Five

Port Castigliar was a sorry excuse for an outpost. It consisted of seven tin huts, two small plots of vegetables, a large but ramshackle supply depot, and a graveyard. The latter was more densely populated than the land for five miles in any direction.

As Artus and Pontifax stood on the narrow stretch of beach, watching the ship’s boat from the Narwhal unload its cargo of food, cookware, knives, and weapons, they could not help but wonder if they’d come to the right place. “Are you certain this is where Theron said we should land?” Pontifax asked, wiping his rain-soaked hair out of his eyes.

Artus scowled. “I have the map right here,” he said, then patted his pack. “My journal may have been stolen, but I was smart enough to keep the map with me at all times.”

Pontifax stared uneasily at the Narwhal. The galleon waited impatiently in the deep waters off Port Castigliar, anxious to move on to more substantial stops in Refuge Bay. The lowering sky was dark and threatening, promising worse than the downpour already underway. “Quiracus might have disembarked before we got to the deck this morning,” the mage offered absently.

Artus grunted. The crew had half-heartedly searched for Master Quiracus. Not only was the elven first mate wanted for questioning concerning his attack of Artus, but he was next in line to take command of the Narwhal. When no sign of him had been uncovered, it was decided he had fallen overboard in the battle with the dragon-turtle—decided, that is, by the newly risen Captain Nelock. Actually, Nelock had made it quite clear he hoped Quiracus never surfaced, and he did all he could to keep the hunt subdued. Even if he had found the elf hiding somewhere aboard ship, Nelock would have offered him shelter, just so long as he disappeared at the first port.

For their parts, Artus and Pontifax believed the elf to be alive. When the explorer discovered his journal had been stolen—pocketed by Quiracus during the turtle attack, one of the ballista crew had said—he concluded the elf must be after the Ring of Winter. Either that, or he was working for someone else who quested after the ring. That possibility worried Artus the most.

“Well, let’s show enough sense to get out of this rain,” Pontifax said. “I don’t think we’re going to catch our elusive adversary by drowning here on the beach.” He hefted a pack to one shoulder and started toward the sprawling supply depot.

Artus grabbed the other two packs. Dragging them along, he hurried after the mage. “If we press on after the ring,” he said wearily, “Quiracus will show himself sooner or later.”

“Quiracus or the blighter with whom he’s so gainfully employed,” Pontifax corrected.

They wrestled their packs into the warehouse. The building appeared dilapidated from the outside, with pocked and scarred tin walls and a haphazardly constructed straw roof. Inside, however, the depot more closely resembled one of the finer shops in Suzail or Waterdeep. Row after row of neatly stacked boxes rose two stories to the waterproof thatch. Everywhere Artus looked lay jars full of buttons, cloth sheets lined with needles, spool after spool of thread, tunics and boots and cloaks, crossbows and swords and arrows. Each shelf was numbered, with a narrow strip of pegboard rising up to the tallest.

“It’s cool in here,” Pontifax whispered. After the humidity and the warm rain, the cold made him shiver.

“And the floor was clean, too, before you dragged in those sodden packs,” came a voice from the polished suit of armor standing at attention next to the door. It spoke in the trade tongue known as Common. “Don’t you two know to wipe your muddy boots?”

The armor shuddered, and a child ten winters old walked from behind it. Like many Chultan natives, his skin was the dark brown of fertile earth and his black hair was cropped close. He wore short pants and a loose shirt, both tan and spotlessly clean. “Well?” he asked, gesturing with his polishing cloth to the wet muddy footprints.

“Oh, er, sorry,” Artus stammered. He and Pontifax stepped back to the stoop. “We’re here to purchase supplies and to hire a guide and some bearers.”

But the boy’s attention was on a large package that had fallen into the nearest aisle. “Zrumya!” he shouted. “Pick up in row two, level six!”

