page 32

by Robert Anthony Salvatore


  “So he’s the one who brought the orcs into the dwarf city?”

  “We think.”

  “The two of ye do a lot o’ thinking for so little answering,” Bruenor growled.

  “We have only a few old texts,” Regis replied. “It’s all a riddle, still.”

  “Guesses.”

  “Speculation,” said Regis. “But we know that the orcs lived there with the dwarves, and that Bowug Kr’kri was one of the leaders of the community.”

  “Any better guesses on how long that town lived? Ye said centuries, but I’m not for believin’ ye.”

  Regis shrugged and shook his head. “It had to be over generations. You saw the structures, and the language.”

  “And how many o’ them structures were built by the dwarfs afore the orcs came in?” Bruenor asked with a sly smile.

  Regis had no answer.

  “Might’ve been a dwarf kingdom taken down by trusting the damned orcs,” Bruenor said. “Fool dwarfs who took much o’ the orc tongue to try to be better neighbors to the treacherous dogs.”

  “We don’t think—”

  “Ye think too much,” Bruenor interrupted. “Yerself and the gnome’re all excited about finding something so different than that which we’re knowin’ to be true. If ye’re just finding more o’ the same, then it’s just more o’ the same. But if ye’re findin’ something to make yer eyes go wide enough to fall out o’ their holes, then that’s something to dance about.”

  “We didn’t invent that library, or the statues inside it,” Regis argued, but he was talking into as smug and sure an expression as he had ever seen. And he wasn’t sure, of course, that Bruenor’s reasoning was wrong, for indeed, he and Nanfoodle were doing a lot of guessing. The final puzzle picture was far from complete. They hadn’t even yet assembled the borders of the maze, let alone filled in the interior details.

  Hralien walked into the room then, answering a summons Bruenor had sent out for him earlier.

  “It’s coming clear, elf,” Bruenor greeted him. “That town’s a warning. If we’re following Alustriel’s plans, we’re to wind up a dead and dust-covered artifact for a future dwarf king to discover.”

  “My own people are as guilty as is Alustriel in wanting to find a stable division, King Bruenor,” Hralien admitted. “The idea of crossing the Surbrin to do battle with Obould’s thousands is daunting—it will not be attempted without great sorrow and great loss.”

  “And what’s to be found by sitting back?” Bruenor asked.

  Hralien, who had just lost a dozen friends in an orc assault on the Moonwood, and had just witnessed first-hand the attack on the dwarven wall, didn’t need to use his imagination to guess the answer to that question.

  “We can’t be fightin’ them straight up,” Bruenor reasoned. “That’s the way o’ doom. Too many o’ the stinking things.” He paused and grinned, nodding his hairy head. “Unless they’re attacking us, and in bits and pieces. Like the group that went into the Moonwood and the one that come over me wall. If we were ready for them, then there’d be a lot o’ dead orcs.”

  Hralien gave a slight bow in agreement.

  “So Drizzt was right,” said Bruenor. “It’s all about the one on top. He tried to get rid of Obould, and almost did. That’d’ve been the answer, and still is. If we can just get rid o’ the durned Obould, we’ll be tearing it all down.”

  “A difficult task,” said Hralien.

  “It’s why Moradin gave me back to me boys,” said Bruenor. “We’re goin’ to kill him, elf.”

  “‘We’re’?” asked Hralien. “Are you to spearhead an army to strike into the heart of Obould’s kingdom?”

  “Nah, that’s just what the dog’s wantin’. We’ll do it the way Drizzt tried it. A small group, better’n…” He paused and a cloud passed over his face.

  “Me girl won’t be going,” Bruenor explained. “Too hurt.”

  “And Wulfgar has left for the west,” said Hralien, catching on to the source of Bruenor’s growing despair.

  “They’d be helpin’, don’t ye doubt.”

  “I do not doubt at all,” Hralien assured him. “Who, then?”

  “Meself and yerself, if ye’re up for the fight.”

  The elf gave a half-bow, seeming to agree but not fully committing, and Bruenor knew he’d have to be satisfied with that.

  The dwarf looked over to Regis, who nodded with increased determination, his face as grim as his cherubic features would allow.

  “And Rumblebelly there,” the dwarf said.

  Regis took a step back, shifting uncomfortably as Hralien cast a doubtful look his way.

