The Sorcerer
Page 1
The Wounded Kingdom
When their turn came to pass under the archway and be counted, Galaeron glanced into the arrow loop behind the guards and found a familiar cascade of golden hair shining in the depths of the gatehouse. He dipped his head in acknowledgement. The hair moved closer, and Princess Alusair’s familiar face appeared on the other side of the loop. Her eyes were red and glassy, though it was impossible to say whether from weeping or exhaustion.
The Elven Enclave
The once-lush grass was gone, burned off or blasted away by battle magic, or withering beneath the rotting corpse of one of the thousands of elf warriors scattered across the field. In the center of the meadow, the marble cliffs of the Three Sisters were speckled around the base with stars of soot and sprays of crusted blood. Atop the hills themselves, curtains of black fume were rising out of the great bluetop forest, coalescing into a single dark cloud that left visible only the lowest reaches of Evereska’s majestic towers.
The Dark Empire
Once inside the cloud, the enclave itself grew visible, a huge capsized mountaintop honeycombed with utility passages and ventilation shafts. Malygris began to circle the crags of the overturned peak in a widening spiral, his fear aura keeping the ever-growing colonies of bats and birds at a cautious distance. Even the jewel-eyed sentries who stood constant watch from their hidden crannies shrank back out of sight as the dragon passed.
RETURN OF THE ARCHWIZARDS
Book I
The Summoning
TROY DENNING
Book II
The Siege
TROY DENNING
Realms of Shadow
EDITED BY LIZZ BALDWIN
Book III
The Sorcerer
TROY DENNING
Return of the Archwizards
THE SORCERER
©2011 Wizards of the Coast LLC
All characters in this book are fictitious. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead is purely coincidental.
This book is protected under the copyright laws of the United States of America. Any reproduction or unauthorized use of the material or artwork contained herein is prohibited without the express written permission of Wizards of the Coast LLC.
Published by Wizards of the Coast LLC.
FORGOTTEN REALMS, D&D, Dungeons & Dragons, Wizards of the Coast, and their respective logos are trademarks of Wizards of the Coast LLC in the U.S.A. and other countries.
All Wizards of the Coast characters and their distinctive likenesses are property of Wizards of the Coast LLC.
Cover art by Jon Sullivan.
Map by Dennis Kauth.
The Sorcerer originally published December 2002
eISBN: 978-0-7869-5973-0
640-37856000-001-EN
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DungeonsandDragons.com
v3.1
To Ed Greenwood
For sharing his world with so many
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank my editor, Phil Athans, for his patience, good humor, and valuable insight; Eric Boyd for his many contributions to the series; and Andria Hayday for her usual extraordinary patience and support.
Contents
Cover
Other Books by This Author
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Map
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Epilogue
CHAPTER ONE
7 Flamerule,
The Year of Wild Magic (1372 DR)
It was the sound of despair, this strained silence that greeted the end of every report. With each account of yet another pact struck by the enemy, with every confession that a realm could raise no more troops, the envoys would drop their gazes to the polished surface of the conference table and study their reflections, and there would be no sound in the room but the sputtering of the oil lamps.
Only Princess Alusair Obarskyr, the Steel Regent of Cormyr, received the news with a raised chin, but it seemed to Galaeron Nihmedu that with each account of another cyclone spawned by the melting of the High Ice, with each description of a new city in flood or a nation’s barley fields withering under a blazing sun, the furrows in the princess’s brow deepened, the circles beneath her eyes grew larger, darker, and more menacing.
Alusair turned her attention to Galaeron and said, “And what news from Evereska, Sir Nihmedu? How go matters for the elves?”
The question was for the benefit of the others present. Alusair was the one who had told Galaeron much of what he would pass along, and she was doing him an honor by asking him to repeat it on behalf of his city. Galaeron stood.
“Evereska will stand, Your Highness.” This good news caused several envoys to raise their heads, and Galaeron continued, “The elven armies are camped outside the Shaeradim, ready to meet the phaerimm the instant the shadowshell falls.”
“You’re certain it will fall?” asked Korian Hovanay, the ambassador from Sembia. A foppish man with fleshy jowls and an outlandish feathered hat resting on the table before him, Hovanay glared at Galaeron as he spoke. “I see no reason the Shadovar should let it fade. The phaerimm are Shade’s archenemies—and the Shadovar have succeeded in all of their other undertakings.”
“All of their diplomatic undertakings,” Alusair corrected. She had aged a decade in the forty days since Tilverton’s loss, and her once striking face had become sallow and haggard with worry. “Their army—what remains of it—has been quiet since the Battle of Tilverton.”
“My point exactly,” Hovanay said. “How do we know they have not been marshaling their strength to renew their attack on the phaerimm?”
“That is wishful thinking, Ambassador,” said Piergeiron Paladinson, who had come by magic all the way from Water-deep. “Sadly, the Shadovar are too cunning to turn their attention elsewhere so our alliance can mobilize against the Melting.”