From high in the rafters came a shriek, followed by the flutter of wings through the chilly air. A monstrous bat, as large as a man, tumbled down and darted crazily between the high stacks of boxes. Finally it landed with a thud in the aisle, right on top of the fallen package. Using the claws located at the joints in its wings, it slid the bundle into a pack strapped to its chest. Then, with slow, spiderlike movements, the bat crept across the floor and began to climb the shelving. It hooked its claws into the pegboard and made it way to the sixth shelf, where it unloaded its cargo. Job done, the bat fluttered back to its perch.

The boy turned back to study Artus and Pontifax for a moment. “Father!” he shouted, then disappeared between a high row of boxes.

The boy’s father appeared at the end of the long aisle running from the door to the back of the warehouse. “Pay Inyanga no mind,” the man said. “He is trying to prove to me he loves the store so he can inherit it some day.”

Despite this, Artus opened the door and kicked as much mud off his boots as possible before treading across the clean planks. Pontifax removed his shoes completely. The old mage smiled at the stern-faced boy, who had returned with a bucket and mop. “It’s our mess,” Pontifax said, holding up a hand. “Allow me.”

He muttered an incantation. Instantly a blue light limned the mop, then it jerked out of the boy’s hand. As the child stared, it cleaned up the mud and swabbed the whole area in front of the door. Finally the mop floated back to the bucket and lowered itself into the now-grimy water.

“I used to sweep up my father’s store when I was your age,” the mage said kindly. “There were lots of times when I wished someone would come along and make the broom do the work itself.” He patted the boy and hurried after Artus, his bare feet peeking out from under his long brown robe.

“This is Ibn Engaruka,” Artus said when the mage reached the long, low counter that ran the entire length of the warehouse. The owner nodded politely, though his face was an impassive mask. The young boy resembled him closely, from the broad nose to the hard-set jaw. Even the clothes they wore were alike.

Ibn gestured to the wet patch near the door. “It has been years since magic has blessed this place,” he said stiffly. “I was just telling your comrade here, a local sorcerer used to trade magic for goods. He placed some enchanted gems under the floorboards to keep the store cool. That keeps my foodstuffs from spoiling so fast, do you see?”

Before either Artus or Pontifax could reply, Ibn clapped his hands. “Inyanga, bring some chairs for these gentlemen.” The boy had apparently foreseen the order, for before his father finished speaking, he had dragged two wooden stools to the tired explorers.

“It is best to do business when comfortable,” Ibn said, but he did not take a seat himself. Instead, he leaned on the counter, openly sizing up the strangers before him. “What brings you to Chult? If I understand your goal, I can better help you to reach it, do you see?”

“We wish to hire a guide and six bearers, and buy supplies for a few weeks trek into the jungle. But we prefer not to discuss our reasons for being here,” Artus began, “There are others—”

“No need to say more. I understand entirely,” the shopkeep said, holding up a restraining hand. “I will tell you this, though. The men and women here will do no traffic with slavers. It is something we will not tolerate, do you see?”

“Of course,” Pontifax said. The mage nodded emphatically. “We’re no slavers. You can count on that.”

“Then I can help you,” Ibn replied, “but not for a few days. This very morning, before dawn, the only guide in Port Castigliar has gone away with the unpleasant young woman from your ship. It is too bad you could not travel together, but—”

“Young woman?” Artus repeated, shocked, “No young woman got off the Narwhal this morning.”

Ibn shrugged. “I could be mistaken, but I doubt so very much. Only locals and people from trading ships stop here, and yours has been the only vessel in days.”

“Was there an elf with her? A young, blond-haired fellow?” Pontifax asked, rubbing his chin.

The boy, who had been watching the mage from atop a pile of crates, shouted down, “No. She left the camp with the guide. No bearers and no supplies: She was very rude to me and my father.”

“She tried to strike Inyanga when he shouted at her for tracking mud into the store,” Ibn noted. He pulled a large ledger from beneath the counter. “The guide leaves a record of his destination with me. I am his agent, do you see?” After flipping past a dozen yellow-edged pages, he frowned. “There is no entry here. Perhaps this woman is searching for the same thing you are, for she is certainly as secretive.”

Artus was on his feet before the book clapped shut. “There has to be another guide here. You, perhaps? Or the boy?”

