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The Thousand Ords

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by A. R. Salvatore




  Ten weeks on the New York Times best-seller list!

  “He eats hobbits for breakfast and makes Sauron look like a harmless little muppet. The star of The Dark Elf Trilogy, Drizzt Do’Urden is back in this latest tale…. If you haven’t had the chance to read The Dark Elf Trilogy yet, run out and do so immediately. It ranks right up there with The Lord of the Rings as one of the best fantasy tales ever conceived, and this new chapter only expands upon its brilliance.”

  —Game Informer

  “The author breathes … new life into the stereotypical creatures of the milieu…. Salvatore has long used his dark elf protagonist to reflect on issues of racial prejudice … and this novel is no exception.”

  —School Library Journal

  “Drow Elf Drizzt Do’Urden and friends return for another rousing tale of derring-do and harrowing escapes.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  FORGOTTEN REALMS® NOVELS BY

  THE ICEWIND DALE TRILOGY

  The Crystal Shard

  Streams of Silver

  The Halfling’s Gem

  The Icewind Dale Trilogy Collector’s Edition

  THE DARK ELF TRILOGY

  Homeland

  Exile

  Sojourn

  The Dark Elf Trilogy Collector’s Edition

  LEGACY OF THE DROW

  The Legacy

  Starless Night

  Siege of Darkness

  Passage to Dawn

  Legacy of the Drow Collector’s Edition

  PATHS OF DARKNESS

  The Silent Blade

  The Spine of the World

  Servant of the Shard

  Sea of Swords

  Paths of Darkness Collector’s Edition (February 2004)

  THE CLERIC QUINTET

  Canticle

  In Sylvan Shadows

  Night Masks

  The Fallen Fortress

  The Chaos Curse

  The Cleric Quintet Collector’s Edition

  THE HUNTER’S BLADES TRILOGY

  The Thousand Orcs

  The Lone Drow (October 2003)

  The Two Swords (October 2004)

  “Oh, well ye got to be pullin’ harder than that!” Tred McKnuckles yelled to his team of two horses and three dwarves. “I’m hoping to be making Shallows afore the summer sun shines on me balding head!”

  His voice echoed off the stone around them, a bellow befitting one of Tred’s stature. He was stout, even as dwarves go, with a body that could take a beating and lumpy arms that could dish one out. He wore his yellow beard long, often tucked into the front of his huge belt, and kept a throwing hammer—commonly called “a dwarven arrow”—strapped on the back of each shoulder, ready for launch.

  “It’d be easier if ye didn’t have th’ other horse sitting in the back o’ the wagon, ye blasted fool!” one of the pulling dwarves yelled back.

  Tred responded by giving him a crack on the rump with the whip.

  The dwarf stopped, or tried to, but the fact that the wagon kept on rolling, and he was strapped into the yoke, convinced him that maybe it would be a good idea to continue moving his strong and stubby legs.

  “Don’t ye doubt that I’ll be payin’ ye back for that one!” he growled at Tred, but the other dwarves pulling, and the three others still sitting up on the wagon beside the boss dwarf, all just laughed at him.

  They had been making fine progress since leaving Citadel Felbarr two tendays earlier, chancing the north run along the western face of the Rauvin Mountains. Breaking through to the flat ground, the group had done some minor trading and re-supplying at a large settlement of the Black Lion barbarian tribe. Named Beorunna’s Well, it, along with Sundabar, Silverymoon, and Quaervarr, was a favored trading locale for the seven thousand dwarves of Citadel Felbarr. Typically, the dwarves’ caravans would run to Beorunna’s Well, swap their wares, then turn back to the south, to the mountains and their home, but this particular group had surprised the leaders of the barbarian settlement and had pressed on to the west-northwest.

  Tred was determined to open up Shallows and the other smaller towns along the River Surbrin, running the western edge of the Spine of the World, for trade. Rumors had it that Mithral Hall had for some unknown reason slowed its trade of late with the towns upriver, and Tred, ever the opportunist, wanted Felbarr to fill that void. Other rumors, after all, said that some pretty amazing gems and even a few ancient artifacts, thought to be dwarven, were being pulled from the shallow mines on the western edges of the Spine of the World.

