The Magehound

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by Elaine Cunningham


  Iago skirted the pair and lunged at the third man, who parried and riposted high. Iago caught the blow with his sword and then planted a foot on the man’s chest, pushing him away—and directly onto the point of Andris’s waiting sword. At the last moment, Andris sidestepped so that the man splashed down into the water. He rose dripping but smiling in relief. Rattan swords did not draw blood, but all of the men were covered with livid bruises.

  “You see?” Andris said. “Working together, small bands of men can fight large numbers. Let’s try it again, this time with four attackers.”

  It was a precise sequence, a deadly dance with finely timed moves. Again and again Andris walked them through it, showing how to fight against four, against six, how to vary the defenses and attacks against humans, against wights and ghouls.

  The wemic was both impressed and troubled by this display. He had always been Kiva’s strong right hand. She had purchased him when he was a cub, a child too young to remember the ways of the pride. The elf woman was his only family. What she said, he did. His strength was prodigious, and he had never known fear. Few men or elves could best him at arms. What he knew, he did very well.

  Mbatu was beginning to realize, however, how limited his knowledge was. Oh, he could fight. In honest melee, few could match him, much less overcome him. Yet in less than a moon’s time he had been outmaneuvered by one jordain and replaced by another.

  The wemic watched as the men sloshed through the shallow, fetid water and drove stakes into the muck. To these they fastened several straw figures. Andris moved the men into position, encircling the straw zombies like a pack of wolves and closing in. At his mark, each man tossed a handful of coarse, sandy substance into the water. The swamp began to roil and sizzle. Foul gas rose from it, writhing like sickly green ghosts. One of the fighters tossed a torch into the vapor. There was a sudden sharp sucking sound, and then the swamp was aflame.

  The fire died almost as suddenly as it had erupted. The only trace of the straw men was the charred sticks that had supported them. The zombies and ghouls wouldn’t leave even that much of a legacy.

  Kiva came up behind him, her nose wrinkled in disgust over the scent. “How goes it?”

  “The jordain knows his undead,” the wemic admitted. “If the men fight as he tells them to do, they will win.”

  “I am glad to hear it. It will be good practice,” she agreed.

  Mbatu studied her, his leonine face troubled.

  “Practice?”

  “For Akhlaur,” Kiva said calmly. “The men will learn to fight in a swamp, to deal with the undead.”

  “But what of the laraken?” demanded Mbatu. “What will prepare them for such a monster?”

  “What could?” she retorted. “I daresay the fiend will be as much a surprise to them as it was to us. Fortunately, we are better prepared now.”

  “We?” the wemic repeated suspiciously. “But you will not be there.”

  “Actually, dear Mbatu, I rather think that I must.”

  A low, angry growl came from the wemic. “You cannot,” he said fiercely. “The laraken feeds upon magical energy. How many wizards have you sent into the swamp? Few of those wizards survived. Those who did were utterly stripped of their magic and more empty of mind than if an enfeeblement spell had been cast upon them. What will happen to you if we go into that place?”

  The magehound traced his set jaw with her coppery fingertips. “Don’t fear for me, dear Mbatu. I have learned quite a few of the swamp’s secrets. Have I never told you how the wizard Akhlaur was defeated? No? He was dragged into the elemental plane of water by the very creature he summoned to help create the laraken.”

  “Yes. So?”

  “So a tiny gate remains. Water leaks through, and with it the powerful magic of the elemental plane. It is this leak, this magic, that sustains the laraken and keeps it dependent upon the swamp.” She smiled slyly. “If I could close this gate, the laraken would be forced to seek sustenance elsewhere.”

  The wemic’s tailed lashed with anger and frustration. “But how? We could take a hundred jordaini into the swamp, and the laraken would still be drawn to you!”

  The magehound’s face hardened. “Why do you think we have been chasing Keturah’s daughter?” she demanded. “If she’s truly her mother’s daughter, she will be able to call the laraken.”

  “What of the mother?”

  “I have other uses for Keturah,” Kiva said in a voice that forbade discussion. “It is Tzigone we need.”