“And the elven armies are as ready to meet the Shadovar as the phaerimm,” Galaeron said. “The shadowshell damages Evereska as much as it does the phaerimm, and our people will prevent the Shadovar from renewing it.”
What Galaeron left unsaid was that with two of Mystra’s Chosen—Laeral Silverhand and her consort Khelben Arunsun—still trapped in the Shaeradim, Storm Silverhand was just as determined as the elves to bring down the shadowshell. At the first hint of trouble, she would teleport straight to the mystical Splicing that held the dark sphere together and join six of Evermeet’s last high mages in preventing the Shadovar from renewing it.
Galaeron felt certain of little else in this strange three-sided war, but he was sure that the shadowshell would fall, and soon. What happened afterward was anyone’s guess. With the phaerimm loose in the world, the Shadovar thawing the High Ice, and the weather wreaking flood and famine across all Faerûn, the only thing anyone co
uld predict for sure was calamity.
Hovanay studied Galaeron with a sneer, then finally said, “How wonderful for the elves. I’m sure you’ll forgive the rest of us if we don’t share your enthusiasm.”
“You have reason to wish Evereska ill, Ambassador?” Galaeron asked. “Perhaps Sembia hopes to strike a bargain for our treasure?”
Hovanay’s eyes flashed. “I trust you are not suggesting that Sembia would traffic with thieves, Sir Nihmedu.”
Galaeron braced his hands on the table and started to rise, but the Harper witch Ruha, seated next to him in her customary veil and head scarf, laid a hand on his forearm.
“Remember your shadow,” she said quietly. “You assume too much.”
Galaeron felt a sudden surge of anger toward her and knew instantly that something dark and sinister had risen inside him. His shadow self was asserting itself again, trying to make him see dark motives and evil betrayals in those around him. He lowered himself into his seat and folded his hands, then looked across the table to Hovanay.
“My question was unwarranted, Ambassador,” he said. It irked Galaeron to apologize, but it was wiser to trust Ruha in such matters than himself. “I hope you will forgive the implication.”
Hovanay smirked back at him. “Of course. We are all aware of your affliction.”
“Which is not to say that we understand your point, Ambassador,” Alusair said. She did not bother to disguise her own suspicion of the man, for there had been no love lost between their two realms since Sembia’s not-so-veiled attempt to carve off a piece of Cormyr during the Ghazneth Scourge. “Why shouldn’t we want Evereska to survive?”
“It is not Evereska’s survival that troubles us,” Hovanay answered. “It is the fall of the shadowshell. Commerce has suffered enough as it is. The last thing we need now is a legion of phaerimm making slaves and egg-bags of the few caravanners still bold enough to meet their obligations.”
Galaeron restrained the urge to berate the man for worrying about his purse while brave elves were dying—but Alusair did not. She studied Hovanay with a sneer usually reserved for something she scraped off her boot, then shook her head.
“There is more at stake here than gold,” she said. “Our subjects cannot eat gold—though I’ll be happy to feed you some if you’d like to experiment.”
Ruha snickered beneath her veil, and several other envoys had to bite their lips and turn away.
Accepting Alusair’s affront with the casual poise of one accustomed to such treatment, Hovanay merely smiled.
“Perhaps we cannot eat gold, but we do need it to feed our armies. Is there a realm among us whose treasuries are not barren already?”
When the table remained silent, the ambassador continued, “If our losses grow any worse, I dare say the alliance will lack the means to muster any army at all, much less one powerful enough to defeat the Shadovar and stop the Melting.”
Again, a tense silence fell over the council room, and Alusair’s face turned stormy with frustration. Already exhausted of both gold and men, the realms of the alliance were stretched to the breaking point, and—just as Hovanay said—any pressure brought by the phaerimm would be enough to crush them. Even to Galaeron, the implications were clear. If Evereska were to survive, it would be at the cost of every other civilized land in Faerûn.
Galaeron began to feel that all eyes were turned on him. When he glanced around the table, it was to see the gazes of the other envoys quickly slipping away.
Lord Nasher Alagondar of Neverwinter, who had come by the same magic as Piergeiron Paladinson, coughed softly into his hand. The quiet thus broken, Alduvar Snowbrand—a Sword of Archendale and one of the three envoys shared by the Dalelands—wrapped his fingers around his chair arms and leaned forward as though he were about to pounce from his seat.
“We are looking at this wrong, I say.” A tall, strong man with silky black hair, Alduvar had a spectral face and deep green eyes that seemed strangely distant and dull. “Our enemies are the Shadovar, not the phaerimm.”
“That is an easy thing to say when it is someone else’s home they have besieged,” Galaeron said. “The phaerimm are enemies to the elves, I assure you.”
“And who’s fault is that?” Alduvar turned to glower at him, but there was no anger in his eyes, no ire or malice—no emotion at all. “Was it not you who freed them in the first place?”
“And who cursed us with the Shadovar?” added Irreph Mulmar, the ruddy-faced Constable of the High Dale. Like Alduvar, he was one of the three envoys from the Dales, and like Alduvar’s, his eyes seemed oddly empty. “Were you not the one who brought them back from the Plane of Shadow?”