  “He’s knowing how to find his place,” Bruenor assured the elf. “And he’s knowin’ me fightin’ ways, and them o’ Drizzt.”

  “We will collect Drizzt on our road?”

  “Can ye think o’ anyone ye’d want beside ye more than the drow?”

  “Indeed, no, unless it was Lady Alustriel herself.”

  “Bah!” Bruenor snorted. “Ye won’t be getting that one to agree. Meself and a few o’ me boys, yerself and Drizzt, and Rumblebelly.”

  “To kill Obould.”

  “Crush his thick skull,” said Bruenor. “Me and some o’ me best boys. We’ll be cuttin’ a quiet way, right to the head o’ th’ ugly beast, and then let it fall where it may.”

  “He is formidable,” Hralien warned.

  “Heared the same thing about Matron Baenre o’ Menzoberranzan,” Bruenor replied, referring to his own fateful strike that had decapitated the drow city and ended the assault on Mithral Hall. “And we got Moradin with us, don’t ye doubt. It’s why he sent me back.”

  Hralien’s posture and expression didn’t show him to be completely convinced by any of it, but he nodded his agreement just the same.

  “Ye help me find me drow friend,” Bruenor said to him, seeing that unspoken doubt. “Then ye make yer mind up.”

  “Of course,” Hralien agreed.

  Off to the side, Regis shifted nervously. He wasn’t afraid of adventuring beside Bruenor and Drizzt, even if it would be behind orc lines. But he did fear that Bruenor was reading it all wrong, and that their mission would turn out badly, for them perhaps, and for the world.

  The gathering fell quiet when Banak Brawnanvil looked Bruenor in the eye and declared, “Ye’re bats!”

  Bruenor, however, didn’t blink. “Obould’s the one,” he said evenly.

  “Not doubtin’ that,” replied the irrepressible Banak, who seemed to tower over Bruenor at that moment despite the fact that he was confined to a sitting position because of his injury in the orc war. “So send Pwent and yer boys to go and get him, like ye’re wantin’.”

  “It’s me own job.”

  “Only because ye’re a thick-headed Battlehammer!”

  A few gasps filtered about the room at that proclamation, but they were diffused by a couple of chortles, most notably from the priest Cordio. Bruenor turned on Cordio with a scowl, but it fast melted against the reality of Banak’s words. Truer words regarding the density of Bruenor’s skull, Cordio—and Bruenor—knew, had never been spoken.

  “Was meself that went to Gauntlgrym,” Bruenor said. He snapped his head to Regis’s direction, as if expecting the halfling to argue that it wasn’t Gauntlgrym. Regis, though, wisely stayed silent. “Was meself that anchored the retreat from Keeper’s Dale. Was meself that battled Obould’s first attack in the north.” He was gaining speed and momentum, not to bang drums for meself, as the dwarven saying went, but to justify his decision that he would personally lead the mission. “Was meself that went to Calimport to bring back Rumblebelly. Was meself that cut the damned Baenre in half!”

  “I drunk enough toasts to ye to appreciate the effort,” said Banak.

  “And now I’m seeing one more task afore me.”

  “The King o’ Mithral Hall’s plannin’ to march off behind an orc army and kill the orc king,” Banak remarked. “And if ye’re caught on the way? Won’t yer kin here be
in fine straits then in trying to bargain with Obould?”

  “If ye’re thinkin’ I’m to be caught livin’, then ye’re not knowing what it is to be a Battlehammer,” Bruenor retorted. “Besides, ain’t no different than if Drizzt got himself caught already, or any o’ the rest of us. Ye’re not for changing yer ways with orcs for meself any more than ye would for any of our boys.”

  Banak started to respond, but really had no answer for that.

  “Besides, besides,” Bruenor added, “once I’m walking out that gate, I’m not the king o’ Mithral Hall, which is the whole point in us being here, now ain’t it?”

  “I’ll be yer steward, but no king is Banak,” the crippled Brawnanvil argued.

  “Ye’ll be me steward, but if I’m not returning then yerself is the Ninth King o’ Mithral Hall and don’t ye be doubting it. And not a dwarf here would agree with ye if ye were.”

  Bruenor turned and led Banak’s gaze around the room with his own, taking in the solemn nods of all the gathering, from Pwent and his Gutbusters to Cordio and the other priests to Torgar and the dwarves from Mirabar.

