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      for Storm.

      She fled, dived past the fire, rolled, and fetched up at Elminster's feet, panting.

      "Easy now," Elminster said, Ye hurt him badly enough that ye triggered one of his contingency spells;

      it whisked him away. I've raised a spell-shield around us. Whatever else he planned, we're safe here, for

      now."

      Storm looked up at him, shaking silver hair out of her face. "You seem to take this very calmly."

      Elminster watched the beholder burn. As the oily smoke drifted away from them over the hills, he said

      softly, "It never lasts, ye see.... I've had to kill him-oh, is it twenty-and-one, by now? Aye-that many

      times."

      "Why didn't you slay him again this time?"

      Elminster shook his tread. "He's prepared for that - half a day after he dies, his next clone's skulking

      about somewhere in the Dales, and death's hardly a setback at all. This way, I pulled him across

      Faerun, away from Shandril and the spellfire he's no hungry for, hurt him, and broke his power for a

      time ... a good afternoon's work, I'd say. Besides, a certain lady has a prior claim on Manshoon's life-

      and I'd hate to deprive her of a chance to do some real good with her spellfire."

      For the first time in years, Manshoon knew fear. Maimed, wincing at the burning pain from his hands,

      he whirled through mists and shadows for a moment, and then the world rocked and changed again. He

      found himself back on the clifftop where Elminster had first spelltrapped him.

      Manshoon staggered and raised hands to his dazed head. Only a last defense had saved him: the

      contingency spell he'd worked long ago, which whisked him away when death came too close. It took

      him back to the last place he'd left by any sort of traveling spell. It was a powerful, expensive magic

      that had snatched him back from certain death only three times in all the years he'd ruled Zhentil lKeep.

      Well, four times, now. Or so he thought for the space of slightly more than one deep breath.

      "Well net, butcher," came a cold, clear voice from close at hand.

      Manshoon turned in time to see Shandril standing amid the rocks nearby. Her eyes kindled into twin

      flames. "For Delg," she whispered fiercely. Her lips curved into a wolfish smile as she raised flaming

      hands. He did not even have time to scream.

      Thirteen

      DARKER DREAMS THAN THIS

      Weep not, child-whatever terrors your night dreams hold, someone somewhere in the Realms has faced

      and fought worse. Wizards who raise monsters from nothing, or twist them from simpler beasts, or call

      them from far and strange places, you see, are tormented by the evil they work-and all of them dream

      darker than you can. That is their worst punishment-no matter what horrors keep you awake, all of

      them must nightly face darker dreams than this.

      Laeral of Waterdeep

      quoted in Words to an Apprentice Ithryn Halast

      Year of the Weeping Moon

      You will be subject to my will, Iliph Thraun You will follow and feed only as I direct, and you will

      challenge no one. You will take care not to be seen or felt by the one you drain. You will...

      The voice that Iliph Thraun had come to hate so much in these last few days the voice that had echoed

      through its being, ccompelling it with irresistible authority, faded at last-forever stilled. The speaker

      was dead, and the lich lord was free.

      "And," the hollow voice hissed, rising in triumph, "so passes Manshoon of the Zhentarim-and I am free

      again."

      The skull rose so suddenly out of a tangled ravine deep in the Stonelands that a dunwing flying past

      squawked and shed feathers as it darted away in fear. The skull laughed. The chilling sound trailed

      behind it as it flew, breaking free of the last, fading traces of Manshoon's control, and racing west-

      heading for Shandril, filled with hunger.

      Thrulgar. the older of the two doorguards, stiffened and brought his spear down, and its tip caught the

      lamplight in a gleaming arc as it moved.

      Azatlim, the guard who stood at the other end of the porch, turned when he saw the flash.

      Out of the night, three folk were approaching Eveningstar. A fat, aging rogue with a disquieting look

      about him; a young man in the robes of a mage; and a bedraggled wisp of a girl in torn clothing.

