“Kaverin!” Artus screamed. He pulled away from the goblins, even managed to get halfway to the stairs before seven Batiri warriors tackled him from behind.
The red-haired man shook his head in mock sadness. Kaverin was dressed in a loose-fitting white shirt and white pants, with high black boots and a wide-brimmed hat. Above his head, the albino monkey hovered in the air, fanning him with its leathery wings.
“Don’t do this, Cimber,” Kaverin said as he walked slowly down the stairs. The winged monkey followed his every move. “I’ve convinced the Batiri queen to sacrifice you to the great and powerful Grumog rather than serve you to her in-laws in a plantain sauce. Don’t give her cause to change her mind.”
Judar laughed that coarse laugh of his. “May I let this dreadful disguise down now?” At a nod from Kaverin, he closed his eyes and murmured an incantation. At first Artus thought his vision was blurred by the tears of rage burning his eyes; Judar’s features softened, then slid away like sand pouring through an hourglass. It was truly sand that fell from the person who had disguised herself as Judar, for such was the main component of the Mulhorandi sorcery Phyrra al-Quim knew best.
The disguise gone, Phyrra rubbed her olive skin and stretched. She turned to Artus, and her round glasses caught the light of the torches, flashing like tiny suns. “Please, tell me they captured you because you were coming back to save me.”
Artus forced a calm façade to slam down over his fury. “Hardly,” Artus murmured. “I was knocked out of the tree by a giant spider.”
“They’re plentiful in this part of the jungle, from what the Batiri tell me,” Kaverin noted. He knit his smooth stone fingers together. “The queen will be here in a moment to toss you into the pit. I hope you know how satisfying this is for me, to see you beaten when you’re so close to the ring. You can go to the Realm of the Dead knowing you led me right to it—well, you and Theron.”
Artus kept his eyes masked. “So that’s it. You were spying on Theron. That’s how you knew to follow me here.”
Idly Kaverin waved the comment aside. His eyes, as always, showed no life, no emotion. “Theron Silvermace was beneath my notice. I’ve had agents of the Cult of Frost trailing you for years, Cimber. That’s an honor, you know. Up until recently, they all had orders to gather information, but leave you alive. Quite sporting, no?”
Phyrra straightened her white robes. Then, dusting sand from her hair, she came to Kaverin’s side. “You’ll be better off dead, Artus,” she taunted. “All your friends are waiting for you in Cyric’s realm—Pontifax, Theron—”
Artus’s façade slipped. “Theron, too?”
“I had hoped to spare him that sadness, my dear,” Kaverin gently admonished. “He’d have met up with the batty old fool soon enough.”
“I’ll see you dead, you bastards,” Artus shouted. He struggled against the goblins’ hold. “If I have to come back from the grave to do it, I’ll—”
Savagely, Kaverin backhanded Artus. A fist-sized bruise purpled on the explorer’s cheek, and his ears rang from the pain. “You’ll do nothing, Cimber. This is the end.” Kaverin removed a small book bound in wyvern hide from his pocket. “I know all your thoughts, all your petty desires, all your sordid little romances. The only thing Quiracus did right was steal this from you. It proved to me you weren’t so worthy an opponent after all.”
“And you killed him, too,” Artus said.
“No, I killed him,” Phyrra gloated.
Artus turned to her. “You’re going to die at Kaverin’s hands, sooner or later, no matter how loyal you are.”
Kaverin frowned. “How predictable. Trying to set us against each other.” He ran a cold jet hand along Phyrra’s cheek, and she smiled. “Phyrra knows full well she’s on her way to the afterlife the moment she fails me. She knows, too, I can offer her more power than she could obtain through more … legitimate allies. Right, my dear?”
“Of course,” she said. Taking a small stick of charcoal from her pocket, Phyrra moved close to Artus. “Don’t move, or I’ll use your own dagger to cut your eyes out. You don’t need to see to be sacrificed to Grumog.”
Carefully the sorceress lifted the medallion from Artus’s chest. She studied the white casing that had so successfully trapped Skuld, then drew a Mulhorandi picture-glyph on it. The metal vibrated and hummed. Blue fire ran along the chain; Artus could feel it tingling on his neck.
“You don’t know how much it galled me to save you from the dinosaurs,” Phyrra said coldly. “If you had let me talk the bearers into camping at Kitcher’s Folly, the goblin raiding party would have caught us there as planned. Instead, I had to cast a spell to mislead the dagger’s compass and trudge through the jungle, pretending to be your trusted servant… .”