Somewhere inside, Galaeron realized that the vitriol of the Dalesmen was strangely at odds with their vacant eyes, but his shadow was already rising to the bait, bristling at the accusations and urging him to answer with blade or spell. He started to stand and found Ruha’s hand clamped to his arm, her nails digging in hard to remind him that he had to be strong, that to indulge his anger was to yield to the darkness devouring him from the inside.
“What is done is done,” she said, continuing to hold Galaeron down. “Is there anyone here who can say he would not have made the same mistake?”
“Mistakes have consequences,” said Mourngrym Amcatha, the third and last of the Dalelands envoys. A huge, powerfully built man with a brown mustache and neatly trimmed hair, his eyes were as vacant as those of his fellow Dalesmen. “The elf is the one who made the mistake. It’s his people who should suffer for it—not ours.”
Mourngrym’s comment drew a chorus of astonished murmurs, for he was as respected across much of Faerûn as he was in his own dale. For him to speak so openly against Evereska’s interests was to condone the resentment harbored in secret by many of the alliance’s lesser leaders, who gathered at night in quiet little groups to complain of the hardships visited upon them by the mistake of one elf.
Galaeron was filled with such a black fury that he forgot about the vacant eyes and no longer felt Ruha’s hand on his arm. He was up and leaning across the table toward Mourngrym, his weight braced on his hands and his words tumbling from his mouth of their own accord.
“And who would you blame had the Shadovar unleashed the phaerimm on the Dalelands instead of Evereska?” Galaeron demanded. “Some saurial from Tarkhaldale?”
Mourngrym’s lip rose in a sneer, but his eyes remained as blank as before.
“A saurial did not release the phaerimm,” he said. “An elf did. You, to be exact.”
Suddenly finding himself off balance, Galaeron looked down to find his hand a foot above the table, his fingers curled as though to call a shadow bolt. Ruha was using both hands to hold his arm so he could not cast the spell. Behind her, Piergeiron Paladinson was rising to help, watching the struggle with an expression that was half alarmed and half forbearing.
The sight was enough to shock Galaeron back to his senses. He let his arm go limp.
“Humans!”
Knowing he was still not fully in control of himself, Galaeron freed his arm and turned toward Alusair.
“If the princess will excuse me—”
“She will not, Sir Nihmedu.” Motioning him into his seat, she nodded at a pair of Purple Dragons posted along the wall. As they stepped forward to stand guard behind Galaeron’s chair, she said, “Actually, I have a keen interest in hearing Lord Mourngrym’s answer.”
Galaeron sat, and Mourngrym turned to face Alusair.
“What answer would that be, Your Highness?”
“To Galaeron’s question, Lord Mourngrym.” Alusair replied, her expression growing suspicious. “Who would you blame if the Shadovar had unleashed the phaerimm in the Dalelands instead of Evereska?”
“But they didn’t, Princess.”
“Lord Mourngrym,” Alusair said, “I am asking what if they had.”
“The question is meaningless, Your Highness. It was the elf who unleashed the phaerimm.”
An astonished murmur f
illed the chamber. Paying no attention, Mourngrym turned to gesture at Galaeron, and at last Galaeron understood what he had been seeing—or rather, not seeing—in the eyes of the Dalesman.
Anger clouded Alusair’s face.
“Lord Mourngrym,” she said, “as a guest in my realm, you owe me the courtesy of an answer.”
Mourngrym responded with an counterfeit smile.
“Of course, Your Highness. What I fail to understand …”
Galaeron did not hear the rest of the answer, for his own thoughts were whirling like one of the cyclones that had of late been laying waste to so many of Faerûn’s farms and villages. The Dalesmen’s attack on him had been carefully coordinated, with the envoys of lesser stature laying the groundwork for a final indictment by their most respected member. Given that the three came from the same area, it seemed entirely plausible they had come together before the council and settled on the strategy, but Galaeron suspected another explanation—a far more menacing one.
He leaned toward Ruha and felt a Purple Dragon’s armored hand grasping his shoulder.
“Milord,” the soldier whispered. “I think the princess meant for you to stay in your own chair.”
“As I will.” Though Galaeron answered in an amiable tone, it was all he could do to keep from cursing the man aloud. If he was right—and he was—the last thing he needed was the lout drawing attention to him. “I only wanted to thank Harper Ruha for her support.”
Ruha raised her kohl-rimmed eyes to the guard and said, “Galaeron will do me no harm.”
The soldier regarded her suspiciously for a moment, then nodded gruffly and released Galaeron’s shoulder. Ruha looked to Galaeron, and as Alusair and Mourngrym continued their argument in more heated tones, waited.
“Uh, thank you,” Galaeron said. It was all he dared say, at least with one of them lurking somewhere in the room, eavesdropping on the council and manipulating its mind-slaves. “I’m afraid I lost control of myself.”
Ruha knitted her black eyebrows and replied, “Considering what was said, I thought you did well to keep your shadow in check.”