  The late winter weather had been quite favorable for the fifty mile run, and the wagon had rolled along without incident past the northern tip of the Moonwood and right to the foothills of the Spine of the World. The dwarves had gone a bit too far to the north, however, and so had turned south, keeping the mountains on their right. Still, the temperatures had remained relatively warm, but not so warm that they would destroy the integrity of the snow sheets and thus rain avalanches all about the trails. That same morning, though, an abscess had reared its ugly head on the hoof of one of the horses, and while the handy dwarves had been able to extract the stone the horse had picked up and drain the abscess, the horse was not yet ready to pull the laden wagon. It wasn’t even walking very comfortably, so Tred had the team put the horse up on the back of the large wagon, then he split the other six dwarves into two teams of three.

  They were quite good at it, and for a long time, the wagon had kept up its previous pace, but as the second team neared the end of its second shift, they were starting to drag.

  “When’re ye thinking we’ll get that horse back in the harness?” asked Duggan McKnuckles, Tred’s younger brother, whose yellow beard barely reached the middle of his chest.

  “Bah, she’ll be trotting along tomorrow,” Tred answered with confidence, and all the others nodded.

  None knew horses better than Tred, after all. In addition to being one of the finest blacksmiths in all of Citadel Felbarr, he was also the place’s most prominent farrier. Whenever merchant caravans rolled into the dwarf stronghold, Tred would inevitably be called upon, usually by King Emerus Warcrown himself, to shoe all the horses.

  “Might be that we should be putting up for the night then,” said one of the dwarves pulling along in front. “Set a camp, eat us a good stew, and lighten that load we got by a keg o’ ale!”

  “Ho ho!” several of the others roared in agreement, as dwarves usually did when the possibility of consuming ale was mentioned.

  “Bah, ye’ve all gone soft on me!” Tred pouted.

  “Ye’re just wanting to beat Smig to Shallows!” Duggan declared.

  Tred spat and waved his hands. It was too obvious a protest. Everyone there knew it was true enough. Smig was Tred’s greatest rival, two friends who pretended to hate each other, but who, in truth, only lived to outdo each other. Both knew that the small town of Shallows, with its trademark tower and renowned wizard, had seen an influx of people right before the winter—frontiersmen who would need fine weapons, armor, and horseshoes—and both had heard King Warcrown’s proclamation that he would be pleased to establish trading routes along the Spine of the World. Since the recapture of the dwarven citadel, which had been in orc hands for three centuries, the area west of Felbarr had calmed considerably, with the mountainous region to the east still buzzing with monstrous activity. There was an Underdark route to Mithral Hall, but none had been discovered thus far to open the lands north of Clan Battlehammer’s stronghold. All of those accompanying Tred—his workers, including his brother Duggan, Nikwillig the cobbler, and the opportunistic brothers, Bokkum and Stokkum, who were carrying essential goods (mostly ale) for other Felbarr tradesmen—had eagerly signed on. The first caravan would be the most profitable one, taking
their pick of the treasures garnered by the frontiersmen. Even more important than that, the first caravan would carry bragging rights and the favor of King Warcrown.

  Right before the departure, Tred had engaged Smiggly “Smig” Stumpin in a good-natured drinking game, but not before he had paid one of the Moradin priests well for a potion that defeated the effects of alcohol. Tred figured that he and his had been out of Citadel Felbarr for a day and more before poor Smig had even awakened, and another day before the dwarf could shrink his head enough to get out the citadel’s front door.

  Tred would be damned if he’d let a little thing like an abscessed horse hoof slow them down enough for Smig to have a chance of catching up.

  “Ye put up a trot for three more miles and we’ll call it a good day,” Tred offered.

  Groans erupted all about him, even from Bokkum, who stood to lose the most profits by an early camp, and hence, more ale consumed and less to sell—though the betting was that he wouldn’t end up selling it in Shallows anyway, and that he’d take it back for the celebration on the return journey.