  The magehound fell silent, and her face became contemplative. “It may well be that Tzigone had not yet relieved herself of her so-called honor debt to Matteo. If Matteo were to come to grief, she might feel obligated to intervene.

  “Yes,” she said with greater certainty, “it is time to add some complications to the young jordain’s life.”

  “And if that does not serve?”

  The magehound gave her servant a small, cool smile. “Then at the very least, you will get your revenge upon him.”

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  In the days to come, Matteo was to spend many hours with Procopio Septus. He attended the wizard daily at the Ilysium, a vast pink marble building that housed the offices of city officials. When Procopio’s duties as lord mayor were discharged, they usually took to the sky. This was Matteo’s favorite time of day, and he was rapidly becoming adept at piloting a skyship. The evenings were a round of lavish public affairs: banquets, festivals, concerts. Since Matteo was only one of several jordaini in Procopio’s service, he was not required to attend every event. He and his fellow counselors met each day at sunrise to compare notes and devise strategies that would best serve their patron.

  Matteo hoped that these meetings would foster the sense of camaraderie he knew back at House Jordain—after all, some of these men had been students at the Jordaini College when he was a young lad. But it seemed to him that his colleagues were far too absorbed with jostling for position. Matteo was keenly aware of his newcomer status, and he never seemed able to move past it. Every morning he began the day in a circle of white-clad men who eyed him with open resentment.

  Slowly he began to understand why this was so. He spent more time at Procopio’s side than any jordain other than Zephyr, the wizard’s high counselor. It didn’t help matters when the old elf took upon himself the role of Matteo’s mentor. Each morning after the jordaini meeting, Zephyr and Matteo spent an hour walking in the villa gardens and discussing the politics of the day.

  As Zephyr had predicted, Procopio arranged several more tests of Matteo’s skills and knowledge. The young jordain passed them all with ease. Riding an unbroken horse was little challenge after his experiences with Cyric. When a wizard “assassin” magically burst into Procopio’s dining chamber, Matteo took a page from Tzigone’s book and coolly deflected the sun arrows with the mirrorlike finish of a bronze plate. Procopio had howled with laughter at the sight of his hired wizard rolling on the floor in agony, and he’d sent Dranklish, the jordain who before Matteo’s arrival had been second in rank to Zephyr, like an errand boy to fetch a cleric of Mystra to heal the unfortunate man. It was that event that cemented Matteo’s position in the household, for it became clear to everyone that the new jordain was being groomed as Zephyr’s successor. The tests ended, and so did Matteo’s hope of finding friends among the household’s jordaini.

  His days were busy, but from time to time an image edged into his thoughts: a small, pointed face with big brown eyes and an irreverent grin. He didn’t expect to see Tzigone again. Her last words to him indicated that she believed she had discharged her mysterious debt. Matteo didn’t understand what exactly she thought she had done, and he wished, more than once, that he could have the opportunity to ask her.

  But the days quickly settled into an orderly pattern, one suited to the life of a jordain and not disrupted by the “assistance” of roguish street waifs. Each day after the skyship flight, Matteo and Procopio would retire to the wizard’s study. The wizard had
a passion for games of strategy, and Matteo obliged him with seemingly endless games of chess, castles, and complex card games.

  One morning he answered an unexpected summons to Procopio’s study to find that the wizard had acquired a new diversion. An enormous table took up half the study, displacing the large cages of birds that Procopio kept in nearly every room of the villa.

  The wizard glanced up when Matteo entered, and his face lit up in an unexpectedly boyish grin. “I ordered this a year and three moons before your arrival. I’ll be a necromancer’s apprentice if it wasn’t worth the wait! Come see.”

  Matteo approached his patron’s side and studied the vast table. It was no ordinary piece of furniture but a wondrous recreation of a wild land: a section of high plateau surrounded by hills and mountains.

  “The Nath?” guessed Matteo, naming the wild region in the northeastern corner of Halruaa.

  Procopio beamed. “Well done. Wait—you’ve not seen the best of it.”