      Travelers, aye-but were they fallen afoul of brigands? Were they beggars? Pilgrims-or thieves

      themselves?

      Thrulgar made sure his back was against the double doors that led into the main hall of Tessaril's

      Tower, braced his spear against the bronze door plates behind him, and cast a quick look down the

      porch to make sure Azatlim had seen them, too.

      Azatlim was hastening toward the tower doors, spear at the ready. Good. This could mean trouble.

      Thrulgar cast a glance in the other direction, judging just where the alarm gong was in case he had to

      strike it in a hurry.

      Then the three stepped up onto the porch.

      "Who are you three, and why come you here by night?"

      Thrulgar kept his voice calm and his eyes on the empty hands of the intruders.

      The fat man rumbled, "We've come to see Tessaril Winter, Lord of Eveningstar, on a most urgent

      matter. We cannot wait until morning, and must see her now." When these words were out, the man

      shut his mouth as if it were a steel trap.

      A little silence followed; Thrulgar let it stretch as he peered long and consideringly at the three of them,

      then said. "You cannot pass. Go up the road, and take rooms at the inn. The lord will see you in the

      morning."

      "We will see her now," the fat man repeated patiently. Thrulgar locked gazes with him and was

      surprised at the wisdom-and the steel in the eyes that met and held his. He had to muster all his will to

      pull his gaze free, and shake his head.

      "No one disturbs the lord at this hour," he said flatly.

      "I do," the big man levelly replied, "just as Azoun does." The Purple Dragons stiffened at that, but their

      spear points did not come down.

      "Go away until morning," Azatlim said. "And take care to speak with respect when you name the

      king."

      "I did," growled the man, "considering-ah, ne'er mind. We must speak with Tessaril, man, and

      speedily! We’ll not go away, I warn ye."

      "You warn me?" Thrulgar repeated, voice rising. "Who are you, stout one, to stand on the soil of

      Cormyr and 'warn' a Purple Dragon of anything?"

      "Guards," the slight lass said quietly, "if you can spare a moment from blustering, look at me."

      Two startled sets of eyes did so, but Azatlim was moved to ask, "Why?" in tones that were just on the

      proper side of a sneer.

      'Because of this," she told them evenly, then raised one arm slowly to point at the sky behind her.

      Without taking her eyes off the guards, she let flames crawl slowly from her shoulder to her fingertips,

      and then explode with a sudden roar into a bright pillar of fire, raging skyward. In the next moment, it

      was gone. She closed her hand and said in the same calm voice, "I'd hate to have to use it on you to get

      in that door-but I've just used it on Manshoon of the Zhentarim, and he died very easily."

      The guards in chain mail stared at her, and their faces grew pale. They hastily yanked down their visors

      and raised their shields.

      "Come ahead, then," Thrulgar's voice came hollowly from within the all-concealing war-helm. It

      trembled only slightly. "For Azoun we stand, and for Azoun well fall."

      The w
    oman hesitated. These men clearly meant her no harm, and she had no love for slaughter. Both

      their spear points were leveled at tier breast now-and as she waited, one of them reached out and

      slapped at a gong behind him.

      Struck glancingly in frantic haste, the gong made only a sort of clank, but the doors behind the men

      opened almost immediately. An unshaven man clad only in boots and a flight robe looked out, a drawn

      sword in his hand. "What befalls here?" he asked, peering over the shoulders of the guards.

      "These three demand immediate audience with Lord Tessaril," said Thrulgar without turning around.

      "The maid threatened us with conjured fire if we didn't let her pass."

      "I saw and heard the flames out the windows of my room," the man with the sword said dryly. He

      straightened. "Outlanders, I am Tzin Tzummer, Herald to the Lord Tessaril and king's man. More

      guards await within, and I can call on many others if need be. Even using magic, you cannot prevail

      here by force of arms. Tell me your names, and why you are so set on seeing the lord now."

