Twelve

Skuld pressed both sets of palms together and bowed deeply. “The wards are complete, master. No one else may look into this room with magic.”

“Fine,” Kaverin said. He resumed his pacing, clacking the knuckles of his jet-black hands together with every third step. At last he turned to Lord Rayburton. “You know, milord, I’m beginning to believe you about the ring.”

His hands bound firmly behind his back, his legs lashed securely to the chair, Rayburton didn’t bother trying to see his captor’s face. Kaverin always paced behind the chair, where he remained hidden. Even in Rayburton’s time in Cormyr this had been an old interrogation trick; without being able to read body language or expression, the prisoner could use only his ears to judge anything told to him.

“Then you can let me go,” the nobleman said. “Byrt, too.”

“I’m afraid that’s not possible. Your gray-furred friend is going to be a present to the goblin queen, since the winged spy your fellows killed was technically hers,” Kaverin said. He clucked his tongue. “Besides, the goblins are having a victory celebration tonight, and you can’t leave before that’s over with. They might even serve the talking pig-bear, knowing them. I wonder what he tastes like?”

“Pig-bear!” Byrt exclaimed. “Hardly, sir. I am a wombat. W-O-”

Skuld’s silver foot descended onto the top of the cramped wooden cage. “Silence, little one. The goblins can eat you whether I pull your teeth out or not.”

Byrt opened his mouth to reply, then thought better of it. Sulking, the little gray wombat huddled against the bars and waited.

“Look,” Rayburton said, “you believe me when I say I don’t have the Ring of Winter. My daughter and the others know I’m here, that I’m alive. They’ll come for me. You can count on that. Why not just let me go and avoid a needless battle?”

Kaverin stopped pacing—Rayburton could tell because the clacking of his knuckles stopped, too. “Oh, I have no doubt they’ll charge right into the Batiri camp, horns blaring. Cimber is with them, and he is the least subtle person I know.”

Finally Kaverin came around to the front of the chair. For the first time, Rayburton saw how exhausted his captor looked. His eyes were ringed by dark circles, his hands trembled from fatigue. Kaverin’s voice was a sigh as he said, “Your would-be rescuers may even have the gem-sorcerer with them. They could have the whole population of Mezro with them, and I still wouldn’t let you go.”

Gingerly Kaverin lifted Phyrra’s skull from the back of the chair. He adjusted the glasses and said, “The key phrase, milord, is immortality. Whether you have the ring or not, you’ve lived for more than twelve hundred years, by my count.” He looked into the skull’s empty eye sockets; the glasses reflected his own lifeless eyes back at him. “I want to know how you’ve managed it.”

“Never,” Rayburton said firmly.

Kaverin yawned and rubbed his tired eyes, then placed the head in Rayburton’s lap. “Whatever the secret is, it’s something you share with T’fima, since he says he’s quite old, too—at least that’s what Feg heard before that fanged thing ate him.” He scowled at the memory of the image he’d seen through the winged monkey’s eyes just before it died—a blur of black fur and razor-sharp claws.

Stoutly, Rayburton fought the urge to flinch from the grisly head or turn away in disgust. “If you want to know, go ask T’fima then,” he said. “You’ll get the same answer from him, I daresay.”

Reaching down slowly, Kaverin took one of Rayburton’s fingers in his cold, stony grip. He pulled it backward, just to the point where it strained, but didn’t break. “Won’t change your mind, will you, milord?”

Rayburton gritted his teeth against the pain and shook his head.

“Quite certain?” Kaverin asked flatly.

Again Rayburton shook his head.

Kaverin didn’t ask a third time. He pulled the finger until it touched the back of the prisoner’s hand. Rayburton stifled a scream, refusing to give his torturer the pleasure of hearing him cry out.

“Bravo,” Kaverin cooed. “Just the sort of control I would expect from a man of your breeding, milord.” He gripped another finger. “This will be a challenge, I think.”

“You monster,” Rayburton hissed through clenched teeth.

Kaverin smiled a predatory smile. “You don’t know the half of it.” He broke another finger, then grabbed a third. “If it comes to it, Lord Rayburton, I will kill you. Then I’ll find your daughter—Oh, don’t look surprised. The lovely young woman mentioned her relation to you in T’fima’s hut, before my spy was so rudely slaughtered,” Twisting the finger sideways, he added, “Maybe she’ll be more cooperative.”

