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"Lady!" the mirthful courtier protested, with a derisive little laugh. "We're not children! We-"
"-have gotten lost to the extent of wandering across a wide courtyard into the wrong building for some other reason, lords? Excessive drink, perhaps?" a new voice said smoothly, as its owner stepped out of a doorway to block their pursuit. He was a Ready Sword of the Palace Guard, and he was not alone.
In the s.p.a.ce of a swiftly-drawn breath the two courtiers found themselves ringed by unsmiling Purple Dragons. Guardsmen, in fact, who held weapons half-drawn and looked like they had never in all their long, weather-beaten lives known how to smile.
Laspeera allowed herself a satisfied grin at the alacrity of the response to the song of her rising s.h.i.+eld, which would have been very loud in that guardroom, but kept it inside. Her face was its usual pleasant mask as she swept past another courtier-a son of the Helmstone n.o.ble family, this one, with rather more right to be on this floor of the palace-even before he could look up from the servant he was snarling threats of dismissal at, and cry hastily, "Lady! Lady Wizard!"
Laspeera neither replied nor slowed, and so-of course-he came hopping along in her wake.
"Lady Laspeera, I must speak with you!"
Not letting her sigh reach her tone of voice, she asked, "Must you, Lord?"
"Well, ah, yes, actually."
Laspeera turned a corner without slowing. "Then do so," she replied calmly.
"Here? In the middle of a hallway?"
"Why not, Lord? Do you find hallways somehow . . . tainted?"
"No, no, you misunderstand me, lady. Why, I almost fear you do so deliberately. I-it's just that the matter I must speak with you about is, ahem, regarding, ah, future actions of some delicacy involving the Lady Caladnei, and-"
"Lord Helmstone," the senior war wizard replied, "I fear discussing a marriage proposal with anyone other than the lady you wish to become attached to is less than prudent-as is considering anything at all of the sort without first acquiring the approval of your rather formidable father."
"Wha-marriage? To such as her? Lady, you wound me deeply-"
"No, Lord, not yet," Laspeera murmured, pa.s.sing through an archway and rounding another corner."Not yet."
The younger Lord Helmstone was bustling after her, still sputtering in outrage. "Lady, I protest!
n.o.bles of the realm are not to be trifled with, not even by-"
Laspeera spun around so swiftly that he was forced to s.n.a.t.c.h at a voluptuous statuette on a pedestal to slow himself, lest he crash into her. Seeing what rondure he'd laid his hand on, he s.n.a.t.c.hed his fingers away in cringing haste.
Her voice was low and calm when she spoke, but it drained the high color entirely from his face nonetheless.
"Young men of even less prudence than manners? I say again, Lord Helmstone: before you open your mouth again in the palace, seek the wise counsel of your father." The War Wizard turned on her heel, stepped through the next archway-and discovered that it was her turn to come to a swift halt.
"He did," a deep voice said, in tones as challenging as a sword-thrust, "and is now doing exactly what I bade him to. He is attempting, in his own way, admittedly less direct than it could be, to tell you a plain truth. Lady Laspeera, you we know and accept, though some among us mistrust a secretive woman-and a commoner, at that-holding so much power. You have demonstrated your loyalty to the Crown time and time again. You we would accept as Mage Royal, but not another mysterious woman- another commoner worming her way into office over us-not this motherless Caladnei. I but seek to warn you of the general mood. King Azoun is gone, lady, and our tolerance for the excesses of those he's left behind wanes-it does indeed. We won't take much more of this." "King Azoun the fifth is alive and well, I a.s.sure you," she replied. "And who, my most gracious Lord of Helm-stone, is 'we'?"
Laspeera's voice was a razor-sharp dagger of ice, but the elder Lord Helmstone did not flinch. A scuffling sound behind Laspeera told her that his son had, but her s.h.i.+eld was still up around her. If sudden ambition-or "patriotism"-should move him to fell a hated war wizard to in some small way cleanse the realm, her back was not unprotected.
"The heads of most of the n.o.ble houses of Cormyr, Lady Laspeera," Helmstone said quietly. "The flower of the realm. The swords and coins upon whose support the Dragon Throne stands-or falls."
"And if I was to loudly denounce this treason, Lord?" "Lady, as King Azoun-the fourth-himself said to us all, 'tis not treason to seek what is best for the kingdom." Helmstone regarded her gravely, and murmured in tones that barely reached her ears. "You should now be Mage Royal, Lady-not some uplands upstart."