“Why not just let the damned monsters kill me?” Artus asked. “Better yet, why didn’t you just send more assassins to the port?”
“Frost minions are too difficult to conjure here and terribly difficult to maintain,” Kaverin replied. “Besides, I’ve decided I need to murder you myself, to stop your heart beating with the hands you forced upon me. I wouldn’t trust anyone else to do it.” He tossed Artus’s journal into the dirt. “After the minions killed Pontifax, I knew I had beaten you. It was only a matter of sending someone trustworthy to fetch you for the slaughter.”
Phyrra lifted the chain from Artus’s neck and handed the medallion to Kaverin. Tossing his hat aside, he slipped it over his shock of red hair. “You won’t be needing this, Cimber,” he said casually. “I thought it a shame to waste such an interesting artifact.”
The tolling of a gong brought an appreciative murmur from the crowd of goblins that had gathered in front of the central building. Slowly they began to file toward the pit. The seven warriors who held Artus hefted him over their heads and followed. Kaverin walked close behind, as did Phyrra, once she had picked up Artus’s journal.
The pit gaped like a ghastly open wound, mist seeping from it like blood, snaking in long, thin wisps over the ground. A huge gong stood at the widest point, next to a small wooden bridge. A bored young goblin leaned upon the gong’s supports. He watched the procession with heavy-lidded eyes, then smacked his lips and raised a cloth-wrapped club. Again he struck the gong. The sound filled the air, echoing back in distorted tones from the pit.
“We ready to offer chow for Grumog?” came a voice from the throng.
The crowd parted and a female goblin sauntered forward. She had the same general features as the rest of her tribe—mottled red and orange skin, yellow eyes, and a broad, flat nose—but she also possessed a full head of flowing, golden hair, the likes of which would have made any lady in King Azoun’s court jealous. In fact, despite her decidedly goblinlike physiognomy, she might have been considered quite attractive.
It was clear to Artus then how Kaverin had managed to win the Batiri to his cause. The queen wore a beautiful silk dress and sported a dozen brooches and necklaces. Her hands were heavy with rings.
“Queen M’bobo,” Kaverin said smoothly, in his most polished Goblin. He bowed to the monarch and held out a hand. She took it and gracefully came forward. “This is the scoundrel I was telling you about.”
She raised a thin eyebrow. “He not so much.” With her finely manicured claws, she pinched Artus’s arm. “Not much to eat anyway. OK. We throw him in.”
“Wait!” Kaverin exclaimed.
“What wrong?” M’bobo asked.
“You—you can’t just drop him into the pit.”
The queen thought about it for a moment, then nodded. “You right. Balt! Get Grumog’s new stuff.”
The goblin warrior with dinosaur-hide armor limped forward. He used Artus’s bow as a staff, and the quiver of arrows hung on his back. Without a word, he walked up to Phyrra and jammed a hand into her pocket. She tried to push him away, but he still came away with the dagger the centaurs had given to Artus. “This all,” Balt grumbled, holding up the bow and the dagger. He limped to the foot of the bridge and tossed them into the pit, then dumped the quiver of arrows.
“The book, too,” Artus said. He gestured with his chin to his journal, still clutched in Phyrra’s hand.
The sorceress started to object, but Kaverin silenced her with a look. “It won’t do him any good,” he said softly.
She handed the book to Balt, who unceremoniously heaved it into the pit. Then the queen gestured to the warriors holding Artus, and they started toward the bridge. Kaverin quickly blocked their path, drawing the ire of both M’bobo and Balt. “What now?” the queen sighed.
Trying his best to maintain his calm, Kaverin spread his hands before him. “Why don’t we kill him before we send him to Grumog,” he suggested. “I thought you’d allow me to prepare him for—”
M’bobo wrinkled her face in disgust. “Grumog like us, not eat dead food.”
The warriors pushed past Kaverin, who suddenly found his carefully designed plan falling to pieces. No matter how dangerous Grumog might be, the creature might prove to be no match for Artus Cimber. He’d certainly shown himself adept at battling such strange creatures in the past. If the goblins tossed him into the pit alive, he might escape. And that just wouldn’t be satisfactory, not at all.