“Why don’t you just ask me?” Byrt chimed from his cage. “I’m a regular font of knowledge. License to lecture granted by the College of Bards on Orlil, order of fabulists. No literary masterpiece too obscure for our attention. Rules of grammar enforced with spirit—root words are a wombat’s specialty, don’t you know.”

“Take that idiotic thing outside,” Kaverin said coldly. “Give it to the queen’s guards.”

As Skuld hefted the cage, Byrt pressed against the bars. His blue eyes were locked on Rayburton. “You’ll need to keep him alive if you want to cash in on his fountain of youth, Kaverin.” When the stone-handed man ignored him, the wombat added, “Ask him what it takes to become a bara of Ubtao. The benefits are quite good, from what his daughter told me.”

“No!” Rayburton lurched forward, making the chair scrape ahead a foot or two. Phyrra’s head rolled from his lap and bounced off Kaverin’s leg before coming to rest under a table. “Don’t tell him,” the bara cried.

Kaverin held up a hand, and Skuld paused at the door. “Why would Rayburton’s dear daughter tell you anything important?”

Glancing up at Skuld, Byrt said. “This will take a while, so you might as well put me down.” When the silver giant didn’t move, the wombat shrugged. “Suit yourself, but don’t blame me if one arm is longer than the other three from holding me up so long.”

“Do not try my patience,” Kaverin said. “I do not brook fools easily.”

“Why would you ever—” Byrt swallowed the rest of the retort. “Sanda told me because she likes animals, has a gift for dealing with them, you might say.” He looked at Rayburton apologetically. “Like her dad, she’s a bara of Ubtao—a sort of mystical guardian of Mezro on behalf of the god. In return for serving the public good, they are granted eternal life.”

“Don’t tell him anything else!” Rayburton shouted.

“Quiet, old man,” Kaverin said. He backhanded Rayburton without so much as looking at him, then strolled to Byrt’s cage. “So why do I have to keep him alive, now that I know the secret?”

Byrt cleared his throat. “When a bara dies, Ubtao chooses his successor from everyone who presents himself at the temple in the city’s center—” he leaned close to Kaverin and lowered his voice conspiratorially “—but you’ve got to go to the temple to be considered. You see the obvious problem, of course?”

“Of course,” Kaverin admitted. “If I kill him before I’m in the temple, ready to undergo the ceremony to become a bara, the good people of Mezro would be sure another candidate got there before me.” He paced a few steps, then looked back to the wombat. “I don’t suppose you’d be willing to tell me where the city is or how it’s hidden?”

Byrt’s blue eyes took on a haze of vagueness. “Sorry, I’m just a tourist in these parts. If you let me go right now, I would be utterly lost.”

“Then how did you find the city in the first place?” Kaverin asked.

“Couldn’t tell you,” Byrt said merrily. “It was all Artus’s doing. Lugg and I were in a daze, but he found us shelter from the storm and put a thatched roof over our heads. Frightfully bright fellow, Artus. I hear you two go way back.”

Kaverin gestured to Skuld. “Give him to the queen.”

“I protest!” Byrt cried as he was carried from the room.

“You might show some gratitude. After all, I saved you the trouble of breaking any more fingers—”

The slam of the door cut off any further pleading. Kaverin strolled to a long couch that faced his prisoner. “I guess I’ll have to keep you alive, at least until we get into the city and test out the pig-bear’s claim.” He clacked his knuckles together. “And as far as finding Mezro is concerned, we’ll just wait for your daughter and that idiot Cimber to try to rescue you. Then we’ll simply follow them back to the city.”

“Why are you doing this?” “Rayburton rasped.

“I told you before, milord. The key is immortality.” Kaverin stretched out on the couch. “Since I know your secret, I’ll share one of mine—not anything that would give you a weapon against me, of course. Just some information that’ll let you know how serious I am about solving this little mystery… .”

Kaverin’s voice trailed off and his head dropped to his chest. He started awake instantly and turned his attention back to Rayburton. “I don’t suppose you’ve ever been dead,” he said. “I have, thanks to Cimber and that bloated mage Pontifax. They murdered me about three years ago. The authorities in Tantras even called it murder.” He covered another yawn with one jet-black hand. “I don’t begrudge them that. We’d been destroying little parts of each other for years—I’d send an assassin after Cimber, he’d gather evidence of wrongdoings and have all my associates arrested. My killing Pontifax’s wife sent them both over the edge. Looking back, it was bad judgment on my part. Still, you can’t undo the past. Cimber and Pontifax swore a vendetta against me, caught me in a tavern without my bodyguards, then blew me into a hundred pieces.”