"Do you know so clearly, my lord, what's best for Cormyr?" Laspeera asked him softly, her voice still icy. "Better than does the wizard Vangerdahast, perchance?"
Helmstone shook his head. "I have no love for the old wizard, Lady, but with him at least I knew what I was mistrusting." He drew back, and waved his hand in a gesture that was clearly a signal to his son to depart, swiftly and upon the instant. "I see our time here is wasted. You too must be mind-mazed by the spells of the new witch."
Laspeera shook her head, almost as amazed as she was pretending to be. "Do you misunderstand what wizards do that much?"
Helmstone's response, as he drew aside a hanging to step through a door he should not have known was there, was a growl of menace.
"Our beloved Forest Kingdom is falling on dark days, indeed," he said, "if the last withered branches of the decadent Obarskyrs are now cozened by scheming witches. Steps must be taken."
A startled servant stood blinking in the revealed doorway, a tray of decanters in her hands. With a snarl of anger the n.o.ble let the hanging fall right in her face, whirled, and strode past Laspeera, back down the pa.s.sage in his son's footsteps.
Timidly the hanging was lifted aside. Laspeera gave the servant a wordless, "I don't know about these n.o.bles, either," shrug and swept on in search of the Steel Regent. The short route to where Alusair would be seemed to have grown very long.
Pa.s.sing a certain doorway, she gave the face regarding her from its shadowed depths a discreet nod and strode on without speaking.
Out of that way, in the senior war wizard's wake, stepped a man whose answering nod was evenmore subtle. Glarasteer Rhauligan, dealer in turret tops and spires, strolled nonchalantly after the storming n.o.ble, humming a popular song of the streets as he went.
Far down the corridor, Laspeera stiffened as she recognized it-and, slowly and ruefully, let a real smile touch her lips. The name of that tune was Wizards, Kings, and Doom, We All Rush to Seek the Tomb. Indeed.
The n.o.ble faces staring down into the pit were pale and sweating. It's one tiling to sneer at terror-tales heard in youth, deeming them sheer lies spun by the weak-minded. It's quite another to see them come to life and writhing in pain below you-wounded, yes, but so large and mighty in magic and so terrifyingly near.
Netheriloursonce. Heed, humans. Greatevil returned shadows shadowmen darkwizards, city of Shade now back. In desertofourdevising. Will reachout seizebetter-lands-this one! Soon, plotting evennow! Storm back from exilehidingcravenstealth to seize whatrightfullyy-ours togreat acclaimproperrank bards'esteem Weak women on throne ignorant willdither willbetoolate youCormyr's only hope YOUher salvation!
The hissing mind-voice fell silent, but its echoes still thundered in their heads, and it was only with difficulty that Halvundrar Cormaeril managed to speak, his voice thick, slow, and awkward.
"What... must we do?"
Keepsecretkeepsilent heedmy words!
The voice slowed, mind-speaking each word carefully and firmly, as an angry father might deliver a warning of great importance to a child.
Royal Magician must be slain. First get from her key to Iltharl's Vault. Very powerful magic therein. Take it, cleanse your fair land, and set someone suitable on the throne. Yourselves, for instance. Soon it will be time to strike. Very soon.
In their minds appeared a sudden, vivid image-of a long-barreled key, its silver plate tarnished with age, its wards large and fluted, its handle worked into a dragon's head, jaws agape.
Darkness descended like a curtain, and their minds were their own again. They could see nothing of the pit and the ridiculous-looking, trumpet-shaped bulk shuddering in it, clawed arms and stinger moving restlessly.
Maerlyn Bleth s.h.i.+vered. So that was a phaerimm.
His mind whirled the image of the key they must seize from the Mage Royal in front of him and took it away again.
A flying city of shadow wizards come back from ancient Netheril. All the Realms endangered, Cormyr the closest prize ... it was using them, that thing down in the pit, using them like the brainless cattle it so obviously and scornfully believed them to be. When the time was right, its spells would lash out or it would stab at their very minds.
But plots are easily spoken and harder in the doing. Mistakes inevitable-oh, hadn't the G.o.ds taught far too many Cormyrean n.o.bles that. Mighty magic is always a weapon worth having-and if Cormyr was doomed, after all these centuries, at least the House of Obarskyr could be driven down in richly-deserved slaughter first, every last screaming woman of it, those sneers wiped off their faces as they saw the n.o.bles they and their forebears had so wronged working revenge upon them at last.