“Absolutely not,” Ibn said. “Inyanga and I, we will not leave our home, and the bearers, they are slaves freed from galleys along the coast. They work here to earn their passage home, do you see? They do not know this place any better than you.” He slid the ledger back under the counter. “You will have to wait for the guide to return. Until then, you can stay in one of the huts. A few are empty now, since three of my bearers bought passage back down the coast aboard a merchant ship last week.”

The door slammed open, and the leader of the Narwhal’s shore party stuck his head into the depot. “All the stuff is on the beach,” he shouted. “Stacked and covered with a tarp. We’re going.”

“Not until I inventory the boxes,” Ibn replied. He vaulted over the counter. “Pardon me, gentlemen, but Captain Bawr’s men have trouble counting their own fingers and toes.”

Artus and Pontifax watched the shopkeep hurry outside. “We could risk going on alone,” the mage ventured halfheartedly.

“That would be foolish.” Inyanga climbed down from the crates. “You would not last a whole night in the jungle alone. There are goblins and wildmen who would eat both of you for dinner.” The boy laughed. “And the Children of Ubtao. They do not like strangers roaming around in Ubtao’s jungle. Then the bearers would bring you back, and my father would have to bury what’s left of you in the ground beside the beach, like the other men who came here and wandered off on their own.”

Artus knew many tribes in Chult worshiped Ubtao as the mightiest of gods, the maker of men and animals. Perhaps these “children” were his high priests. “Well, Pontifax?” the explorer sighed.

“What else can we do?” the mage replied. “We take up residence here in Port Castigliar until the guide returns.”


Here lies Wurthek of Tethyr.

He has gone to chart the realms beyond.

Artus pulled a clinging vine off the tombstone. It was as thick around as his thumb, and, when it hit the ground, the vine snaked slowly back toward the jungle. Artus merely stared at it; the rain and the somber setting had dampened his already-dark mood so much that anything less than a charging dragon would have gotten a similarly subdued reaction.

The explorers’ graveyard started at one end of Ibn’s store and ran behind it for almost its entire length. By the shopkeep’s count, it held one hundred and eight bodies. Stones marked most of the sites, though the jungle had long ago reclaimed some of the ground. High, thick-rooted trees towered overhead, their fronds sheltering Artus from much of the downpour. Creepers wound around the grave markers and anything else that stood still too long. Hidden in the wall of green, birds called and monkeys chittered and shrieked. Other, more ominous sounds echoed from the jungle, too, but they were far-off and muted.

Over everything hung a blanket of hot, humid air, thick with the sickly smell of rotting vegetation. Not even the breeze from the sea, only a few hundred yards away, could force the pestilent haze away for long. Like the jungle itself, the humidity soon reclaimed its lost ground.

I wonder if Wurthek’s wife knows where he is? Artus pondered grimly, crouching before the marker. He cursed not having his journal; he could have written down all the names—the ones still legible, anyway—and taken them back to Suzail with him.

“He was a mapmaker,” came a voice from behind him.

Ibn squatted next to Artus and pointed to the stone. “I cut these myself, do you see? When the men and women from your part of the world make it back this far, but can go no farther, I let them rest here until Ubtao calls them. Then I bury them, as is the custom in the northern lands. They seem safe enough, I think.”

“Does anyone know this man is buried here?”

“Ubtao does,” Ibn replied, “and whatever gods the mapmaker worshiped. I send a list north with the ships, but sometimes I don’t have names to put on the stones or the list.” Glancing at Artus, he added, “Since you haven’t offered your name, I would only have a symbol to go on your marker—if Ubtao calls you to his home before you leave the port.” Ibn opened his left hand. In his palm lay a silver Harper pin.

“I think you’re mistaken,” Artus said. “That’s not mine.”

“No,” Ibn said. “It’s mine. You have one of your own.” Before Artus could protest, be dropped the pin into a pocket and held out a calloused hand. “This morning the men from the Narwhal told me your name and what you did to save the ship from the dragon turtle. Like many Harpers, I have heard tales of your adventures. I am honored to meet you, Artus Cimber.”