Kaverin clubbed two of the warriors with his stone hands. Skulls crushed, they crumpled to the ground. Chaos broke out around the bridge. Goblins hefted spears and bows, but couldn’t attack because of the press of bodies surrounding Kaverin. Phyrra lifted her arms to cast a spell. M’bobo, who’d seen enough magic in her time to recognize the threat, clobbered the sorceress with a spear shaft.
Artus broke free of the goblins and pushed to the center of the bridge. He grabbed a torch from the railing, then used it like a club to keep the Batiri at bay. No one dared attack him with spear or bow for fear of killing Grumog’s sacrifice. The explorer locked eyes with Kaverin, who was being held by Balt and ten of his warriors. For an instant, Kaverin’s cold, lifeless eyes showed a spark of something—anger, surprise, fear perhaps. Artus didn’t stick around long enough to find out. Torch in hand, he vaulted over the railing and disappeared into the mist-filled pit.
He managed to slow his fall a little by grabbing an outcropping of rock. That maneuver probably saved Artus from breaking his neck, but the rough stone sheared the skin from the side of his hand and his wrist. His fingers slipped from the blood-slicked stone, and again he fell, rebounding painfully off the uneven wall. The torch was battered out of his hand just before he hit the ground, but fortunately it stayed lit.
The air exploded from his lungs when he landed, facedown atop a pile of clothes, wooden plates, and old bones. The latter cracked and splintered under his weight, slicing dozens of shallow cuts ail along his chest. For a moment, Artus gasped frantically, concerned only with breathing again.
Then he saw the glint of four beady eyes staring at him from the shadows.
“Pardon us, old man,” came a cheerful voice out of the darkness, “but could you be bothered to point the way to the exit from this drab place?”
Artus grabbed his bow, which lay nearby. It had no string, but that didn’t matter. The elf-crafted wood had served well enough as a club before. “Don’t come any closer,” the explorer warned.
One set of eyes narrowed. “There’s no need for that sort of rough stuff. We was only looking for a way out of this trench.” This voice was deeper than the other, with a mournful tone that made Artus think of the huge cloister bells in the House of Oghma.
Two dark figures detached themselves from the shadows and came warily forward. At first Artus took them for pygmy bears, for they walked on all fours, had stout bodies and coarse fur. As the two creatures moved fully into the torchlight, though, he saw that they were something else entirely. Short legs supported their chubby bodies, which were half as long as Artus was tall. Their heads seemed to grow right from their shoulders, with rounded ears, flat noses, and bristling whiskers.
The larger of the pair was dark brown, with sad eyes. “I ’ate being stared at,” he grumbled. “Better if ’e tried to club me than stare at me.”
“Now, now, Lugg,” the smaller, gray-furred creature chided happily. He held up a thickly clawed front paw. “The gentleman has obviously never seen a wombat before.” He turned vacant blue eyes to Artus, who could only stare at the duo, dumbfounded. “See,” he continued. “Completely awed by our unheralded entrance.”
Artus shook his head, certain the lumps he’d gotten from the goblins and the blow from Kaverin’s fist had rattled his brains somehow. First Pontifax’s ghost, now talking wombats. He closed his eyes. That had dispelled the phantom Pontifax quickly enough.
“That won’t ’elp a bit,” Lugg noted flatly.
The creature was right. When Artus opened his eyes, both wombats still stood at the edge of the junkpile, staring up at him. “You’re not Grumog, are you?” he asked.
“Sorry,” the gray wombat replied. “Don’t know the chap. I’m Byrt, and this is Lugg. Who—”
A bellowing roar echoed up from the lone tunnel sloping out of the pit. It rattled the loose stones in the walls and sent a shower of dirt cascading from the roof. Artus took a quick survey of his surroundings. Mist swirled all around, but he could easily see that the walls of the circular prison were too steep to climb, even if he did want to face Kaverin and his goblin allies again.
“Wait a minute,” Artus said. “How did you two get in here?”
Lugg shook his head. “We pushed through that ’ole over there. I don’t think you’d fit in it, if that’s what you’re thinking.”
Artus cursed. After snatching up the quiver of arrows, he began to turn over the pile of bones, tattered clothes, old cookware, and broken pottery in search of his dagger—and any other weapons he could find. Byrt quickly joined in the hunt, digging into the possessions of those sacrificed to the goblins’ god. “By the way,” the gray wombat asked, “for what, may I ask, are we searching?”
Artus spared him a withering look. “Go away,” he said simply.
