Dragons of a Vanished Moon Page 9
“We’re going to die a hero’s death,” said Tasslehoff with his first mouthful of air.
“What?” Conundrum shrieked with his first mouthful of air.
“We’re going to die a hero’s death,” Tasslehoff repeated.
Then he suddenly realized that they weren’t.
Absorbed in preparing both himself and the gnome for an imminent demise, Tasslehoff had not taken a close look at their surroundings. He assumed that all he would be seeing was the ugly underside of Chaos’s foot. Now that he had time to notice, he saw above him not a foot, but the dripping needles of a pine tree in a rain storm.
Tasslehoff felt his head to see if he had received a severe bump, for he knew from past experience that severe bumps to the head can cause you to see the most remarkable things, although those were generally starbursts, not dripping pine needles. He could find no signs of a bump, however.
Hearing Conundrum drawing in another large breath, undoubtedly preparatory to letting loose another ear-piercing shriek, Tasslehoff raised his hand in a commanding gesture.
“Hush,” he whispered tensely, “I thought I heard something.”
Now, if truth be told, Tasslehoff had not heard something. Well, he had. He’d heard the rain falling off the pine needles, but he hadn’t heard anything dire, which is what his tone implied. He’d only pretended that in order to shut off the gnome’s shrieks. Unfortunately, as is often the way with transgressors, he was immediately punished for his sin, for the moment he pretended to hear something dire, he did hear something dire—the clash of steel on steel, followed by a crackling blast.
In Tas’s experience as a hero, only two things made sounds like that: swords beating against swords and fireballs exploding against just about anything.
The next thing he heard was more shrieking, only this time it was not, blessedly, Conundrum. The shrieking was some distance away and had the distinct sound of dying goblin to it, a notion that was reinforced by the sickening smell of burnt goblin hair. The shrieking ended summarily, then came a crashing, as of large bodies running through a forest of dripping wet pine needles. Thinking these might be more goblins and realizing that this was an inopportune time to be running into goblins, especially those who have just been fireball-blasted, Tasslehoff squirmed his way on his belly underneath a sheltering, low-hanging pine bough and dragged Conundrum in after him.
“Where are we?” Conundrum demanded, lifting up his head out of the mud in which they were lying. “How did we get here? When are we going back?”
All perfectly sound, logical questions. Trust a gnome, thought Tas, to go right to the heart of the matter.
“I’m sorry,” said Tas, peering out through the wet pine needles, trying to see what was going on. The crashing sounds were growing louder, which meant they were coming closer. “But I don’t know. Any of it.”
Conundrum gaped. His chin fell so far it came back up with mud on it. “What do you mean you don’t know?” he gasped, swelling with indignation. “You brought us here.”
“No,” said Tas with dignity, “I didn’t. This brought us here.” He indicated the Device of Time Journeying that he was holding in his hand. “When it wasn’t supposed to.”
Seeing Conundrum sucking in another huge breath, Tas fixed the gnome with a withering stare. “So I guess you didn’t fix it, after all.”
The breath wheezed out of Conundrum. He stared at the device, muttered something about missing schematics and lack of internal directives, and held out his mud-covered hand. “Give it to me. I’ll take a look at it.”
“No, thank you,” said Tasslehoff, shoving the device into a pouch and closing the flap. “I think I should hold onto it. Now hush!” Turning back to stare out from under the pine bough, Tas put his fingers to his lips. “Don’t let on we’re here.”
Contrary to most gnomes, who never see anything outside of the inside of Mount Nevermind, Conundrum was a well-traveled gnome who’d had his share of adventures, most of which he hadn’t enjoyed in the slightest. Nasty, bothersome things, adventures. Interrupted a fellow’s work. But he had learned an important lesson—the best way to survive adventures was to lie hidden in some dark and uncomfortable place and keep your mouth shut. This he was good at doing.
