The Sword Never Sleeps
Page 1
The Knights of Myth Drannor, Book III
THE SWORD NEVER SLEEPS
©2009 Wizards of the Coast LLC
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www.DungeonsandDragons.com
v3.1
Ed Greenwood
Shandril’s Saga
Spellfire
Crown of Fire
Hand of Fire
The Shadow of the Avatar Trilogy
Shadows of Doom
Cloak of Shadows
All Shadows Fled
The Elminster Series
Elminster: The Making of a Mage
Elminster in Myth Drannor
The Temptation of Elminster
Elminster in Hell
Elminster’s Daughter
The Cormyr Saga
Cormyr: A Novel (with Jeff Grubb)
Death of the Dragon (with Troy Denning)
The Knights of Myth Drannor
Swords of Eveningstar
Swords of Dragonfire
The Sword Never Sleeps
Stormlight
Silverfall: Stories of the Seven Sisters
The City of Splendors: A Waterdeep Novel
(with Elaine Cunningham)
The Best of the Realms, Book II
The Stories of Ed Greenwood
Edited by Susan J. Morris
tempore felici multi numerantur amici
To my loving lady, Jenny, who puts up with so much from me.
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Other Books by This Author
Dedication
Map
Prologue
Chapter 1: For the Good of Cormyr
Chapter 2: What Traitors Are Up To
Chapter 3: Arrows and Tapestries
Chapter 4: Just Such a Task
Chapter 5: Hiding Behind Our Lady
Chapter 6: Great Murdering Battle
Chapter 7: Whirlwinds Come A-Reaping
Chapter 8: Doors, Disputes, and Sudden Downfalls
Chapter 9: The Lost Palace
Chapter 10: Tasks, Travels, and Life-Altering Choices
Chapter 11: Deliverance from Tumult and Fire
Chapter 12: The Fire Answers Back
Chapter 13: Drowning and Dismembering Curses
Chapter 14: Into Our Laps
Chapter 15: Swords Among the Walking Dead
Chapter 16: Orders, Strict and Otherwise
Chapter 17: Another Crown Secret, or Seven
Chapter 18: No Realm Can Confine Me
Chapter 19: Drawn Daggers Haunting Me
Chapter 20: Talons in the Night
Chapter 21: Alone I Faced the Dragon
Chapter 22: If You Skulk Out in the Trees This Night
Chapter 23: All the Nine Hells Break Loose
Chapter 24: Anger a Wizard, and Die
Epilogue
From The Knights Who Came To Shadowdale
by Ornstel Maurimm of Selgaunt:
Although they had beyond dispute saved the life of the wizard Vangerdahast, many lives, the loyalty of the Wizards of War, and the peace and stability of fair Cormyr, Vangerdahast’s reward to these brave six was a hasty expulsion from the realm, for the Royal Magician suffered Cormyr to be beholden to none but himself.
Forth then they rode for Shadowdale once more, these six Knights of Myth Drannor.
They were led by Florin Falconhand, a handsome ranger, famed for saving the life of King Azoun Obarskyr. Noble and kingly of spirit was Florin, but as yet young and unsure.
The strongest blade among the Knights was swung by Islif Lurelake, a sturdy fighting lass of Espar, who like many a farm girl was quiet, level headed, unlovely, and large.
Among these adventuring companions, the Art was wielded by sleek Jhessail Silvertree, the smallest of the Knights, flame haired and beautiful.
The quieter of the two holy Knights was Doust Sulwood, priest of Tymora, destined to become Lord of Shadowdale. Like many wise holy ones, he watched and pondered more than he spoke.
The other holy Knight wielded a swifter, sharper tongue and was hight Semoor Wolftooth. As was customary among priests of Lathander, he would later take another name, Jelde Asturien, as he rose in service to the Morninglord.
The most lawless and experienced of the Knights was the only one among them who had not been reared in Espar: the shapely, sharp-eyed, and sharper-tongued thief who preferred to be known only as Pennae. Her wits delivered her younger companions from trouble almost as often as her shady deeds plunged them into it.
Six bumbling adventurers, notorious in Cormyr but unknown outside it—and heading out of the Realm of the Purple Dragon as fast as Vangerdahast could urge them along.
Prologue
It all began with the gruesome murder of Ondel the Archwizard, whose various pieces were found on many stoops, porches, and thresholds up and down Shadowdale.
Or perhaps it began with the finding of the legendary, long-hidden hoard of Sundraer the She-dragon.
Or then again, mayhap it started the night Indarr Andemar’s barn exploded in stabbing lightnings and balls of green flame that soared up to try to touch the stars.
Or the morning the best woodcarver in Shadowdale, Craunor Askelo, discovered his wife was not his wife and that for years he’d been sleeping with something that had scales and claws when it wanted to.
Or a handful of days after Vangerdahast, the Royal Magician of Cormyr, had stood inside a dank stone castle sally chamber, seen the Knights of Myth Drannor provided with new mounts, armor, weapons, and much spending-coin by his command, gestured in the direction of the rising portcullis, and given them a firm order of his own: “Tarry within Cormyr no longer!”