There was little else Artus could do, so he greeted the Harper as amicably as possible. “Well met,” he said, clasping wrists in a traditional northern gesture of friendship. “I suppose you’ve been waiting for me.”

Ibn smiled and nodded. “The package Theron left for you is inside the store. I have kept it safe, just as he asked.” A look of concern washed across his features. “Theron is well, I hope. The case of fever he took away with him was quite serious. I have not heard from him—or anyone else in the Heartlands—for weeks now.”

Artus tried hard to mask his relief, but his heart was racing. Theron hadn’t told the Harpers after all, or the message hadn’t reached here yet. If the guide got back soon, he might actually get away without the Harpers meddling in his quest. “I saw Theron the night I left Suzail,” Artus said at last. “His mind wandered back to the jungle now and then, but I think he’ll recover.”

“He had a terrible experience with the Batiri—the goblin tribe, do you see?” Ibn straightened, his knees creaking at the effort. “There are many horrible things in Ubtao’s domain, but many beautiful things, as well. Theron found more terror thin beauty, I’m afraid.”

“He didn’t mention anything about a package,” Artus said, following Ibn back to the warehouse. He glanced back at the graveyard, only to see the creeping vine wind its way around Wurthek’s tombstone once more.

“He wished you to be surprised.” Ibn stopped at the door. “I will get the package, then come to your hut. There is something for Sir Hydel here, too.”

In the clearing before the store, there was no canopy of tree fronds to shield Artus from the downpour. He barely noticed the warm rain, though; the humidity made him sweat so much that he was soaked even when sitting inside. His shirt plastered to his back, his boots squishing uncomfortably on his feet, he made his way to the tin huts. As he got close, the steady hiss of the downpour became the loud clatter of raindrops pelting the slanted tin roofs. When he opened the door, Artus was greeted by another sound: the rambling of Pontifax’s snoring.

“How can he sleep with this racket?” Artus asked softly as he entered the hut. The rain beat a fast cadence on the roof, and the walls echoed the rolling sound. But Pontifax was indeed fast asleep on one of the four frond-stuffed mattresses that covered the floor.

The room’s accommodations were sparse but clean. Aside from the mattresses, the only other furniture was a low teakwood table, obviously meant to be used without chairs, and a set of four wooden headrests. At first Pontifax had thought these to be chairs for children. Even now, he rested his head upon his pack rather than one of the blocks. The other two packs lay huddled in the corner. Atop this pile rested Inyanga. The boy sat with his legs crossed, watching the sleeping Pontifax with great intensity.

“He said he would teach me how to make the mop work on its own,” the boy said in reply to Artus’s questioning gaze. “I am waiting for my lesson.”

Artus lifted Inyanga from the packs and placed him gently on the ground. “We have to talk business with your father now,” he said. “Pontifax will teach you that trick later.”

“It is not a trick,” the boy said. He narrowed his bright eyes in anger, “it is magic, like the spells used by the sorcerers of the Tabaxi and the shamen of the Batiri.” He crossed his arms over his chest. “Besides, I am also here to watch over the old man, like my father asked.”

Pontifax snorted awake. “Eh? Inyanga, you’re still here? Don’t worry, my lad, you’ll learn something from me before I go.” He rubbed his eyes and, noting the anxious look on Artus’s face, sent the boy away.

“You’ve just dismissed your guard,” Artus said after Inyanga had closed the door behind him.

“Guard, you say? What’s this all about? I was just taking a nap.”

Artus placed a foot on the low table. “Ibn Engaruka is a Harper. He knows who we are, too. The crew of the ship’s boat told him.” He shrugged. “The story of the fight with the dragon turtle will likely be back in Suzail before we are.”

“But why a guard?” Pontifax sputtered. “I don’t see why—”

“Because someone is trying to kill you,” Ibn noted from the doorway. He had a longbow and a quiver of arrows slung across his back and a large bundle of cloth in his hands. “The men from the Narwhal also relayed the story of the assassination attempt on Artus, Sir Hydel. You needed your rest, and I thought it best for Inyanga to watch over you. If I have offended—”

“No, no.” Pontifax stood and straightened his sleep-rumpled robes. “My thanks for your concern.”

