FOUR

Huldra was a reasonably imposing figure in her black-and-white hooded cloak and mask. The colors flowed and changed from one to the other as she marched along, like she was the moon itself come down to the sunlit center of the village of Yivel. And Aoth fancied that the rest of their little procession Jhesrhi, Cera, Vandar, and himself appeared as impressive as the hathran striding at the head of it.

Yes, all in all, it was no wonder that the inhabitants of the little huddle of longhouses and huts came scurrying to attend them. No one dared to keep them waiting, although, evidently hoping to avoid notice, some villagers made a point of standing behind their neighbors.

Huldra lifted her staff a length of birch with an ivory crescent for a head and thumped it down again. Dirty snow crunched beneath the ferrule. Who speaks for this village? she asked.

Since there was a gray-bearded man, muscular but running to fat, with a silver medallion in the shape of a bird of prey standing right in front of her, Aoth assumed the question was ceremonial. The bearded man s stony-faced response probably was, too. I, Borilak Murokina of the Eagle Lodge, he replied.

Do you know why I ve come? Huldra asked.

No, Borilak said, and now his anxiety showed through. Traveling hathrans visited the village once a month. But to hear Huldra tell it, it had always been as a friendly counselor and healer, not as the cold, magisterial figure who stood before him with even more threatening-looking associates in tow.

Then you don t know anything about the massacre in the north? Huldra asked.

No! the aging berserker said.

That s strange, Huldra said. Very strange.

Aoth had to give the hathran credit. He d drafted her not because he had any reason to think her a skilled dissembler, but simply because she was the hathran who ministered to the settlement. Yet she was being as subtly menacing as a Red Wizard inquisitor.

Please, lady, Borilak said, tell us. A murmur ran through the onlookers.

I believe you all know, Huldra said, that even with the durthans gone, the Erech Forest is a dark and tainted place. That s why the Wychlaran urged the Eagle Lodge and those allied with it not to settle the western shores of the lake. But you couldn t bear to let rich land go unclaimed, and we hathrans have protected you as best we can.

Get to the point, growled Jet, monitoring the proceedings through his master s eyes and ears. Aoth suppressed a smile.

Unfortunately, Huldra continued, bands of black and white flowing across her garments, it has now become plain that, despite our vigilance, a number of settlers have fallen prey to lycanthropy. And those so cursed have joined into a pack that slaughtered every living soul in Vinvel.

The villagers gasped and babbled.

Huldra waited until they had quieted down. I promise the same thing won t happen here, she said. We hathrans are going to do everything necessary to identify and kill the werewolves. You all know that my particular patron is Sel ne. At moonrise, she ll give me the power to reveal any lycanthropes living among you, and then my companions will strike them down. Killing shapeshifters is their particular trade.

Her gaze shifted back to Borilak. Meanwhile, we ll rest in your house, she continued. We ve had a long hike through the snow.

The hathran led her companions toward a longhouse with carved jutting eagle heads and images of the birds in flight. Behind them, the villagers resumed their agitated talk, and a couple of women started sobbing.

Borilak had a good fire leaping and crackling in his field-stone hearth, and the air inside was considerably warmer than that outside. As Aoth leaned his spear against the wall and shrugged off his cloak, he said, That was perfect, lady, thank you.

I m glad you think so, Huldra replied. Distress had supplanted the hauteur in her voice. I never would have done it if not ordered by the Urlingwood itself.

Aoth knew just enough about Rashemen to understand the figure of speech. The Urlingwood was a sacred forest where only hathrans were allowed, and trespassers were put to death. Thus, ordered by the Urlingwood meant she had been commanded by one of the supreme matriarchs of her order. In her case, Yhelbruna.

I understand how you feel, Cera began, slipping her gilded buckler off her arm.

Do you? Huldra snapped. Many of the folk outside had family in Vinvel, and I just told them their kin are dead! How will they ever forgive me or trust me again?

They ll forgive you, Jhesrhi said, when you explain the lie was necessary to flush out the werewolf that was living among them. Though she was the only one of them who likely hadn t felt the winter cold even slightly, she drifted toward the fireplace, and the yellow flames leaped higher. The light reflected on her staff.

But you don t know that there is a werewolf! Vandar said. You re only guessing!

Aoth sighed. He cast about and spotted a jug on a shelf. He pulled the cork and was pleased when the smell of beer suffused the air.