  The wizard gestured with a long, slender wand. Several drawers hidden along the edges of the table opened, and tiny, magically animated figures poured out onto the table. Halruaan soldiers marched in formation across the wild terrain toward a mountain pass. A wizard, seated cross-legged on a flying carpet, whizzed out of the drawer and began to circle over the troops. A small horde of mounted warriors burst from the foothills and charged the Halruaan forces, and the faint pounding of their hooves reminded Matteo of the sound of distant rain. They pulled up at the far end of the mountain pass and faced the Halruaans.

  All of the miniature troops were marvelous, but it was these mounted figures that drew Matteo’s eye. They were rendered in shades of gray. All the horses were dappled grays, and the warriors were elflike females with dusky skin and dull silvery hair.

  “Shadow amazons,” Matteo marveled. For as long as he could remember, he had been fascinated by the Crinti, and he longed to pick up one of the tiny figures and examine its artistry and detail.

  Some of this must have shown on his face, for Procopio chuckled. “Go ahead,” he urged. “They’re not alive, so you needn’t be afraid to handle them.”

  “It is not that. The jordaini are forbidden to own, use, or even knowingly handle any magical item.”

  The diviner frowned. “How can you possibly refrain from doing so when you are in a wizard’s service? I require you to engage me in a game of military strategy. Must I refrain from magic to accommodate you? Who is the master here, and who the servant?”

  This was a reasonable question, and suddenly Matteo wasn’t entirely satisfied with the traditional answer. He gave it anyway.

  “Jordaini are forbidden by law and tradition from handling magic or benefiting from it. This ultimately safeguards the wizards we serve.”

  “What of the skyships?” Procopio said slyly. “Does this mean you intend to forego your daily flight?”

  Matteo blinked, startled by this logical but unexpected application of the rule. “I never thought of skyships in that light,” he said slowly. “They are so integral to Halruaan culture that the jordaini have ceased to think of them as common magical artifacts. I suppose by strict application of law, skyships are also forbidden.”

  “Yet no one would censor you for flying with your patron. Nor will anyone gasp with shock if they learned you were commanding toy troops,” Procopio said, sweeping a hand toward the tiny figures on the table.

  Matteo considered this. “Would it be possible for you to remove the enchantment? We could move the figures about by hand.”

  “Certainly not!” the wizard protested. “I will not suffer such a barbarian inconvenience. If I go down this path, where will it end? Would you expect me to refrain from using magic in battle for fear of offending your sensibilities?”

  “Of course not. But this is a game, not a battle.”

  “A game I require you to play,” Procopio said forcefully. “There are exceptions to every rule, and the sooner you learn this, the greater your service to me. But calm your scruples. You need not fear the taint of magic today. You are here to advise, not to do. I will move the troops.”

  Matteo nodded slowly. As Procopio said, it was impossible for a jordain in a wizard’s household to remain entirely beyond the touch of magic. Every jordain he knew coveted the chance to ride a skyship, and no one thought this unseemly.

  He studied the placement of the tiny figures. “This looks very much like the skirmishes that preceded the battle of Mycontil’s Stand,” he said, referring to the archmage who died defeating a massive invasion of Crinti-led warriors.

  “That depicts Mycontil himself,” Procopio agreed, pointing to the figure that buzzed about like a particularly colorful fly. “He was a great wizard, but no strategist. At this battle, he lost over a hundred men because the Crinti outflanked him. Like so.”

  The wizard touched his wand to the foothills on either side of the warriors. Bands of shadow amazons materialized in response to his summons and began to box in the foot soldiers.

  Procopio looked to Matteo. “If you were Mycontil, what would you do to minimize your losses?”

  Matteo thought for a moment. “Create an illusion of sound that echoes throughout the area held by the two flanking bands, a sound that will frighten the Crinti and cause them to scatter into the hills. Then the soldiers can engage the central band.”

  “And what, pray tell, could frighten the Crinti?” Procopio said in scathing tones. “They lull their girl children to sleep with battle songs that would raise a pirate’s gorge!”

