“Why would so many people bring carts and wagons here?” Nellus questioned.
“The nagas tricked them,” said Alex. “It must have made promises to these travelers to lure them close to its den.”
“Then why did it not do the same with us?” Kat questioned.
“Travelers are easier prey than adventurers are,” Arconn answered.
“Yes,” agreed Thrang, looking around the clearing. “Arconn, Alex, and I will enter the cave. The rest of you, search the wagons and carts.”
“For what?” Thrain asked.
“Treasure, of course. The nagas could not easily move items from carts and wagons,” Thrang said. “It would be best for us to make a complete search.”
The others did as Thrang asked, dismounting from their horses and beginning their work. Alex and Arconn rode forward with Thrang to the cave opening and tied their horses to a broken wagon wheel just outside the dark entrance.
“We’ll need torches,” said Thrang.
Alex smiled, and with a wave of his hand, conjured up several weir lights and sent them into the cave.
“Yet another good reason to bring a wizard along,” said Thrang with a grin.
“I find them easier than torches, and faster,” said Alex.
“Halfdan said you used them to great effect on your last adventure together,” Thrang said.
“They have many uses,” said Alex. “Right now they will make our search quicker. I don’t want to spend any more time in this cave than we have to.”
“Nor do I,” said Arconn.
Thrang nodded his agreement and led the way into the cave. The weir lights moved ahead of them, lighting the cave better than a dozen torches. Fortunately, the cave did not extend deep into the hill. It took only a minute or two for the three of them to find the main chamber, and when they did, they stopped in surprise.
“You said these creatures hoarded treasure, but I did not expect this,” Thrang said to Alex.
The floor of the chamber was covered with wealth. Gold and silver coins were scattered everywhere, making it appear as if the cave floor was solid metal. The weir lights reflected brightly off the treasure.
“It will take at least two days to get all of this out in the open,” Thrang declared.
“Yet well worth the labor,” Arconn said.
“Yes, but I do not wish to remain in this dark place for two days or more,” said Alex.
“So you would leave all of this behind?” Thrang asked, stunned.
“That is not what I said,” Alex answered. “If you will allow me, I can quickly move all of this into my bag, and then we can find a better place to do the sorting and dividing.”
“Not going to try and put one thing in your bag at a time, then.” Arconn laughed.
“You two have taught me well,” said Alex with a bow, remembering the trouble he’d had the first time he’d used a magic bag. “Now, if you wouldn’t mind standing back—I wouldn’t want to accidentally add the two of you to my bag.”
Thrang and Arconn both laughed and stepped behind Alex. Alex lifted his bag and concentrated on the room in front of him. He had done something similar before, so he knew it would work now. He spoke softly so Thrang and Arconn would not hear the secret password to his magic bag, and in one shimmering moment, the chamber was emptied.
“I’ve never seen that done before,” Thrang said, an astonished look on his face. “Piles of bags or stacks of wealth, yes, but never an entire room in one instant.”
“Useful, if you are in a rush,” said Arconn.
Thrang insisted on checking every corner of the empty cavern, so Alex sent the weir lights dancing around the room as Thrang searched. He even made a couple of them circle Thrang’s head. Arconn stifled a laugh when Thrang stood up too quickly and the weir lights bounced off his head, spinning wildly around the chamber.
“Well, it seems you’ve done your work well,” said Thrang at last, swatting at one of the weir lights that had returned to circle his head. “Let’s get out of this hole and see what the others have found.”
They left the empty cave, and Alex put out the weir lights as they returned to the bright morning sunshine. The others were having more difficulty with their search than Alex, Thrang, and Arconn had had. Many of the wagons and carts had been tipped over, making it difficult to see what was under them. Alex noticed that his friends had stacked a fair-sized pile of bags and boxes already, and he wondered how much wealth the nagas had managed to hoard.
“Any treasure in the cave?” Barnabus questioned.
“A fair amount,” answered Thrang. “Master Taylor has put it in his bag for now, thinking it would be best to sort and divide later.”
“There is wisdom in that,” Nellus said, lifting a broken cart to see what was under it. “The bones of the dead are all around this place.”
“The sooner we are away from here, the better,” said Thrang. “What have you found so far?”
It turned out the others had searched about one-third of the clearing. Alex, Thrang, and Arconn joined in the search and were soon sweaty and dirty with the work. Alex was surprised by the amount of treasure they found in the broken wagons and carts, and he wondered who would be traveling with so much wealth in this open and empty country. He had little time to ponder because Thrang soon called him away from the cart he was searching.
“Magic books,” said Thrang, holding up a large, leather-bound volume. “A strange find, and something you should have a look at.”
Alex took the book from Thrang, looking at it for several minutes before noticing the pile of nine or ten other books that Thrang had recovered from a broken-down wagon.
“With your permission, I would like to add these to my bag,” said Alex slowly, looking at Thrang.
“They are yours, of course,” said Thrang. “None of us has any use for magic books, and they should not be left about for just anyone to find.”
Alex bowed to Thrang and began looking at the books more closely. After several minutes, he put the books inside his bag and began walking around the clearing in a wide circle.
“What are you doing?” Thrang questioned, dragging a heavy chest out from under one of the wagons.
“Looking for something,” Alex replied.
As the others finished their search, Alex continued to wander back and forth, across and around the clearing.
“Well, that’s done,” said Thrang, loudly enough for Alex to hear him. “Now if Alex will add all of this to what we’ve already taken from the cave, we can find a better place to do our sorting.”
“In a moment,” said Alex, finally spotting what he was looking for and hurrying toward it.
He moved carefully into the trees on one side of the clearing, and when he returned, he was carrying two staffs.
“The nagas was even more dangerous than I thought,” Thrang said in a whisper.
“We were lucky to defeat it,” Nellus added.
“But a wizard?” Barnabus questioned.
“Perhaps,” said Alex. “It is a wizard’s staff, but the person carrying it may not have been a true wizard.”
“How did you know it was there?” Kat asked.
“The books,” said Alex. “They are too advanced for most, and I thought it unlikely that just anyone would be carrying them.”
“But a wizard would stand a fair chance against the nagas,” said Barnabus.
“A true wizard would,” said Alex. “We do not know who carried this staff, so we cannot say that he was a wizard.”
“Alex is correct,” said Arconn. “There are some who carry a staff and pretend to be wizards. This staff might have been carried by one of those.”
“Yes, but a staff,” Thrain said breathlessly.
“A staff is a tool and a symbol of a wizard, not the power of the wizard,” Alex explained, looking at Thrain. “The power is in the wizard, not in his staff.”
“What will you do with this second staff?” Thrang questioned.
“I will take it with me,” said Alex, “and send a message to Whalen and the counsel of wizards. They might be able to tell us who the staff belonged to. If they can’t, then I will have to assume the person who carried this staff was a pretender.”