Pool of Radiance (35 page)

Read Pool of Radiance Online

Authors: James M. Ward,Jane Cooper Hong

Shal lifted her hands and began the incantation to another spell.

“Enough!” The vampire’s devil voice echoed in the room. “I will have no more of this!”

Shal extended her fingers in his direction and cast a Lightning Bolt spell. A brilliant bolt of electricity X-rayed the room, blinding many of the undead and forcing even the vampire to raise one arm over his eyes as a shield from the awful light. But the bolt never reached its target, the vampire’s chest. Instead, the energy of the lightning bolt was deflected by the subverted hammer. Shal never knew what hit her. In the same fraction of a second it took for the bolt to reach the hammer, it also returned and caught her solid. Her body jolted into the air like a tossed sack of flour and came down with the same sick thwack.

“No!” Tarl screamed. “No!” He was horrified. He would gladly have died ten times to save Shal.

The vampire roared in delight. “It’s just you and me now, booooy!” He gloated over the words. “I’m going to have your blood—and theirs—for dinner!”

Tarl could barely see. Tears of rage, fear, and pain burned in his eyes. He ripped his holy symbol from his neck and held it up while he charged toward the vampire like a man possessed. The medallion’s blue light shimmered rich and strong—until Tarl flashed it at the vampire. Then, with one turn of the defiled Hammer of Tyr, the light from the holy symbol was extinguished, absorbed by the black light of the hammer. The vampire drew his icy lips in a pucker, as if to spit, and puffed one noxious breath of air from the putrid depths of his lungs.

Tarl was forced to stagger backward.

“Now, now. There is noooo reasonnnnnn to be soooo testy. Deny that foooolish god of yours. Jooooin my army, and I’ll see that your friends are given safe passage oooout of here.”

“So they can be living vegetables like Anton? No way, devil spawn!” Tarl took a precious few seconds to collect his thoughts so he could attempt to turn the undead vampire. He spoke a hurried prayer, calling for the force of Tyr to rise up against the creature. But Tarl’s effort was strangled, stifled by the hammer, just as the light from the medallion had been.

The vampire tipped his head back and laughed, a grating, wicked laugh. “Fooool! I grow tired of these games. Jooooin my army, now, or die!”

“Never!” shouted Tarl.

“Kill … him!” The vampire said the two words separately, distinctly, and each reverberated the length, breadth, and height of the cavern.

Before Tarl could lift his holy symbol or cast another spell, a dozen wraiths and twice that many specters circled him. Just one touched him, and he felt his body freeze up as though he’d spent hours naked on the great glacier. He tried desperately to lash out with his hammer, to run, to move, anything, but his body had lost its ability to react. All around him, the wraiths’ deadly nonmaterial fingers were reaching toward him. If he could force himself to move, he could stop one, two, maybe more before they killed him, but he could never hope to stop them all.

The vampire’s laughter rang out again, and Tarl did the only thing he could do. In one stiff movement, he dropped to his knees and called on the full power of Tyr. In less than the time required for a simple prayer, he had to accomplish what had taken him hours at the temple— a complete cleansing and baring of his innermost self to his god, the purging of all fear in exchange for total confidence. In one mental picture, he had to devote his entire being to selfless concern for Shal, Anton, Ren, and the Hammer of Tyr.

On bended knee, Tarl did not even see the workings of his faith. The Hammer of Tyr erupted with the light of the sun. One horrible, bloodcurdling scream escaped the blue lips of the vampire before he and his light-hating minions turned to dust. And then the brilliant light from the hammer bathed the room, shedding the pure, healing power of Tyr on Tarl, Ren, and Shal.

 

12

The Pool of Radiance

“Incompetent clods!” Cadorna shouted. “What does the city pay you for?”

The fifteen assembled soldiers of the Black Watch stood mute before Cadorna in the council chambers.

“Didn’t any of you at least see where they went?”

Finally one of the men responded. “I did. Eight of our soldiers pursued them in a small schooner. I was the only one to make it to shore after the wizard-woman sank our boat in a maelstrom—”

“Congratulations, soldier,” said Cadorna, his tone dripping with sarcasm. “So you live! I’d expect that from a child. But what exactly do you know?”

“They didn’t go straight south into the Moonsea. They skirted the mouth of the Barren River and made their way along the shoreline beyond the eastern edge of the city.”

