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Dragons of a Vanished Moon Page 4


  Holding the device, Tas said a little prayer in his heart. “I know you can’t hear me, Fizban … Or maybe you can but you’re so disappointed in me that you don’t want to hear me. I’m truly sorry. Truly, truly sorry.” Tears crept into his eyes. “I never meant to cause all this trouble. I only wanted to speak at Caramon’s funeral, to tell everyone what a good friend he was to me. I never meant for this to happen. Never! So, if you’ll help me just once to go back to die, I’ll stay dead. I promise.”

  “It’s not doing anything,” Conundrum grumbled. “Are you sure it’s plugged in?”

  Hearing the footsteps growing louder and louder, Tas held the device over his head.

  “Words to the spell. I have to say the words to the spell. I know the words,” the kender said, gulping. “It goes … It goes … Thy time is thine … Around it you journey … No, that can’t be right. Travel. Around it you travel … and something, something expanses …”

  The footsteps were so close now that he could feel the floor shake.

  Sweat beaded on the kender’s forehead. He gulped again and looked at the device, as if it might help him. When it didn’t, he shook it.

  “Now I see how it got broken in the first place,” said Conundrum severely. “Is this going to take long? I think hear someone coming.”

  “Grasp firmly the beginning and you’ll end up at the end. No, that’s wrong,” Tas said miserably. “All of it’s wrong. I can’t remember the words! What’s the matter with me? I used to know it by heart. I could recite it standing on my head. I know because Fizban made me do it.…”

  There came a thundering crash on the door, as of a heavy minotaur shoulder bashing into it.

  Tas shut his eyes, so that he wouldn’t hear what was going on outside the door. “Fizban made me say the spell standing on my head backwards. It was a bright, sunny day. We were in a green meadow, and the sky was blue with these little puffy white clouds, and the birds were singing, and so was Fizban until I asked him politely not to.…”

  Another resounding crash and a sound of wood splintering.

  Thy time is thy own.

  Though across it you travel.

  Its expanses you see.

  Whirling across forever.

  Obstruct not its flow.

  Grasp firmly the end and the beginning.

  Turn them forward upon themselves.

  All that is loose shall be secure

  Destiny be over your own head.

  The words flooded Tasslehoff’s being, as warm and bright as the sunshine on that spring day. He didn’t know where they came from, and he didn’t stick around to ask.

  The device began to glow brightly, jewels gleaming.

  The last sensation Tas felt was that of a hand clutching his. The last sound Tas heard was Conundrum’s voice, crying out in panic, “Wait! There’s a screw loose—”

  And then all sound and sensation was lost in the wonderful and exciting rushing-wind noise of the magic.

  3

  The Punishment for Failure

  he kender is gone, Mina,” Galdar reported, emerging from the Tower.

  “Gone?” Mina turned away from the amber coffin that held the body of Goldmoon to stare at the minotaur. “What do you mean? That’s impossible? How could he escape—”

  Mina gave a cry of anguish. Doubling over in wrenching pain, she sank to her knees, her arms clasped around her, her nails digging into her bare flesh in transports of agony.

  “Mina!” Galdar cried in alarm. He hovered over her, helpless, baffled. “What has happened? Are you wounded? Tell me!”

  Mina moaned and writhed upon the ground, unable to answer.

  Galdar glared around at her Knights. “You were supposed to be guarding her! What enemy has done this?”

  “I swear, Galdar!” cried one. “No one came near her—”

  “Mina,” said Galdar, bending over her, “tell me where you are hurt!”

  Shuddering, in answer, she placed her hand on the black hauberk she wore, placed her hand over her heart.

  “My fault!” she gasped through lips that bled. She had bitten down on them in her torment. “My fault. This … my punishment.”

  Mina remained on her knees, her head bowed, her hands clenched. Rivulets of sweat ran down her face. She shivered with fevered chills. “Forgive me!” she gasped, the words were flecked with blood. “I failed you. I forgot my duty. It will not happen again, I swear on my soul!”

  The spasms of wracking pain ceased. Mina sighed, shuddering. Her body relaxed. She drew in deep breaths and rose, unsteadily, to her feet.