Conundrum was so good at hiding that when Tasslehoff, who was not at all good at this sort of thing, started to get up with a glad and joyful cry to go to meet two humans who had just run out of the forest, the gnome grabbed hold of the kender with a strength borne of terror and dragged him back down.
“What in the name of all that’s combustible do you think you’re doing?” Conundrum gasped.
“They’re not burnt goblins, like I first thought,” Tas argued, pointing. “That man is a Solamnic Knight. I can tell by his armor. And the other man is a mage. I can tell by his robes. I’m just going to go say hello and introduce myself.”
“If there is one thing that I have learned in my travels,” said Conundrum in a smothered whisper, “it is that you never introduce yourself to anyone carrying a sword or wearing wizard’s robes. Let them go their way, and you go your way.”
“Did you say something?” said the strange mage, turning to his companion.
“No,” said the Knight, raising his sword and looking keenly about.
“Well, somebody did,” said the mage grimly. “I distinctly heard voices.”
“I can’t hear anything for the sound of my own heart beating.” The Knight paused, listening, then shook his head. “No, I can’t hear a thing. What did it sound like? Goblins?”
“No,” the mage said, peering into the shadows.
The man was a Solamnic by his looks, for he had long, blond hair that he wore braided to keep out of his way. His eyes were blue, keen, and intense. He wore robes that might have started out red but were now so stained with mud, charred with smoke, and smeared with blood that their color was indistinguishable in the gray light of the rainy day. A glint of golden trim could be seen at the cuffs and on the hem.
“Look at that!” gasped Tasslehoff, agog with amazement, “He’s carrying Raistlin’s staff!”
“Oddly enough,” the mage was saying, “it sounded like a kender.”
Tasslehoff clapped his hand over his mouth. Conundrum shook his head bleakly.
“What would a kender be doing here in the middle of a battle field?” asked the Knight with a smile.
“What does a kender do anywhere?” the mage returned archly, “except cause trouble for those who have the misfortune to encounter him.”
“How true,” sighed Conundrum gloomily.
“How rude,” muttered Tasslehoff. “Maybe I won’t go introduce myself to them, after all.”
“So long as it was not goblins you heard,” the Knight said. He cast a glance over his shoulder. “Do you think we’ve stopped them?”
The Knight wore the armor of a Knight of the Crown. Tas had first taken him to be an older man, for the Knight’s hair had gone quite gray, but after watching him awhile, Tas realized that the Knight was far younger than he appeared at first glance. It was his eyes that made him look older—they had a sadness about them and a weariness that should not have been seen in one so young.
“We’ve stopped them for the time being,” the mage said. Sinking down at the foot of the tree, he cradled the staff protectively in his arms.
The staff was Raistlin’s, all right. Tasslehoff knew that staff well, with its crystal ball clutched in the golden dragon’s claw. He remembered the many times he’d reached out to touch it, only to have his hand smacked.
“And many times I’ve seen Raistlin hold the staff just like that,” Tas said softly to himself. “Yet that mage is most certainly not Raistlin. Maybe he’s stolen Ra
istlin’s staff. If so, Raistlin will want to know who the thief is.”
Tas listened with all his ears, as the old kender saying went.
“Our enemy now has a healthy fear of your sword and my magic,” the mage was saying. “Unfortunately, goblins have an even healthier fear of their own commanders. The whip will soon convince them to come after us.”
“It will take them time to regroup.” The Knight squatted down beneath the tree. Picking up a handful of wet pine needles, he began to clean the blood off his sword. “Time enough for us to rest, then try to find our way back to our company. Or time for them to find us. They are undoubtedly out searching for us even now.”
“Searching for you, Huma,” said the mage with a wry smile. He leaned back against the tree and wearily closed his eyes. “They will not be looking very hard for me.”
The Knight appeared disturbed by this. His expression grave, he concentrated on his cleaning, rubbing hard at a stubborn speck. “You have to understand them, Magius—” he began.
“Huma …” Tas repeated. “Magius …” He stared at the two, blinked in wonder. Then he stared down at the Device of Time Journeying. “Do you suppose …?”