Think about it, he said. High Lady Yhelbruna and the Iron Lord sent us all out to hunt the undead. So that s what Bez, Dulsaer, and Dai Shan are doing. Even though the ghosts and such have turned out to be damned elusive so far.

He took a pull from the jug the hoppy brew tasted good to him, but then, drink nearly always did and offered it to Huldra. After a moment s hesitation, she accepted it and turned away to drink, so no one would see when she pulled her mask aside.

What the others haven t considered, Aoth continued, or at least I hope they haven t, is that not all the creatures we fought were undead. Some were werewolves. And since the durthans hailed from the Erech Forest, maybe the shapeshifters came from hereabouts, too. Maybe those who remained behind can tell us something about the witches.

If any did remain, Huldra said, passing the jug to Cera. And if they truly do live in one of the settlements instead of in the wild.

It s reasonable to assume there are some left, Cera said. Lycanthropy is a kind of sickness, after all. It spreads.

And such a creature has a divided nature, Jhesrhi said. When it s a wolf, it wants what a beast wants. But when it walks on two legs, it wants to live like a human.

Well, maybe, Vandar said. But it s still a shameful thing to lie to innocent people.

Aoth shook his head. It s a miracle all you innocent Rashemi have held back the legions as long as you have, he said.

I see them, said Jet, speaking mind to mind.

Them? Aoth replied.

Look through my eyes, the familiar said.

Aoth did so. As though peering down from high above, he spotted a man, a woman, and a half-grown girl who was almost certainly their daughter, trudging through the snow.

And they haven t spotted you? Aoth asked.

Are they acting like they ve spotted me? the griffon replied. They re too busy glancing back over their shoulders at the village to check the sky.

Aoth redirected his attention to his actual surroundings. Vandar and Huldra seemed perplexed by his momentary abstraction, but Cera and Jhesrhi were merely curious. The sunlady and wizard had seen him in psychic communication with his familiar before.

That was the answer to your objections, he said.

The plan worked. We have a whole little werewolf family fleeing the village.

Have they already changed form? Huldra asked. The hint of forlorn hope in her tone reminded Aoth that the locals were her flock and her friends.

Not yet, he said, speaking as gently as he could.

But you just told the news that werewolves are roaming the countryside slaughtering people by the score, yet a mother, father, and a child are headed for the forest with sunset on its way. There really isn t any doubt.

The hathran took a breath and squared her shoulders. I suppose not, she said. What now?

You go calm the village down, Aoth replied.

Jet will keep the werewolves in sight, and my bond with him will lead the rest of us right to them.


Some people had the knack of creeping through a benighted forest, and some people didn t. Up ahead, Cera was doing her best, and her best was passable. But she suddenly tripped over a gnarled root, pitched forward, and nearly sprawled on her face before she caught herself. She growled a vulgar word under her breath.

Jhesrhi realized she d smiled. It couldn t really be the first time since Tchazzar s death, but it felt like it, and she decided that Aoth truly had done her a kindness by bringing her to Rashemen. Perhaps, after all the disappointments of Chessenta, it was exactly what she had needed.

At the head of the procession, Aoth raised his spear to signal a halt, then waved for everyone to gather close.

Jet says they re just ahead, he whispered. We ll circle around and come in from the west, so we re downwind of them. Remember we re here to spy, at least at first. He fixed his luminous blue eyes on Vandar. No one is to attack unless I do, and I don t want to hear any nonsense about the spirits taking the matter out of your hands.

Vandar glowered back. It happened as I said, he replied.

If we do fight, we want prisoners, Aoth continued, and I also don t want to hear how somebody s crazy bloodlust prevented that.

I don t take orders from you, Thayan, said Vandar. We agreed to be partners, not

Cera put her hand on the Rashemi s forearm. Please, she said. We decided on our strategy on the way out here. You didn t object to it then. Surely you d agree that now is not the time to argue.

Vandar s mouth tightened, but apparently he couldn t quite find it in himself to spit poison at a pretty, soft-spoken priestess even if she wasn t quite a hathran. Fine, he said, and then looked at Jhesrhi. You were going to cast some enchantments?

Yes, she said, and began to work spells of concealment, drawing serpentine figures on the air with the head of her staff.

When she had finished, the companions prowled onward. Suddenly, the occasional howling they d heard since entering the forest sounded much closer and louder than before. Aoth hesitated for a heartbeat before continuing forward. Evidently Jet had assured him that the werewolves weren t reacting to the interlopers approach.