Days that had been spent riding and discovering just how hard new saddles can be—and, despite what they looked like on maps, how astonishingly large the wilderlands of northeastern Cormyr were.
Not for the first time, Semoor rolled his eyes and asked, “Gods, will these trees never end?”
“Picture each of them as a willing wench, arms and lips opening to welcome you,” Islif told him, her saddle creaking under her as she turned to smile. “And the ride will seem less endless.”
Semoor closed his eyes, growled appreciatively a time or two, then opened them again to favor her with a sour look. He shook his head. “My aching shanks remind me that this
is not the sort of ride I’d prefer to be endless.”
“You fail to surprise me,” Jhessail said in acid-laced tones of mock disapproval, running fingers through her red hair to rid it of some of the clinging road dust. A small cloud obligingly swirled away in her wake, causing Doust—who was riding there—to wince even more than she did.
Islif shrugged. Dirt had been their constant companion growing up in Espar—dust when dry, and mud when wet. Grime bothered her not at all. Little crawling insects, now, itching in intimate places …
Under the hooves of their patient mounts, the Moonsea Ride ran tirelessly on northeast, rising and then falling away again over gentle hill after gentle hill. Around it, as they rode, steadings grew fewer and fewer, and the scrub of abandoned fields and forests ravaged by woodcutters gave way to darker, deeper woods. Cormyr this might still be on maps, but much of it seemed unbroken wilderland, the road spawning small campsites at every trickling stream, but the trees otherwise standing dark and unbroken.
Pennae and Florin rode at the head of their band of six, peering watchfully into the forest shadows on either side. Florin’s searching gazes were almost hungry.
Yet Vangerdahast’s order had been both curt and clear. “Tarry within Cormyr no longer!” The Royal Magician wanted them gone out of the realm before anything else befell them and hurled trouble across Cormyr—or as Pennae had put it, “Gave us a chance to save the Forest Kingdom from itself, while nobles and war wizards dither, again.”
That sentiment had earned her one of the wizard’s coldest, darkest looks and a slowly rising, menacingly silent finger pointing at the doorway beneath the risen portcullis—not to mention Purple Dragon patrols following them along the road, so far back as to be just clearly visible, for the first few days.
“Subtle, isn’t he?” Semoor had asked everyone then. Several aching days in the saddle later, he stirred himself to ask, “So, are we fated to spend the rest of our lives riding out of fair Cormyr and not making it?”
“Avoid all inns,” Doust said darkly, in the same grand portentous tones favored by priests of Tempus and of Torm, who often visited Espar.
Islif gave that feeble jest the sour smile it deserved, then turned and asked Semoor, “If I answer you, will you say nothing more about our journeying and progress until the morrow?”
The priest of Lathander winced. “Well,” he said carefully, “I’ll certainly try.”
Pennae turned in her saddle to fling a single word back at him: “Harder.”
That smoothly twisting motion made the arrow that sped suddenly out of the trees burn past her cheek without striking anyone.
The second arrow, however, hissed to catch her squarely in the ribs. Sinking in deep, it smashed her, sobbing, right out of her saddle.
Chapter 1
FOR THE GOOD OF CORMYR
Why, down the passing years, have so many Purple Dragons died?
Why, every day, do courtiers in Suzail lie so energetically?
And why have war wizards and Highknights alike
Slain so many, stolen so much, and destroyed so much more?
Why, for the good of Cormyr, of course.
The character Ornbriar the Old Merchant
In the play Karnoth’s Homecoming
by Chanathra Festryl, Lady Bard of Yhaunn
First performed in the Year of the Bloodbird
Wizard of War Lorbryn Deltalon sat alone in the small, windowless stone room, staring silently at the carefully written notes spread out on the desk before him. He was no longer seeing what he’d penned these last few months. He was staring past his neat jottings and beholding memories.
Recent memories. A succession of pain-wracked, sweating faces belonging to a lot of tormented nobles. Every one of them staring back at him in wild, mouth-quivering terror.
All too often, the sharp-eyed, faintly smiling visage of the Royal Magician of Cormyr loomed up amongst them. Looking back at him mockingly, Vangerdahast’s unreadable gaze seemed a silent challenge. No frightened nobleman, he.
Deltalon sighed and shook his head, seeking to banish the piercing stare of the great mage he served. Yet the weight of Vangerdahast’s menacing regard refused to fade.
The veteran war wizard sighed again, passed a hand over his eyes, and tried to stare at the all-too-familiar curves and swashes of his writing. He did a lot of silent staring these days.
Ever since Vangey had set him this task. The slow and distasteful work of spell-slaying all the mindworms Narantha Crownsilver had put into the minds of nobles. Hopefully without killing said nobles or leaving them more furious foes of the war wizards than they were already.
Work that, time and again, left him sitting alone, brooding.