Kaverin studied Rayburton’s face, watched contentedly as horror mixed with the pain. “So down to Hades I went, to the Realm of the Dead. When you were in Cormyr, the Lord of the Dead was Myrkul. Not any longer. That’s Cyric’s domain now.” He snorted. “It’s a good thing that homicidal maniac killed Myrkul and took his godhood, because he was willing to cut a deal with me: I get to live out the rest of my life, just as if Cimber hadn’t caught me in Tantras, but only so long as I sow chaos and destruction in the North. That’s why I’m after the Ring of Winter. No other artifact in the history of the world has such potential for destruction.”

“I never found the ring,” Rayburton snarled. “You won’t find it here.”

“But there had to be a reason you were in Chult looking for it,” Kaverin said. He held up his hand. “But that’s something we can discuss later. Where were we? Ah, yes. My deal with Cyric.” Lashing out with one stone hand, he shattered a skull resting atop the couch. “The price for all this was a bit steep, I’ve come to find out. When I do die, I go straight back to Cyric for an eternity of torture.”

Rayburton saw a glimmer of some weird emotion flash in Kaverin’s dark, lifeless eyes. It was gone as soon as it had appeared, though.

“That’s another reason for me to possess the ring—eternal life. But even that would be a torture of sorts, thanks to Cyric….” Kaverin smiled mirthlessly, then fell into a drowsy reverie. From the frown on his face, Rayburton assumed it was far from pleasant.

After a few moments, Kaverin’s breathing became regular and deep, his chest rising and falling in a steady rhythm. He did not wake this time, though Rayburton soon wished he had.

The first indication of the horror that was to come was the smell of sulphur. The stench grew so strong it seared Rayburton’s lungs and made his eyes tear. Next came the sound of wailing. The murmur never became very loud, just audible enough for some of the individual shrieks and cries for mercy to rise above the hellish nimble. The chorus of the damned made the hair stand up on the back of Rayburton’s neck. Panic swelled in his chest, muffling his heartbeat, threatening to choke the air from his lungs.

Finally they came. On either side of the sleeping Kaverin, two huge figures appeared out of the air. Their heads were lupine, with slavering jaws and glowing red eyes. Coarse hair bristled in a mane from between their pointed ears down their backs, but the rest of their bodies were plated with armorlike scales. Each had a pair of human arms ending in clawed hands. These they rubbed together like a miser considering his hoard. Four other limbs, more akin to a spider’s legs than anything human, waved and clutched the air. When the beasts moved toward the sleeping man, it was on a snake’s writhing body. They pulsed forward and, gripping the couch, leaned over Kaverin.

Rayburton tried to close his eyes, but the ghastly sight had burned into his thoughts. The two creatures, monstrous denizens of the Realm of the Dead, moved closer to the sleeping Kaverin. Yet they didn’t so much as lay a taloned hand on him. No, they did something far more terrible.

As Kaverin slept, the denizens whispered in his ears, describing the horrors of the Realm of the Dead and the awful fate that awaited him when he died. The sleeping man twitched and groaned, but stayed lost in slumber. Such was the part of their deal that Cyric didn’t reveal to Kaverin on the day he made his pact; so long as he lived, these creatures would visit him every time he slept. Even if he found a way to prolong his life, the stone-handed man would be given a bitter taste of his eventual fate each time he drifted off to sleep.

All that afternoon Lord Rayburton shared in the nightmares those creatures conjured in Kaverin’s mind. The sweet voices spoke of tortures and promised terrors beyond belief. They whispered of a world of agony without end, an eternal fife filled with misery and suffering, all at the hands of the dark god Cyric.

No matter how loud Lord Dhalmass Rayburton screamed, the voices of the denizens came to him clearly, as if their words were meant for him, too.


Since leaving Ras T’fima’s hut an hour past, Artus, Sanda, and Kwalu had moved toward the goblin camp at a steady pace. The jungle had thinned, the tangles of trees and vines giving way now and then to clearings filled with saw-edged grasses, squat palms, and strange creatures. Docile dinosaurs lumbered about, tearing up huge mouthfuls of greenery. Kwalu showed no fear of these gigantic lizards, and they in turn watched unafraid as the trio passed.

Only when he spotted a quartet of dinosaurs running through a clearing did the negus order the party to take cover. These beasts stood twice as tall as Artus and ran on two legs. Their tails stuck out straight behind them like rudders, allowing them to balance as they charged across the field. The most frightening thing about them was the scythelike claw hooking up from each foot. It was clear to Artus that they used these in combat, probably hopping up and tearing at each other like giant birds.