  “This is why Moradin sent me back,” Bruenor insisted. “It’s me against Obould, and ye’re a fool betting if ye’re betting on Obould!”

  That elicited a cheer around the room.

  “Yerself and the drow?” Banak asked.

  “Me and Drizzt,” Bruenor confirmed. “And Rumblebelly’s up for it, though me girl’s in no place for it.”

  “Ye telled her that, have ye?” Banak asked with a snicker that was echoed around the room.

  “Bah, but she can’t be running, if running we’re needing, and she’d not ever put her friends in a spot o’ staying behind to protect her,” said Bruenor.

  “Then ye ain’t telled her,” said Banak, and again came the snorts.

  “Bah!” Bruenor said, throwing up his hands.

  “So yerself, Drizzt, and Regis,” said Banak. “And Thibble dorf Pwent?”

  “Try to stop me,” Pwent replied, and the Gutbuster brigade cheered.

  “And Pwent,” said Bruenor, and the Gutbusters cheered again. Nothing seemed to excite that group quite so much as the prospect of one of their own walking off on an apparent suicide mission.

  “Begging yer pardon, King Bruenor,” Torgar Hammerstriker said from the other side of the room. “But me thinking is that the Mirabar boys should be represented on yer team, and me thinking’s that meself and Shingles here”—he reached to the side and pulled forward the scarred old warrior, Shingles McRuff—“be just the two to do Mirabar proud.”

  As he finished, the other five Mirabarran dwarves in the room exploded into cheers for their mighty leader and the legendary Shingles.

  “Make it seven, then,” Cordio Muffinhead added. “For ye can’t be goin’ on a march for Moradin without a priest o’ Moradin, and I’m that priest.”

  “Eight, then,” Bruenor corrected, “for I’m thinking that Hralien o’ the Moonwood won’t be leaving us after we find Drizzt.”

  “Eight for the road and eight for Obould!” came the cheer, and it grew louder as it was repeated a second then a third time.

  Then it ended abruptly, as a scowling Catti-brie came in through the door, staring hard at Bruenor with a look that had even the doubting Banak Brawnanvil looking at the dwarf king with sympathy.

  “Go and do what needs doin’,” Bruenor instructed them all, his voice suddenly shaky, and as the others scattered through every door in the room, Catti-brie limped toward her father.

  “So you’re going for Obould’s head, and you’re to lead it?” she asked.

  Bruenor nodded. “It’s me destiny, girl. It’s why Moradin put me back here.”

  “Regis brought you back, with his pendant.”

  “Moradin let me go from his hall,” Bruenor insisted. “And it was for a reason!”

  Catti-brie stared at him long and hard. “So now you’re to go out, and to take my friend Regis with you, and to take my husband with you. But I’m not welcome?”

  “Ye can’t run!” Bruenor argued. “Ye can hardly walk more than a few dozen yards. If we’re turning from orcs, then are we to wait for yerself?”

  “There’ll be less turning from orcs if I’m there.”

  “Not for doubtin’ that,” said Bruenor. “But ye know ye can’t do it. Not now.”

  “Then wait for me.”

  Bruenor shook his head. Catti-brie’s lips grew tight and she blinked her blue eyes as if fighting back tears of frustration.

  “I could lose all of you,” she whispered.

  Bruenor caught on then that part of her difficulty at least had to do with Wulfgar. “He’ll come back,” the dwarf said. “He’ll walk the road that’s needin’ walking, but don’t ye doubt that Wulfgar’ll be coming back to us.”

  Catti-brie winced at the mention of his name, and her expression showed her to be far less convinced of that than was her father.

  “But will you?” she asked.

  “Bah!” Bruenor snorted, throwing up a hand as if the question was ridiculous.

  “And will Regis come back? And Drizzt?”

  “Drizzt is out there already,” Bruenor argued. “Are ye doubtin’ him?”

  “No.”

  “Then why’re ye doubting me?” asked Bruenor. “I’m out for doing the same thing Drizzt set out to do afore the winter. And he went out alone! I won’t be out there alone, girl, and ye’d be smarter if ye was worrying about the damned orcs.”

  Catti-brie continued to look at him, and had no answer.

  Bruenor opened wide his arms, inviting her to a hug that she could not resist. “Ye won’t be alone, girl. Ye won’t ever be alone,” he whispered into her ear.