Ibn handed the cloth bundle to Artus. “You should keep your voices down, my friends. I heard you clearly from the store’s front door. One can never tell who serves as the ears for your enemies.”

A silver string held the bundle in a neat square. Artus had only to tug at one loose end for the cord to fall away and the cloth to drape down. It was a hooded tunic. The deep green fabric looked as thick as a heavy cotton weave, but felt as light as a pickpocket’s touch in his hands. A folded sheet of parchment slipped from the tunic’s hood. Artus caught it before it dropped to the floor. The note from Theron was scrawled in a shaky hand:

Since you are reading this, Artus, I must have survived the trip back to Cormyr. Bully for me. I have no doubt you will make it to this port once I tell you of my extraordinary rescue at the hands of Lord Rayburton. The gifts I leave with Ibn will help you in the jungle: Trust to him for everything else. If you do not know by now, he carries the silver harp and moon.

No matter what or who stands in your way, Artus, you must struggle on. The thing you seek must be found, then turned to good.

Beware the goblins and the dinosaurs—the giant lizards the locals call Ubtao’s Children. They are the greatest dangers you will face.

—Theron Silvermace

Below there was one more passage, written in another hand, neater but very small. Artus took his dagger from his belt and used the glow of its hilt to read by.

I have had Ibn sew my badge to the tunic. I hope you don’t mind, but I wish to be with you on this expedition—if only in this small way.

“He asked me to add the last part,” Ibn said as Artus folded the parchment again. “He had become too ill to write it himself, do you see?”

Artus handed the note to Pontifax. “Burn it after you’ve read it.” He held the tunic up. There, over the left breast, was Theron’s family crest. White thread made the diving falcon and spiked mace contrast sharply with the verdant cloth. Artus closed his eyes for an instant, regretting the disagreement that had marked his parting with Theron.

Ibn placed the bow and quiver of arrows on one of the mattresses. “These Master Silvermace bought from me. I purchased them in trade long ago from an elven sailor. They are from Evermeet, I am told, crafted by the bowyers and fletchers of the royal family.” He laughed. “Even if that is not true, they are wonderfully wrought.”

A gout of flame devoured the parchment in Pontifax’s hands. After the mage dusted the ashes from his palm, he sighed. “Thank you for watching over these things.”

Ibn bowed. “Any Harper would do the same.” He settled back against the wall. “Theron would not tell me what he found in the jungle, saying only that it was not a Harper matter and I would be safer if I did not know about it.”

“He was wise not to tell you,” Artus said. “There are many who would stop at nothing to gain information about our quest.”

He peeled his wet, sweat-soaked shirt off and dropped it to the floor. Old scars—some small, some long and twisted—marred his back and stomach. The medallion hung heavily on its chain, still encased in a cast of solid white paste. Artus studied the now-lifeless medallion, then shrugged on the tunic Theron had left for him. “It’s light and very cool. And,” he added, flipping the hood over his head, “this will keep the sun off quite nicely.”

“You look like a monk,” Pontifax chuckled. “Brother Artus of Oghma to the rescue.”

Artus pulled the hood down. “Perhaps I should reconsider my calling if I look so dashing in this,” he said. “I’m certain Zin would have me back in the order if I asked.”

“These men who are after you,” Ibn interrupted, “are they Zhentarim? I have seen the marks left by the tortures they employ. Yours are very much like them.”

Artus lifted his shirt and traced a puckered line across his stomach. “You’re very observant, Ibn. The scars—most of them, anyway—I got in the dungeons of Zhentil Keep, at the hands of the Zhentarim. They aren’t the ones who tried to kill me aboard the Narwhal, though. They favor magic over brute force, so they would never have been so crass as to push me overboard during a battle.”

“You know,” Pontifax said, “it could be the Red Wizards. Maybe that’s why they took your journal.” He gave Artus a stern look. “After all, you stole it from them in the first place.”

