Raistlin had memorized the route Kitiara had taken to reach the secret vault below Dargaard Keep. He traveled the dark and silent corridors, following the map in his head. He carried with him the Staff of Magius, which he had left in Dargaard Keep to await his return.
“Shirak,” he said, and though the word again sounded tinny and flat, the crystal ball atop the staff began to glow.
Raistlin was glad for the light. The keep was empty; its master and undead warriors were gone; the banshees were silent. But fear and dread and horror remained full-time occupants. Death’s bony fingers plucked at his robes or brushed, cold and horrifying, against his cheek. The ground shook, the stones fell from the walls, and the walls began to collapse. He could hear the screams of the dying woman, begging Soth to save her child, and the piercing cries of a small child being burned alive.
The horror almost overwhelmed him. His hands started to shake; his vision blurred. He could not catch his breath, and he leaned against a wall and made himself breathe deeply, clear his head, reassert his own will.
After he had recovered, he continued down the stairs that spiraled into the stone. He doused the staff’s light when he reached the steel door, for he wanted to see before he was seen. Fumbling in the impenetrable darkness, he placed his hand on the door and felt with his fingers for the graven image of the goddess. He invoked the name of Takhisis, and white light glowed. He spoke the name four more times, as Kitiara had done, and each time a different-colored light flared beneath his palm. The door clicked open.
Raistlin did not immediately enter the room. He remained in the darkness, quiet, unmoving, holding his breath so as not to make a sound. The room appeared to be empty except for the Hourglass of Stars standing upon its pedestal. As he watched, the small grain of sand dropped into the narrow opening between the top half and the bottom and hung there.
Raistlin breathed a sigh of relief. The night was almost over. The gods of magic must have won their battle. Odd, though, that they had not destroyed the hourglass …
His stomach tightened. Something was not right. He walked into the room, his black robes rustling around his ankles. He leaned the Staff of Magius against the wall and went to stare intently into the hourglass. Three moons, the silver and the red and the black, glimmered in the darkness at the bottom of the hourglass. Their light still shone, but it was dim and would not shine for long. What had happened?
Raistlin did not understand and reached out his hand for the hourglass.
A voice stopped him, nearly stopped his heart. “You are wrong, Baby brother,” she said softly. “I do love Tanis.”
Kitiara emerged from the darkness, her sword on her hip.
Raistlin lowered his hand and slipped it into the folds of his robes. He managed to keep his voice under careful control and said with a shrug, “You are incapable of loving anyone, my sister. In that, you and I are alike.”
Kitiara gazed at him, her dark eyes shining in the starlight glimmering from the hourglass. “Perhaps you are right, Baby brother. It seems we are incapable of love. Or loyalty.”
“By loyalty I assume you are referring to your betrayal of Iolanthe,” said Raistlin.
“Actually I was speaking of your betrayal of our Queen,” said Kitiara. “As for Iolanthe, I did feel a small twinge of conscience about handing her over to the death squads. She saved my life, you know. She rescued me from prison when Ariakas had sentenced me to death. But she couldn’t be trusted. Just as you, Baby brother, cannot be trusted.”
Kitiara drew nearer. She walked with a swagger, her hand resting casually on her sword’s hilt.
Raistlin’s hand, hidden in the folds of his robes, slipped into one of his pouches.
“I have no idea what you are talking about,” he said. “I did what I promised I would do.”
“Right now you are supposed to be in the Tower of Wayreth, betraying your wizard friends to Lord Soth.”
Raistlin gave a grim smile. “And you are supposed to be asleep.”
Kitiara began to laugh. “We’re a pair, aren’t we, Baby brother? Takhisis gave you the gift of her magic, and you used it to betray her. Ariakas gave me my command, and I plan to do the same to him.”
She sighed and added, “You left poor Caramon to die. And now I must kill you.”
She shifted her gaze to the hourglass. Raistlin saw the three waning moons reflected in her dark eyes, and he understood the truth. She was not asleep because the magic spell he had cast on her had not worked. And it had not worked because there was no magic. He had been duped. He watched the grain of sand slide down the narrow opening, falling a little closer to the darkness.
“There were never any Gods of the Gray, were there?” Raistlin said.
Kitiara shook her head. “Takhisis had to find some way to lure Nuitari and his cousins into her trap. She knew that the idea of new gods coming to supplant them would be too much for them to bear.” She passed her hand over the smooth, clear crystal. “Think of this as a whirlpool in time. Your gods have fallen into the whirlpool, and they cannot escape.”
Raistlin stared into the glass. “How did you know I would warn the gods? Bring them here?”
“If you didn’t, Iolanthe would have. So it really didn’t matter.” Kitiara drew her sword from the scabbard. The blade made a ringing sound as it slid out. She held it expertly, wielding it with easy, practiced skill. She was implacable, remorseless. She might feel some regret, perhaps, for having to kill Raistlin. But she would go through with it, of that he had no doubt, because that was what he would have done.
Raistlin did not move. He did not try to flee. What was the point in that? He could picture himself racing in terror down the hall, his robes flapping around him, running until his legs faltered and his breath gave out, and he would stumble and his sister would stab from behind. …
“I remember the day you and Caramon were born,” Kitiara said suddenly. “Caramon was strong and healthy. You were weak, barely alive. You would have died if it hadn’t been for me. I gave you life. I guess that gives me the right to take it. But you are my little brother. Do not fight me, and I will make your death quick and clean. Over in an instant. All you have to do is give me the dragon orb.”
Raistlin thrust his left hand into the pouch. His fingers grasped hold of the orb, closed over it. He kept his eyes fixed on Kit, holding her gaze, her attention.
“What good is the dragon orb?” he asked. “It is dead. The magic is gone, after all.”
“Gone from you, perhaps,” said Kitiara, “but not from the dragon orb. Iolanthe told me all about how the orb works. Once an object is enchanted, it will always remain enchanted.”
“You mean, like this?” Raistlin spoke the word, “Shirak,” and the Staff of Magius burst into flaring light.
Momentarily blinded, Kit tried to shield her eyes from the bright glare and raised her sword, jabbing wildly into the darkness. Raistlin dodged the attack easily and, bringing out a fistful of marbles, he tossed them on the floor under Kit’s feet.
Unable to see clearly, Kitiara trod on the marbles and slipped, losing her footing. Her feet went out from under her. She fell heavily to the stone floor, striking her head.
Raistlin snatched up his staff and stood over his sister, ready to smash in her skull if her eyelids so much as twitched. She lay still, however, her eyes closed. He thought perhaps she was dead, and he knelt down to feel the lifebeat in her neck, still strong. She would wake with a terrible headache and blurry vision, but she would wake.
He probably should kill her, but as she had said, she had given him life. Raistlin turned away. One more debt repaid.