Land of the Minotaurs

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Land of the Minotaurs Page 27

by Richard A. Knaak


  Kaz shifted. “Someday, I hope to have a conversation with you that makes some sense. Meanwhile …” He shook the chains that held him. “Are you going to free me now?”

  “This is the time for everything to come together, Kaz. This is when the potential to rebalance the scales is at its zenith.”

  With the last word, the minotaur’s chains—empty, but still locked—suddenly clattered against the wall. Kaz looked at his free hands, then at the manacles. There were some advantages to being a mage.

  “What happens now?” he asked as he tested his arms and legs.

  “The path is open to you.” The door swung open just enough to allow Kaz out. “The rest is up to you.”

  “What about the others? I can’t just leave them.”

  “I will watch over them as best I can. The kender knows what I plan and will do his part. If it encourages you further, I will tell you that a certain stubborn catalyst has made her mind known in Nethosak despite my intentions. As is sometimes the way, this catalyst’s presence has given me a new and unexpected path to use, a path that your friends must take rather than aid you.” When Kaz still hesitated, the gray man added, “Trust me. This will not work if they are with you, Kaz. You know that.”

  He did, but it was difficult to admit it, even to himself. Alone, Kaz could slip through the halls to where Ty was being kept. With the others, he ran the greater risk of discovery.

  Thinking of Ty, he started, “The female. Where—?”

  “Look in the lair of the dragon,” the mage returned. For the first time, a hint of impatience appeared on the gray human’s face. “The guards have been delayed, Kaz, but not for long.”

  The minotaur started for the door, pausing just before stepping through. He turned one last time to the gray figure. “I don’t suppose you have a weapon?”

  In response, the mage suddenly tossed his staff toward Kaz. The warrior reached out and caught it in midair. Despite its thinness, it felt like a strong, sturdy piece of wood. It would have to do. “My thanks … Hecar and the others … you’ll …”

  “It is the least I can do for you, Kaz.”

  “Thank you.”

  As he hurried out the door, he thought he heard the gray man add, “Huma would have been proud of you, minotaur.”

  As the minotaur disappeared down the hall, the gray man walked calmly over to the empty chains and stood in front of them, his back to the wall. The manacles materialized about his wrists and ankles, securing him. The mage nodded, then smiled. In his place there suddenly stood a minotaur, a minotaur who looked exactly like Kaz.

  He waited for the guards to come.

  With the events of the arena captivating nearly all of Nethosak, even the temple was nearly bare of occupants. Kaz did not encounter a sentry until almost the ground level. The sentry, not expecting an assault from below, had grown lax. When Kaz discovered him, he was leaning against the wall, staring up at the ceiling.

  A blow with the staff to the stomach, followed by a solid punch in the jaw, was enough to deal quickly with the guard. Kaz dragged him into an empty cell and laid him to the side so he would not be visible. As he finished, however, the minotaur heard the sounds of an armed escort.

  Keeping clear of the open door, Kaz waited until the sounds continued past him. It was the escort for him and his comrades. He prayed to Paladine that the gray man would indeed watch over his friends. He also hoped the mage had done something to prevent them from noticing his disappearance. Kaz needed some time to reach his goal.

  In the lair of the dragon. That could be only the high priest’s personal chambers. Ty must still be there. It made sense, since, if the female had been escorted back to her own cell, she would have had to pass Kaz’s. That had not happened.

  There were no apparent guards when he entered the ground level. That was not too surprising. The vast majority would be attending the circus, the better to emphasize the glory of the sons of Sargas. Kaz had some inkling of how Infernus’s mind worked. The dragon was one for showmanship and flash. He reveled in power and wanted others to recognize the supremacy of that power. Now that tendency was working for Kaz.

  He had made it halfway from the stairs to the high priest’s chambers when he nearly ran headlong into Infernus’s chief acolyte. The other minotaur was so stunned, he did not react until Kaz was already upon him. The staff caught the acolyte under the chin. Kaz dodged a reckless swing, then lowered the staff on his adversary’s head.