Artus frowned and crossed his arms. “Or it could be the Slashing Skulls, or the assassins’ guild of Iriaebor, or those lunatic halflings from the Shar, or any one of fifty groups that’d like to see me dead.” He paused and took a deep breath. “It could even be Kaverin Ebonhand, for all we know. This has Cult of Frost written all over it.”

“Wait a moment,” Ibn said. “I’d heard Kaverin Ebonhand was dead.”

“You’re right,” Pontifax said glumly. “Kaverin was dead, the bastard. We killed him ourselves not three years ago.”

“But, if you killed him… ?”

Artus picked up the bow, which very nearly matched his height. As he braced it against the wall to string it, he asked, “You’ve heard how Kaverin lost his hands for murdering a Harper?” When Ibn nodded, the explorer continued. “After that sordid business, he swore to kill me and Pontifax. We clashed now and then, especially after he murdered his way to the head of the Cult of Frost. Anyway, one day in Tantras, he slipped up and we caught him.”

“I blasted him to pieces with a lightning bolt,” Pontifax noted grimly.

Artus studied one of the arrows and fit it to the bow. “We should have dealt with him sword-to-sword or called in the local watch, but he’d found his way out of their jails a hundred times before.”

With a quick pull, Artus fired the arrow across the hut. It split the skull of the snake that was in the process of crawling through a gap beneath the rear wall. The serpent’s head was as large as a man’s fist. “The end result of all this is Pontifax and I are still wanted for Kaverin’s murder in Tantras. The government was annoyed at us interfering with their local problems—even if they knew Kaverin was a murderer and worse—so they tried to haul us in on a dozen different charges.”

“But if you killed him … ?” Ibn prompted.

“Some say Kaverin made a pact with the Lord of the Dead, but that may be a myth.” Artus tossed the bow aside. “We do know that he came back from the dead, as rotten as ever, and he’s never slipped up again. The Cult of Frost now shields him from everything. We haven’t even been close to catching him in three years, though he keeps trying to kill us.”

In the silence that followed, Ibn pulled the arrow from the snake’s skull. “This is a fine shot, Master Cimber,” he said, “but do not be so cavalier about what you kill in the jungle. More importantly, you must never leave a creature’s corpse lying about. If you do not eat it, burn it.” He pulled the rest of the snake—all five feet of it—into the hut. “It is too bad Theron chose the menu for dinner tonight. These are quite good when cooked correctly.”

“Theron picked the menu?” Pontifax asked.

“That was his gift for you, Sir Hydel,” Ibn replied. “ ‘A good meal for Pontifax before he’s subjected to trail rations for days on end.’ ”

“I always said that man knew how to live,” Pontifax said happily. Yet as he followed Ibn out of the hut he warily eyed the snake coiled around the shopkeep’s arms. Just what, he wondered, did the natives of Chult consider a good meal?


A clatter on the hut’s tin roof woke Artus. He sat up, dagger in hand, even before he realized he was fully awake.

The gem in the dagger’s hilt lit the room enough for Artus to see there was no immediate danger. The rain had stopped hours ago, the drumming of raindrops replaced by the soft roll of the ocean and the steady, faraway blanket of sounds of the jungle. It was still dark outside; he could tell that much from the gaps around the door and the hole at the base of the back wall. Pontifax snored sonorously, well-fed upon a meal of fish, koko-yams, plantain, and palm wine. Had he dreamed the noise? Perhaps a monkey had leaped from a tree and—

Something struck the door and a voice cried out, high and filled with fright.

Artus leaped to the door and braced himself against it. “Pontifax, quick!”

Startled from a deep sleep and a pleasant dream of a room in Cormyr’s finest inn, the mage was slow to his feet. “What’s going on?” he murmured, rubbing his eyes with awkward fingers.

“Help, Father!”

“Mystra’s wounds!” Pontifax cried. “That’s Inyanga!” Artus stepped to one side of the door, then pulled it open. A tall figure, pale and ghostly by the fight of Artus’s dagger, blocked the way. Its body was made entirely of crystal-clear ice. The explorer had faced assassins like this before, minions of the Cult of Frost, conjured servants of Kaverin Ebonhand.

