“Now I can understand where you might not consider it quite fair of me to be asking you for help, since I’ve never done anything for you, but you’re a lot bigger than me and a lot more powerful, so I think you could afford to be magenta or magnesium, or whatever that word is which means being kind and generous to people even if they don’t deserve it.
“And maybe I don’t deserve your help, but Rhys does. Yes, he did leave off worshipping you to worship Zeboim, but you must know he did that only because you let him down. Oh, I’ve heard all that talk about how we’re not supposed to understand the minds of the gods, but you gods are supposed to understand the hearts of men, so you should understand that Rhys left because he was angry and hurt. Now you’ve taken him back and that’s really good of you, but after all, it’s no more than what you should have done in the first place, because you’re a god of good, so you’re not getting much credit from me for that.”
Nightshade paused to draw a breath and to try to sort out his thoughts, which had gotten rather muddled. This done, he continued his argument, growing more heated as he went. “Rhys proved his loyalty to you by turning down Zeboim when she would have rescued him and us, too, and he’s proving his loyalty by sitting in that cave waiting to die when Mina comes back to torture him. What are you doing in return? You’re leaving him chained up in that grotto!”
Nightshade raised his arms and his voice and shouted. “Does this make any kind of sense to you, Majere?”
He fell silent, giving the god time to respond.
Nightshade heard sea gulls squabbling over a dead fish, waves crashing on the shore, and the wind making the dead grass crackle. None of this sounded to him like the voice of a god.
Nightshade heaved a sigh. “I guess I could offer you something to make this worth your while. I could offer to become one of your faithful, but—to be honest—that would be a lie. I like being a nightstalker. I like helping dead souls find their way off this world if that’s what they want, and I like keeping them company if they’d rather stay. I like the feeling I get when I cast one of my mystical spells and the spirit of the earth creeps into me and wells up inside my heart and spills out into my fingertips, and my hands go all tingly and I—me, a kender—can make big, huge minotaur keel over.
“So I guess I can’t bargain with you, and you know what, Majere, I don’t think people should have to bargain with gods. Why? Because you are a god and because you’re great, wonderful and powerful, and because I’m just a kender, and Atta’s just a dog, and Rhys is just a man, and we need you. So send me those six monks and be snappy about it.”
Nightshade lowered his arms, heaved a tremulous sigh and waited expectantly.
The gulls’ quarrel ended when one of them flew off with the fish. The waves continued to crash, but they’d been doing that forever. The wind had died away, so the grass was silent. So was the god.
“Maybe not six monks,” Nightshade temporized. “How about two monks and a knight? Or one monk and a wizard?”
Atta whined and pawed at his leg. Nightshade reached down to pet her head, but she slid her head out from under his hand. She looked at him and her eyes narrowed. She was not urging him. She was telling him.
Enough of this nonsense. We’re going back.
Her intense gaze made him go all squirmy inside.
“Now I know what it feels like to be a sheep,” he muttered, trying to avoid her piercing gaze. “Let’s wait just one more minute, Atta. Give the god a chance. It’s those boulders, you see. I don’t have any skin left on my palms— What’s that?”
Nightshade caught sight of movement. He whipped around and stared down the road and saw, in the winking moonlight, two people walking his direction.
“Thank you, Majere!” Nightshade cried and he began running down the road, waving his arms and calling, “Help! Help!”
Atta dashed after him, barking madly. The kender was so excited and relieved he paid no attention to the tone of her bark. He kept running, and he kept yelling, “Boy, am I glad to see you!” and it was only when he was much closer to the two people and took a good look at them that he realized he wasn’t.
Glad to see them.
They were the Beloved.
10
Mina stared out the window at the Blood Sea that was calm in the moonlit darkness. The red light of Lunitari glimmered on the rolling waves, forming a moon glade, a red path across the red water that was stained purple from the night. Mina’s longing carried her out of her prison to the endless eternal sea. The waves lapped at her feet and she strode into the water . . .
Behind her, the door creaked open.
“Chemosh!” Mina said with heartfelt joy. “He has come to me!”
She was back in the room, back in the prison in an instant. Arms outstretched, she turned to welcome her lover, ready to fling herself at his feet and beg his forgiveness.
“My lord—” she cried.
The words died on her lips. Joy died in her heart.
“Krell,” she said, and she made no effort to hide her loathing. “What do you want?”
The death knight clanked ponderously into the room. The helmed head, adorned with the curling rams horns, leered at her. Piggy fire-eyes flared.
“To kill you.”
Krell kicked the door shut. He drew his sword from its scabbard and walked toward her.
Mina drew herself up, faced him with scorn. “My lord will not let you touch me!”
“Your lord doesn’t give a rat’s ass about you,” Krell sneered. “Go ahead. Call out to him. See if he answers.”
Mina remembered the look of hatred Chemosh had given her, remembered he had banished her from his sight, refused to even listen to her. She imagined herself calling to him for help, and she heard in her heart the echoing silence of his refusal.
She could not bear that.
Krell had threatened her before now, but his threats had been all bluster and bravado. He had not dared harm her while Chemosh protected her. This was Krell’s chance. She was alone and helpless. She had no weapons. Not even prayer, for Chemosh had turned his back on her.
Mina searched the room for something, anything, she could use in her defense. Not that it would make a difference. The sharpest sword ever crafted could not so much as dent the death knight’s armor.
She did not mean to die without a fight, however. Her soul would go proudly to the Hall of Souls Passing. Chemosh would not be ashamed of her.
Krell was looking about the room as well, though not for the same reason.
“Where is that strange light coming from?” he demanded. “Have you set something on fire?”
A candlestick stood on a table. The candlestick was made of twisted iron, with a clawed foot and three claw-like hands that held the candles. It was big and it was heavy. The trouble was, it was several paces from her.
“Yes,” said Mina. “I summoned a fire wight.”
She pointed to a part of the room opposite the candlestick.
“A fire wight!” Only Krell would have fallen for that one. His head pivoted.
Mina sprang at the table and lunged for the candlestick. She clasped her hands around the base and grabbed it up and, swinging as she turned, she struck with all her strength at Krell’s helm.
The last time she had fought Krell in Storm’s Keep, she had swept his head from his shoulders. That time, Chemosh had been with her.
No god sided with her this time. No god fought for her.
The iron candlestick crashed against Krell’s helm, but the blow did nothing to him. He might not have even felt it. The shock of the blow and the fell touch of the death knight jarred Mina’s arms from wrist to shoulder, momentarily paralyzing her. The candlestick slipped from her hands that had gone suddenly numb.