      "I am Mirt," the fat old man said, waving at his companions to keep silent. "and as a Lord of

      Waterdeep, I demand audience with Lord Tessaril Winter."

      The herald frowned. "None know the identities of those who wear the masks of the Lords of

      Waterdeep, save for the Lord Piergeiron of that city. Anyone could come to this door claiming to be a

      Lord of Waterdeep. Besides, it's highly unlikely a Lord of Waterdeep would ever come to Cormyr

      without a large escort, an invitation from the king, and-ah, rather more splendid clothing."

      You don't know Waterdeep very well," Mirt murmured.

      "Whether I do or not," Tzin Tzummer replied coolly, your claim is not going to move me to let you in,

      especially given the magic the maid among you wields-all here will resist to the death, if need be. If

      you'd prefer, one of the guards can escort you to the inn- The Lonesome Tankard, just up the road,

      there-and see that you get comfortable rooms. Come back in the morning."

      Mirt inclined his head. "Reasonable words, herald, yet we can no longer afford to be reasonable. D’you

      know what this is?" Slowly his hands went to his belt, opened a pouch there, and drew forth a Harper

      pendant, on its broken chain.

      The herald's eyes widened, but he said slowly, "That device is welcome here, as are those who bear it.

      Yet we serve Azoun here, not the silver harp. Could you not come back in the morning-and unarmed?"

      Mirt sighed. "Azoun, is it? Well, then. Hold yet blades back a moment." He turned and waved his

      companions back off the porch, followed them, and turned as his boots touched the dirt of the road.

      There, in the full light of the porch lamps, he slowly drew a dagger that glowed - the guards traded

      glances-and he dropped it pointdown in the earth at his feet. Upending the empty sheath, the old man

      twisted it in a certain deft, delicate way. Its steel tip slid sideways and open, revealing a tiny cavity; out

      of this Mirt plucked something and held it up. It was a ring.

      "In Azoun's name-," he rumbled formally, holding the ring up between finger and thumb so they could

      all see it in the flickering light of the lamps, "I ask immediate audience with Tessaril Winter. Lord of

      Eveningstar."

      "A Purple Dragon ring," the herald said wonderingly. "I've never seen one in the hands of an outlander

      before." "Well, now you have," Mirt said testily, "and no, I didn't steal it. Azoun gave it to me when I

      guarded his two infant daughters, years ago, when-but that's not for me to tell without his word. Well?

      What's it to be? Defy Azoun or let us in to talk to Tessar? By the burning lashes of Bane, I've kissed her

      often enough!"

      As the full darkness of night descended softly on Eveningstar, Lord Tessaril Winter lay abed, lounging

      in the warmth of the dying fire. King Azoun ruled this pretty village through her, and matters both great

      and small sometimes weighed heavily on her mind. Today, it had been Lord's Court, and she'd had to

      disentangle several nasty trade disputes and sit through much blustering. She cared nothing for the

      threats, but the shouting had given her a headache that had taken three hot mugs of soup and much

      quiet to quell.

      She yawned and shook her head ruefully, set aside the spellbook she read every night after she'd used a

      spell, blew out the lamp, and waited for slumber to take her.

      The four chains her bed hung from creaked once as she settled down, and then all was dark and silent.

      ror a time....

      The roar of spellfire awakened Tessaril. She sat up in the hanging bed acid looked out tier west window

      in time to see flames licking at the night sky. Snatching up a wand in one hand and tier sword in the

      other, she strode to the north window, using the tip of tier scabbarded blade to hook down a robe front

      a peg along the way.

      It was a long way down from her chambers at the top of the tower, and a wizard going into battle

      should never get out of breath. Tessaril tossed the wand and blade ahead of tier as she vaulted the

      windowsill, whispering the word that evoked a spell that let her fall the three floors to the ground

      slowly and gently. By the time her feet touched the grass just outside the tower, she was dressed.

