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This added burden severely slowed their progress through The Bog the next day. Tarn had originally planned to traverse it in a single march and arrive back at Thorbardin before nightfall, but storms had soaked the perpetually waterlogged ground and turned some sections of the road into an oozing morass. With their heavy burdens, the dwarves were forced to slog forward at a snail’s pace, further deepening Tarn’s black mood. They were still some distance from the foothills when the sun began to sink into the mists above the swamp.

Already deeply concerned about the risk of passing through The Bog, Mog watched the sun fade into the fog with growing alarm. He had no desire to make camp in the swamp, but traveling through this place after dark was more dangerous. With the majority of Beryl’s forces still unaccounted for, there was no telling what might be lying in ambush on the road ahead.

Not for the first time that day, Mog said, “You run far too great a risk, my king. Let me scout ahead.”

“We’re almost home, Mog,” Tarn growled. “There’s nothing to worry about here. Soon there’ll be good stone beneath our feet and you’ll feel better.”

“That is what concerns me,” his captain said. “They always hit you just when your guard is down.”

“They? Who are they?” Tarn asked. “You are paranoid, my old friend.”

“It’s my job to be paranoid where the king’s safety is concerned. The road here is more muddy than any we’ve seen so far, and I wonder if perhaps some large force has passed this way already. We’re almost home now, and if I were lying in ambush, this is where I’d set my trap. Look how the road narrows up ahead. At least allow me to scout there.”

“There is no need. Someone has already scouted it for us.” As Tarn said this, a lone dwarf emerged from the fog and strode briskly toward them. “Maybe this stranger knows who churned the mud,” he said.

Mog called a halt to await the newcomer’s approach. Because he was a dwarf, Tarn’s guards kept their weapons sheathed but ready. Mog’s axe, however, never left his hand. He held it at his side and watched the stranger struggle and stumble through the mud, curses exploding from his lips every time he nearly fell. Finally he was close enough for all to see his face.

“Ilbars Bleakfell,” Mog said in surprise. “How did they get you to stick your nose outside the Gates of Thorbardin? This is a rare day!”

Ilbars nodded curtly to Mog and continued his approach. “I was sent to welcome the king back to Thorbardin and to ease his journey,” he said to Tarn, stopping a moment to deliver a sweeping bow. “Our camp is not far ahead.”

“Ah, very good,” Tarn said. He extended his hand to the Daewar captain. Ilbars strode forward to greet him, but suddenly Mog stepped in front of him, blocking the Daewar’s progress with his axe.

“Mog, what—” Tarn barked as the Klar seized him and pushed him to his knees. Ilbars stopped short, a snarl of anger forming on his face.

At that moment, bowstrings twanged from either side of the road, and Mog pushed Ilbars away.

“Draconians!” the Klar shouted as arrows and crossbow bolts clanged and pinged off the dwarves’ armor and shields. Two of Tarn’s guards dropped immediately, the swarm of arrows having found chinks in their armor. The others quickly formed into a circle around the thane, their round shields locked together, as more arrows poured into them.

Mog shielded Tarn with his own body, grunting as arrows pummeled his mailed back. Tarn swore and cursed at him to let him up, to let him fight, but the captain maintained his protective position. Another volley of arrows tore through their ranks, dropping three more dwarves. The others closed up the spaces, drawing back to tighten their circle around the thane. They hunkered behind their shields beneath the relentless rain of arrows. Scrambling to find protection, Ilbars picked up a shield from a fallen dwarf and crouched behind it, swearing furiously as he inched closer to the king.

Under cover of their missile fire, draconians began to climb up out of the bog onto the road, crawling up through the mud with their swords in their teeth. These were the smallest of their kind, known as baaz, a race of cruel and rapacious fighters. Without even waiting to form ranks, they assaulted the dwarves’ defensive circle, throwing themselves into the chaotic fray. As the first baaz crashed into the dwarven circle of shields, the last volley of arrows fell among both friend and foe, and kapak draconians appeared from the swamp to join in the assault. This species of draconians poisoned their blades with spittle before entering battle.

Quietly, Mog loosed his hold on the thane, pointing. A dwarf to their right fell, his head split to the teeth by a draconian sword, opening a space in their ranks. With a nod to the king, Mog threw himself into the empty space, his axe flashing out, separating the draconian’s head from its neck in one blow. Its body slumped to the ground and immediately turned to stone.

Tarn quickly clambered to his feet. A good head taller than any of the other dwarves in his company, he could see the whole battle from his protected position within the circle. Still, this made him an obvious target, and he knocked aside one spear with his sword, while trying to figure out his best move. All around him, his dwarves were battling furiously, some of them engaging two or three opponents at once. In one glance, he knew that they couldn’t last for very long. More and more draconians were climbing onto the road, while his dwarves were slowly being cut down before his eyes. Ilbars Bleakfell rose up beside him, sword drawn, and eyes blazing.

Then a gap opened as a dwarf fell with a spear through his heart. Tarn grabbed Ilbars by the shoulder and rudely thrust the surprised dwarf into the gap. He turned and looked back the way they had come. There didn’t appear to be as many draconians attacking from the rear. He might be able to slip out of this trap, but only if he acted swiftly, before the draconians cut off their escape route.

Tarn was about to shout orders that would shift his dwarves into a column when he heard words of magic being chanted.

“Wizard!” he shouted, seeking out the source of the eerie words.

Too late, he saw the bozak draconian standing at the road’s edge, its brown robes caked with mud. The creature lifted its hands, and as it did so Tarn threw himself to the muddy ground. Crying in surprise and rage, nearly a third of Tarn’s dwarves suddenly found themselves engulfed in thick sticky strands of web.

Tarn scrambled to his feet, brushing clinging fibers from his arm and beard. Mog was instantly at his side, pulling him away from the battle. Half the draconians attacked the entrapped and helpless dwarves, slaughtering them mercilessly. The other draconians surged toward Tarn and the others, who had fallen back in disorder at the actions of the magic-user.

Tarn barked a quick series of commands that brought the dwarves together in an inverted V shape just in time. The bozak came up, already casting another spell. Tarn braced himself and shouted for shields to be raised. Two bolts of white energy exploded from the draconian’s fingertips and streaked toward Tarn. Brave Mog threw himself into their path, but the gesture was futile, as the bolts wove past him and the shields to strike Tarn full in the chest. They seemed to burn through both layers of his armor, searing into his flesh like gouts of molten metal. He sank to one knee, screaming in agony.