“Okay, but who are the War Wizards?”
Kern made a noise between a grunt and a hiccup. “The War Wizards are a lot of busybodies who think that because they’re wizards, they have the right to poke their snouts into everything that passes under the sun.”
“Well,” observed Trandon pacifically, “let’s just say we felt we had a legitimate interest in the outcome of this affair.”
“We might be a lot better off if you’d told us you were a wizard,” Noph half shouted. “Couldn’t you have used wizardry back in Undermountain? Maybe you could have saved Harloon….” His voice choked as he remembered his dead friend.
Trandon sighed and placed a hand on Noph’s shoulder. “Believe me, Kastonoph, I did everything I thought I could. Maybe I could have done more. Harloon and Abie’s deaths are something I have to live with now. But I didn’t want to tip my hand. And you must agree that when I did use my powers, it was at a time we really needed it.”
“And the result,” observed Entreri, speaking for the first time in the debate, “is that we’re here.” He stood and stepped a pace nearer the now-revealed wizard. “I don’t like surprises. And I don’t much like wizards,” he said flatly. “Is there anything else that anybody’s keeping secret?” His eyes swept the party. When no one spoke, his lips creased in what might have been taken as a smile. “All right. The Fallen Temple has the bloodforge. But if we hurry, we may be able to get it back.”
“Get it back? Are you insane?” Shar was on her feet, pointing to Artemis’s injured arm. “Have you forgotten what that thing did to you?”
Entreri turned his back on her and went up the stairs. In a moment, the rest of the party followed,
The stairway rose in a steady line for perhaps a hundred feet, then leveled off in a broad landing. Three doors opened onto it, and Ingrar, without the slightest hesitation, entered the right-hand one. Entreri, apparently equally confident, followed him, with the rest of the adventurers trailing behind him.
This tunnel rose in a steady spiral, the slope gentle but wearing on pirate and paladin alike, suffering as they still were from the stiffness and aches from their fall. Nonetheless, their spirits rose as they sensed they were coming closer to the surface.
“We must be almost there,” gasped Shar. As she spoke, a flicker of red light flared against the side of the tunnel before them, and a wind blew down the passage, carrying with it the smell of something burning.
A moment later, the companions found themselves standing in a doorway whose great wooden doors had been wrenched asunder. Trandon and Kern stepped forward and pushed the wreckage aside, and the group stepped through. They were in the interior of a temple; that much was clear from the great altar with its now-familiar image of the mage-king. The doors on the opposite side of the building stood open, and Noph, longing for a glimpse of the sky, ran to them. His strangled cry brought the others behind him. In awe, they stared out upon the scene.
Eldrinpar was burning. From the temple doors, standing atop a vast pyramid, they gazed out at the doomed city. Flames lit the dawn and flickered against the horizon. Spirals of smoke wafted upward, tendrils of black that seemed to reach into the greater darkness of the early morning sky. From time to time, a new building, ignited by the great heat of the fires, burst spontaneously into flame. The companions could hear a confused din of cries, screams, and shouts borne on the hot breeze.
From their vantage point above the city, they could see crowds of citizens fleeing through the streets. Pursuing them were bands of fiends, who ensnared them with paw and claw, sometimes slaying, sometimes capturing the unfortunate Doeganers and bearing them off to an unthinkable destination.
Not a word was spoken among the companions for some time as they stared, horrified, at this orgy of death and destruction. Then Sharessa pulled her eyes from the scene and faced the others.
“Come on! With a lot of luck and some fighting and wizardry, we can probably get to the harbor. Once we’re out to sea, I doubt any of those things will follow us. They’re too busy making meals out of these people.”
Entreri turned toward her. The rising sun showed the dark circles beneath his eyes. Raising his injured arm, he pulled the cloth from it. The others shuddered at the sight of the bones that clicked and moved without sinew or muscle.
“I don’t plan to go anywhere,” the assassin observed, “until I have that forge.” His voice rose in power and ambition. “Imagine what would be mine if I could learn to control the power that did this to me!”