  “Have you never heard the songs of the Unseelie folk? I have, and found it an uncanny, unnerving experience. But to the Crinti, the Unseelie music holds the essence of terror,” Matteo explained. “It is part of the legend of the Ilythiiri. Do you know it?”

  “I know little of the Ilythiiri, other than they were dark elves who inhabited the southern lands in ancient times. They were the ancestors of the drow, who were in turn the ancestors of the Crinti. What of it?”

  “Legend has it that once, many thousands of years ago, an Ilythiiri wizard stumbled through the veil that separates the world we see from the unseen world of the Unseelie Court. There she learned some of the magic of the dark feiries, most of it by unfortunate firsthand experience. After much torment, she escaped, now utterly insane but carrying a knowledge of fell magic that surpassed any wizard in the land. She began a rise to power that attracted the darkest hearts of her time to her court. Her name is lost to memory, and she is known only as the Spider Queen. It is said that the evil goddess of the drow, Lolth, assimilated the wizard into her own being, taking for herself both the wizard’s name and her dark magic. It is said that something of the wizard’s memory remains within the goddess, and as a result, the drow, even Lolth herself, fear the Unseelie folk. What, then, could be more frightening to the Crinti than the songs of the dark fairies?”

  Procopio nodded slowly as he took this in. “Interesting notion. I had not heard that tale.”

  “Few men make a study of drow legends. There are perhaps three libraries on the surface of this world that contain reliable lore books. Halruaa, of course, has one of them.”

  “You think the Crinti are better informed than we in such matters?”

  “They cherish their drow heritage. They would pass it on.”

  “Hmm.” Procopio considered this, then shrugged. “Very well. Let’s see what happens.”

  The wizard moved the wand in a slow, complex pattern over the table. A faint melody, dark and compelling and chilling, began to rise like mist from the hillside.

  The tiny shadow amazons that came in from the flank positions halted their charge. Chaos swept over them like an evil wind. The horses reared and pitched. Some of them, riderless, milled frantically about. In moments the warriors and their horses were gone, melting off into the hills and leaving exposed the central band of Crinti, who were panicked into utter disarray, too far from the hills for retreat. The Halruaan soldiers charged and easily overtook the advance band
. In short order, the table was littered with the tiny gray corpses of the shadow amazons.

  Procopio smiled and nodded. He made a quick gesture with one hand, and the figures, both victors and vanquished, disappeared from the table.

  “Who would have thought a song—no, a mere illusion of a song!—would have such power against those she-demons? Fascinating how so simple a ploy could turn the tide of battle! Have you more Crinti secrets to teach me?” Procopio spoke eagerly, and his animated face betrayed a more than casual interest.

  A suspicion that had been growing in Matteo’s mind for some time began to take solid and disturbing form. “A few,” he said slowly. “I begin to see why you bid for my services. You are most avidly fond of strategy games, and as a master of games, I was first in my form.”

  “There is that,” the wizard said in neutral tones.

  Matteo pressed on. “We jordaini believe that such games train the mind and character, for a truly responsible man understands that every action prompts a reaction.”

  There was an edge to Procopio’s smile that acknowledged the subtle layers in Matteo’s comment. “I am in training, that is certainly true. He who would command must understand the art of war. It is no secret that games provide preparation. Kittens stalk imaginary prey, and small boys whack each other with sticks in anticipation of their first swords. What we do here is not so different.”

  Matteo shifted uneasily. “You speak plainly. I will do the same. Action prompts reaction. I know enough of history to understand that men who prepare so assiduously for battle seldom fail to find one.”

  “But the land is at peace, and has been for many years. Do you think that would be true if no one was prepared for battle? Why do you think our enemies stay away? The Crinti elf-breeds and their Dambraii subjects, and the Mhair savages, and the barbarians of the Shaar desert, and the wizards of Thay and Unther and Mulhorand, and Mystra only knows where else? Because we remain strong,” Procopio concluded in a tone that rang with certainty.

 

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