“Oh,” Delg grunted, “how’d you get to be a Harper, then?”
Mirt sighed. “My long patience had something to do with it, as I recall,” he answered deliberately, drawing a gleaming dagger and, with a single flick of his wrist, casually trimming off the tips of the nails on one hand. Narm stared, fascinated, but Shandril shuddered. If he’d missed by half an inch …
But he hadn’t. The Old Wolf smiled at her again, a mirthless grin that reminded her of a grinning skull she’d seen—long ago, it seemed—amid the ruins of Myth Drannor. Then he pointed ahead. “We turn here,” he said shortly, and then added, looking down, “even if we’re clever dwarves.”
Delg grunted in reply. “If I hear you tell us we’re lost, just once,” he threatened, “you’ll find yourself rapidly becoming more my size.” He glared at the tranquil wind-driven clouds that filled the sky and the endless rolling fields and rubble walls around them.
“I’ve crawled along in the dirt once or twice before, ye know,” Mirt told him, and added over his shoulder to Shandril, “that’s something else to being a Harper. There’s fools’ pride—the sort that won’t get dirty, an’ do this or that—and then there’s Harpers’ pride: where ye won’t quit and won’t be scared off. If ye only have the first kind, ye seldom live long enough to learn the second, unless ye leave off being a Harper altogether.”
“Do all Harpers talk this much?” Delg asked innocently from somewhere just out of reach.
Mirt sighed again. “It’s one way to keep from fighting,” he replied patiently, then turned to Narm and Shandril. “Ah—remember that, too.”
“You’ll remind me, from time to time, about all the things I should be remembering?” Shandril asked him dryly, eyes twinkling.
“Certainly,” the fat merchant boomed cheerfully. “All the way to Silverymoon, if ye like.”
“I was afraid you’d say that,” Narm told him as they approached another stile.
Mirt grinned at him. “Ye, lad, are already beginning to speak as a Harper does. If ye can learn some spells to match that mouth, ye’ll be a mageling to be reckoned with … now, where was I?”
“At the strutting grandly bit, Lord,” Shandril told him, so softly that it was almost a full breath later before Delg snorted. Shandril chuckled softly despite herself, and Narm started to laugh. It was another breath after that before Mirt joined in.
Overhead, the moon rode high above dark, ragged, racing clouds that streamed across the stars like tattered banners. Where the moonlight fell between the clouds, it laid bright white strips across the field.
Narm lay drowsily watching the clouds, Shandril asleep on his shoulder. The two of them were buried in a warm haystack, only their shoulders and heads protruding. Beside Narm’s face lay Shandril’s hair, a swirling mass that smelled faintly of spices. Baergasra had given her some bathing spices to ruin her scent for dogs—and worse things—the Zhents might use to track her.
To his left, Narm could just see the alert shadow that was Delg sitting watch. The dwarf sat with his blanket held over the ready axe in his lap, thereby preventing moongleams from betraying their presence to a watcher in the night. Despite Delg’s caution, the deep, rhythmic snores of Mirt the Moneylender—once Mirt the Merciless, mighty Lord of Waterdeep—could tell anyone in this corner of Faerûn right where they were.
To Narm’s left, something moved. It was Delg, creeping silently as a cat to peer into the night nearby. He seemed to see nothing amiss, because after a few moments, he turned and looked toward the haystack. His eyes met Narm’s. The dwarf nodded and withdrew to his post as silently as he had left it.
Narm thought the dwarf’s face looked bitter and drawn in the moonlight. Usually Delg seemed lit by a fierce fire from within, his face like a smithy door, spitting surly sparks with energy to spare. Not now. He looked like a ruined farmer Narm had once seen—beaten, bereft of hope.
The dwarf stared out across the moonlit field again, beaked nose pointing like an accusing finger into the night. Then something cold and wise crept slowly up Narm’s spine, and with sudden certainty he knew the look Delg wore. He looked like a man about to leave his friends behind forever and go down into the darkness that does not end.
For all their differences, dwarves and men do look like brothers when their faces wear the same hopeless expression. Delg looked like a man who knew he was about to die.
Ten
A Hard and Stony Place
The Realms hold many a hard and stony place—and the worst of it is, some of them come well furnished with wizards.
Ahead, the land was rising. “The Stonelands,” Mirt announced unnecessarily.
Delg squinted up at him. “It may come as a great surprise to you, large and mighty one, but I’d managed to puzzle that out for myself already.” Mirt sketched a florid bow. “The wits of the dwarves are keen, and the fame of their workings resounds from the Spine of the World to the peaks of the Dustwall.”
Delg made a rude sound in reply. The fire-blackened pans he carried clanked slightly as he clambered to the top of a ridge to get a better view ahead.
In the distance, like a row of old and gray teeth, a line of crumbling stone cliffs rose out of the mottled greenery of the forest. The edge of the Stonelands. Between that line and where they now stood stretched a wide expanse of gently rolling pastureland. Down its center, the road that linked Cormyr with Tilverton lay like a dark snake basking in the sun. The Moonsea Ride, it was called. Soldiers of Cormyr kept the brush cleared on either side of the road; a long, long walk across open ground lay between them and the Stonelands.
Delg turned to Mirt. “How d’you propose to get unseen across that? Wait for dark, I suppose—or have you some hidden magic at the ready?”
Mirt grinned easily, then lazily reached out one stout, hairy arm to haul the dwarf back from the crest of the ridge. “I’ve as little liking as ye do for waiting about while foes on our trail grow nearer, friend Delg. Sit ye down for a breath or two, and I’ll show ye my hidden magic.”
The old merchant wheezed as he bent over and fished in the open top of one of his large, flopping leather boots, dragging a leathern cord into view. It was loosely knotted around his leg; Mirt grunted, drew the knot open, and then pulled on the line. A wrinkled, seemingly empty sack came up from the depths of his boot. “A gift from a lady,” he announced with dignity, shaking the hand-sized thing to rid it of folds and wrinkling his nose at the boot smell it gave off. He was not alone in this reaction.
Then the Old Wolf opened the bag’s drawstring and plunged his hand in, drawing forth a gown of shimmering, flame-red silk, with a bodice of linked gold chains.
Hastily the old merchant thrust the garment out of view again, chuckling. “Sorry—wrong handful,” he explained as Shandril lifted an eyebrow and the other two grinned delightedly. The next thing he drew up was a mesh sack, holding a large bottle filled with something dark. The mesh bag and the bottle both seemed too large to have come out of the wrinkled sack—which still looked and hung as if empty.
Delg’s eyes fixed on the bottle and lit up. “Amberjack! Now that’s worth dragging around one of these magical sacks for.”
Mirt had already made it vanish into the depths of the bag again and was feeling around, his arm thrust into the small sack up to the shoulder. Shandril could see that it wasn’t half deep enough to swallow the Old Wolf’s arm—but …
“Ah!” Mirt said in triumph, and drew forth a large bundle of russet cloth, mottled with green, orange, and silver threads that confused the eyes, making one’s gaze involuntarily slide away from it. The old adventurer set the bundle carefully on the ground and undid its tied ends, unfolding it to reveal what looked like a stack of shallow, silvery glass bowls inside. With the air of a tavern show wizard, he fanned these curved pieces of glass as one does a hand of cards; they looked like plates or masks to Shandril.