  He understood fully her frustration, for would his own have been any less if he was to be left out of such a mission, when all of his friends were to go?

  Catti-brie pulled back from him far enough to look him in the eye and ask, “Are you sure of this?”

  “Obould’s got to die, and I’m the dwarf to kill him,” said Bruenor.

  “Drizzt tried, and failed.”

  “Well Drizzt’ll try again, but this time he’s got friends trying with him. When we come back to ye, the orc lines’ll be breaking apart. Ye’ll find plenty o’ fighting then, to be sure, and most of it outside our own doors. But the orcs’ll be scattered and easy to kill. Take me bet now, girl, that I’ll kill more than yerself.”

  “You’re going out now, and getting a head start,” Catti-brie answered, her face brightening a bit.

  “Bah, but I won’t count the ones I’m killing on the road,” said Bruenor. “When I get back here and the orcs come on, as they’re sure’n to do when Obould’s no more, then I’ll be killing more orcs than Catti-brie’s to fell.”

  Catti-brie wore a sly grin. “I’ll have me bow back from Drizzt then,” she said, assuming a Dwarvish accent as she threw out the warning. “Every arrow’s taking one down. Some’ll take down two, or might even be three.”

  “And every swipe o’ me axe is cutting three in half,” Bruenor countered. “And I’m not for tiring when there’re orcs to cut.”

  The two stared at each other without blinking as each extended a hand to shake on the bet.

  “The loser represents Mithral Hall at the next ceremony in Nesmé,” Catti-brie said, and Bruenor feigned a grimace, as though he hadn’t expected the stakes to be quite so high.

  “Ye’ll enjoy the journey,” the dwarf said. He smiled and tried to pull back, but Catti-brie held his hand firmly and stared him in the eye, her expression solemn.

  “Just get back to me, alive, and with Drizzt, Regis, and the others alive,” she said.

  “Plannin’ on it,” said Bruenor, though he didn’t believe it any more than did Catti-brie. “And with Obould’s ugly head.

  Catti-brie agreed. “With Obould’s head.”

  CHAPTER 24

  TAKING CARE IN WHAT THEY WISHED FOR

  Clan Wolf Jaw lined both sides of the trail, their
formidable array of warriors stretching out for hundreds of feet, beyond the bend and out of Chieftain Grguch’s line of sight. None moved to block the progress of Clan Karuck, or to threaten the hulking orcs in any way, and Grguch recognized the pair who did step out in the middle of the trail.

  “Greetings again, Dnark,” Grguch said. “You have heard of our assault on the ugly dwarves?”

  “All the tribes of Many-Arrows have heard of the glory of Grguch’s march,” Dnark answered, and Grguch smiled, as did Toogwik Tuk, who stood to the side and just behind the ferocious chieftain.

  “You march west,” remarked Dnark, glancing back over his shoulder. “To the invitation of King Obould?”

  Grguch spent a few moments looking over Dnark and his associate, the shaman Ung-thol. Then the huge orc warrior glanced back at Toogwik Tuk and beyond him, motioning to a trio of soldiers, two obviously of Clan Karuck, with wide shoulders and bulging muscles, and a third that Dnark and Ung-thol had parted company with just a few days earlier.

  “Obould has sent an emissary, requesting parlay,” Grguch explained. Behind him, Oktule saluted the pair and bowed repeatedly.

  “We were there among King Obould’s entourage when Oktule was sent forth,” Dnark replied. “Know you, though, that he was not the only emissary sent out that day.” He finished and met Grguch’s hard stare for a few heartbeats, then motioned behind to the Wolf Jaw ranks. Several warriors stepped out, dragging a beaten and battered orc. They took him around Dnark, and on his signal closed half the distance to Grguch before dropping their living cargo unceremoniously onto the dirt.

  Priest Nukkels groaned as he hit the ground, and squirmed a bit, but Ung-thol and Dnark had done their work extremely well and there was no chance of him getting up from the ground.

  “An emissary sent to you?” Grguch asked. “But you said that you were with Obould.”

  “No,” Toogwik Tuk explained, reading correctly the smug expressions worn by his co-conspirators. He stepped forward, daring to pass Grguch as he moved toward the battered priest. “No, this is Nukkels,” he explained, looking back at Grguch.

 

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