  “Two miles, then!” Tred barked. “Are ye wanting to share a camp this night with Smig and his boys?”

  “Bah, Smig ain’t even out yet,” Stokkum said.

  “And if he is, he and his got slowed plenty by the rock-fall we dropped in the path behind us,” Nikwillig added.

  “Two more miles!” Tred roared.

  He cracked the whip again, and poor Nikwillig stood up very straight and managed to turn about enough to put a glower over the rugged driver.

  “Ye hit me again and I’ll be making ye a pair o’ shoes ye won’t soon be forgetting!” Nikwillig blustered.

  His feet were digging little trenches as he got dragged along, and that only made Tred and the others laugh all the louder. Before Nikwillig could start his grumping again, Duggan kicked up a song about a mythical dwarven utopia, a great town in a deep mine that would please Moradin himself.

  “Climb that trail!” Duggan crooned, and several looked at him, not sure if he was singing or ordering them around. “Break down that door!” Duggan went on, prompting Stokkum to yell out, “What door?”

  But Duggan only continued, “Find that tunnel and run some more!”

  “Ah, Upsen Downs!” Stokkum yelled, and the whole crew, even surly Nikwillig, couldn’t resist, and broke into a rowdy, back-slapping song.

  “Climb that trail

  Break down that door

  Find that tunnel

  and run some more

  “Cross the bridge of fiery glow

  Running deeper down below

  Make some smiles from those frowns

  Ye’ve found the town of Upsen Downs!

  “Upsen Downs! Upsen Downs!

  Ye’ve found the town of Upsen Downs!

  Upsen Downs! Upsen Downs!

  Make some smiles from those frowns.

  “Ye’ve found the place o’ the finest ale

  With arm-sized pretzels that’re never stale!

  With big Chef Muglump and his coney stew

  And Master Bumble with his forty brews!

  “And in the holes ye can break the rock

  and haul it up with yer tackle and block

  Smelt it down and ye’ll get it sold

  Upsen Downs’s got the finest gold!

  “Upsen Downs! Upsen Downs!

  Ye’ve found the town of Upsen Downs!

  Upsen Downs! Upsen Downs!

  Make some smiles from those frowns.

  It went on for many verses, and when the seven dwarves ran out of the formal lines of the old song, they just improvised, as they always did, with each piping in his own wants from such a remarkable place as Upsen Downs. That was the fun of the dwarven song, after all, and also a fairly subtle way for any perceptive dwarf to take a good measure of a potential friend or a potential foe.

  Also, the song was a fine distraction, mostly for the three tugging the wagon along, backs bent and straining. They made fine progress through those minutes, bouncing along the rocky ground, the mountains rising up to their right as they moved south along the trail.

  In the driver’s seat, Tred called out names in order, bellowing for each to add the next verse. It went on smoothly, until he called out to his little brother Duggan.

  The other five kept humming, providing the background, but they went through almost an entire verse, and there was still no response from Duggan.

  “Well?” Tred asked, turning to regard his little brother and seeing a very confused look on Duggan’s face. “Ye got to sing in, boy!”

  Duggan looked at him curiously, confusedly, for a long moment, then quietly said, “I think I be hurt.”

  Only then did Tred look past that puzzled expression, moving his head back and taking a wider view of Duggan. Only then did Tred notice the spear sticking out of Duggan’s side!

  He gave a shriek, and the humming behind him stopped, with the two sitting in the back of the wagon turning to regard the slumping Duggan. Up front it quieted, too, but not completely, until a huge boulder whistled down, slamming the path right beside the three surprised dwarves and bouncing over them, clipping Nikwillig on the shoulder and knocking him silly.

  The terrified horses broke into a gallop, and both the injured horse and poor Stokkum broke free of the rig, with Stokkum tumbling out onto the stony ground. Tred grabbed the reins hard, trying to slow the beasts, for his poor kinsmen up front were being tugged and dragged along, especially Nikwillig, who seemed unconscious.

