Authors: James M. Ward,Anne K. Brown
“You know, you’re really not as amusing as you think you are, Daile,” Ren observed acidly. He sank to a boulder and accepted the leather waterskin his daughter handed him. “Just wait until old age creeps up on you. I imagine you won’t find life quite so funny.”
Daile frowned, chewing her lip. These last two years she had noticed a gradual, disturbing change in Ren. And it wasn’t that his hair was a little grayer or that he was more cantankerous because his joints were stiff in the morning. After all, he had been gray and cantankerous for years. It was as if, one day, he had suddenly decided that he was old. Once he did, all of the aches and pains that had never bothered him before suddenly combined to slow him down. Unfortunately, Daile could guess at the reason for the shift in her father’s outlook. The change had begun not long after the two of them had laid a beautiful, pale-haired druidess within a cairn of cold gray stone beside the waterfall.
“You’re not all that old, Father,” Daile said firmly.
“It’s not polite to argue with your elders, young lady,” Ren countered. But he laughed then, his old, devilish laugh, and Daile couldn’t help but join in. He held out a hand, and she pulled him up off the rock with a grunt. Then the two began picking their way swiftly across the jagged top of Dead Orc Ridge. A league south of the waterfall they plunged back down into the forest, heading for the small clearing where their dwelling stood.
Ren took the lead now. They were nearly home when a faint sound brought Daile to a halt. She scanned the shadows among the towering spruces and lodgepole pines. Some instinct made her unsling her bow. Quietly but swiftly, she nocked an arrow.
Something stirred in the dimness between the trees. She caught two brief flashes of emerald. Eyes. Something was stalking them, drawing closer. Holding her breath, she raised the bow. “Seek the heart, bow,” she whispered to the weapon. A faint quivering of the polished wood told her that the bow understood her words.
Suddenly, her stalker separated itself from the shadows of the forest. It was a great cat, its powerful muscles rippling under its tawny coat. Its maw was slightly open, revealing dagger-length canines, its eyes showing green fire.
Daile did not hesitate. She drew the arrow to her cheek and aimed. The animal snarled, tensing for a leap.
“No!” a voice shouted.
Just as Daile released her grip on the bowstring, a hand struck her bow, knocking the weapon aside. The arrow went wild, sinking into the trunk of a dead lodgepole with a thunk. The cat froze in reaction.
“Father, what are you doing?” she exclaimed.
“Quiet, Daile.”
She shook her head in confusion. Was Ren trying to get them killed? To her astonishment, her father walked right up to the ferocious feline.
‘This is crazy,” Daile grumbled. She nocked another arrow, ready to slay the animal if it made a move. Then Ren did something that almost made her drop the weapon.
“It’s been a long time, Gamaliel.” He spoke softly to the great cat
The cat seemed to nod in reply. A shimmering radiance appeared around the animal. Its tawny fur began to undulate, and suddenly the cat was gone. In its place stood a tall barbarian man clad in fringed leather, a broadsword at his hip. But his eyes were the same emerald green as the cat’s, his hair an identical tawny gold.
The arrow slipped from Daile’s fingers.
“Greetings, Ren,” the man who had been a cat said in a rich, growling tenor. He turned toward Daile. “And greetings to you as well, archer.” A faint smile touched the barbarian’s lips. “Do not be concerned,” he assured her. “I would not have allowed you to harm me with your arrows.”
Ren reached out and gripped the barbarian’s arms in greeting. “I’d like to think you’re paying me a visit because you’ve missed me, Gamaliel, but I have a feeling that I’d be deluding myself.”
“Perhaps, ranger,” the barbarian replied, his expression unreadable.
Daile could stand it no longer. “Father, what in the world is going on?”
“I trust Gamaliel here is going to tell us.”
The barbarian nodded, his chiseled face solemn. “Evaine bid me to find you, Ren. She has learned of another pool.” His eyes flashed from bright green to deep gold. “Phlan is in grave peril.”
“Again?” Ren snorted. “It must be habit-forming.” The ranger eyed the sky through the overhead branches. “It’s getting dark. Can we discuss this at the keep? It’s a little too chilly out here for these old bones.”
The barbarian looked surprised at Ren’s words, but nodded. “Lead the way.”
There was nothing for Daile to do but follow.