  Her Knights gathered around her, wondering and ill at ease.

  “Alarm’s over,” Galdar told them. “Go back to your duties.”

  They went, but not without many backward looks. Galdar supported Mina’s unsteady steps.

  “What happened to you?” he asked, eyeing her anxiously. “You spoke of punishment. Who punished you and for what?”

  “The One God,” said Mina. Her face was streaked with sweat and drawn with remembered agony, the amber eyes gray. “I failed in my duty. The kender was of paramount importance. I should have retrieved him first. I …” She licked her bloodied lips, swallowed. “I was so eager to see my mother, I forgot about him. Now he is gone, and it is my fault.”

  “The One God did this to you?” Galdar repeated, appalled, his voice shaking with anger. “The One God hurt you like this?”

  “I deserved it, Galdar,” Mina replied. “I welcome it. The pain inflicted on me is nothing compared to the pain the One God bears because of my failure.”

  Galdar frowned, shook his head.

  “Come, Galdar,” she said, her tone chiding, “didn’t your father whip you as a child? Didn’t your battle master beat you when you made a mistake in training? Your father did not strike you out of malice. The battle master did not hit you out of spite. Such punishment was meant for your own good.”

  “It isn’t the same,” Galdar growled. He would never forget the sight of her, who had led armies to glorious conquest, on her knees in the dirt, writhing in pain.

  “Of course, it is the same,” Mina said gently. “We are all children of the One God. How else are we to learn our duty?”

  Galdar had no reply. Mina took his silence for agreement.

  “Take some of the men and search every room in the Tower. Make certain the kender is not hiding in any of them. While you are gone, we will burn these bodies.”

  “Must I go back in there, Mina?” said Galdar, his voice heavy with reluctance.

  “Why? What do you fear?” she asked.

  “Nothing living,” he replied, with a dark scowl at the Tower.

  “Don’t be afraid, Galdar,” said Mina. She cast a careless glance at the bodies of the wizards, being dragged to the funeral pyre. “Their spirits cannot harm you. They go to serve the One God.”

  A bright light shone in the heavens. Distant, ethereal, the light was more radiant than the sun, made that orb seem dim and tarnished by comparison. Dalamar’s mortal eyes could not look long at the sun, lest he be blinded, but he could stare at this beautiful, pure light forever, or so he imagined. Stare at it with an aching longing that rendered all that he was, all that he had been, paltry and insignificant.

  As a very small child, he had once looked up in the night sky above his homeland to see the silver moon. Thinking it a bauble, just out of his reach, he wanted it to play with. He demanded his parents fetch it for him, and when they did not, he wept in anger and frustration. He felt that way now. He could have wept, but he had no eyes to weep with, no tears to fall. The bright and beautiful light was out of reach. His way to it was blocked. A barrier as thin as gossamer and strong as adamant stretched in front of him. Try as he might, he could not move past that barrier, a prison wall that surrounded a world.

  He was not alone. He was one prisoner among many. The souls of the dead roamed restlessly about the prison yard of their bleak existence, all of them looking with longing at the radiant l
ight. None of them able to attain it.

  “The light is very beautiful,” said a voice that was soft and beguiling. “What you see is the light of a realm beyond, the next stage of your soul’s long journey. I will release you, let you travel there, but first you must bring me what I need.”

  He would obey. He would bring the voice whatever it wanted, so long as he could escape this prison. He had only to bring the magic. He looked at the Tower of High Sorcery and recognized it as having something to do with what he was, what he had been, but all that was gone now, behind him. The Tower was a veritable storehouse for the magic. He could see the magic glistening like streams of gold dust among the barren sand that had been his life.

  The other, restless souls streamed into the Tower, now bereft of the one who had been its master. Dalamar looked at the radiant light, and his heart ached with longing. He joined the river of souls that was flowing into the Tower.

  He had almost reached the entrance when a hand reached out and seized hold of him, held him fast. The voice, angry and frustrated itself, hissed at him, “Stop.”

  “Stop!” Mina commanded. “Halt! Do not burn the bodies. I have changed my mind.”

