Two of Bane"s ships had left the dock in pursuit of the captured galley.
"Wonderful!" Bjorn cried out as he was informed of the news. "Those dogs have given us no choice. We turn and fight!"
In moments, the ship was alive with activity, and the Queen of the Night turned to intercept the closer of the Zhentish ships. The catapults on the deck were filled with everything the men could get their hands on, including the Zhentish corpses that had not yet been cast over the side.
From the cries of panic that sounded from the opposing ship as the Queen drew close, Kelemvor realized that the Zhentish were hardly prepared for this type of battle. The majority of their crew was probably on sh.o.r.e leave, celebrating the fall ofScarsdalewith the crew of the Queen of the Night and the rest of Bane"s forces.
"Ramming speed!" Bjorn cried, a maniacal glint in his one good eye.
The ships collided, and a hole was torn in the side of the pursuing Zhentish ship. The Queen of the Night withdrew, and the second Zhentish ship moved in to pick up survivors as the Queen sailed out into the Dragon Reach. But before the galley could put a hundred yards between it and the other Zhentish ship, there was a cry from the bridge. Kelemvor looked up and saw a horrible shape floating in the air above the galley.
Kelemvor"s mind seemed to freeze as he realized that Bane must have discovered his betrayal. Seja.n.u.s had escaped the suits of animated armor and now sat astride his nightmare, ready to attack the galley. The a.s.sa.s.sin"s bolos whirled in the air. The fighter looked to the bow and saw Midnight about to throw a spell.
" Midnight , get out of the way!" Kelemvor cried, but he was too late. The bolos flew through the air. In seconds, the weapon would wrap around Midnight "s torso, and they would knock her over the edge of the ship, into the water. Seja.n.u.s would have his prisoner at last.
Suddenly Varden appeared beside the mage and shoved her to the side. The bolos wrapped around the blond thief"s neck, and Midnight heard a sickening snap as her friend"s neck broke. Varden fell over the side of the ship, already dead.
"No!" Midnight wailed in horror. Images of Cyric being swept away in the Ashaba flooded the mage"s mind. She raised her hands once more. Her fingers moved like quicksilver, and the incantation flew from her lips so quickly that it sounded like gibberish.
The a.s.sa.s.sin reigned in the nightmare and hovered in place for an instant, the extent of his error suddenly becoming clear. A spiral of light leaped from Midnight "s hands and struck the water below Seja.n.u.s. He was startled to find no ill effects from the spell. Whatever incantation the mage had tried had gone awry. Ordering his mount to descend toward their prey, the a.s.sa.s.sin charged toward the Queen of the Night.
But as Seja.n.u.s raced down through the air, the nightmare he rode slapping fiery hoofprints into the sky, a group of huge, black tentacles burst from the dark green water next to the galley. Pulling a knife from his boot, the a.s.sa.s.sin looked down and saw the horrible sight. Dozens of writhing, slimy limbs were rising up toward him, curling around the nightmare"s legs.
This is only an illusion, Seja.n.u.s thought. These figments cannot harm me.
He was wrong.
The tentacles grabbed the a.s.sa.s.sin and his mount and carefully, methodically pulled them apart. When the last of the black limbs sank back into the Dragon Reach, Midnight collapsed. The few small pieces of Seja.n.u.s"s armor that had stayed afloat for a moment after striking the water now sank beneath the b.l.o.o.d.y waves.
Several hours pa.s.sed, and Midnight would not speak. Liane had been told of Varden"s death, and she too had kept to herself. At highsun the following day, Midnight joined Kelemvor in the private quarters Bjorn had set aside for his guests.
The mage was still badly shaken. "How could I have done that?" she asked as she entered the cabin.
"He deserved death," Kelemvor concluded coldly. "An a.s.sa.s.sin doesn"t feel remorse. He doesn"t care about the agony he causes to those left behind. You"ve done the Realms a favor."
"That"s not what I mean," Midnight said. "The spell I used. It should have been a fireball spell. That was all I had time to learn when we reached the Sembian"s safe house. But something else happened. Something else completely."
Kelemvor shrugged. "Magic is unstable, remember? We both know that."
Midnight shook her head, trying to scatter the unwanted questions that had grown there since the incident. "Was that all?" the mage asked.
Kelemvor sensed the apprehension in his lover"s voice. "Aye," he said, rea.s.suring the raven-haired mage. "What else could it be?"