An hour later found the three of them gathered around a stout oaken table in the center of the stone-walled keep. Daile had cleared away the supper dishes and poured three steaming mugs of mulled wine. She tentatively handed a mug to Gamaliel. He accepted it with a wordless nod. She tried to smile, but the expression faltered badly.
Hurriedly she sat down and hid her face behind her own mug. The green-eyed barbarian made her dreadfully uncomfortable, mostly because she had nearly shot him with her magical bow.
Gamaliel had told them his reason for coming in short, terse sentences. The message was simple. Kern, the son of Ren’s best friends, was about to set off on a quest to find the lost Hammer of Tyr. But Gamaliel’s mistress, the sorceress Evaine, had learned that a mysterious, evil wizard also sought the hammer and was drawing power from a magical pool. This was not the first time Daile had heard of the dreaded pools. She knew that Ren had helped to destroy two of them many years ago.
“The pool is hidden somewhere in the Dragonspine Mountains,” Gamaliel finished. The firelight played across his sharp, striking features. “Evaine has need of your knowledge and experience. You will return with me.”
Ren’s eyes flashed angrily. Then suddenly he let out a guffaw, slapping his knee. “You never did bandy words, Gamaliel. I don’t know why I should expect you to now.”
Daile held her breath, watching the two men closely. She knew from stories that Ren and the barbarian had not cared for each other at their first meeting. But over the years, their mutual respect had drawn them into a grudging sort of friendship.
“All right,” Ren grumbled. “Winter’s coming on, and the gods know I’d rather spend it drinking ale by a fire than traipsing about the countryside. But I’ll go if Evaine needs me.”
Daile’s spirit soared, but she did her best to contain her excitement. If she played her cards right, maybe, just maybe, her father would let her come along on this promising adventure.
“Good,” was Gamaliel’s only reply. He drained his mug of wine. The barbarian looked around the small, tidy room then. “Tell me, Ren. Where is the druidess, Ciela?”
Ren stood up abruptly, his chair scraping loudly against the wooden floor. “I’ve got to chop some more wood for the fire,” he murmured, as if he had not heard the barbarian’s question. He headed out into the cold, moonlit night.
Gamaliel watched him go, then turned to regard Daile. “Have I said something wrong?”
Daile stood to ladle more mulled wine for the barbarian. “You couldn’t have known,” she said sadly, sitting back down. “My motherCieladied two winters ago.” She looked around the keep. Everywhere there were still signs of the gentle druid woman: a chair she had fashioned of willow branches magically wended together, a wreath of holly that stayed perpetually green hanging above the mantel, a beautifully polished walking staff she had always taken with her on her long walks through the forest. Daile hung her head, her short red-gold hair shining in the firelight. She wondered that her mother’s death could hurt so much after all this time.
“You miss her,” Gamaliel said in his oddly matter-of-fact voice. “That is well.”
“How so?” Daile found herself asking.
“It means that she was worth knowing.”
Daile felt her heart strangely buoyed by Gamaliel’s simple words. She smiled at him gratefully.
Abruptly the iron-banded door swung open, and Ren stepped through. He wasn’t carrying any firewood, but Daile chose not to mention this obvious fact. “Be ready to leave at dawn,” Ren told Gamaliel gruffly. “And Daile…”
She sighed. “I know, Father. I’ll repair the chinks in the walls while you’re away.”
“Oh, really?” Ren stroked his beard with a mischievous expression. “Well, all right, Daile, if you really want to. Of course, I was hoping you’d come with me on this particular journey, but I do know how much you enjoy patching the walls with mud.”
Daile’s heart leaped. She couldn’t believe her good fortune.
She let out a whoop of joy and sprang up to give her father a hug. “I love you!” she exclaimed, kissing his bearded cheek for emphasis.
Ren grinned at Gamaliel. “Sometimes having a daughter is almost worth the trouble.”
“So it seems,” the barbarian observed.
It was verging on dusk when Kern and Listle rode through the unguarded Death Gates and into the dank, murky streets of the city. The fog and rain did nothing to conceal Phlan’s decay. If anything, the dreary elements emphasized the squalor and filth. The cold rain was gritty and acrid with soot, streaking all the city’s buildings with dark, leprous stains. It was hard to tell which of the heaps in the gutters were piles of refuse and which were bloated, rat-gnawed corpses. All smelled vile. The loud rain did nothing to mask the curses, screams, and wicked laughter that drifted down from dimly lit windows.