“Good idea, that,” Lugg murmured and trundled off toward the hole in the wall.
“Just a moment,” Byrt said. “If that was Grumog bellowing a moment ago, he sounded quite large and quite mean—rather like Nora, my kid sister. And if Grumog is indeed anything like her, this fellow may need our help.”
Lugg’s response to that was a derisive snort. Nevertheless, he turned back around and sat down.
Artus found his dagger inside a cracked goblin skull and his journal resting in a rib cage. Grateful to have them again, he slipped the blade into his boot and the book into his pocket. Whatever Grumog was, it was thorough in stripping the flesh from its victims. In fact, it had tried to eat most of the bones and rubbish, too. There was little in the pile that wasn’t scored with teeth marks.
“If it’s weapons you seek, here’s a spear, in relatively good condition,” Byrt called. He bit down on the pole, dragged it to Artus, and spat it out. “Only one previous owner—a headhunter who used it to do in little old ladies on their way to the market. Yours for a song.”
Again Grumog’s roar rang through the cavern, this time underscored by a rousing cheer from the goblins above. “Ah. That’s just the song I had in mind,” Byrt chirped and hurried off in search of more weaponry.
“That’s a bunch of them Batiri up there, ain’t it?” Lugg asked mournfully. “Brrr. Those rotten twisters are a lot of—”
“Look, Lugg,” Byrt interrupted. “Why don’t you go on up ahead and delay Grumog a bit. You know, use what little grace you still possess to keep him occupied. Dazzle him with fancy footwork and the like.”
“What for?” Lugg shouted.
“I just came up with a plan,” Byrt said proudly. “You slow Grumog up, and I’ll widen the hole enough for our friend here, Master—” He paused meaningfully.
“Artus Cimber,” the explorer said, not looking up from ransacking the refuse pile. He had uncovered another goblin spear, a bent and rusted sword, and a small shield made of palm fronds. “Thanks anyway, but I can take care of myself.”
“Yeah, maybe ’e don’t need protecting,” the brown wombat said truculently. “Besides, why me?”
Byrt flashed him a fatuous grin. “Because you would be a mouthful and a half to a starving monster. I would merely be a mouthful. Being a ravenous beast, which would you choose?”
“I’d choose not to go,” Lugg grumbled.
Byrt didn’t wait for a more serious answer before he set about widening the hole. He tore into the loose rock with his claws, scattering dirt and rubble in a wide arc behind him. Artus wasn’t certain, but he thought he heard the wombat whistling a tuneless song as he worked.
At the point where the tunnel opened into the pit, Lugg took up his post as unwilling sentinel and would-be decoy. “I can’t see a thing out there,” he said.
Just then, the mist grew thicker and a spade-shaped head poked into the cave above Lugg. It was fully equal in size to the wombat, with bulbous eyes and a huge, gaping maw. Teeth like garden spades jutted up around its scaly lips. Mist poured from two sets of gills that flapped along the thing’s snaking neck, obscuring the long, serpentine body coiling slowly out of the tunnel.
Lugg yelped and dashed away from the creature. Whether the wombat intended to draw Grumog’s attention or not, he did so quite successfully. It slid into the pit in pursuit of the chubby snack, mist hissing from its gills, its thousand small legs pulsing along the walls and floor. As much as Artus could see in the growing murk, Grumog resembled a cross between a reptile and a centipede, with a thin body tapering away to a double-barbed tail.
“Byrt!” the brown wombat shouted. “ ’Urry up!”
Grumog arched its back and opened its mouth. Four long tentacles shot forward, groping for Lugg. The wombat scrambled behind a rock, only to have it snatched away an instant later by the tentacles. The gray-green limbs stuffed the stone blindly into Grumog’s mouth, then retracted as the creature chewed up the unappetizing morsel. It quickly spit out the remains of the large stone—a few fist-sized rocks and a shower of gravel.
When Grumog opened its mouth to roar again, Artus threw one of the two spears he’d found. The iron-tipped shaft sank deep into the creature’s side, and its roar of hunger became a yowl of pain. The victory was short-lived, though. When Grumog couldn’t reach the offending spear with its short legs, it used its tentacled tongue to pull the barb from its side. Casually it tossed the weapon away.
Artus glanced over his shoulder. “Lugg’s right, Byrt. Hurry!”
“Almost there,” came a muffled reply.