  Another boulder smashed down right behind the bouncing wagon, and a third hit the ground before the charging team. The horses veered wildly to the left, then tried to turn back to the trail on the right, putting the wagon up on two wheels.

  “Move right!” Tred ordered, but even as he spoke the command, the wagon’s left wheels buckled and the cart crashed down and flipped.

  The horses broke free, then, taking the harness and the three strapped dwarves on a dead run down the rocky trail.

  The two dwarves behind Tred went flying away—and Duggan was hardly aware of it—and Tred would have, too, except that his leg got hooked under the wagon seat. He felt the crunch of bone as the wagon came down atop him, then he got smacked on the head, and hard. He thought he had erupted into a bloody mess for a moment as the wagon continued its sidelong roll, but he had the fleeting notion that it was ale washing over him.

  Luck alone extracted the dwarf from the crunching catastrophe, for he somehow wound up inside that decapitated keg. He went bounding and rolling away down the slope of the foothills. A rock stopped him abruptly, shattering the keg, and Tred went into a weird twisting somersault.

  Tough as the stone around him, the dwarf struggled to his feet. One of his legs gave out under him, so he fell forward against the stone, stubbornly propping himself up on his elbows.

  He saw them then, dozens and dozens of orcs, waving spears, clubs, and swords, swarming over the destroyed wagon and fallen dwarves. A pair of giants followed them down from the higher ground—not hill giants, as Tred would have expected, but larger, blue-skinned frost giants. He knew then that this was no ordinary band of raiders.

  Slipping from consciousness, Tred kept enough of his wits about him to throw himself backward, falling into a roll down another slope, ending hard against another rock beneath a tangle of brambles. He tried to stand again but then tasted bloody dirt in his mouth.

  Tred knew no more.

  “Well, are ye alive, or ain’t ye?” came a distant, gravelly voice.

  Tred opened one eye, caked with blood, and through a haze saw the battered form of Nikwillig, crouched before the brambles and staring in at him.

  “Good, so ye are,” said Nikwillig and he slipped his arm in, offering Tred a hand. “Keep your arse low or the pickers’ll be skinning it good.”

  Tred took that hand and squeezed it tightly but did not start out of the tangle.

  “Where’re the others?” he asked. “Where’s me brother?” />
  “The orcs killed ’em all to death in battle,” came the grim response, “and the pigs’re not too far away. Damned horses dragged me a mile an’ more.”

  Tred didn’t let go, but neither did he start forward.

  “Come on, ye dolt,” Nikwillig scolded. “We got to get to Shallows and get the word spreadin’ back to King Warcrown.”

  “Ye run on,” Tred replied. “Me leg’s all broke. I’ll slow ye down.”

  “Bah, ye’re talking like the fool I always knowed ye was!”

  Nikwillig gave a great tug, dragging Tred right out from under the brambles.

  “Bah, yerself!” Tred growled at him.

  “And so ye’d be leaving me if it was th’ other way around?”

  That question hit home. “Get me a stick, ye stubborn old fool!”

  Soon after, arm in arm, with Tred leaning on both Nikwillig and a stick, the two hardy dwarves ambled off toward Shallows, already plotting their revenge on the ambushing orc band.

  They didn’t know that another hundred such bands were out of their mountain holes and roaming the countryside.

  hen Thibbledorf Pwent and his small army of battleragers arrived in Icewind Dale with news that Gandalug Battlehammer, the First King and Ninth King of Mithral Hall, had died, I knew that Bruenor would have no choice but to return to his ancestral home and take again the mantle of leadership. His duties to the clan would demand no less, and for Bruenor, as with most dwarves, duties to king and clan usurp everything.

  I recognized the sadness on Bruenor’s face as he heard the news, though, and knew that little of it was in grieving for the former king. Gandalug had lived a long and amazing life, more so than any dwarf could ever hope. So while he was sad at losing this ancestor he had barely known, that wasn’t the source of Bruenor’s long look. No, what most troubled Bruenor, I knew, was the duty calling him to return to a settled existence.

 

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