Still, the war mage motioned for everyone to stay low, and he took cover behind the ridged trunk of a shadowtop tree. Jhesrhi crouched behind an alder and peered forward. Her eyes widened.

There were nine lycanthropes in the little clear space before her. They had already transformed, some to true wolf form and some to a bipedal shape midway between lupine and human, to howl. But they were changing back, their muzzles retracting into their heads, and their fur melting away. It seemed like an odd thing for them to do until she realized they likely found it easier to discuss certain matters with human tongues.

Naked like the rest of her companions, a female werewolf with a mournful, jowly face and a pudgy belly peered into the trees. For an instant, she seemed to look right at Jhesrhi but evidently didn t see her.

Where is he? the female shapeshifter said.

He must hear us. I heard the call all the way from Vinvel.

And the rest of you didn t destroy Vinvel, said a fellow with bushy eyebrows. He hadn t quite changed all the way back to human. His arms and upper torso were still furry.

The jowly female sighed. No, she said, with the air of someone responding to the same stupid remark or question for the dozenth time. Of course not.

But why would Huldra lie? asked the man.

I don t know! the female replied.

We re careful. Even when the craving s strong, we only attack people who are off by themselves, and we never leave a body where anyone can find it. I don t understand why she s thinking about werewolves at all.

It s the others, said a lycanthrope with an eagle tattooed on his chest a member of Borilak s lodge, evidently. They got into trouble somehow, and now it s coming back on us. They never should have gone.

The sole child in the pack a gawky girl who must be the one from the family whom Huldra had scared into running gasped and shrank closer to the rather pretty woman beside her. They re coming, whined the child, pointing in Jhesrhi s general direction. I feel them looking at me.

As Jhesrhi peered around behind her, she heard the man with the bushy eyebrows say, It s all right, Sweetheart. They re our friends. But he himself didn t sound entirely convinced, and as soon as Jhesrhi caught a glimpse of the four creatures stalking out of the trees, she understood why.

The newcomers in black mail and leather were as tall and as massively built as ogres. A single eye glared from each square, flat-nosed face; the pupil smoldered like a hot coal.

Jhesrhi and her comrades had taken cover to keep the werewolves from spotting them. Only her magic could shield them from creatures coming from the opposite direction. She held her breath, and her heart beat faster, until the cyclopes stalked on by.

The lycanthropes bowed awkwardly. Then a cyclops with an air of authority about him growled, What s so urgent that it couldn t wait four more nights?

There s trouble, said the man with the bushy eyebrows. He d moved to stand with his wife and daughter.

When he had finished pouring out the story, the cyclops leader studied him for a moment. The creature shifted his grip on the haft of his battle-axe and said, You, the bitch, and your whelp don t have a brain among the three of you, do you?

The father blinked. I what do you mean? he said.

If this Huldra of yours really knew a prayer to reveal your true natures, would she warn you and give you a chance to flee? the cyclops said. It was a bluff to flush you out. To flush out the whole pack, perhaps. If so, it worked brilliantly, since your second idiot impulse was to howl for everyone to come running. I wouldn t be surprised if someone s checking to see who s absent from each of your villages tonight.

But that s not fair! said a fellow who was thin and narrowshouldered, for a Rashemi, with pale puckered scars on his right thigh. Jhesrhi wondered if they were the marks of the attack that had cursed him.

The cyclops sneered, exposing stained, jagged fangs. Really, Faurmar? he said. That s your opinion on the subject? How useful. Thank you.

What will become of us? the werewolf mother asked. What can we do?

Well, the one-eyed giant said, fortunately, it s not like you weren t about to move on anyway. The bravest among you already volunteered to help the durthans, and I always meant to enlist the rest of you whenever I found the patience to coax you. You ll come below with me tonight, and I ll find things for you to do.

The girl let out a little whimpering cry.

The cyclops glowered at the mother and father. Shut her up before I decide she s too young and timid to be useful, he said. Trust me, you don t want that.

The female werewolf with the sad, drooping face squared her shoulders and said, Don t you threaten them. Don t you threaten any of us. It s your fault if we lose our kin and our homes. Because you cursed the first of us, didn t you?

No, the cyclops said, of course not. There s a lot of old, wild magic festering in these woods, and you simply ran afoul of some of it. If you ingrates will recall, I m the benefactor who found you and taught you how to survive. No, to thrive, for thrive you certainly did. In fact, you gloried in your condition. But now, just because things have gotten a little difficult largely because of your own stupidity you refer to it as an affliction? Be careful lest you offend the Black-Blooded Pard and all the princes of the night.