Grumog started forward again, this time right at Artus. To slow the beast, Lugg dashed close to its legs. The wombat dodged in and out among the thin stalks, shouting. The tactic clearly annoyed Grumog. The beast halted abruptly, then launched its tentacles at Lugg. One of the quartet of writhing limbs wrapped around his rear legs.
Artus dove forward. Fearlessly he raised the remaining spear high over his head and jammed it into Grumog’s tentacles. The beast roared and shook its head, tossing Lugg across the pit in the process. The wombat tumbled end over snout and landed with a grunt atop the junkpile.
Artus, meanwhile, had gotten himself hopelessly tangled in Grumog’s tentacled tongue. He had succeeded in driving the spear through two of the four limbs, but also in getting his left leg completely wrapped up. The creature, realizing at last that shaking its head like a broken maraca wasn’t going to stop the pain in its tongue, decided to swallow the problem.
“Success!” Byrt noted with satisfaction. He backed out of the newly widened hole just as Grumog started to reel in its tentacles. “Oh my,” he said, staring at the monster. “That can’t be good.”
Lugg charged again, biting down hard on the end of one tentacle. This gesture, while uncharacteristically heroic for the wombat, did nothing to slow Artus in meeting his fate. The spear caused so much pain Grumog barely noticed the addition of a wombat bite, and Lugg’s sixty pounds was nothing to its thickly muscled tongue.
Closer to the creature’s mouth, Artus had let go of the spear and was now hacking away with his dagger. The creature’s misty breath rolled over the explorer, choking him with its sour smell. Hanging upside down, gasping and suspended by one leg, it was difficult to do much damage. Still, desperation had granted him surprising dexterity, and he had succeeded in slashing a few minor wounds.
Fortunately for Artus, the spear presented Grumog a momentary dilemma. It was simply too wide to fit in its mouth. The creature tried once, twice, then a third time to pull the shaft in, but the wood held. This was enough of a delay for Artus to right himself and make a sizeable gouge in the ensnaring tentacle. Shrieking, Grumog released him.
The explorer landed atop Lugg, knocking the wombat hard enough to make him lose his grip. Good thing, too, for at that moment Grumog snapped the spear and swallowed it whole. The creature’s tentacled tongue shot back into its mouth.
“Quickly, children,” Byrt called. “The animal pens are closed for the evening. Toddle to the exit. No stragglers, please, and no feeding the unpleasant local gods.”
Lugg spit out a chunk of tentacle and ran. Artus was about to follow on the wombat’s furiously kicking heels when he saw his journal had been jarred from his pocket by the fall. He thought to reach back for the book, but a horrifying noise stopped him.
Grumog roared and lunged at Artus, mouth open wide. The explorer managed to dodge the clumsy attack, but the creature did succeed in tearing up a large section of the pit’s floor. Grumog chewed up the earthen victim. Sadly, it found no bones to crush, no flesh to rend. It did, however, get a surprise.
Along with the rocks and dirt, Grumog had gobbled up Artus’s journal.
When the beast bit down upon the wyvern-hide binding, its spadelike teeth shredded the tough covering—and thus broke the enchantment placed upon the book long ago by the Red Wizards of Thay. Thousands of pages spewed out of the journal when the binding snapped. Grumog tried to push them out of its mouth, but there were simply too many of them. The lizard-thing gagged. Twitching and gasping for breath, it fell over and kicked its feet futilely. Then the god of the Batiri died.
Artus walked silently to the creature’s bead. Its mouth had been forced so wide by the paper that the lower jaw hung at an impossible angle, broken. A few pages floated free of Grumog’s mouth and drifted to the ground. Artus picked up one of these. The top read; The tale of Elminster at the magefair, as told to me by the Sage of Shadowdale himself. Most of the text had been sheared off by one of Grumog’s teeth.
He crumpled the page and let it fall.
The journal had contained his whole life, everything he’d done as an adventurer and all that he’d learned from the sages and heroes of Faerûn. Even when it had been stolen aboard the Narwhal, Artus knew somehow he would get it back. Now it was gone for good, irrevocably destroyed.
“That was quite a trick,” Byrt said, nosing one of the pieces of parchment. “It goes to show the power of a good book.”
The larger wombat trundled to his fellow’s side. “Leave ’im alone,” Lugg growled. “Can’t you see ’e ain’t thrilled about this?”