“I understand them quite well, Huma,” Magius returned. “The average Solamnic Knight is an ignorant, superstitious dolt, who believes all the dark tales about wizards told to him by his nursery maid in order to frighten him into keeping quiet at night, in consequence of which he expects me to start leaping through camp naked, gibbering and ranting and transforming him into a newt with a wave of my staff. Not that I couldn’t do it, mind you,” Magius continued with a quirk of his brow and the twist of an infectious smile. “And don’t think I haven’t considered it. Spending five minutes as a newt would be an interesting change for most of them. Expand their minds, if nothing else.”
“I don’t think I’d much care for life as a newt,” said Huma.
“You, alone, are different, my friend,” Magius said, his tone softening. Reaching out his hand, he rested it on the Knight’s wrist. “You are not afraid of new ideas. You are not afraid of that which you do not understand. Even as a child, you did not fear to be my friend.”
“You will teach them to think better of wizards, Magius,” said Huma, resting his hand over his friend’s. “You will teach them to view magic and those who wield it with respect.”
“I will not,” said Magius coolly, “for I really have no care what they think of me. If anyone can change their obsolete, outdated and outmoded views, you are the one to do it. And you had best do it quickly, Huma,” he added, his mocking tone now serious. “The Dark Queen’s power grows daily. She is raising vast armies. Countless thousands of evil creatures flock to her standard. These goblins would never before have dared to attack a company of Knights, but you saw with what ferocity they struck us this morning. I begin to think that it is not the whip they fear, but the wrath of the Dark Queen should they fail.”
“Yet she will fail. She must fail, Magius,” said Huma. “She and her evil dragons must be driven from the world, sent back to the Abyss. For if she is not defeated, we will live as do these wretched goblins, live our lives in fear.” Huma sighed, shook his head. “Although, I admit to you, dear friend, I do not see how that is possible. The numbers of her minions are countless, their power immense—”
“But you do defeat her!” Tasslehoff cried, unable to restrain himself any longer. Freeing himself from Conundrum’s frantic grasp, Tas scrambled to his feet and burst out from underneath the pine trees.
Huma jumped up, drawing his sword in one, swift movement. Magius extended the staff with the crystal held fast in the dragon’s claw, aimed the staff at the kender, and began to speak words that Tas recognized by their spidery sound as being words of magic.
Knowing that perhaps he didn’t have much time before he was turned into a newt, Tasslehoff accelerated his conversation.
“You raise an army of heroes, and you fight the Queen of Darkness herself, and while you die, Huma, and you die, too, Magius—I’m really very sorry about that, by the way—you do send all the evil dragons back to—ulp”
Several things happened simultaneously with that “ulp.” Two large, hairy, and foul-smelling goblin hands grabbed hold Conundrum, while another yellow-skinned, slavering-jawed goblin seized hold of Tasslehoff.
Before the kender had time to draw his blade, before Conundrum had time to draw his breath, a blazing arc of lightning flared from the staff and struck the goblin who had hold of Conundrum. Huma ran his sword through the goblin trying to drag off Tas.
“There are more goblins coming,” said Huma grimly. “You had best take to your heels, Kender.”
Flapping goblin feet could be heard crashing through the trees, their guttural voices raised in hideous howls, promising death. Huma and Magius stood back to back, Huma with his sword drawn, Magius wielding his staff.
“Don’t worry!” Tasslehoff cried. “I have my knife. It’s called Rabbit-slayer.” Opening a pouch, he began searching among his things. “Caramon named it. You don’t know him—”
“Are you mad?” Conundrum screamed, sounding like the noon whistle at Mount Nevermind, a whistle that never, on any account, goes off at noon.
A hand touched Tasslehoff on the shoulder. A voice in his ear whispered, “Not now. It is not yet time.”
“I beg your pardon?” Tasslehoff turned to see who was talking.
And kept turning. And turning.