All right, the jowly woman said. If I spoke foolishly, I m sorry. But still, we never said we wanted to be part of some great scheme. If we did, we would have gone along with the dead witches like our packmates.

Maybe I m the fool, the cyclops said.

I assumed you d all want lives of pleasure and ease. I thought you d want to live openly and hunt humans whenever you felt like it. But if I was wrong, then drop to all fours and live out your days here in the wild as beasts and nothing more. Because, with your homes lost, I don t see that you have a third choice.

The werewolves exchanged looks. The sad-faced female said,

We ll go with you, Choschax. But we d better get the rewards you promise.

Choschax leered. I thought you might see reason, he said. And no one needs to look so hangdog about it, either. You ll think back on this as one of the finest moments of your life. Now change, and we ll be on our way.

As the werewolves began to shapeshift, Jhesrhi reflected that she and her comrades had learned a little that was new, but nowhere near enough. Expecting that he would either want to shadow the enemy or attack and take prisoners, she looked to Aoth for a signal.

But he surprised her. With a patting motion, he indicated that she, Cera, and Vandar should hold their positions. Then he stood up and stepped out from behind the shadowtop. He recited a counterspell, slashing his hand through a zigzag figure, and the concealing enchantments she d cast on him fell away with a gleam like water cascading down his body. And much as Jhesrhi trusted both Aoth s judgment and his prowess, she winced to see him attempt such a daring ploy.

The cyclopes had their backs to him, so it was the werewolves who saw him first. The shaggy-browed father straightened back up into near-humanity to yell, That s one of them! He was with Huldra! The other lycanthropes rushed to complete their transformations into wolves or wolf-people. They grunted and snarled in pain, and bones ground and cracked beneath their fur. The giants lurched around and came on guard.

Easy! said Aoth, keeping his spear in a vertical, nonthreatening position. I only want to talk.

Hmm, replied Choschax. He raised a hand, and his underlings held off attacking. Studying the intruder, he cocked his head one way and then the other, as if that would help his single eye see more clearly.

Thayan? he asked at last.

Aoth grinned. What gave it away? he replied.

Where are your companions? the cyclops asked.

Back in the village performing the promised charade, Aoth said. I didn t want you to jump to the conclusion that I was a threat and react accordingly, and plainly, the one of me is no match for the whole gang of you.

I don t believe you, said Choschax.

Aoth shrugged. In that case, have the wolves sniff around, he replied.

The cyclops sneered. I believe I ll do exactly that, he said as he raised his hand and waved it in a go-forward gesture. With their transformations complete, sniffing audibly, the shapeshifters prowled out of the little clearing and into the trees.

Damn you, Aoth! Jhesrhi thought. Even up close, her magic might baffle a lupine s eyes. But its nose? Its ears? Whispering, she rattled off words of power to reinforce her original spells, hoping they would be good enough.

Meanwhile, Aoth said, Can we start talking while the wolves are making their check?

You can start by explaining yourself, Choschax replied. Did you follow them here to betray Huldra?

Huldra s beyond betrayal, Aoth replied.

She s rotting in an unmarked grave several miles to the north.

Then the hathran who came to Yivel was an impostor, said the cyclops.

Right you are, said Aoth. Masked priestesses can be convenient.

The cyclops hesitated as though unsure what to ask next. Then what s your game? he eventually asked.

Oh, pretty much what it seemed, replied Aoth.

To bluff the werewolves into revealing themselves. But just for a talk, not to kill them.

Wandering back and forth, one of the two-legged werewolves came prowling straight at Cera. With the utmost care, fighting the urge to hurry, she eased herself out of the creature s path.

The lycanthrope stopped in the same spot she d just vacated, a single step away from the place where she was crouching now. It pivoted on the spot, sniffing, then dropped to all fours to put its nose right next to the ground. After that, it raised its head and cast about some more.

Whispering, Jhesrhi repeated the charm of concealment. Cera s lips moved in silent prayer.

Jhesrhi wasn t the target of the sunlady s magic. But perhaps because she was so intent on the creature that was, she felt a bit of the effect even so. Time stretched. A single moment lasted twenty heartbeats.

The wolf-man apparently succumbed to the illusion completely. Seemingly convinced that it had searched for a sufficient time, it sprang to its clawed, gray-furred feet and stalked on.