  The blow should have only stunned the robed figure, but to Kaz’s surprise, his opponent slumped to the floor. Kaz glanced at the staff, recalling that it belonged to a mage, then shrugged. A meditation chamber provided him with an adequate place to hide the body. Kaz hesitated once he had the cleric in there, pondering the voluminous robes and the high hood.

  A few moments later, clad in the same robe and with the hood pulled up over his head, he continued on his way. There was no method by which he could hide the staff, so he kept it out and used it as a walking stick, pretending some leg injury.

  Two clerics, obviously on their way to the circus, gave him perfunctory acknowledgments, then hurried on. A temple guard straightened as he walked past.

  His good fortune faded as he reached the doors to the audience chamber. Two guards stood on duty, guards who stared intensely at him as he walked up to the doors.

  “I’m on official business for the high priest. Let me pass.”

  They did not move. The one on the right announced, “We’ve orders not to admit anyone. That comes from His Holiness himself.”

  “My orders are new. His Holiness left important papers behind that I’m to retrieve. Do you want to face his displeasure after I tell him you wouldn’t let me pass?”

  The words were enough to cause the two sentries discomfort, but still they stood their ground. The same guard spoke again. “The orders were very clear. No one is to enter, save the high priest himself.”

  “Commendable,” replied Kaz with a nod. He stepped closer to the two. Both sentries shifted stance ever so slightly, showing their weapons, in this case a pair of sturdy battle-axes. “But I think I have a way of resolving this problem.”

  He brought the staff up sideways and charged both guards. One raised his axe and managed to deflect his end of the staff, but the other was slower. The staff caught him in the throat, and he went down, coughing and struggling to breathe.

  The other sentry fought back, pushing against Kaz’s staff. Kaz slipped to the side and used his momentum to strike the gasping minotaur with the hard end of his weapon. Again, the blow, which should have only stunned the guard, sent him slumping to the floor.

  The remaining guard was still off balance. He stumbled forward, and Kaz caught him on the back of the neck, just below the head. The second guard joined the first on the floor.

  The battle had not gone unnoticed, however. From across the temple, several guards and clerics came running. Kaz cursed, pulling a door open. He slipped through even as the first of the guards threw a lance at him. The weapon bounced harmlessly off the door.

  The doors were designed to be barred from the inside, something Kaz found very useful. Kaz had the entrance barred in seconds. That would certainly hold off the guards for a time. Now he had to find Ty.

  The audience chamber was dark, but it was not difficult to locate the rooms in back. Kaz found the doors, but could not open them. They were either locked or possibly ensorcelled. He glanced at the doors, then at the staff the mage had given him. It was not Honor’s Face, but he was certain it was imbued with magic.

  Raising the staff, he aimed for the center of the door. Behind him he could hear the barred doors to the audience chamber rattle as the guards threw their weight against them, so he rammed the staff against the door.

  It shattered, sending splinters flying everywhere. Kaz had to fall back immediately lest he be injured by the debris.

  No magic had kept the door sealed, only a simple lock.

  Clearing the remnants with the
aid of the staff, Kaz entered.

  Tiberia sat in the midst of a chamber that seemed almost as huge as the one from which he had just departed. A pulsating shell of crimson light covered the small figure. Prior to the minotaur’s appearance, Ty had evidently been staring at a greenish globe that floated at the young prisoner’s eye level. Even from where he stood, Kaz could see faint images skimming along the globe’s surface. It was just like the red dragon to make his captive watch the deaths of Kaz and the others.

  Ty rose to her feet at the sight of the minotaur. Her eyes were tired. A smile broke across her features. “Kaz!”

  “I’ve come to free you, Ty.”

  “I know. The gray man said to wait for you.”

  “Nice of him to do that.” He wondered if the mage had said anything else, such as how to break the spell that surrounded Ty.

  The staff had worked before. Perhaps it would work again.

  “Ty, curl yourself up into as small a ball as you can.”

  The female did as Kaz requested.