He was grinning like a wolf, Maerlyn knew. Teeth flashed in the dim light around him as they hastened out of the cavern together. Every last one of his fellow conspirators was grinning savagely too.
Ah, but it would be good to see the Obarskyrs get theirs at last.
The Steel Regent struck again, grunting with the effort, and Caladnei reeled. Every blow of Alusair's onslaught was like a hammer in her head, and the Mage Royal was fast acquiring a blinding headache.Both women were drenched and staggering as they circled each other, cotton tunics plastered to their curves and errant hairs escaping sodden headscarves. G.o.ds, but the princess was as fast as a striking snake!
Her wooden practice blade swept around again, and this time Caladnei dodged away to avoid parrying, stumbling in her weariness.
Her own sword was an edgeless bar of force, maintained by her will alone, and- Alusair thrust past her guard, their blades binding, and Caladnei shouted in pain.
"No," the Steel Regent snarled, as the Mage Royal gasped and held up a hand in a gesture of surrender, "don't give up on me now! A murderous n.o.ble won't stay his steel because you wave to him that you're winded."
They were circling each other again, both caked with the sand of the practice-floor where they'd clinched, kicked, and tumbled earlier in their bout. Shamra the Healer stood watching them carefully, ready to step in if either woman lost her temper and went too far, or took a wound through a slip at the wrong instant.
"I did not. . . seek this office," the Mage Royal snarled between gasps. "I didn't want this t.i.tle ...
these duties..."
The Steel Regent's grin was as wry as it was fierce.
"I've heard those very same words before, echoing back at me from my own bedchamber mirror."
Her blade skirled and thrust. Caladnei shouted again at the pain in her head-and a wooden blade slid home to touch her just under her b.r.e.a.s.t.s, thudding painfully up and in, at her heart. She put a hand on Alusair's weapon and bent over to catch her breath, reflecting ruefully that she wasn't half the swordmaster the princess was.
"Did you die gloriously?"
The calm question made both of the panting, sweating women look up. The voice belonged to Laspeera, and she never disturbed them at practice unless matters were urgent or of the utmost importance.
Caladnei waved away the question with a smile as she struggled for breath.
Alusair handed her sword to the healer, strode up out of the sand, and asked, "What news, Lasp?"
The senior war wizard reported the news from Arabel and her encounters with various murmuring critics of the Mage Royal on the way to them, as the two women did off their tunics and headscarves, washed with mint-water, toweled down, and put on fresh tunics.
Shamra was holding out a hair-ribbon to Caladnei as Laspeera recounted the words of the elder Lord Helm-stone, her mimicry of his tone as exact as her recall of his utterances.
The Mage Royal frowned, stiffened, and snapped, "Later, ladies!"
The place where Caladnei had been standing was suddenly empty. Shamra was holding out a ribbon to emptiness. She blinked once, and calmly turned and put the ribbon back on the side table from which she'd taken it. Alusair and Laspeera were exchanging raised-eyebrow looks.
"One of her telltales went off," the war wizard murmured. "I wonder what disaster's unfolding now?"
The princess sighed as she made for the door, binding back her hair as she went.
"I miss Vangerdahast," she said. "He never told you anything either, but he had this sneering, testy way of doing it that somehow rea.s.sured you that he had everything under control. I miss that feeling."
Laspeera's smile, as they went out of the practice hall together, was thin. "You're not the only one.
Nor am I. The n.o.bles were never so restless under Vangy's eye."
Behind them, the healer smiled. Out of habit she turned to make sure nothing vital had been forgotten, and struck Alusair's wooden sword against the door post. It was still slick with sweat, and slipped from her fingers-but it never clattered to the floor.
Just for an instant, Shamra's hand blurred into something dark and very like a tentacle, that pluckedthe blade from the air and reshaped itself once more into the healer's fine-fingered hand.
She was alone, Laspeera's back just disappearing through an archway.
Hefting the wooden sword in her hand, the healer let her smile broaden. Not so wide as to show fangs or seem strange-but as eager and deadly as the sudden glitter in the eyes above it.
Soon it would be time to move at last . . . very soon. With magic enough, she could hold the throne if she took it. And taking it would be so easy. Wring the neck of a babe, and catch Alusair alone and treat her to the same fate before word spread of little Azoun's doom ... and slay Filfaeril, take her shape, and play the sorrowful queen waiting to be wooed by the right n.o.ble.