Kern’s spirits, so high after gaining the enchanted silver and steel warhammer, instantly plummeted. Even if he did manage to recover the Hammer of Tyr, he wondered if he could do it in time to save the fast deteriorating city.
The young warrior and elf rode into a desolate square. Once the marble fountain in its center had bubbled with clear, sweet water. Now black sludge oozed from the urn clasped by a stone cherub. The liquid gurgled sickeningly into the fountain’s half-full basin. So much for watering the horses here, Kern thought glumly. He swung his palfrey in the direction of Denlor’s Tower.
Pounding hoofbeats shattered the air.
Wide-eyed, Kern whirled his mount around. Listle did likewise with her dapple gray.
Both stared as a huge knight mounted on a coal-black charger thundered into the square.
The knight was clad in armor of purest jet, the oval of his shield as dark as a starless sky. His face was concealed by a visor, two crimson points of light glowing hungrily behind the narrow eye slit. Instead of a feathered plume, a gout of livid scarlet flame flickered atop the black knight’s helm. The dark rider’s onyx charger snorted crimson fire, and sulfurous smoke blasted out of flaring nostrils. Brilliant sparks flew from hooves that shattered cobblestones with every stride.
The black knight lowered his steel-tipped lance, digging cruelly barbed spurs into the charger’s flanks. The horse let out a bloodcurdling sound as it leaped into a gallop. The black knight intended to run Kern through.
There was no time to consider options.
Kern dove out of the saddle. He hit the grimy cobbles hard and rolled, ignoring the flash of pain in his shoulder. The crushing hooves of the onyx charger passed so close, flying sparks left pinprick burns on Kern’s skin.
Breathless, he staggered to his feet. The charger’s momentum had carried it to the opposite side of the square, but already the black knight was wheeling the massive horse around.
“Listle, ride for the tower!” he shouted. The elf had guided her mount behind the scant protection of the marble fountain.
“What? And leave you to have all the fun?” she shouted back.
Kern cursed under his breath. Why didn’t she ever do anything he told her to do? The black knight lowered his lance again, ready for another charge. Kern looked wildly about for cover, but there was nothing close by to do him any good. He made a pathetically easy target, standing there in the middle of the empty square.
“You don’t suppose this is just another one of Primul’s tests?” he called out to the elf hopefully.
“No,” Listle snapped. “I don’t.”
“I didn’t think so,” Kern gulped.
The black knight dug in his spurs again, his crimson eyes glowing murderously. Blood streamed darkly down the charger’s flanks as it lunged forward; its hoofbeats rent the air.
Deliberately, Kern reached for the steel and silver hammer at his belt. He gripped it firmly in both hands and raised it above his head, planting his feet on the slimy street. If he tried to run, his foe would simply skewer him in the back. He tensed his muscles, waiting for the right moment to hurl his hammer.
“Kern, no!” Listle screamed.
Abruptly a wall of searing fire ignited before the knight. Even from a distance, Kern could feel the scorching heat.
“Take that!” Listle cried.
The onyx charger didn’t so much as pause. It galloped straight through the blazing barrier. The magical wall burst apart in a spray of harmless sparks, revealing itself as an illusion. The knight did not flinch. He lowered the tip of his lance. The steed charged.
Kern tensed, waiting… waiting for the precise moment in which to hurl the warhammer.
He never got the chance.
A streak of lightning crackled out of nowhere, striking the black knight.
The midnight charger reared up on its hind legs with a terrible whinny. Tendrils of magical energy crept up the knight’s armor, snaking into the visor’s eye slit. The lance burst asunder. The knight clenched a fist, letting out a horrible scream.
Another bolt of magical lightning exploded against the black knight’s breastplate. This time Kern could discern its sourceit came from the shadowed mouth of an alley on the edge of the square.
The charger reared again, then suddenly dissipated in a cloud of acrid smoke. The knight crashed to the cobbles and lay still. The flaming plume atop his helm guttered and died out. A few last sparks of magical energy skittered across his armor.
Cautiously Kern approached the fallen knight. With the toe of his boot, he tapped the scorched breastplate. A thin wisp of yellow smoke drifted out of the visor’s eye slit. That was all.
“I think he’s dead,” Kern said grimly, returning the magical hammer to his belt.