  “Ready yourself!”

  Kaz brought one tip of the staff down on the crimson field.

  The force unleashed by the dragon’s spell when the staff hit burned the magic artifact to ash and threw the minotaur across the chamber.

  The guards chosen to escort Hecar and the others gathered the party together. Scurn was among the prisoners. The guards placed Hecar next to an oddly contemplative Kaz, who obeyed their captors’ orders without protest. He did not have an opportunity to do more than glance at Helati’s mate, but when he did, Kaz smiled back at him. It was almost as if Kaz knew some jest, which he had not shared with the others.

  What can he be thinking about? Hecar wondered. Does he have a plan of escape?

  They reached the main level just as several guards and clerics went rushing toward the doorway leading to the high priest’s audience chamber. The guard leader called a halt and started toward one of the clerics, but Kaz suddenly broke his silence.

  “If you delay, we won’t make the circus in time. They can handle the matter.”

  If Hecar and the other prisoners thought it odd for Kaz to speak these words, the guards and their commander seemed to find them completely sensible. The leader nodded, and the small band continued on, departing the temple moments later.

  “Kaz!” whispered Hecar. “If you’ve got a plan, you’d—”

  “Be silent!” snapped a temple soldier. He swatted Hecar on the shoulder with the flat of his blade. Hecar was tempted to forego the circus and end his life in a valiant but futile struggle with the guard.

  “Rest easy, Hecar.” Kaz gave him that same peculiar smile again.

  “But, Kaz—”

  Delbin abruptly giggled. Hecar glanced at him, wondering what even a kender could find so humorous at this moment. Delbin glanced at Hecar, then barely forced back another giggle after looking at Kaz.

  “Just a little longer, Delbin. It’s almost time for the surprise.”

  None of the guards seemed to take notice of what Kaz was saying, which further perplexed Hecar. It was as if they knew Kaz was there, but paid no mind to anything he said or did.

  There were ten guards besides the leader, which was something of a compliment to the four minotaurs and one kender they guarded. Given weapons and free hands, Hecar was fairly certain he and the others could have fought their way to freedom … at some cost, of course. Still, that was not likely to happen.

  The streets were nearly deserted, most of the city’s population having gathered in or near the Great Circus. Now and then a minotaur passed within sight of them, but, compared with the normal traffic in the busy city, Nethosak was a ghost land.

  Then the attack came. Hecar likely would have chosen the same location, for it was narrower than most of the path, and the street was deserted, with many hiding places for armed warriors.

  The band and their captors were suddenly surrounded by roughly a dozen or so minotaurs bearing swords and axes. Some of the newcomers were vaguely familiar to Hecar, but he had no time to consider that, for the guards formed a defensive position, some of them concentrating their weapons on the captives.

  “Stand aside,” commanded the guard leader. “These warriors are destined to redeem themselves in the Great Circus.”

  “You mean they’re supposed to die there,” said one of the strangers, a tall, dark-furred minotaur with a streak of white between his horns that ran all the way to the back of his head. Hecar was certain he knew him, but from where, he could not recall. “For daring to defy the high priest’s desires and nothing more. I had another brother who died for reasons something like that. There’s no honor in such a death.”

  “This is treason. You defy the will of your lords.”

  The leader of the newcomers smiled. It was a smile that Hecar had seen on only one other minotaur. Kaz. “We’ve got a history of defiance in our clan.”

  Beside him, Hecar heard Kaz quietly say, “All right, Delbin. It’s time.”

  The temple guards did not seem to hear or notice the kender suddenly touch his manacles, which slipped off a moment later without a sound. Only belatedly did Hecar note the tiny lockpick in Delbin’s hands, a lockpick that the kender put to use with astonishing speed on Hecar’s own manacles. In the space of seconds, he had the chains off Fliara as well.

  It was not until Delbin reached Scurn that one of the guards blinked and noticed what was happening. He turned to stop the kender’s efforts, shouting, “The prisoners—!”