Shar stared at him. “You’re mad! Even if you could control that thing, there’s no way you’d get within a mile of it. Gods, we don’t even know where it is now.” She turned away from him to the others. “If he wants to stay and get killed, so be it. Come on!”
Kern took his warhammer from his belt. “I agree that we must go. But Master Entreri is right in one respect. As long as that forge remains in the hands of the Fallen Temple, no one on all Toril is safe. I cannot allow this.” He looked at Entreri. “I’ll go with you, but I won’t allow you, of all people, to claim the bloodforge.”
Sharessa bit her lip in frustration, and Noph saw the red blood spread across the rosy promise of her mouth. “Ingrar?”
The young pirate, his face lit by the fires of, Eldrinpar, shook his head. “I can’t, Shar. My destiny is bound up with the bloodforge.” His voice grew in strength as he spoke. “I am linked to the forge and to the destiny of the Five Kingdoms. It is beyond your power to change my course. It is my destiny.”
“Your destiny!” spat Shar angrily. “Your death, you mean! Haven’t you seen enough death already? Remember Kurthe? And Brindra? And Anvil? Gods, how many more deaths is it going to take?” She whirled furiously on Entreri. “You brought nothing but death to us. We were the best of Kissing Shark’s crew, and now look at us. Three dead, and Rings and Belgin gone off on some expedition to the ends of the earth, all because you say so, you tell us what to do. But you don’t say when we die! Do you hear me? You don’t say when we die!” She slammed her blade at the temple wall. The steel struck a shower of sparks from the stone, and the sword sprang back, a notch in its gleaming edge.
“Shar?” Noph’s voice was shaking with weariness and emotion. “Shar, listen to me.” He looked around at the others: Entreri scanning the chaotic scene below them; Kern, the flames shining on his golden armor; Trandon, his silver hair blowing free in the wind; and Ingrar, a strange radiance shining from his face. “Shar, we’ve been through too much to run away. All those deaths—they’re not the only ones. I’ve seen our friends Able and Harloon die in Undermountain before we even got here. There’s been too much death.” He gestured toward the city. “There’s more down there. But it all has to mean something. It can’t just have been for nothing. And the only way I can see that any of this is going to mean anything is for us to try to do what we set out to accomplish.”
He flushed and turned away. Trandon looked at him with something very like affection. The others did not move.
Shar looked at Noph. “Is that what you think?” she asked. Her voice, honey-sweet, dripped sarcasm, and in her eyes the youth saw only contempt.
Contempt for weakness, for sentiment that had no place in survival. Artemis had said that, Noph remembered. But it was the pirate code as well.
Shar turned away from him. Her long dark hair blew free in the wind, fanning into a great cloud that seemed to cast a shadow over the dreary sun of this dreary land.
On one side of the door was a bas-relief of the mage-king’s face, gazing sadly out at the capital of his empire. Shar walked over to it and stared at the stone eyes for a long moment. Then, drawing her sword, she reversed it and, pommel first, struck at the image as hard as she could. The visage shattered, the pieces clattering around her feet. The female pirate looked at her companions. “All right. I’m ready now.”
Entreri nodded almost imperceptibly and turned to Ingrar. “Can you feel anything? Anything about where the Fallen Temple might be holding the
forge?”
Ingrar hesitated for a moment, then pointed out over the roofs below. “There.” He gestured toward another, smaller pyramid, perhaps a mile or two away.
Shar, standing beside him, looked coolly at the scene below.
“The fiends are taking their captives that way.” She gestured toward the city’s walls that held back the encroaching jungle. “If we’re careful, we ought to have a clear path to the harbor.”
“And do we leave the population to the tender mercies of those monsters?” Kern asked angrily. “I am a soldier of Tyr. I fight evil wherever I find it. I—”
“Yes, all right,” interrupted Shar. After we get the forge, we’ll put you in a room with all the fiends in the Abyss and you can slaughter them all in the name of Tyr, or Tempus, or whoever you damn well please. For right now, let’s concentrate on getting the forge.”
She stared coldly into the paladin’s blue eyes. He looked stoically back into her brown orbs. Trandon cleared his throat.