      Snatching up wand and blade, Tessaril let herself into the ground floor of the tower through a secret

      door that would open only for her and trotted to the main hall, shaking the sword free of tier scabbard

      as she went. She burst out the front door with wand and blade both held high, expecting trouble.

      Mirt's words still hung in the air as Lord Tessaril herself strode out into the light. All around her, men

      stiffened, and the herald said, "Lord, you should not-"

      The rest of his words were lost as Tessaril tossed sword and wand aside with a clatter and ran across

      the porch to kiss the fat man who held the ring. Even in her bare feet, the slim, ash-blond Lord of

      Eveningstar stood taller than everyone else present, and she moved with fluid grace and a warrior's

      speed.

      Tessaril flung her arms around the old merchant.

      "Mirt! Old Wolf, I'd never thought to see you here in Eveningstar! Come in. come in! Who are your

      friends?" Mirt managed to keep a grin off his face as she dragged him into her tower, through a throng

      of astonished Cormyrean faces. Narm didn't.

      Goblets of wine were in their hands a moment later as Tessaril waved them toward her audience

      chamber. "Come in here and tell me what business presses you so urgently," she said, making signs to

      the guards-who scattered in all directions, one darting up the stairs with her sword and wand.

      "Teleport me to Zhentil Keep," Shandril burst out. "I ... I have to destroy the Zhentarim, now!"

      Tessaril smiled. "Some of us have been trying to do that for years," she said, "and they still sit in

      Zhentil Keep tonight."

      Shandril looked at her with eyes that blazed, just for an instant, and fought to control her voice. When

      the words came out, they were low and angry. "Lady, those snakes killed our friend and have hunted

      me like game across the Dales. Today, I burned Manshoon to bones and ashes and I want to go after the

      rest of the Zhentarim before ... before my nerve fails me." Her words ended with a sob.

      Tessaril stared at her. "You're serious," she said quietly. Then, slowly, she shook her head. "I'd be

      sending you to your deaths."

      Narm looked quickly at Shandril. On the verge of tears, Shan
    dril pleaded, "Please, Lady? Please? I

      must go now!" Her voice rose. "I can't go on like this, every day, wondering how soon we'll be killed!"

      Tessaril looked at her and asked softly, "Are you in the right state of mind, now, to go up against any

      Zhen-arim - and live?"

      Shandril glared at her. "By the gods, get me to Zhentil Keep!" she cried, then held up a hand that

      blazed with spellfire. Around her, men cried out, weapons rang as they were drawn, and she heard

      running feet approaching.

      Tessaril was on her feet facing Shandril, flinging up her hand in a restraining signal. Silence fell.

      Shandril looked around at all the scared faces and raised blades and saw the herald holding a sword

      warningly at Narm's throat. She shook her head wearily and dissolved into tears, turning to Mirt's arms.

      "I'm sick of all this killing and fighting and running," she sobbed. "When will it all end?"

      "It never does, lass," Mirt said softly, holding her. The words summoned to his mind memories of

      burning cities, spilled blood slowly running out and down stone steps underfoot, and corpses-fields of

      sprawled, contorted corpses-all around. "It never does."

      Mirt and Tessaril exchanged glances, and the Lord of Eveningstar said quietly, "You'd best bring her in

      and tell me what this is all about. I can see this is going to be one of those evenings when the gods turn

      us on our heads a time or two......

      Storm looked up at the stars sailing endlessly overhead.They glittered softly through a thin veil of

      scudding clouds. She said, "I can't sleep, Old Mage."

      "What's amiss?" A wrinkled hand came out of the darkness to pat her own comfortingly.

      "Manshoon. What's he up to, now?" After a moment, she added, "I hate leaving things unfinished."

      "Lass," Elminster told her gently, "nothing is ever finished. Do what ye can, when ye can, and go on to

      the next thing. Some folk never learn that, all their lives long-and never do anything, spending their

      time worrying away at something they should have set by long ago." Stone sighed. "You're right" She

     


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