Cera sighed a long sigh, and Jhesrhi felt some of the tension quiver out of her muscles. She looked around and saw that none of the other werewolves appeared on the verge of penetrating anybody s veil of invisibility. Remaining vigilant, she tried to pick up the thread of Aoth s and Choschax s conversation. is it, exactly? asked Aoth.

The cyclops grinned. You seem like a clever fellow, he said. What do you think it is?

I think some durthans survived the Witch War, Aoth replied. Now they re reanimating their fallen sisters, and reaching out to their old allies among the dark fey and such like you for another run at the hathrans and the lodges.

And what if they are? Choschax asked.

Then I offer my personal compliments, and those of Thay, on the harm you folk have done to the Wychlaran and their followers, Aoth replied. But I also have to say that your actions have not truly weakened them, and if that s all you can manage, a second Witch War will end just like the first. But it doesn t have to.

The cyclops snorted. How so? he asked.

You folk want to get rid of the old order, and so does Thay, said Aoth. Working separately, we ve failed to accomplish that goal. But by joining forces, we can succeed.

But then what happens? asked the cyclops.

The durthans intend to rule the humans of this land, and, the way I hear it, so does Szass Tam.

I admit, said Aoth, there was a time when he did. But he s come to recognize that no expansion is possible while Thay s enemies surround us on every side. But if Rashemen becomes an ally, it changes the strategic picture considerably. Working together, we could conquer Thesk and Aglarond, too, and divvy them up between us.

Choschax grunted. And you have the authority to speak on Szass Tam s behalf and negotiate this grand alliance? the cyclops asked.

Aoth grinned. Abyss, no, he said. I m what I appear to be. An agent charged with the task of investigating accounts of strange occurrences in Rashemen. But I at least have the authority to begin such a negotiation. If I report that the durthans have returned and are willing to discuss an alliance, you ll have a tharchion, zulkir, or someone similar sneaking north for a parley soon enough. So my question is this: Who can tell me whether such an envoy would be welcome? No offense, but I doubt it s you.

No, Choschax said, stepping closer, it isn t. But I can take you to them, and I He thrust his axe into Aoth s face.

The cyclops struck with the blunt top surface of the blade, and it clanked into the rim of the war mage s open-faced helmet. Otherwise, the blow likely would have dashed Aoth s brains out instead of simply knocking him down to sprawl motionless in the snow.

Jhesrhi had believed the conversation was going well, and so Choschax s sudden violence caught her by surprise, too. Fortunately, she d experienced enough battles to shake off surprise quickly. She sprang up, stepped out into the open, discarded her veil of concealment with a word, and cloaked herself in fire to deter her foes from coming close to her.

Nor did they. But Choschax and two of the other cyclopes stared at her, and pain stabbed into her eyes and through her chest. She fell down with her heart pounding out a spastic, stuttering beat. It felt like it was tearing itself apart.

She struggled to recite a charm of protection, but it wasn t easy when she couldn t catch her breath. A cyclops warrior sneered as though to mock her desperate efforts.

Suddenly Jet plunged earthward in a rain of broken twigs. The branches overhead were thick enough that he d no doubt scraped and battered himself in his precipitous descent, but maybe he felt desperate, too.

The griffon slammed down on top of the cyclops who d sneered at Jhesrhi. As big and as strong as the giant was, Jet s momentum smashed him to the ground, although it didn t finish him. The cyclops strained to drag himself out from underneath his assailant and to shift his grip on his spear until he could use it to stab at close quarters. Meanwhile, Jet raked at him in an effort to tear away armor and reach the flesh beneath. His claws rasped metal.

Pure startled reflexes made the other cyclopes scramble away from the beast that had plummeted among them. But they soon poised their weapons to threaten him. Snarling werewolves came slinking to surround and menace him as well.

With the cyclopes gazes diverted elsewhere, Jhesrhi managed to suck in a breath and wheeze her incantation. Her heartbeat steadied, and the juddering pain subsided. Using her staff for support, she heaved herself to her feet. Swaying, she regarded the circle of foes who, by the looks of it, were only a moment away from swarming Jet and overwhelming him.

She couldn t hit them all without striking the familiar as well, so she settled for extending her blazing hand and snapping a word of command. Darts of red light leaped from her fingertips and stabbed into the broad backs of Choschax and another cyclops. The brutes cried out and staggered.