“She’s right, Kern,” the fighter observed. “One thing at a time. We can’t save the population without a weapon that’s a lot more powerful than anything we’ve got. The bloodforge is the key to retaking the city.”
Kern nodded reluctantly, persuaded in spite of himself. “Very well. Let’s go.”
The party began to descend the steps cautiously. The street below them had begun to empty as the fiends herded their captors toward the city’s center. The companions picked their way carefully over many of the stone steps that had been broken or cracked. The heat from the fires grew greater as they descended the slope.
At the foot of the pyramid, they halted. Kern pointed down a narrow street of adobe houses crowded together, some sagging uneasily. “That’s the most direct route.”
Entreri nodded wordlessly, and the company moved on. Within a few of the darkened doorways of the street, they could hear wailing and moaning. Noph paused before one such door, but Shar pushed him on. “We don’t have time, Noph.” Her face seemed to mirror that of Entreri in its cold decisiveness.
Noph realized the wisdom of her words. Even now he thought he could hear soft footsteps behind them. He turned and glanced back at the winding way they had come. Nothing. No one. He took a few steps, then turned again. There! Surely there had been a dark shadow flitting along one side of the street. Noph grabbed Trandon’s arm.
“Look! Do you see anyone? Anything?”
Trandon stopped and gazed back, shading his eyes. “No. You sure you’re not imagining things?”
Noph shook his head. “I don’t think so. Someone’s following us.”
Trandon called softly to Entreri, and the little man halted impatiently.
“Well?”
“Noph thinks we’re being followed.”
The assassin looked irritably at Noph, who stared back, unblinking. Entreri sighed. “Ingrar?”
The blind pirate listened. “Yes. There’s someone back there. Several someones. They’ve got weapons, too.”
Entreri turned abruptly and walked back the way they’d come, Kern at his side. From out of the shadows on either side of the street, dark figures emerged and blocked them. One of the shadows stepped forward. “Greetings to you, Master Entreri. Sir Paladin.”
“Lord Garkim!” Kern’s voice was relieved but not friendly. “What do you want with us?”
“A word.” The chancellor of Aetheric III was soot-streaked and weary-looking. His once-fine robes were singed and tattered. In one hand he bore a curving sword. His followers, members of the palace guard, looking equally bedraggled, carried similar weapons. “I know what you are seeking.”
Entreri looked at him without expression. “How do you know?”
“I can hear your thoughts. My telepathic abilities are exceptional, but all this”—he gestured broadly around them—”has made it difficult to sense much. However, your desire for the bloodforge is so strong that I could feel it when you descended from the temple.”
“What of it?” asked Kern. “We are seeking the bloodforge, it’s true. We had it once, but—”
“I know. It was stolen from you by members of the Fallen Temple.” A ghost of a smile wafted across Lord Garkim’s face. “I suppose there is something appropriate about a theft by the Fallen Temple from a paladin of Tyr.”
“What do you want?” repeated Kern. His hand was on his sword, his face stern. Trandon stood behind him, both hands resting on his staff, watching the scene closely. “I tell you frankly, my lord, I feel no great friendliness toward you. As far as I can tell, you have lied to us since we came into this land. You used us, you and your master. What can you offer us now?”
“An alliance, though perhaps a temporary one. The bloodforge in the hands of the Fallen Temple is an artifact that represents an extraordinary danger to the Five Kingdoms.”
“It’s also a grave danger to Faerûn,” said Trandon quietly.
Garkim shrugged. “Possibly. I cannot concern myself with matters in your corner of the world. What is of importance to me is safeguarding my land and performing the bidding of my master. In this I have failed. But if we can retrieve the bloodforge from the Fallen Temple, we can turn back the fiendish invasion.”
“You know the secret of the bloodforge?” Entreri’s voice trembled slightly, and his hand reached up to stroke his skeletal arm, now concealed again by wrappings.
“I do.”
Entreri stood silent for a moment in thought. The others waited, Sharessa shifting impatiently from foot to foot, casting worried glances at the shadows in the street.
“I agree,” observed Entreri finally. “But you will obey me in this affair.”