Artus absently gathered up his unstrung bow, a few stray pieces of discarded clothing, his quiver of arrows, and the now-smoldering torch. Without a word, he headed off down the tunnel, backtracking Grumog’s trail. The wombats fell in behind him, keeping a respectable distance.
“I think he can help us,” Byrt whispered.
Lugg shook his head mournfully. “I don’t think anyone’s likely to ’elp us.”
Grinning so broadly all his wide teeth showed, Byrt replied, “Give him a chance, old sport. I think our Master Cimber is a good fellow, if a bit at sea right now.” He looked up at the man shuffling down the tunnel, shoulders slumped, head bowed. “Anyway, I think he could use our help, poor chap.” He picked up the pace, trying to catch up to the explorer.
“I wonder what ’orrible thing ’e did to deserve that,” Lugg mumbled, then hurried after the others.
Kaverin Ebonhand leaned back in his chair and placed the back of one hand to his forehead. The black stone remained cool, even in the most unfriendly of climes. Currently, it was doing a fine job of soothing the headache he had developed the moment Artus disappeared into the pit.
“What do you think the punishment is for murdering Batiri warriors?” Phyrra asked, nervously cleaning her glasses with the hem of her tunic.
The decor of the room they occupied suggested many gruesome possibilities. Like much of the goblin queen’s two-story palace, the main motif here was human bones and animal skins, though this particular room was rife with skulls. The bleached relics of meals past grinned from the walls, the tables, and even the backs of chairs. Small and large, human and inhuman, they kept perpetual, sightless watch on the prisoners.
Kaverin chuckled bitterly. “Allowing Cimber to escape was the worst punishment they could have inflicted upon me, my dear.” He gestured to Feg, and the winged monkey fanned him more fervently.
“He might be dead, you know.”
That hopeful statement only turned Kaverin’s mood more sour. “Impossible,” he scoffed, “You heard the clatter from the pit. Did it sound to you as if that—that—thing the goblins worship simply chewed Cimber up? He was armed, for Cyric’s sake! Could this Grumog succeed where I have failed, despite the efforts of six long years?”
The sorceress silently returned her attention to the Mulhorandi artifact she had taken from Artus, which still hung around Kaverin’s neck. The medallion was very, very old and exceedingly interesting. She had added two more glyphs to the white damper surrounding the silver coin. Now Phyrra took up her charcoal one last time. “I’ve already broken the enchantment that made it impossible to remove the medallion, as well as the one limiting Skuld’s servitude to moments when his master is in danger.” She made two quick strokes. “This one will free him from his imprisonment. You’ll have a sleepless guardian who never has to leave your side.”
With a final cross of the charcoal stick, Phyrra completed the magical symbol. The white casing cracked, then flaked away. Silver light radiated from the medallion. The sorceress covered her eyes, but Kaverin found himself mesmerized. The tiny, four-armed figure on the front of the disk writhed in pain. It grew larger and larger, until it could barely crouch within the confines of the circular prison. The medallion warped and, finally, disappeared in a burst of energy.
When the spots cleared from Kaverin’s eyes, he found Skuld standing before him. The Mulhorandi guardian spirit held Phyrra by the front of her blouse. “Your spell made me fail to protect my master, witch,” Skuld rumbled. “For that you shall die.”
“No,” Kaverin said calmly. He dangled the twisted remnant of the medallion before him on its chain. “I, Kaverin Ebonhand, am your master now. Let the woman alone.”
His silver eyebrows knit in consternation, Skuld dropped Phyrra unceremoniously to the floor. He planted two of his hands on his hips, rubbed his chin with another, and reached for the medallion with a fourth. Kaverin ducked out of the chain and handed it to him.
“Only the one who wears this has the right to control me” Skuld noted. “You relinquish that right so easily?”
“Of course not,” said Kaverin smugly. “The glyphs the young lady added to the disk make you my slave, whether I wear the medallion or not. You must protect me and do my bidding … forever.”
“Until you die,” Skuld corrected. “I will be free when you die.” He crushed the chain and the fragments of the silver medallion into a ball.
Kaverin smiled. “Then you will never be free. Moreover, you are going to help me find a ring that will make certain I don’t ever have to see the Realm of the Dead again. First, though, we—”
The door to the room creaked open, and Queen M’bobo sauntered in. At her side was Balt, the leader of the Batiri warriors and her consort. While the queen’s face showed little emotion, the veins on the general’s neck were bulging with suppressed anger. Neither seemed particularly surprised to see Skuld, and they disregarded his presence with the unthinking bravado of royalty. Kaverin understood their confidence; the entire village would tear him to shreds if he harmed their beloved queen.