Midnight shuddered. "No more talk," she said as she drew the fighter close to her. "We"ve been apart for far too long to talk this day away." Kelemvor kissed her then smiled. "I told you there would be time for us," he reminded her softly.
It was the following day when the lovers left the cabin. On deck, they noticed Adon talking with Liane. The scarred cleric placed a comforting hand on the woman"s back as he gestured out to sea. Liane sniffed the flower she held tightly in her hands, then leaned over the railing and faced east, towardScarsdaleand the spot where Varden"s body had sunk beneath the sea.
"I forgive you," she said quietly and cast the flower upon the waters of the Dragon Reach.
XI.
TANTRAS.
Bane was furious. News of the seizure of the Queen of the Night and Midnight "s escape fromScarsdalehad driven the Black Lord into such a state that he had refused to speak to anyone the entire day. Now, sitting alone in his chambers inScarsdale, the fallen G.o.d of Strife muttered and cursed.
Suddenly the doors to his chamber opened and the sorceress, Tarana Lyr, entered. The blond madwoman was practically drooling with excitement.
"Why do you disturb me when I left strict orders that I wished solitude?" Bane snarled, curling his hands into fists.
The sorceress took a deep breath. "There is a man who wishes to see you, Lord Bane. He waits just outside this chamber."
"A man?" Bane asked irascibly. "Not a G.o.d?"
The blond sorceress looked at the Black Lord in confusion. "A G.o.d, Lord Bane?"
The G.o.d of Strife closed his eyes, trying to control his anger. "The presence of another G.o.d would have been sufficient cause for you to interrupt my meditation. Not the supplications of a mortal."
"I think you will see this mortal," Tarana purred, rocking back and forth on her heels.
Gripping the arms of his throne, Bane grimaced as he growled, "I do not trust you, mage, but show him in anyway."
Tarana Lyr sprinted across the length of the chamber and threw the door open wide. "He will see you now," she cooed from the door.
A lean, dark-haired man entered the chamber, and the sorceress quietly closed the door behind him.
Bane leaped from his throne, suddenly, frighteningly aware that Fzoul had reclaimed his body.
"You!" the priest shouted in anger, and images of Cyric firing an arrow into the red-haired man at theAshabaBridgecoursed through the mind he shared with the G.o.d of Strife. The priest"s anger pushed the Black Lord"s consciousness down into his mind"s dark recesses. Fzoul reached out to the sorceress. "Give me your dagger!"
Cyric stood motionless, a thin film of sweat on his brow. "Lord Bane, you must listen -"
Fzoul grabbed the weapon from Tarana and advanced on the thief. "Not Bane, you imbecile! It is Fzoul Chembryl who will taste your blood this day."
The hawk-nosed thief backed away from the red-haired priest. The last thing Cyric expected was to confront Fzoul. He was certain that Bane would have crushed Fzoul"s mind completely when he took the priest as an avatar.
Fzoul lunged with the knife and Cyric sidestepped as best he could. But maneuverability was limited in the chamber, and a single misstep could mean death. Cyric couldn"t risk drawing a weapon. If he killed the avatar of Bane, the explosion might level the entire port town ofScarsdale- or the fallen G.o.d might choose his body to inhabit next. Worse still, the giggling blond sorceress was chanting and seemed prepared to release a spell.
The red-haired priest feinted to the left then drove his body to the right, crashing into Cyric. Both men tumbled to the ground. The thief"s head struck the floor with a sharp crack, and Fzoul drove the dagger toward Cyric"s right eye, then stopped. The priest"s eyes turned crimson, and Bane smiled as he stared into Cyric"s wide, panic-filled eyes.
"Fzoul"s anger surprises me sometimes," the Black Lord said casually as he climbed off the thief and handed the dagger back to the sorceress. "He has a capacity for hate greater than most G.o.ds. Excepting myself, of course."
"No need, Lord Bane," Cyric said as he struggled to his feet.
Bane turned his back on Cyric and climbed to his throne. "I hadn"t expected to see you, thief," the G.o.d of Strife noted.
"Reports from my a.s.sa.s.sins told me that you were dead. Of course, my a.s.sa.s.sins have hardly been reliable these days."
Cyric shook his head, and confusion crossed his face. "Wait a minute. What happened to Fzoul?" the thief asked numbly.