It would not be such a bad thing, to rule a kingdom as fair as this one, if she could keep all these idiots from shattering it around her.
"What can I say, good my Lord, to convince you to join us?"
The elder Lord Helmstone was angry-G.o.ds above, couldn't the man see this was the right thing to do? He wasn't a dullard, after all.
"Nothing that comes to my mind," Lord Everran Summertree replied, in a voice that was sharp with disapproval. "Cormyr can ill afford-Helmstone, we can ill afford-another war right now, with so many dead and their crops implanted, and Sembians eager to snap up land in return for just enough coin to see starving crofters warm and fed through the coming winter. Our realm needs peace to rebuild, not another petty squabble over whose shoulders carry this or that t.i.tle, or even whose backside warms the Dragon Throne!"
Lord Helmstone sighed-the angry gust of a man exasperated by obstinate idiocy. He drew a slow, simmering breath, threw his chin forward like a weapon, and growled, The time will come, Summertree, when you see sense. I only hope 'twill not be too late. In the end you'll find you simply must turn against these witches and foolish women who now misrule us, and so sully the bright memory of Azoun and Cormyr's greatness-before it ebbs entire!"
Out on the balcony-or rather, just beneath it, where he was clinging by his fingertips-Glarasteer Rhauligan rolled his eyes. Did all of these n.o.bles learn their bombast at the same school? Or did the Lord of Traitors answer their prayers by filling their minds with the same grand speeches of self-righteous "for the good of the realm I do this" blurf?
"If you truly cared for the good of Cormyr," Lord Summertree replied coldly, "You'd court Alusair and set your son to wooing the Mage Royal-and win or lose their charms, you'd gain yourself ample opportunity to fill their ears with the policies and stances you think the realm should adopt."
"Take that spitfire to wife? Harness my son to a commoner?"
"Oh, stop squeaking, my lord. Barely two centuries have your kin held n.o.bility-and right now you scarcely seem suited to it. We were all commoners, once. As for taming princesses-think of it as better sport than sticking your lances through stags and a few scrawny boar. Twould keep you busy, at least, and-"
"And out of your regard? That much I can do, my lord! Good day to you!" Lord Helmstone's parting wish was delivered at a roar as he whirled and stormed out, back-handing a wine-bearing manservant out of his way so fiercely that one of Summertree's best decanters clanged off the pa.s.sage wall.
Its owner waved the servant away with a rea.s.suring smile, firmly closed the door, set its lock bar in place, and strode to his desk.
Lord Summertree was not in a writing mood at this moment, it seemed. He went around behind his chair, kept going-and with surprising speed for a man so muscular and of graying years-s.n.a.t.c.hed aside the tapestry that concealed the door to his cloak closet. His sword was half drawn as he stared into the wide eyes of the still-sweating Mage Royal.
He asked pleasantly, "I trust you heard everything you wanted to. Have you a good reason to give me why I shouldn't just run you through with this good blade right now-as I would any sneak-thief?"
Caladnei cleared her throat. "Are you not afraid of my Art?"
Summertree smiled back at her wryly. "Shouldn't you be afraid of mine?"
The larger of the two ornate rings on his left hand winked, and a singing, glowing aura appearedaround the n.o.ble. He stepped back and drew his sword. In silence they both watched a radiance that matched Summertree's s.h.i.+eld awaken in his blade, and start to silently race along its bright, sharp edges.
"No," the Mage Royal said flatly, tossing her head. "I know you stand loyal for the Crown-and so I have nothing to fear."
Summertree raised an eyebrow. "I know not where you stand," he replied gently, lifting his sword so that its tip was a whisker away from the cotton cloaking her breast, "so I think you do."
The blade lifted, to menace her throat. "Who is Caladnei, really?" the n.o.ble asked, his voice almost a purr. "How do any of us know if Vangerdahast really chose you-or if he did, what he intends for our fair realm? Who's he truly loyal to, and whom do you serve? I ask again: why shouldn't I just run you through now, as many of the hotheads among we who bear t.i.tles desire me to do?"
Steel flashed as Glarasteer Rhauligan stepped into the room. "Because, my Lord Summertree," he said firmly, "to do so would be the act of a traitor-a man I would be forced to cut down, even in his own manor, for so cruel a murder and deliberate treason against the Crown."