Then he was still, and the world was turning, and it was all a mass of swirling color, and he didn’t know if he was on his head or his heels, and Conundrum was at his side, shrieking, and then it was all very, very dark.
In the midst of the darkness and the turning and the shrieking, Tasslehoff had one thought, one important thought, a thought so important that he made sure to hang onto it with all his brain.
“I found the past.…”
8
The Coming of the God
ain fell on the Solamnic plains. The rain had been falling without letup since the Knights’ crushing defeat by Mina’s force at the city of Solanthus. Following the loss of the city, Mina had warned the surviving Knights that she meant next to take the city of Sanction. She had also told them to think on the power of the One God, who was responsible for the Solamnics’ defeat. This done, she had bidden them ride off in safety, to spread the word of the One God.
The Knights didn’t have much choice but to glumly obey the command of their conqueror. They rode for days through the rain, heading for Lord Ulrich’s manor house, located about fifty miles east of Solanthus. The rain was chill and soaked everything. The Knights and what remained of their meager force were wet through, coated with mud, and shivering from the cold. The wounded they brought with them soon grew feverish, and many of them died.
Lord Nigel, Knight of the Crown, was one of the dead. He was buried beneath a rock cairn, in the hopes that at some future date his relatives would be able to remove the body and give him proper burial in his family’s vault. As Gerard helped place the heavy stones over the corpse, he couldn’t help but wonder if Lord Nigel’s soul had gone to join the army that had defeated the Solamnic Knights—the army of the dead. In life, Lord Nigel would have shed his last drop of blood before he betrayed the Knighthood. In death, he might become their enemy.
Gerard had seen the souls of other Solamnic Knights drifting on the fearful tide of the river of souls. He guessed that the dead had no choice, they were conscripts, constrained to serve. But who or what did they serve? The girl, Mina? Or someone or something more powerful?
Lord Ulrich’s manor house was constructed along simple lines. Built of stone quarried from the land on which the house stood, it was solid, massive, with square towers and thick walls. Lord Ulrich had sent his squire ahead to warn his lady wife of their coming, and there were roaring fires, fresh rushes on the floors, hot bread and mulled wine waiting for them on their arrival. The Knights ate and drank, warmed themselves and dried out their clothes. Then they
met in council to try to determine what to do next.
Their first move was obvious—they sent messengers riding in haste to Sanction to warn the city that the Knights of Neraka had taken Solanthus and that they were threatening to march next on Sanction. Before the loss of Solanthus, the Knights would have scoffed at this notion. The Dark Knights of Neraka had been laying siege to Sanction for months without any success. Solamnic Knights insured that the port remained open and that supplies flowed into the city, so that while the besieged citizens didn’t live well, they didn’t starve either. The Solamnics had once almost broken the siege, but had been driven back by strange mischance. The siege continued, the balance held, neither side making any headway against the other.
But that had been before Solanthus had fallen to an army of dead souls, living dragons, a girl called Mina, and the One God.
These all figured large in the discussions and arguments that rang throughout the great hall of the manor house. A large, rectangular room, the hall had walls of gray stone covered with a few splendid tapestries depicting scenes illustrative of texts from the Measure. Thick, beeswax candles filled the hall with light. There were not enough chairs, so the Knights stood gathered around their leaders, who sat behind a large, ornately carved wooden table.
Every Knight was permitted his say. Lord Tasgall, Lord of the Rose and head of the Knights’ Council, listened to them all in patient silence—including Odila, whose say was extremely uncomfortable to hear.
“We were defeated by a god,” she told them, as they shifted and muttered and glanced askance at each other. “What other power on Krynn could hurl the souls of the dead against us?”
“Necromancers,” suggested Lord Ulrich.
“Necromancers raise the bodies of the dead,” Odila stated. “They drag skeletons from the ground to fight against the living. They have never had power over the souls of the dead.”
The other Knights were glum, bedraggled, dour. They looked and felt defeated. By contrast, Odila was invigorated, exalted. Her wet, black hair gleamed in the firelight, her eyes sparked as she spoke of the god.