He had now only two nobles left to cleanse: Malasko Erdusking and Ardoon Creth. Young, handsome fools both, who would be improved by a little healthy fear.
Yet Deltalon had something else, now, too: grave misgivings about the whole matter.
At first, Vangerdahast had commanded several senior war wizards to visit the nobles the ill-fated Lady Narantha had infected and to use magic to slay the mindworms. When some nobles had been left witless or damaged in their wits and bitterly aware of it and one young lord had died along with the mindworm riding him, the Royal Magician had ordered the work to cease.
Yet that hadn’t meant dealing with the mindworms was abandoned or unfinished. Rather, Vangerdahast himself had without warning taken over the task of “fixing nobles,” abruptly and imperiously whisking himself to mansions and country castles all over the realm.
Vangey’s visitations had gone on for most of a month before he’d just as abruptly summoned Lorbryn Deltalon and ordered him to use “all slow, deft care possible” to kill the mindworms still in the heads of a handful of remaining nobles.
Lorbryn Deltalon was a careful, loyal Wizard of War, and several other things besides, but he had never been a fool.
Vangerdahast, he strongly suspected, hadn’t killed a single worm. Instead, the Royal Magician had altered their spell-bindings to make them obey him rather than the fell and vanished wizard who’d compelled Narantha to spread the little horrors. And, no doubt, he had commanded them not to gnaw away any more of the brains in which they dwelt.
In other words, Vangey had spent a little less than three tendays crafting a small army of nobles whose minds he could control whenever he desired—for the good of the realm, of course.
The few nobles he’d deemed the least useful—or perhaps judged any meddling with them would be suspected and sought after by wizards hired by their noble kin—he’d assigned to Lorbryn Deltalon for curing.
Deltalon knew he should be flattered. The Royal Magician absolutely trusted the loyalty of rather less than a handful of his Wizards of War—or anyone else. Laspeera, yes, and … well, perhaps no one else but Lorbryn Deltalon.
Yet therein lay the problem. For some time Deltalon had harbored growing misgivings about Vangerdahast’s mental stability and loyalties.
The Royal Magician grew ever more glib and self-satisfied as bodies fell and rotted, years passed, and the realm endured.
A realm shaped more and more to Vangerdahast’s liking. In the humble opinion of Lorbryn Deltalon—an opinion held only within the deep mind-shielding spell he’d found in a tomb all those years ago and ever since had kept secret from the Royal Magician and everyone else—Vangerdahast was increasingly likely to convince himself that only he was capable of ruling Cormyr for the good of all.
He might already have reached that conclusion. Wherefore Lorbryn Deltalon watched the royal family of Cormyr very carefully.
Sooner or later, if Vangerdahast was so deeply corrupted, he would work spells to make the Obarskyrs mere puppets, or have them eliminated—by “enemies of the realm” of course—so he could “reluctantly” take the throne.
Others held similar suspicions. Several of the elder nobles did so openly, daring Vangerdahast to confront them. The Wizards of War watched and listened to such noble
s even more attentively than they spied on the other highborn of the realm—wherefore Deltalon and most other war wizards knew that many who suspected Vangerdahast of seeking the throne had found reassurance in the rebelliousness of the young Princess Alusair and Vangey’s seeming tolerance for her willful nature.
Privately, Deltalon held a much darker view. In his opinion, Vangey was encouraging the tantrums and defiant escapades of the younger princess—and thereby happily allowing his grounds for a future argument (that the Obarskyrs had become unfit to continue ruling) to grow ever stronger.
“For the good of Cormyr,” Deltalon murmured, staring unseeingly through the notes on the table before him.
He didn’t want to think such thoughts.
He didn’t want to do this.
Yet, for the good of Cormyr …
His lips twisted at that irony, but he found himself nodding and bringing one of his hands, clenched into a fist, down—slowly and softly—to strike the table. Deep reluctance would claw him with tireless talons, but he could stride on.
He, Lorbryn Deltalon, must make these last two nobles his own mind-slaves. Just in case. And he must do it deftly enough that Vangerdahast must not suspect the worms were in stasis rather than dead, and the nobles would have no inkling of what he’d done. Until the day came—and by the Dragon Throne, let it never come!—when he found it needful to awaken the worms and enthrall the two. Just two, not the dozen-some the Royal Magician commanded.
Of course. Hadn’t Vangerdahast had years upon years longer than he to become truly evil and self-serving? Able villainy takes practice.…
He was strong enough to do this now. For the good of Cormyr.
No longer would he have to trust in a deep shielding spell that faded over time and needed to be cast anew. Now, he had the elfstone.
Small, pale, egg-smooth, and far more ancient than Cormyr. Deltalon had found the gem hidden beneath stones under poor old Ondel’s rain barrel, when sent to investigate that archwizard’s murder.
Deltalon had carefully neglected to mention it in his report to Vangerdahast, and he’d swallowed it that same night. It remained safely inside him, magically nudged out of his stomach into adjacent tissue, to lodge there behind rehealed skin, hopefully forever.