Garkim looked at him, eyes gleaming. “You’ll forgive me, Master Entreri, but I have some little experience with the false adherents of Tyr. Moreover, I know where they have taken the forge. It hardly seems to me that you have anything with which to bargain.”
“Then why propose an alliance?” snapped the little assassin.
Kern cleared his throat. “Come. We’re wasting time. Lord Garkim, lead us to the bloodforge. Our pact can last at least that far. As to what happens when we recover the forge from these blasphemers—” He shrugged. “We’ll see.”
“Oh, yes,” said Garkim softly. “We shall see.”
Chapter 5
The Glory of Tyr
“How can we get through the streets without being attacked by the fiends?”
Noph’s question, directed to Garkim, echoed the unspoken sentiments of his companions. However, the chancellor appeared unfazed by it.
“I know a secret way. Come.” He gestured to the paladins and pirates and walked quickly down one of the dark, crooked streets that led away from the base of the pyramid. The companions followed him, and the four palace guards brought up the rear.
Near the temple, the houses were large, some with enclosed courtyards in which Noph could see fountains playing and gardens with bright blooming flowers. However, as Garkim led them on, the way became more twisted and foul, the smells more pronounced, the dwellings smaller. Everywhere they found signs of the assault of the fiends: bodies lying across doorways where they had fallen defending their homes, shattered walls and windows, doors scored with claw marks and acid burns.
Garkim entered one of the courtyards, cautiously peering about. In the center of the atrium was an iron grille set into the paving stones. The chancellor gestured to two of the guards, who swiftly pried up the grille, revealing a gaping well beneath it. A few feet below the rim was a narrow ladder.
“The city drains,” said Garkim in a low voice. “They reach into every part of Eldrinpar. The fiends may not yet have entered them.”
“May not,” began Kern, but stopped as the chancellor, gathering his robes about him, climbed down the ladder.
Entreri gave a swift glance at his companions, then followed. The others entered the well, gasping at the stench that rose from below. Noph, clinging to the slimy metal ladder, heard a clank above him as the last guard pulled
the iron grille back in place.
Descending some fifteen feet, the party came to the bottom of the shaft and found themselves at the entrance to a brick-lined tunnel that snaked off into the darkness. Garkim hastily lit a torch and led the way, splashing through puddles and streams of water that gleamed in the torchlight. From time to time, the party passed other conjoining passages, but Garkim never hesitated in choosing which way to turn.
Noph caught up to Garkim and Entreri. “Lord Garkim, how do you know your way about here?”
Garkim’s mouth was tight, but his eyes brimmed with tears. “My people sometimes use these tunnels.”
“Your people?”
“The Mar. In Eldrinpar, it is the Ffolk who live near the temples and palaces, and the Mar who remain apart from power and faith. To escape the scrutiny of the Ffolk, the Mar long ago learned to use the drains. Like maggots, they burrow beneath the city, and the Ffolk are none the wiser.” He sighed. “The gods have so decreed it, but it still seems hard to me.”
“But you’re a Mar.”
“I was plucked from my home when I was a boy by the mage-king himself. It’s true that I’ve risen to high station under his rule, but even so, there are—were—those in high councils who whispered against me when my back was turned because I was Mar.” He shrugged and quickened his pace. “None of this will matter, though, if the followers of the Fallen Temple install the bloodforge.”
“Why do they want it?” asked Entreri. His voice echoed strangely against the tunnel walls. “What do they want to accomplish?”
“They wish to summon Ysdar, a being of great power who comes from beyond this plane of existence. Some say he is no more than a name, a shadow to frighten children. But I believe he is real and is plotting to conquer all the Five Kingdoms.”
“And he can do that if he gets a bloodforge?” Noph asked.
“According to most accounts of him, Ysdar already has a bloodforge. But a second would give him decisive power to command armies far greater than any that other kingdoms might bring against him. So we stand upon the sword’s edge. The next few hours may decide whether my world stands or falls.” Garkim fell silent and strode on.
Forgotten Realms - [Double Diamond Triangle Saga 07] - Uneasy Alliances Page 5