  His outburst was all that was needed to send the two groups into battle. Three guards turned on the prisoners. Hecar, using his chains like a flail, swung at a soldier. His blow struck the minotaur’s sword hand, causing him to drop his weapon. Delbin was instantly there, seizing the sword and handing it to Fliara, who was closest.

  The minotaur with the streak in his hair laughed as he fought back both the escort leader and another temple guard. He wielded a sword large even by minotaur standards, a sword that whipped in and out and around with such speed and daring that it confounded the pair who fought him. Neither could get past his blade. The escort leader fell seconds later to a thrust.

  Two more guards fell, one of them wounded in the leg, but one of their rescuers also died. Hecar swung the chains at any guard who came within range. One soldier managed to press Fliara back, but Hecar pulled his chains around the attacker’s neck and did not loosen his grip until the guard ceased to move.

  Someone bumped into Hecar from behind. He turned, expecting another attacker, and found Scurn, one hand still manacled, struggling with a guard who had evidently tried to run Hecar through the back. The guard was strong, but Scurn was stronger. The scarred minotaur pushed his opponent to his knees, then raised his knee into the guard’s chin. Scum’s adversary collapsed.

  Circumstance makes for strange shield-brothers, Hecar thought as he turned to fight some more. Never thought I’d owe that one my life.

  “Give yourselves up!” demanded the leader of the rescuers. “You can’t win this battle!”

  The remaining soldiers lowered their weapons. Four of their number were dead, including the escort commander, with at least three others injured. Of the rescuers, only one had fallen and another had a wounded arm. All in all, a good battle, at least from Hecar’s point of view.

  “Toron!” Fliara ran over to the minotaur with the streak in his fur, hugging him. For no reason he could fathom, Hecar felt a twinge of jealousy. He was certainly not attracted to Kaz’s sister. Certainly not.

  “This is hardly the situation I’d expected you to get into, little sister!” roared the one called Toron. “You were always the strict, rule-abiding one in the family!”

  “Toron?” The name was more than familiar, but as with Fliara, many years had passed since Hecar had seen this same minotaur. Toron, like Fliara, had been much younger. Hecar turned to where Kaz had last been standing. “Kaz! Your brother is—”

  Kaz, however, was nowhere to be seen.

  Hec
ar quickly scanned the street, fearing that somewhere he would find the fallen body of Helati’s mate. However, it almost immediately became apparent that Kaz was not among the dead and wounded.

  Delbin tugged on his hand. Hecar looked down at the kender, who was trying to hold back a giggle. “He fooled you really good, but then he looked exactly like Kaz, which is what he told me he had to do in order to give Kaz the time to get where he had to, and, besides, it would have been harder for Kaz to do certain things if we were still prisoners in the temple—”

  “What the blazes are you talking about, Delbin? Are you saying that wasn’t Kaz with us?”

  “No, it was the gray man from my dreams, and he said Kaz had the best chance to rescue Ty if we were out and safe, and, besides, Helati’s been talking to your clan, which is why—”

  “Which is why we decided to show the temple it can’t push around Orilg, especially my own family.” Toron walked up and patted Hecar on the shoulder. “And that includes you, Hecar! I missed the rest of what this little creature said! Where’s Kaz?”

  Hecar shook his head. “Delbin says he was never here, that some mage was here, disguised as him. That much I think I understand. Kaz went to rescue a … human female”—it would not do to tell Toron the truth just yet—“who is a prisoner of the high priest. The female’s important for some reason.”

  “Then we should go back and help him! The others can handle these prisoners!”

  “No!” piped up Delbin. “The mage said we should go to the circus!”

  Hecar paused. On the one hand, he wanted to go back and help Kaz, but on the other hand, their interference might make it more difficult for Kaz to slip out with Ty.

  “I wish Helati were here,” he muttered. Her advice had always been sound.

  “She’s done enough as it is,” replied Toron, “considering all she helped plan!”

  “Helati’s here? How is that possible? Where is she?”

  “Not here, at least not in the flesh, but—”

 

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