“How far beyond? Where exactly did they get off?”

“I didn’t see, sir.”

Cadorna threw up his hands, then turned to where Gensor stood beside him. “What do you think, Gensor? Do we have any way of tracking them?”

“Not that I know of,” answered the mage, shaking his head. Then he lowered his voice and whispered, for Cadorna’s ears alone, “Dismiss the others. Have them wait out in the hallway. We need to talk.”

Cadorna looked at Gensor curiously for a moment, then did as the mage suggested.

When the two men were alone in the council chambers, Gensor began to speak, enunciating slowly and deliberately for emphasis. “You have no way of knowing where the three are—or where they are going.”

“Correct.” Cadorna’s eyes widened and his voice raised agitatedly as he spoke. “And who knows what Yarash may have told them? It’s absolutely imperative to catch all three of them. But how? You yourself said that there’s no way to track them.”

“Councilman, I hate to be so blunt, but you’re missing the point. It’s not what they know that you need to worry about. It’s what the Lord of the Ruins might get from them. Think about it…. Remember your plan to get their two stones and complete the figure of power yourself? If the Lord of the Ruins should catch up to those three and get the two ioun stones they carry, you will lose your chance to usurp power. You will never have the opportunity to rule all of Phlan, civilized and uncivilized alike.” Gensor leaned in close to Cadorna and spoke emphatically to make his point. “Honorable First Councilman Cadorna, as your advisor, I urge you to make your move against the Lord of the Ruins now, or you may never have another chance.”

“You mean attack the Lord of the Ruins to get his ioun stones and then find the thief, cleric, and mage to get their two?” asked Cadorna.

“Exactly,” Gensor said. “Even if you don’t get their stones immediately, you should still have as much power as the dragon has now, which is considerable.”

“Right you are,” Cadorna answered slowly. His eyes gleamed brightly, and he clenched his hands in excitement. He didn’t need to wait for Gensor to go on. Immediately he commanded the soldiers of the Black Watch back into the chamber. With Gensor’s help, Cadorna explained to them that there was a certain bronze dragon he wanted killed, a very powerful bronze dragon that made its lair at the heart of Valjevo Castle, in the northernmost part of Phlan. “I’m giving you a chance to redeem yourselves,” he said to the soldiers. “You stand to earn an unprecedented reward, but be forewarned, I won’t tolerate cowardice or stupidity!”

“I’m sure I speak for the others, First Councilman,” one of the soldiers at the side of the room called out. “You can count on us.”

The mercenaries made hasty preparations for their mission, and just two hours after dawn, under Cadorna’s direction, they arrived at the gates to Valjevo Castle.

Silence hung thick in the cavern, like spiderwebs. The stone floor was covered with thick dust. Shal opened her eyes and saw the gentle blue light that filled the room. She did not know what had happened. She was not even sure at first that she was alive. She pressed the heels of her hands into the dust and slowly pushed herself up into a sitting position. Tarl was nearby, kneeling, his hands lifted skyward, an expression of awe and innocence on his face. His silvery hair glowed almost blue in the soft light. The Hammer of Tyr hung suspended in the air just above him, its steel head shining with the vibrancy of molten metal. Shal could also see Ren, still lying facedown near the front of the cavern. Quickly she pushed herself to her feet to run to his side, but before she got there, he was already rousing himself up from the floor.

“Hell of a party,” Ren said thickly, rising slowly to his feet. “What happened to our hosts?”

Tarl rose to his feet and joined the others, his face still bathed in light from the Hammer of Tyr. “Gone,” he said simply. “Vanquished by the power of Tyr, the same power that saved and healed the three of us.” He reached out his arms and pulled his friend and his beloved close.

Tears of relief welled in his eyes and in Shal’s and Ren’s. Though thoroughly shaken, all three felt strangely rejuvenated and infinitely grateful for their own survival.

They stood together silently, arm in arm, for several minutes. It was Tarl who finally broke the silence. “I feel an incredible sense of relief. Now that the vampire is vanquished, Anton can be healed and I can return the Hammer of Tyr to the temple in Civilized Phlan. I’m not even worried about the guards around the city. It’s Tyr’s will that the hammer be returned, and nothing’s going to stop me from doing it.”

Tarl reached out for the floating hammer, but the holy symbol quickly scooted away from his outstretched hand, the way one magnet moves away from another. He reached for the hammer again, and again it moved just out of reach.