Settling back in his throne, the G.o.d laughed and tapped his forehead. "The priest struggles for freedom... in here. We have a deal, you see. He does certain things for me. I allow him to rail at his fate and curse the world. Sometimes he gets out of control." The Black Lord paused for a moment then smiled. "He"ll be punished later," he said, seemingly to himself.
Looking off at the wall for a moment, Bane listened to Fzoul"s cries for vengeance. The smile dropped from the G.o.d"s face as he turned back to the thief. "I see you wear my colors, Cyric."
The thief looked down at the Zhentilar garb he had taken from the Company of the Scorpions. "I suppose I do," Cyric answered absently.
"Why have you come here, thief?" Bane asked gravely. "You should have known that a slow, painful death is the most you can hope for at my hands. You are, after all, allied with forces that seek my destruction and the fall of my empire."
"No longer, Lord Bane," Cyric stated flatly. "I entered Scardale with a troop of Zhentilar two hundred men strong, and all loyal to my command."
"Oh, I see," Bane snickered. "You seek to usurp my power. Shall I abdicate now, Lord Cyric?"
The hawk-nosed thief remained perfectly still, his arms at his sides, his hands open, palms to the G.o.d. The sorceress approached Cyric, squinting as she stared into his face. Next she circled the man, examining him from every vantage.
"I have no intention of challenging you," Cyric said, ignoring the giggling madwoman who still circled around him." I wish to offer my services to your cause."
A single laugh escaped the lips of the Black Lord. In his mind, Fzoul was screaming.
You cannot trust him, the red-haired priest cried to the Black Lord. He will betray us. The thief will destroy us both!
Bane sent a horde of gibbering, imaginary terrors to chase away Fzoul"s consciousness. For your impudence, I may just make him your commander when I"m done, Fzoul, the fallen G.o.d taunted to his avatar"s mind as it retreated.
The G.o.d looked to the mortal who stood before him. "Tell me why I should believe you," Bane growled, the smile suddenly gone from his face. "Your cursed friend, Kelemvor, played this game with me. He made a pact then reneged on his agreement at the first opportunity. What guarantee do I have that you would not do the same?"
Cyric started at the mention of the fighter"s name. Perhaps his former allies were still alive after all. He quickly pushed all thoughts of Midnight and Kelemvor aside, though, and returned to the Black Lord"s question. The answer was rather obvious. "None," the thief said firmly.
Bane raised a single eyebrow. "You"re honest, anyway." The G.o.d of Strife paused then stood. "Give me some proof that you favor my causes. Tell me about the mage."
Cyric told the Black Lord more than he ever intended to relate. He informed Bane of almost all that had occurred from the time he first met Midnight in the walled city ofArabel, to the time they were separated on the Ashaba.
"I"m intrigued," Bane said as he paced back and forth in front of his throne. "For some reason, I actually think you"re telling me the truth."
"I am," Cyric told the G.o.d. "I"ve kept myself alive through much to offer my services to your cause." The thief smiled and then explained the intricate series of deceptions that had kept him alive from the time Yarbro and Mikkel found him on the Ashaba"s banks to the present. Tarana stood by the thief with her arms folded across her b.r.e.a.s.t.s. The mad mage hugged herself tightly as the bloodshed and violence was exposed by Cyric"s casual narrative.
Bane shook his head as Cyric concluded his gory tale. "In the last few weeks, you"ve betrayed everything you once held dear. What do I offer that you want so badly?"
"Power," Cyric snapped, a little too emphatically. "The power to shake empires one day."
The Black Lord"s lips trembled in amus.e.m.e.nt. "You sound more like a rival than an ally, thief."
Cyric took a step toward Bane"s throne. "The Realms are very large, Black Lord. When you have conquered them all, you will certainly be able to spare a small kingdom for me. After all, a true G.o.d cannot bother himself with the petty day-to-day operations of an entire world." The thief paused and took another step toward the G.o.d of Strife. "Give me a kingdom to run."
The Black Lord was stunned. "You have a gifted tongue, Cyric. Perhaps I should not waste such skills by slaughtering you where you stand, though that would be amusing." Bane gestured for the sorceress to draw near. She had backed herself into a corner, near the door. "Have Durrock released from his torments and brought before me. We are going to give the thief a chance to hang himself."
Tarana bowed and raced from the chamber.
When she was gone, Bane walked to the thief"s side. "Now that my insane a.s.sistant has scampered away, is there anything about the mage you have not told me?"