At that same moment, Vandar charged out of the darkness. With his face twisted in a snarl that made him look as feral as any of the wolf-men, he cut at a cyclops s neck. The giant jumped back and raised his shield just in time to keep the blade from opening his throat. Metal clanked on metal.

Cera chanted and swung her mace over her head. A circle of golden light flared into existence beneath her feet, and lines shot out from it through the snow, so that she appeared to be standing atop a shining symbol of the sun. The rays reached far enough to stab under some of the werewolves and Jet, too. The lycanthropes jerked, yelped, and snarled. The griffon struck at a shapeshifter and nipped off a forearm.

For a heartbeat or two, the enemy floundered in confusion, and Jhesrhi thought the fight might already be as good as won. But then Choschax bellowed, Parothor, the sun priestess! Wolves, the griffon and the berserker! I ll kill the wizard! And his underlings, cyclopes and lycanthropes alike, oriented on the targets he d chosen for them.

Choschax s crimson gaze jabbed at Jhesrhi once again. To her relief, it wasn t as devastating that time. It didn t have the power of three other cyclopes eyes reinforcing it, she d warded herself, and she knew better than to meet it squarely. But even so, it rocked her backward and made her head throb.

She was still off balance when Choschax produced a javelin that seemed to simply appear in his hand, and threw it. She jerked up her staff and gasped a word of command. A disk of red light blinked into existence between them. The javelin banged into the shield and fell to the ground.

Choschax charged. His lumbering strides ate up the distance, and his axe was upraised. Jhesrhi realized that her corona of flame hadn t dissuaded him from fighting at close quarters. Maybe he thought that with his long arms, leathery hide, and gauntlets, he could strike her down and come away with nothing worse than blistered hands.

She spoke to the wind, and it blasted into Choschax s face, slowing his progress to a stagger. In other circumstances, she might have asked the spirits of the air to whisk her beyond his reach, but the terrain was too clustered for flying. She didn t want to bang into a tree or entangle herself in branches.

The cyclops drove into striking distance. The malice in his eye was like a pounding hammer, and his arm shifted as he aimed his black axe at her head.

She asked the wind to stop shoving him, and it did. As he pitched forward off balance, she stepped forward and to the side. She was close enough for her fire to sear much of his body, but she saw no reason to leave it at that. The end of her staff burst into flame, and she jabbed it at his eye. He flinched. She missed her mark but charred his jaw, cheek, and ear.

Choschax screamed and reeled sideways. She hurled a fan-shaped burst of yellow fire at his feet. If it burned them, so much the better, but her real objective was to melt the snowdrift he d stumbled into. As soon that happened, she rattled off a rhyme, pointed her staff, and hurled a blast of pure cold.

The meltwater froze into ice around Choschax s boots. He backed up another step, and his legs flew out from under him. He hit the ground with a crash of battered armor.

Jhesrhi grinned because she knew she had him. She spoke the first word of a spell intended to burn his flesh to ash, when suddenly a grip clamped shut on her ankle. It wrenched her leg out from under her, and she fell down, too.

A lycanthrope in true wolf guise had attacked her. Her halo of fire was burning away its fur and the skin beneath, but it was still snapping and gnawing in a frenzy. It left off gnawing at her war boot to lunge for her throat.

Jhesrhi jerked her staff across her body, and the brass rod caught the werewolf at the base of its neck. The shapeshifter strained to reach her with its slavering jaws, and she struggled to hold them away. The beast s paws pummeled her torso. Its raking nails tore her robes.

Her arms were hitched backward as the werewolf s strength overcame her own an inch at a time. The gnashing, foaming jaws and the glaring eyes behind them lurched closer. The creature s burns were ghastly, but it didn t even seem to feel them, or anything but the need to make its kill.

Jhesrhi struggled to simultaneously hold the werewolf back and recite an incantation with the precise cadence required. On the final word, a portion of her mantle of fire streamed into her attacker s gaping jaws. The lycanthrope screamed once and collapsed, burned from the inside out. Some of its ashy substance crumbled instantly, and more dropped away from the central mass as, in death, it reverted to human shape.

Enough of the charred form remained intact to show that Jhesrhi had just killed the daughter, the child werewolf. With a gasp of revulsion, she rolled the flaking corpse off her chest.

Choschax loomed over her, his glare pinning her in place like a butterfly in some sage s display case. He raised his axe.

Snarling, Jhesrhi broke free of her paralysis but knew she only had time for the simplest of spells. She jerked her staff into line and channeled pure force, pure will, through the end of it.