  Startled, the Knights let loose their hold. The corpses flopped limply to the ground. The Knights exchanged glances. They had never seen Mina like this, irresolute and vacillating. They didn’t like it, and they didn’t like to see her punished, even by this One God. The One God was far away, had little to do with them. Mina was near, and they worshiped her, idolized her.

  “A good idea, Mina,” said Galdar, emerging from the Tower. He glared balefully at the dead wizards. “Leave the vultures to be eaten by vultures. The kender is not in the Tower. We’ve searched high, and we’ve searched low. Let’s get out of this accursed place.”

  Fire crackled. Smoke curled about the Tower, as the mournful dead curled about the boles of the cypress trees. The living waited in hopeful expectation, longing to leave. The dead waited patiently, they had nowhere to go. All of them wondered what Mina meant to do.

  She knelt beside Dalamar’s body. Clasping one hand over the medallion she wore around her neck, she placed her other hand on the mage’s mortal wounds. The staring eyes looked up vacantly.

  Softly, Mina began to sing.

  Wake, love, for this time wake.

  Your soul, my hand does take.

  Leave the darkness deep.

  Leave your endless sleep.

  Dalamar’s flesh warmed beneath Mina’s hand. Blood tinged the gray cheeks, warmed the chill limbs. His lips parted, drew in breath in a shivering gasp. He quivered and stirred at her touch. Life returned to the corpse, to all but the eyes. The eyes remained vacant, empty.

  Galdar watched in scowling disapproval. The Knights stared in awe. Always before, Mina had prayed over the dead, but she had never brought them back to life. The dead serve the One God, she had told them.

  “Stand up,” Mina ordered.

  The living body with the lifeless eyes obeyed, rose to its feet.

  “Go to the wagon,” Mina ordered. “There await my command.”

  The elf’s eyelids shivered. His body jerked.

  “Go to the wagon,” Mina repeated.

  Slowly, the mage’s empty eyes shifted, looked at Mina.

  “You will obey me in this,” said Mina, “as you will obey me in all things, else I will destroy you. Not your body. The loss of this lump of flesh would be of little consequence to you now. I will destroy your soul.”

  The corpse shuddered and, after a moment’s hesitation, shuffled off toward the wagon. The Knights fell back before it, gave it wide berth, although a few started to grin. The shambling thing looked grotesque. One of the Knights actually laughed aloud.

  Horrified and repelled, Galdar saw nothing funny in this. He had spoken glibly of leaving the corpses to the vultures, and he could have done that without a qualm—they were wizards, after all—but he didn’t like this. There was something wrong with this, although he couldn’t quite say what or why it should so disturb him.

  “Mina, is this wise?” he asked.

  Mina ignored him. Singing the same song over the second wizard, she placed her hand upon his chest. The corpse sat up.

  “Go join your fellow in the wagon,” she commanded.

  Palin’s eyes blinked. A spasm contorted his features. Slowly, the hands with their broken fingers started to raise up, reach out, as if to grab and seize hold of something only he could see.

  “I will destroy you,” Mina said sternly. “You will obey me.”

  The hands clenched. The face contorted in agony, a pain that seemed far worse than the pain of death.

  “Go,” said Mina, pointing.

  The corpse gave up the fight. Bowing its head, it walked to the wagon. This time, none of the Knights laughed.

  Mina sat back, pale, wan, exhausted. This day had been a sad one for her. The death of the woman she loved as a mother, the anger of her god. She drooped, her shoulders sagged. She seemed scarcely able to stand under her own power. Galdar was moved to pity. He longed to comfort and support her, but his duty came first.

  “Mina, is this wise?” he repeated in a low voice, for her ears alone. “Bad enough we must haul a coffin about Ansalon, but now we are further burdened by these two … things.” He didn’t know what name to call them. “Why have you done this? What purpose does it serve?” He frowned. “It unsettles the men.”

  The amber eyes regarded him. Her face was drawn with fatigue and grief, but the eyes shone clear, undimmed, and, as always, they saw right through him.

  “It unsettles you, Galdar,” she said.