A name flashed into Cyric"s mind. Midnight "s true name. The words were poised on the end of his tongue, but he drew them back. With that information, the Black Lord could lay claim to the soul of the mage in an instant, and Cyric wasn"t sure that that would be at all acceptable. Not yet, anyway.
"No," Cyric said firmly, looking up into the G.o.d"s eyes. "There is nothing else."
The door to the chamber opened, and Durrock was brought before the Black Lord in chains. Cyric flinched as he stared at the a.s.sa.s.sin"s disfigured face. Then he realized that the burn marks were very old. Only a few of the scars that lined his body had been inflicted recently.
"I am in a forgiving mood this day, Durrock. I"m sure it won"t last," Bane told the a.s.sa.s.sin then he returned to his throne. "I have a task for you, a.s.sa.s.sin. You will travel to Tantras with this thief and spy on his former allies. You know them quite well, since you escorted them intoScarsdale."
Durrock stiffened and bowed his head. Before the scarred a.s.sa.s.sin looked to the ground, Cyric saw an intense hatred flash in Durrock"s eves.
Bane continued. "As I told you before, I do not want the mage killed. The cleric is of no consequence. As for the fighter, Kelemvor Lyonsbane, I want his head adorning a gate on this building as soon as possible. Have I made myself perfectly clear?" Bane asked sharply.
"You have, Lord Bane," Durrock answered, his voice a growl.
"You have a question?" Bane said when Cyric didn"t answer quickly.
The thief nodded, glanced at Durrock then looked back at Bane. "What if they discover the location of the... artifact we spoke of? What if they try to take it from Tantras?"
Bane frowned and gripped his throne tightly. "Then, Cyric, they will all have to die."
It had been two days since the heroes left thePortofScarsdalein the stolen galley. At night, a glowing spot on the horizon had marked the location of the city the Queen of the Night journeyed toward. The cause of the unearthly light couldn"t be explained, but as the travelers drew closer to the city, the illumination grew brighter. Other than this strange light, the journey across the Dragon Reach was uneventful. The slaves prowled the upper decks in shifts, luxuriating in the feel of the warm sun upon their faces. Adon, as usual, kept to himself. Midnight divided her time between long hours with her spellbook and wonderful, tender moments of love with Kelemvor.
After the escape fromScarsdale, the fighter had been more relaxed than Midnight had ever seen him, though he did have occasional bouts of worry that the curse had not been lifted for good. Although she was happy, too, the mage found herself wondering if Kelemvor would be happier going back to the adventuring life, perhaps even sailing with Bjorn and his crew. She wondered, too, if the fighter desired to follow that course rather than put himself at risk in Tantras. Soon, the question started to plague Midnight . Similar circ.u.mstances had driven a wedge between the lovers before, in Shadowdale, and she did not want history to repeat itself.
Finally she confronted Kelemvor as they stood near the bow, looking out at waves ahead and the dark craggy sh.o.r.eline that they were fast approaching. It was a few hours after morningfeast.
"I am going with you," Kelemvor told her simply. "I have no destiny to fulfill, other than remaining at your side." After a moment, he looked at the mage, a serious look on his face. "You, on the other hand, seem to have a grand destiny, a path laid out for you by the G.o.ds themselves."
"But isn"t being dragged along in my wake, following me as I follow my destiny, just another curse, Kel?" Midnight asked somberly. "You"ll have less control of your life than you did before."
The fighter took her in his arms and kissed her.
"I love you," Midnight said softly, the words escaping her lips before she even realized what she was about to say.
"And I you," Kelemvor whispered and kissed her again. The lovers stood in each other"s arms for a moment. "It won"t be long before we land," the green-eyed fighter sighed at last. "We should alert Adon." The lovers walked off, arm-in-arm.
Ten minutes later, Midnight and Kelemvor found Adon on the deck. Bjorn and Liane joined them. Tantras loomed in the distance.
"It"s not as big a.s.scarsdale, but it"s not that much different," Bjorn told the heroes. "Are you sure you wouldn"t rather go to theLivingCity?"
"We have business in Tantras," Adon said, the light in his eyes darkening as he spoke.
An hour later, the Queen of the Night entered Tantras harbor. The tip of a huge ridge hooked into the Dragon Reach, forming a natural breakwall, and the ship sailed toward a gap in the southern part of the wall. Ma.s.sive catapults guarded the harbor from positions along the rocky inner wall. The harbor was filled to overflowing with ships, and watchmen signaled the Queen of the Night to fly its color.