“It won’t help my political career any to go jaunting off into Thay as a spy,” he heard Brenna say. “My rivals will surely use it against me, claiming I have more interest in what goes on outside my country than in Aglarond.”
“But if we uncover some plot against Aglarond, you’ll be a hero,” Wynter commented.
“Perhaps, but I think the negatives will outweigh it. Do you have any interest in politics?”
“I don’t, and I don’t care to,” Wynter countered. “But I do know something about people. And—” there was a lengthy pause as Galvin strained to hear what came next— “you’re going to have to find some other way to gain fame. Galvin says you’re staying behind, and I trust his judgment. Thay’s a harsh place—no place for you. I know. I was born there.”
Galvin sat up to watch the pair. Brenna sat cross-legged on a straw mat outside her tent, her arms crossed defiantly. Wynter stood above her, looking amused.
“Can you keep up with us?” Galvin asked.
She looked through the centaur’s legs at the druid and nodded emphatically.
The druid glanced up at Wynter. “We leave at dawn.”
The centaur grinned broadly and joined Galvin. “I’m not sure about her motives, but she just might be an asset. At least she knows her way around cities.”
Galvin frowned, hoping desperately that he hadn’t made a mistake by allowing Brenna Graycloak to come along.
Three
Maligor reclined on a crimson-dyed leather divan in the center of his immense bath chamber, his head resting on a green silk pillow recently imported from Shou Lung. Although he was thin and stood only about five and a half feet tall, he looked large on the couch; he chose his furniture to make himself appear imposing. A half-dozen of his favorite pleasure slaves attended him. Two, who had been born on Maligor’s slave plantation and were hardly more than children, massaged his feet, applying expensive, musky oils. The scent was sweet and heavy and permeated the air. Another pair, blond twin sisters kidnapped by pirates from their sea captain father in Orlumbor, worked diligently to manicure and polish his hard yellow nails. The fifth, the eldest of the human slave women, a buxom twenty-year-old from Ravens Bluff, sat on a stack of pillows near his right shoulder. Slowly rubbing a damp cloth across his forehead with one hand, she used the other to gently run a sharp blade over his temples and across the top of his head, shaving the fine stubble growing there. She took extreme care not to cut him; her predecessor had died horribly in the laboratory several days ago for just such an offense.
The women wore sheer, colorful fabrics that left nothing to Maligor’s imagination. He dressed all of his female slaves thus to prevent them from hiding weapons that could be turned against him. The women’s hair extended to the middle of their backs, while the children’s hung about their shoulders. It was an indication they had been slaves for many years. However, the sixth slave, an elven woman in a short, rose-hued gauze tunic, had silvery-white hair that reached barely below the lobes of her pointed ears. Maligor had owned this prize only a few months. She sat apart from the group near a black iron cage filled with finches. Strumming an ebonwood lyre, she sang a mournful old elvish tune that Maligor could not understand. The Red Wizard usually enjoyed her music. Tonight, however, he found the tune annoying. It prevented him from concentrating.
The wizard owned more than eight hundred slaves, a considerable stable. Most were male laborers who worked at various tasks around his properties. Several dozen were warriors and sailors who had been captured in nearby countries. Fewer still were slave women who attended to his needs. He continually added to his stable, as the Red Wizard needed a steady supply of slaves to replace those who died of overwork, old age, or, more likely, because of his malicious magical experiments.
There were few Red Wizards who owned more slaves than Maligor. Slaves made up about two-thirds of the country’s population and were considered one of Thay’s major imports. Maligor prided himself on having some of the most exquisite slaves.
This evening, however, his pleasure slaves were doing little to please him. The Red Wizard’s mind was elsewhere, concentrating on another woman—the one he had seen before his darkenbeast died. Maligor still puzzled over her. He had sent the darkenbeast after an errant gnoll guard, yet through his telepathic link with the darkenbeast, he had picked up no trace of the gnoll—only the red-tressed beauty.
The woman was confounding. If she was in Thay, she might be a slave because of her long hair. But she was not one of Maligor’s. Perhaps she was the slave of another Red Wizard, the same one who had solicited the services of the missing gnoll. Perhaps she herself was a Red Wizard—but if she was, why had the darkenbeast attacked her? And what had happened to the gnoll?
Maligor pursed his lips, causing the slave shaving him to tremble. Continuing to puzzle over the matter will do little good, he thought. The gnoll, wherever he is, knows nothing of my real plans. But the woman… who is she? Where is she?
“Finished, my lord,” the buxom slave announced timidly, interrupting his thoughts. Looking frightened yet expectant, she wiped the damp cloth across the top of his head with a shaky hand and replaced the shaving blade in its case.
Maligor eyed her sternly and ran his hand over his head to inspect her handiwork. He watched her bottom lip quiver and her face grow pale in fear that her performance was less than satisfactory. For a moment, he was tempted to find fault with her, then decided to be uncommonly kind.
“It is barely adequate, but it will do for tonight. Tomorrow make sure you do better.”
Visibly relieved, she rose and joined the elven woman. The other slaves continued their tasks. Maligor stared past them to the blackness beyond the room’s small windows. It was late, and from his position all he could see was a small section of sky and a few tiny stars, the bottom claw of the Malar constellation. He pulled his thoughts away from the dead darkenbeast, pondering instead what was transpiring under the stars in Amruthar at this moment. At least he would know about that within a few hours, as he had informers stationed in several taverns and on select street corners to pick up gossip. Maligor enjoyed the ability to keep track of most of the city’s seedy activities without leaving the safety of his fortified tower.
Maligor felt comfortable and secure here. His tower stretched sixty feet above the rich Thayvian soil. It boasted a crenellated top, where seasoned fighters were always stationed within easy reach of massive mounted crossbows and jugs of oil that could quickly be set aflame. The outer walls were made of solid granite, eighteen inches thick in most places. All the windows in his keep were of the same size—eight inches wide by two feet high. This small size made for better defense. Each was barred or covered with protective spells to keep unwanted things from entering or the wrong eyes from looking inside. To complete his defenses, the wizard had magical guards and wards scattered throughout his premises and skilled guards and loyal slaves on every level.
“My Lord Maligor,” a soft voice came from just beyond the chamber. “You summoned me?”
“Yes, Asp,” Maligor replied thickly as he continued to stare at the sky. “You’re late.”
“I was drilling the gnolls.”
Maligor sneered, hating to be kept waiting. “Enter. We have much to discuss.”
The bath chamber was lit by dozens of thick red candles on curved iron stands that were placed around the walls and near Maligor’s divan. They kept away the shadows, except those in the darkened doorway where Asp now stood. She poked her head out from the gray entrance, glancing around the room and at the nervous slaves. Sliding her shoulders and arms out of the shadows, she maneuvered herself entirely into the chamber, revealing her serpentine body.
One of the twins gasped. Throwing both hands over her mouth, she dropped the manicure tools, sending them clinking in several directions across the polished white marble floor. She scooted away from the divan, unmindful of Maligor’s burning gaze. The other slaves also appeared startled, but they were wiser. They remained rooted to their posts.