  He grunted. His mouth twisted.

  Mina turned her gaze to the corpses, sitting on the end of the wagon, staring out at nothing.

  “These two wizards are tied to the kender, Galdar.”

  “They are hostages, then?” said Galdar, cheering up. This was something he could understand.

  “Yes, Galdar, if you want to think of it that way. They are hostages. When we recover the kender and the artifact, they will explain to me to how it works.”

  “I’ll put an extra guard on them.”

  “That will not be necessary,” Mina said, shrugging. “Think of them not so much as prisoners, but as animated slabs of meat.”

  She gazed at them, her expression thoughtful. “What would you say to an army of such as these, Galdar? An army of soldiers who obey commands without question, soldiers who fight without fear, who have inordinate strength, who fall, only to rise again. Isn’t that the dream of every commander? We hold their souls in thrall,” she continued, musing, “and send forth their bodies to do battle. What would you say to that, Galdar?”

  Galdar could think of nothing to say. Rather, he could think of too much to say. He could imagine nothing more heinous, nothing more obscene.

  “Fetch my horse, Galdar,” Mina ordered. “It is time we left this place of sorrow.”

  Galdar did as he was told, obeyed that order eagerly.

  Mounting her horse, Mina took her place at the head of the mournful caravan. The Knights fell in around the wagon, forming an honor guard for the dead. The wagon’s driver cracked his whip, and the heavy draft horses heaved against the harness. The wagon and its strange burden lurched forward.

  The souls of the dead parted for Mina, as did the trees. A trail opened up through the thick and tangled wood that surrounded the Tower of High Sorcery. The trail was smooth, for Mina would not have the coffin jostled. She turned often in her saddle to look back to the wagon, to the amber sarcophagus.

  Galdar took his customary place at Mina’s side.

  The bodies of the two wizards sat on the back of the wagon, feet dangling, arms flaccid, hands resting in their laps. Their eyes stared straight ahead behind them. Once, Galdar glanced back at them. He saw two wispy entities trailing after the living corpses, like silken scarves caught in the wagon wheels.

  Their souls.

  He looked quickly away and did not look
back again.

  4

  The Death of Skie

  he silver dragon had no idea how much time had passed since he had first entered the caverns of Skie, the mighty blue dragon. The blind silver, Mirror, had no way of judging time, for he could not see the sun. He had not seen it since the day of that strange and terrible storm, the day he’d heard the voice in the storm and recognized it, the day the voice had commanded that he bow down and worship, the day he’d been punished for his refusal, struck by the bolt that left him sightless and disfigured. That day was months past. He had wandered the world since, stumbling about in human form, because a blind human can walk, whereas a blind dragon, who cannot fly, is almost helpless.

  Hidden away in this cave, Mirror knew nothing but night, felt nothing but night’s cool shadows.

  Mirror had no notion how long he had been here in the lair with the suffering blue dragon. It might have been a day or a year since Skie had sought to make demands of the One God. Mirror had been an unwitting witness to their encounter.

  Having heard the voice in the storm and recognized it, Mirror had come seeking an answer to this strange riddle. If the voice was that of Takhisis, what was she doing in this world when all the other gods had departed? Thinking it over, Mirror had decided that Skie might be the one to provide him with information.

  Mirror had always had questions about Skie. Supposedly a Krynn dragon like himself, Skie had grown larger and stronger and more powerful than any other blue dragon in the history of the world. Skie had purportedly turned on his own kind, slaying and devouring them as did the dragon overlords. Mirror had often wondered: Had Skie had truly turned upon his own kind? Or had Skie joined his own kind?

  With great difficulty, Mirror had managed to find Skie’s lair and enter it. He had arrived in time to witness Skie’s punishment by Mina for his presumption, for his perceived disloyalty. Skie had sought to kill Mina, but the lightning bolt meant to slay her reflected off her armor, struck him. The immense blue dragon was mortally wounded.

  Desperate to know the truth, Mirror had done what he could to heal Skie. He had been only partially successful. He was keeping the Blue alive, but the barbs of the gods are powerful weapons, and Mirror, though a dragon, was mortal.