The respect Kwalu showed these monsters surprised Artus, for the negus seemed truly fearless. He had warmed to the explorer considerably after hearing of his escape from the Batiri camp, even offering cryptic hints as to some of his own fantastic adventures. Few predatory beasts had escaped his spear and club, few places in Chult had remained closed to his wandering. He was never specific about his feats, though. His modesty simply wouldn’t allow him to stoop to anything even close to bragging.

Though Kwalu appeared tight-lipped to Artus, Sanda was amazed at how talkative the negus had proved to be with the explorer. For her part, she never seemed at a loss for a comment or question. Her mood never darkened for long; she’d even recovered from her worry about her father, convincing herself and the others that they would certainly rescue him in time. Artus found her self-assuredness a welcome beacon, warning him away from the shoals of despair. At least, he welcomed it most of the time. At other moments, Sanda’s breezy dismissal of problems seemed frivolous, her mocking tone rather mean-spirited.

“I make you uncomfortable, don’t I, Artus?” Sanda asked bluntly as they tore through a particularly thick curtain of vines. A smile tugged at the corners of her mouth. “I would have thought you too worldly to be intimidated by an older woman.”

The comment flew straight and true, dead on target to the heart of the matter. Artus could only wince at the sting, though, for Sanda had seen right through him. To deny the truth would be pointless. “You should understand my discomfort,” he said. “I mean, I find myself wondering how you see me—like a child or a fool. Don’t you ever wonder how we mortals see you? Doesn’t that make it hard for you to live with us?”

“Of course,” Kwalu said. The negus looked up from the trail marker he was leaving for the Tabaxi troops that King Osaw was sending after them. “That’s the reason you’ve met so many barae in such a short time. We tend to stay together. Why choose a hunting partner who can only keep up with you for twenty years or so?”

“How lonely,” Artus said.

“Oh, any isolation is self-imposed,” Sanda offered cheerfully. “The king doesn’t have a problem becoming close to ‘mortals,’ as you call them. Most of the barae have, at one time or another.”

“Not me,” Kwalu said proudly.

Sanda bowed. “Except Negus Kwalu,” she corrected. “The rest of us have had friends, lovers, and children pass away, all while we remain untouched by the scouring winds of time.” A cloud passed over her bright features as she looked at Artus. In reply to his unvoiced question, she added, “Two sons and a daughter. Actually, grandchildren, too, and great-grandchildren. I stopped keeping track. It made me too sad to see them as infants and watch them die of old age, all without much noticing the passage of the years myself.”

In silence they came to the edge of a wide field. Above the general cacophony, a chorus of high-pitched cries rang out. Desperation gave an edge to the shrieks, a panic that grew as the cries were repeated. The source of the calls remained hidden, though, for the grass in this particular clearing stood taller than Artus’s waist.

Cautiously Kwalu started out from the cover of the trees, Sanda and Artus close behind. They had stumbled across creatures hidden in tall grass before: rabbits or deer or even an occasional huge snake or hunting cat. These the negus frightened away by slapping the flat of his spear against his dinosaur-hide shield. The resulting boom sent most animals scurrying for cover.

Kwalu expected the same ploy to work this time. As the grass began to part a little farther ahead of the trio, he slammed his spear to his shield. But instead of running, the unseen animals darted forward. The wake they left in the grass gave Artus no doubt they were heavy creatures, and their cries sounded uncomfortably similar to the yelps of the altispinax that had attacked his expedition in the swamp. The explorer nocked an arrow to his bow and braced himself to fire.

The creature that galloped out of the grass was only frightening in its enthusiasm at finding someone else in the field. It was a dinosaur, but not like the other monsters Artus had encountered in Chult. It stood two feet tall at the shoulder, and twice that from the tip of its tail to the small horn on the end of its beaklike snout. A bony frill protected its neck, and two larger horns jutted. from its head. These horns were blunt, not yet grown into the awesome weapons they’d one day become, but Artus still jumped back when the dinosaur took another galloping step toward him.

“Quickly,” Kwalu cried. “Get away from them!”

The bellow that erupted from the jungle made Artus’s heart skip a beat. The crack and clatter of trees falling before some charging giant followed, along with a low tremor that shook the entire field. Immediately the four dinosaurs answered the call with sharp cries of greeting.