The power shot out as a ball of solid light. It smashed Choschax in the mouth and shattered into shards that vanished before they could tumble all the way to the ground. The cyclops fell and lay motionless.

Sometimes, Jhesrhi thought, the simplest magic did the trick. Although it helped if you d already kicked the enemy around for a while.

As Aoth had taught her, she glanced about, making sure no new threat was about to strike at her. She clambered to her feet. Choschax was still breathing, but a final burst of flame would remedy that. She steadied her breathing and raised her staff.

No! Cera called. Jhesrhi turned to see the priestess hurrying toward her. She appeared disheveled but unharmed, which presumably meant she d disposed of the cyclops that Choschax had ordered to kill her.

Aoth wants a prisoner to question, Cera continued, and this is the one who knows the most.

She was right, of course, but Choschax was also the one who d struck Aoth down. That, far more than the cyclops s attempt to kill her, made Jhesrhi want to burn his life away. If the war mage wasn t all right, she would, too. To the Abyss with the mission, Yhelbruna s griffons, and Rashemen s problems.

For the moment, though, she and her comrades needed to finish the fight so Cera could tend to Aoth. Watch him, then! she told the sunlady, pivoting and looking to see where a spell would help the most.

For a heartbeat or two, she saw no reason to cast one at all. A griffon was slightly less deadly fighting on the ground than in the air, but even so, Jet had plainly had little trouble annihilating his share of the werewolves. He whirled amid a litter of mangled, bloody bodies as a last foe dashed away on four feet. He bounded after it like a cat chasing a mouse.

With his teeth bared and his eyes glaring, Vandar pushed a wolf-man backward. The berserker s style was all offense: a relentless onslaught of slashes and cuts. He scarcely even maintained a guard, or seemed aware that his opponent had the ability to hurt him.

No sellsword in Aoth s company would have fought so recklessly, if only because the drillmasters would have trained it out of him. But it was working. The bloody gashes on the werewolf s torso showed that Vandar was hurting it faster than it could heal. Whenever it lashed out with its claws or fangs, the beserker somehow contrived either to meet the attack with a stop cut or to twist aside.

Suddenly a four-legged werewolf lunged out of the darkness toward Vandar s back. Jhesrhi leveled her staff and shouted a word of command. The resulting darts of scarlet light pierced the creature just as it started to leap, turning what could have been a deadly spring into the flopping tumble of a lifeless body.

Without seeming to even realize there d been anything behind him, Vandar kept pressing his foe until his sword cut halfway through the werewolf s neck. The creature s legs buckled, and it dropped to its knees, clawing feebly at the blade. When the berserker yanked his weapon out of the wound, the beast toppled onto its face, and the fight was over.

Cera instantly abandoned the fallen Choschax to rush to Aoth and kneel down beside him. Jhesrhi guessed that meant it was her turn to stand guard over the cyclops. She positioned herself accordingly, but found it difficult to pay attention to anything but what the sunlady was doing.

Maybe her concern showed in the way she was standing. As Cera tugged off Aoth s dented helmet, Jet looked over and rasped,

He s not dead. I d know if he was.

I know, Jhesrhi said. But that didn t mean Aoth wasn t badly hurt or even dying.

Cera closed her eyes for a moment, and then her shoulders slumped in manifest relief. He s all right, she said.

Just knocked senseless. I ll bring him around. She murmured a prayer, and her fingers glowed with golden luminescence. She gently touched them to Aoth s forehead, where a livid stripe of bruise already showed.

Aoth stirred, and his lambent blue eyes in their mask of tattooing fluttered open. Need to puke, he groaned. Cera helped him sit up, and he turned his head and vomited into the snow.

Better? she asked.

Some, he replied as he wiped his mouth with the back of his hand. My head still hurts. What happened to me?

Choschax hit you, Cera said.

You d think I d remember that, Aoth said.

No, it s normal, she answered. Stay still. She murmured a second prayer and caressed his forehead again.

He smiled. That s much better, he said.

Thanks. He looked around, retrieved his spear, and stood up. Cera quickly rose as well, and stood ready to catch him if he lost his balance. But he didn t.

When it was clear that he was steady on his feet, Cera looked around at the rest of her comrades. Was anyone else hurt? she asked. In particular, was anybody bitten? If so, the Keeper s light can cleanse you, but we need to deal with it right now.

Apparently, everyone else was essentially all right. Jet disdained to mention the bumps and scratches he d sustained while plunging through the branches.