“We no kill you now,” Balt said, disappointment clear in every broken word.
Kaverin bowed and gestured to his silver guardian. “My thanks for your consideration. This is Skuld. He is my manservant, just arrived from parts unknown.”
With practiced disinterest, M’bobo eyed the servant. His double set of arms was no more strange to her than the light-skinned humans who had begun to appear in her jungle. “Maybe he do,” she murmured. “You meat or metal?”
Skuld remained silent, but Kaverin quickly filled the awkward lapse. “Do for what?” he asked.
“You owe price for warriors. Pay family something good and heavy,” Balt replied. Expecting resistance, he raised his chin defiantly and planted the butt of his spear on the wooden floor.
Phyrra stood and dusted herself off. “What about more beads and trinkets?” she asked Kaverin in a Cormyrian dialect meant to baffle the goblins.
He shook his head. It was clear in the goblins’ faces that the time for petty bribery was over. “Name your price,” Kaverin told the queen.
Slowly she leveled a scaly finger at the winged monkey. The creature shrieked and hopped to its master’s shoulder. “Feg is very valuable to me, and I treasure him greatly,” Kaverin said, though his eyes remained as cold and lifeless as his hands.
Balt pointed his spear at the creature. “We go easy. Take monkey and all baggage. That be heavy enough.”
“What?” Phyrra exclaimed. “How are we supposed to survive here without any supplies?”
Kaverin sat down, rested his elbows on the chair, and knit his jet fingers together before his face. “You need to be paid something valuable, but also of equal weight to those warriors I killed, is that it?” At M’bobo’s curt nod, he sighed. “Skuld, you do not eat. Am I correct in assuming that?”
“I have not consumed a bite of food or swallowed a gulp of wine in a thousand years,” he reported proudly, though his filed teeth would have made any casual observer think otherwise.
“And you do not speak unless I ask you to? I find idle chatter very annoying in a traveling companion.”
“That is so, master.”
Kaverin nodded. “You know sorcery, of course… .”
Phyrra al-Quim was a quick-witted woman, and it was only a moment before the direction of this conversation became startlingly clear to her. She pulled a small sphere of pitch from her pocket and raised her hands. The spell she intended never came to pass, though. Skuld grabbed her hands and lifted her from the ground. With his other set of hands, he clamped her mouth shut. Her glasses clattered to the floor. “It is fitting for you to be punished, witch. You caused me great discomfort.”
Kaverin gestured casually to Phyrra. “She should be enough to cover most of the debt,” he said. Then he turned to the sorceress. “Sorry, my dear, but you were correct about the supplies. I cannot sacrifice them and hope to uncover my prize.” A frown crept across his thin lips. “It’s too bad you aren’t heavier, though. I would have preferred not to have lost Feg, too. It gets rather hot without him fanning me.”
Gently he nudged Feg off his shoulder, and the winged monkey sailed across the room to M’bobo. “I must insist on the right to use him to spy on my enemies, if the need arises,” Kaverin noted.
M’bobo nodded absently, caught up as she was in pampering and cooing over the bat-winged ape. For its part, Feg seemed thoroughly disgusted by the whole situation.” The monkey cast a longing look back as M’bobo left the room.
Balt called in a contingent of warriors, and they took the struggling mage from Skuld. Phyrra thrashed about, her eyes wide with terror. As she was carried from the room, her gaze fell upon the skulls lining the walls. She screamed, knowing she would become part of that grisly collection—just as soon as the Batiri had their dinner.
“Do be careful to keep her mouth closed and her hands bound,” Kaverin called after them.
When the commotion had at last died down, the stone-handed man turned to his new servant. “As I was saying before that costly interruption, we have one more task to complete before we can set off in search of this very important artifact.” He picked up Phyrra’s glasses and twirled them idly in his ebony fingers. “We must go down into the pit in the center of the village and see if your previous master is still alive.”
When Kaverin gazed through the glasses, the lenses made his lifeless eyes huge. He blinked and settled the spectacles on a table. “In a way,” he said, “I hope Cimber survived his encounter with Grumog, so we can present his corpse to the Batiri. It would be fitting to have his bones set on display in here next to Phyrra’s. She would have wanted it that way, poor girl.”