Tarl wondered for a moment if perhaps somehow his motives were not right and so the hammer would not come to him. But when the hammer started to float away, he was gripped by a sense of dread, fearing the hammer’s power was somehow being subverted again. Maybe the vampire wasn’t really gone. Once more Tarl tried to catch the holy artifact. It floated to the front wall of the cavern, precisely above the spot where the vampire had hovered just a short time before. For one terrible moment, Tarl thought the hammer’s light was darkening, turning black, but then its blue glow surged strongly and a blinding ray of light flooded the cavern.

Suddenly a blue oval was outlined against the wall behind the hammer. The stone surface within the oval began to shimmer like water under moonlight. As if wielded by some unseen but steady hand, the hammer cocked back and then forward, striking the calm, fluid center, sending out ripples as would a stone tossed into a quiet pool. Concentric rings of water spread from the center to the edge of the oval outline for several seconds.

As the ripples dissipated, so did the shimmering surface, and they could now see that the oval framed a doorway.

The hammer’s light illuminated a small interior room beyond the oval doorway. Tarl quickly made for the door, with Shal and Ren right behind. When they could see inside the small room, Ren said, “Teleporter, just like the one Yarash used.”

“And obviously I’m supposed to use it,” said Tarl, the magical Hammer of Tyr finally settling into his outstretched hand.

“Obviously we’re supposed to use it,” Shal corrected him.

Tarl nodded, and together the three entered the small chamber. Once again the hammer blazed blue in Tarl’s hand, for a moment blinding all three, and when its light diminished, they found themselves standing under an archway of strange-looking, sharply spiked shrubbery.

“Careful,” Ren cautioned, pointing to the archway. “I’ve seen this kind of bush before. The thorns are tipped with a natural poison, and the serrated leaves can make some pretty wicked slashes. Don’t even try to push aside any loose branches. Step around instead. Some bushes of this variety actually send feelers out, like vines do. They can move as fast as a man’s hand, and their touch is deadly. There’s plenty of snake venom in the world that’s tame by comparison.”

Beyond the archway were three narrow paths, one to the right, one to the left, and one straight ahead. All were lined with the same variety of poisonous hedge. Tarl looked to the hammer, hoping to receive some kind of sign or direction, but none was forthcoming.

“Where are we, anyway?” asked Shal.

Ren pointed to a tall, white turret, some distance ahead, the only thing that could be seen above the vicious shrubbery. “Valjevo Castle,” he breathed, his voice hushed. “Probably one of the tallest buildings in the Realms, and according to that party of orcs we ran into on the way to Yarash’s, the home of the Lord of the Ruins. This must have been a teleport the vampire used when he needed to see his master.”

“It’s no coincidence the three of us are here,” Tarl pronounced firmly.

“Nope,” Ren agreed. “Fate and the gods.” He looked to Shal. “If you’re ready to meet the bastard who sent Cadorna to kill Ranthor, I’m ready to meet him, too—and to take a chunk out of his hide for murdering Tempest.”

“I’m ready,” said Shal. “But do we even know what we’re looking for or which way to go?” A glance in any direction along the pathways through the tall hedges showed a series of turns. They were obviously inside a topiary maze, and an elaborate one at that.

Tarl spoke confidently. “We’ll recognize the evil of the Lord of the Ruins when we find him.”

“He’s right. I think we should try going straight ahead,” Ren said. “I have a hunch that if the vampire visited often enough to have a private passageway here, he probably wasn’t forced to go through the whole maze every time he dropped in.”

Ren led the way. The path immediately took a jog to the right, then left, where there were two archways leading off from it. They proceeded on straight ahead, then stopped when it came to a T. “Wait,” Ren said. He sniffed the air, then very carefully touched one finger to the flat of one of the hedge’s thick, serrated leaves. “There’ve been other humans here—recently. They sliced their way through. These bushes are screaming in agony.”

“Bushes screaming?” Shal asked in astonishment.

“There’s a pain scent from the fluids lost when any woody plant is cut. This hedge has been hurt bad, and in lots of places.” Ren looked for a moment like a shaman searching for an aura, his hands outstretched, his nose uplifted to catch scents.

“This way,” he said finally, leading them off to the left. Suddenly he stopped and raised his hand to stop Shal and Tarl. “Blood …” he whispered. “I smell blood.”

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