Artus turned and saw Kwalu standing, shoulders back, chin out. As the negus faced the tree line and the source of the awful, ear-splitting roar, the four little dinosaurs raced past him. “Gods,” Artus murmured. “They’re babies.”

The guardian of the four young creatures breached the tree line. It shared the basic shape and features of its young, but it was ten times as large. Its horns were fully developed—as long as Artus was tall and tapered to deadly points. Opening its beaklike snout, it roared a challenge. The teeth in that cavernous mouth were not the jagged knives of a carnivore, but the dinosaur didn’t need such weapons. If it wanted to kill the humans, it merely had to trample them beneath one of its four huge feet.

Trees crashed to the ground, shoved out of the way as the dinosaur charged. The young creatures wisely scattered out of the way, but evidently Kwalu did not share that wisdom.

“Run!” Artus shouted.

Calmly the negus lifted his broad-bladed spear and threw it with all his considerable strength. The weapon flew, lodging just below one of the monster’s eyes. The wound didn’t even slow the beast down. It rampaged forward, closing half the distance between itself and the doomed men with three steps. Kwalu didn’t retreat an inch, instead reaching for a small leather box that hung at his belt.

Artus saw then how futile it would be to run. Unless he’d started to move long before the dinosaur broke through the tree line, it could catch him in a half-dozen thunderous steps. The explorer glanced over his shoulder, hoping Sanda had possessed the sense to bolt at the first rumbling footstep. At the same time, he reached back for an arrow from his quiver. Kwalu was right in that much—better to fight until the end.

He never got to fire that arrow. The sight of Sanda, stretched out in peaceful repose before the charging dinosaur, made him fumble the shaft back into the quiver. She hadn’t moved a single step. Neither had she drawn her weapon for a final, hopeless stand. No, Sanda had lain back in the grass and fallen asleep.

Certain that bizarre sight would be his last, Artus braced himself for the crushing weight of the dinosaur’s foot. Yet the roars of the guardian and the thunder of its charge had stopped. Only the calls of the young, pleading and submissive, rang out over the clearing.

When Artus turned around again, the dinosaur stood close enough for him to reach out and touch the leathery hide of one leg. Nearby, Kwalu leaned against another thick leg, idly adjusting his grip on his shield. “It is a triceratops, I think,” the negus noted. “The young must have got separated from the herd. They usually travel in large groups.”

“What?” Artus sputtered. He looked up at the dinosaur. It had taken another step toward him, blocking out the sun with its massive frill and horns.

“Sanda has control of the beast,” Kwalu offered calmly, gesturing toward the woman with his club. “That is the power Ubtao granted her. She can possess any warmblooded creature, bend its will to hers.”

“But this is a lizard!”

“It is a dinosaur,” Kwalu replied. “A child of Ubtao. It is like a lizard, but its massive heart pumps blood as hot as yours or mine.”

The negus turned to his fellow bara. “We should move her,” he said, shooing away one of the baby triceratops that had begun to rabble at the fringe around his calf. “She cannot control this brute for long.”

Artus slung his bow over his shoulder and picked up Sanda. As he draped her limp arms over his shoulders, lifting her on his back, he stared up at the full-grown triceratops. The creature nodded and turned one huge eye toward him. As Artus watched, the black orbs filled with color—the same green as Sanda’s eyes. Shaken, he looked away.

When Artus caught up with Kwalu again, the negus was fast approaching the far end of the clearing. He seemed unaffected by the incident, unfazed by the gruesome death he had nearly met. “You knew Sanda was going to do that,” the explorer said. “Take over the triceratops, I mean.”

“No,” Kwalu answered. “I was not thinking of her bara power. I am glad she did.”

“Yeah, I’m glad too.” Artus shifted Sanda’s weight on his back. “Kwalu, if you didn’t know she was going to use her power… .”

The negus patted the small leather box at his hip. “I have a power of my own, Artus.” He let the comment stand, refusing to elaborate even after the explorer asked him directly. All he would say was, “Perhaps you will see me use it against the Batiri. They captured me unprepared to call upon Ubtao the time your friend, Theron, found me a prisoner in their camp. Never again.”

At the edge of the clearing, Sanda began to stir. “It was unfair of you to make Artus carry me by himself, Kwalu,” she murmured sleepily.

“I do not think he wanted to share the burden,” the negus noted. “He did not ask my aid, so I assumed he enjoyed the task.”