Cursing, Artus grabbed for the door. The frost minion lashed out, knocking the sheet of metal from its hinges. The door crashed to the ground. Swiftly the explorer jumped back, but the assassin grabbed him by the front of his tunic and lifted him from the ground. It raised one massive fist to strike.

A tiny ball of fire hissed across the hut. It struck the frost minion in the side, then burrowed in. The assassin probably didn’t feel any pain, but it was sentient enough to sense danger. It dropped Artus and tried to dig the ember out. Too late. The pinpoint of fire exploded, and the minion’s clear body filled with flame, then shattered into a thousand shards.

Artus wiped a line of blood from his cheek where one of the larger shards had grazed him. The other fragments had been too small to do any damage.

The mage smiled sheepishly. “Sorry,” he said. “A bit of an overreaction.”

“At least we know it’s Kaverin,” Artus said. He gestured to the scattered shards of ice. “This is like an engraved calling card.”

There was noise in the compound now—doors being flung open, shouts of alarm, and the clatter of weapons. Artus charged outside and was immediately knocked to the ground from above. The roof! He tumbled, feeling icy hands fumble for his throat.

When Artus stopped rolling, another of Kaverin’s frost minions was on top of him, its weight crushing the air from his lungs. Its arms were as thick around as fenceposts, its hands like dwarven hammers. It turned its smooth, eyeless face toward Artus and reached for his throat, but the explorer struck with his dagger. The enchanted blade carved a deep furrow in the assassin’s arm. Another frantic blow, and the limb shattered. Water dripped down on Artus as the thing loomed over him, melting even as it tried to choke him with its one remaining arm.

Again and again, Artus dug his dagger into the frost minion, gouging out chunks of ice. Half its head was gone, then much of its torso. Artus felt the thing’s grip falter. It went stiff then, and dropped onto him, lifeless ice once more.

Ibn pushed the cold mass from atop the explorer. “Are you all right?”

“Yes,” Artus said softly, his throat raw from the attack. He sat up and looked at the hut. Pontifax knelt in the doorway, consoling Inyanga.

“I climbed on the roof to watch over you,” the boy said between sobs. “I saw them coming from the jungle, but I thought it was two of the bearers and their child.”

Something about Inyanga’s words jarred Artus’s mind. A child? Artus pushed himself from the ground. “Pontifax!”

In the darkness of the hut, a figure no larger than a human toddler had slipped through the gap beneath the back wall and stolen up behind the mage. The frost minion had been diminished by the heat, so much so that it barely resembled a man. That was to its advantage, though. Its hands were no longer large enough to strangle Pontifax, but they had melted to points at the ends.

It rammed one spearlike arm through the mage’s back.

From the compound, Artus saw his old friend gasp, then slump forward. Inyanga screamed. The boy reached for the figure that still stood with its arm buried in Pontifax’s back. Stiffly the frost minion jerked free. It disappeared into the hut and out through the hole where it had entered.

Ibn pulled the sobbing child away from Pontifax as Artus stumbled to his friend’s side. “Maybe not an overreaction,” the mage said. He gasped as Artus removed the ice dagger and tried to staunch the flow of blood.

“Quiet,” Artus said. He cradled the old man’s white head in his arm. “I’ll pull you through.”

Pontifax stiffened as pain spasmed through him. “Don’t let… Kaverin get the ring,” he hissed, staring with wide, clear eyes at Artus. “But be careful what you do to get it. You’ll become like him if you let the end of the quest blind you to the path you take to reach it.”

Artus felt his throat constrict. “Gods, Pontifax, I’m sorry. This is my fault.”

The mage managed a smile. “Not your fault,” he whispered. “Not even the curse.” He closed his eyes. “Be a good soldier. Don’t cry till I’m gone.”

Artus struggled to hold back the tears, unaware of the men and women looking on in horror and pity. After a moment, the mage slipped quietly away. The tears came then, burning like molten metal as they coursed down his face. But the pain didn’t scald away Artus’s thoughts and regrets. The only things that offered him comfort were Pontifax’s final words and the kindly smile on the mage’s lips, a smile not even death could erase.

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