So what s our situation? asked Aoth.

Your trick failed, said Jet. And the rest of us had to clean up the mess. As usual.

Aoth smiled a crooked smile. And don t think I don t appreciate it, he said. But the question is, why did the trick fail? What sort or rebel or marauder spurns a potential ally out of hand when he s got a powerful enemy to fight?

All Rashemi hate Thayans, Vandar said. Looking drained and shaky with his fury subsided, he tugged a stopper from a water bottle.

Aoth shook his head. If it was a werewolf that had attacked me, or even an undead durthan, that might explain it, he said. But do the fey care about the grudges that divide one group of humans from another?

It could be that the cyclops recognized you, Cera said. Because you have a reputation even this far north, or because the enemy has spies in Immilmar.

Maybe, said Aoth, shrugging. Bits of snow that had caught in the links of his mail fell out.

We don t have to speculate, Jhesrhi said.

Choschax is alive. Wake him up, and he can tell us.

Good idea, said Aoth.

Everyone gathered around the cyclops. Aoth took a look at the hulking creature, satisfying himself that he was still unconscious, then used the point of his spear to pry the axe out of his hand and flip it beyond his reach. Next he slipped Choschax s curved dagger from its sheath and poised the spear an inch above his eye.

Now you can heal him enough to rouse him, he said to Cera. He doesn t need to feel well and strong. In fact, I d rather he didn t.

Amaunator will do as he sees fit, Cera replied with a hint of reproof. But when she stooped and worked the same magic on the cyclops that she had worked on Aoth, it was in a brusquer and more perfunctory fashion. The burns on the side of Choschax s face scarred over like he d sustained them months before, and she backed away from him.

The fey s eye opened. He gasped and froze.

Don t do anything stupid, said Aoth.

I m squeamish about sticking a spear in a captive s eye. But not so squeamish that I won t do it.

Useless curs, Choschax growled.

Don t be too hard on them, Aoth replied.

Jhes there is an able wizard, and anyway, they ve already paid with their lives for not being able to sniff us out. Your guards, too, I m afraid. There s nobody left to help you if things get nasty.

What is it you want? the cyclops asked.

Information, said Aoth. Why did you respond to an offer of help by trying to take me prisoner?

Choschax hesitated. I do want to take you to speak to those above me, he said. But no one is allowed to see the way to our stronghold.

And it didn t occur to you to offer me a blindfold? Aoth asked. Try again.

The wolves, Choschax said. You stole their human lives away from them. They needed revenge.

The wolves weren t in charge, Aoth replied. You were. Even that one female gave in to what you wanted in the end. Tell the truth, or lose the eye.

I can t tell you! the cyclops said.

I gave my oath.

Aoth set the spearhead shining with blue phosphorescence. I promise you, no healing power will grow it back, he said.

Not with my magic poisoning the wound. So, how do the blind and the crippled fare among your kind? Will the other cyclopes care for you lovingly? I doubt it. But since your loyalty is absolute

Don t! Choschax said.

Then tell, replied Aoth.

The one-eyed giant swallowed. I can only say what I know, he said. I m not one of the lords who first struck bargains with the durthans, nor one who conferred with them when they returned. I m just the leader of a war band. My mistress gives me orders without explaining the reasons why.

What orders? asked Aoth.

To keep our endeavors a secret from all living humans, especially those loyal to the hathrans and the Iron Lord, of course, Choschax said. But also especially from Thayans.

Aoth frowned. You re sure she said that specific thing? he asked. Even though the odds of running into a Thayan this far north of the border were remote?

Yes, the cyclops said.

Why? What exactly was she worried about?

I just told you, I don t know.

How did the undead witches and the werewolves travel south from the Erech Forest without being spotted?

I don t know.

How is it that you dark fey and durthans expect to win this time around?

I don t know.

Aoth made a spitting sound. You d better know something more than what you ve said already, he said.

Otherwise, enjoy the sight of my face, because it s the last

It s not durthans! Choschax said.

What?

I mean, it is, but they re just one part of something bigger. It s not live durthans bringing back the dead ones, because there aren t any. At the end of the last war, the hathrans really did wipe them out.

Then who s doing it?

I don t know. But they re the instigators of all this. The planners. And they must be the ones who are leery of Thay.

Aoth frowned. This mistress of yours. Does she know more than you? he asked.

I suppose she must, replied the cyclops.

Then we ll need you to show us where she lives.

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