Artus had not asked for Kwalu’s help because the young man was royalty, and one simply didn’t demand that a prince stoop to manual labor, at least not in the Heartlands. That was the majority of the reason, anyway. Suddenly self-conscious, he shuffled his feet and shifted his bow from one hand to the other.

But Artus wasn’t the only one unsettled by the negus’s offhand remark. An uncharacteristic wave of embarrassment struck Sanda, and she hurried past both Artus and Kwalu, “We’d best hurry,” she mumbled. “It’ll be dark in a few hours.”


Sanda kept ahead of the others all afternoon. Only when they reached the outskirts of the goblin camp did she slow down enough for them to speak to her. By then, she had brushed aside whatever was bothering her. Though Artus was curious about her reaction, he let the subject rest until a more convenient time.

Kwalu immediately took up a position at the base of a tree. He detached the dinosaur skin from the bone frame of his shield and rolled the thick hide up into a bundle, which he used as a makeshift camp chair. The frame he folded and hid in the leaves. With his club resting across his knees and one hand on the leather box at his belt, he sat motionless, watching the camp and counting the war banners staked outside the huts and tents.

When Artus went to take up his own position, Sanda held him back. “Unless the goblins spot us and raise an alarm, don’t even think about starting a battle,” she whispered. “If a sentry gets too close, try to drag him into the bushes before fighting in the open.”

It seemed like common sense to Artus, but he nodded politely, as if the bara’s orders were full of useful revelations. Before she turned away, he said, “When Kaverin shows himself, watch where he goes. He knows we were spying on him from T’fima’s hut, so he might have moved your father from the queen’s house.”

Sanda paused and took Artus’s hand. “Just stay out of sight until the warriors get here. If they arrive before sundown, we’ll storm the main building. If not, we’ll fall back into the jungle and come up with another plan.”

Stealthily Artus moved through the undergrowth, settling for a post a few yards from Kwalu. He sat with his longbow at his side, the arrows planted tip-down in the ground near his feet. This was an old army practice Pontifax had taught him upon returning from the Tuigan Wars. The Cormyrian archers had used the time-saving trick to good effect in their battles with the barbarians.

The goblin camp was much the same as Artus had seen it last. A few guards hid in the shadows of Queen M’bobo’s two-story palace. Others squatted in the doorways of various huts or lounged against the leering totems stationed throughout the camp. Artus grimaced when he saw the wooden totems; their screeching alarm rang fresh enough in his ears for him to dread disturbing them again.

One thing had changed in the Batiri enclave. In many places, tattered, sagging tents were staked out next to the huts. Artus could see warriors fast asleep under these dirty bivouacs, piled together like dozing lions. Their spears had been planted outside the tents, much in the same way the explorer had planted his arrows—point-down and ready for quick use. Banners marked with crude symbols announced which clan occupied each part of the camp.

The sun was fading fast, and there was still no sign of the Tabaxi warriors King Osaw had promised or Kaverin himself. Without knowing precisely where Rayburton was hidden, it was pointless to charge into the camp; Artus patiently bided his time by counting the goblins and learning their clan symbols. Sanda didn’t share the explorer’s patience. As dusk began to settle on the camp, she climbed a nearby tree, perhaps for a better vantage.

“I hear somethin’, I do,” the closest of the Batiri guards murmured. He was a short brute, even for a goblin, with one fang missing and a jagged gash across his face. He squinted in Sanda’s direction. The woman hung motionless and silent, only half-hidden by the brush. Raising his spear menacingly, the goblin started toward her. “What’re you there, hidin’ in the tree?”

Why doesn’t he call out the other guards? Artus wondered, grabbing his bow and nocking an arrow. He centered his aim on the guard’s throat; if the arrow struck true, it would stop him from crying out. The guard took another step forward, then another.

Just like when they captured me last time, Artus thought bitterly. Only there’s no spider to—

He let the arrow slide to the ground and pulled his dagger from his boot. Concentrating on the softly glowing stone set in the hilt, he whispered, “Come down.” In the leaves high above, something trilled a loud reply to the magical summons.

A monstrous spider crawled partway down the trunk toward Sanda. Like the thing that had knocked Artus from his hiding place when he’d first escaped the Batiri camp, this one was easily as large as a man. Hair as black as midnight stood up like a porcupine’s bristles all along its body and how they’d been spotted. And standing as they were, with their backs to the jungle, they couldn’t see the sad, phantasmal figure of Sir Hydel Pontifax behind them. The ghost hovered above the ground for a moment, hands held out to Artus. By the time the battle started, he had faded reluctantly into the growing twilight.

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