"You presume much, Master Kane," said Ilnezhara.
"You deny little," Kane replied.
"We have had minor dealings with this drow and his friend," Tazmikella said. "You know our business. Who better to acquire goods than that pair?"
"You sent them to Vaasa," the monk said.
Ilnezhara scoffed, but Kane didn't blink, so Tazmikella remarked, "We suggested to Jarlaxle that his talents might serve him better in the wilderness, and that perhaps he would find adventure, reputation, and booty."
"There is an old saying that a dragon's suggestion is ever a demand," the monk remarked.
Tazmikella managed a weak grin, and looked to her sister. She noted the exchange of looks between Kane and Ilnezhara, bordering on threatening.
"We know Jarlaxle and Entreri," Tazmikella said bluntly. "They are not in our employ, but we have, on occasion, employed them. If you have come to question their bona fides, Master Kane, should you not have arrived before the ceremo—"
Kane stopped her with an upraised hand, a gesture that had the proud dragon fighting hard to suppress her anger.
"Your accommodations here are at the suffrage of King Gareth," Kane reminded her. "Never forget that. We are not enemies; we have welcomed both of you into the community of Bloodstone with open arms and trust."
"Your warning does not reek of trust, Grandmaster," said Ilnezhara.
"You repudiated Zhengyi's advances. That is not unnoticed."
"And now?" Ilnezhara prompted.
Kane unfolded suddenly, standing on the chair, and dipped a low bow. "I pray you understand that we are in dangerous times."
"You see the world from a human perspective," Ilnezhara cautioned. "You view disasters in the terms of years, at most, and not in terms of decades or centuries. It is understandable that you would utter such a silly statement."
Kane betrayed no anger at the statement as he sat again, but neither did he seem impressed. "The castle was no small matter, was perhaps the greatest manifestation of Zhengyi, curse his name, since his demise those years ago."
"Zhengyi himself was a small matter," Ilnezhara replied. "A temporary inconvenience and nothing more."
Even Tazmikella winced at the obvious and self-serving understatement. Both she and her sister had breathed much easier indeed when the Witch-King had fallen, and not since the time when Aspiraditus the red dragon and her three fiery offspring had flown into the mountains of western Damara four hundred years before had the dragon sisters been that concerned about anything.
"Perhaps we measure our catastrophes in the sense of tendays, or even years, good lady, because that is all we have," Kane countered. "Our time is short by your measures, but eternity by our own. I am not overly concerned about this latest Zhengyian construct, for it is dead now, and I am confident that whatever plagues the Witch-King left behind for us will be handled accordingly by Spysong and the Army of Bloodstone."
"And yet, you are here," reasoned Tazmikella.
"This is how we handle accordingly our catastrophes," Kane answered, and for the first time, a bit of emotion, a dry sarcasm, crept into his monotone voice.
"Then pray tell us of your catastrophe," Ilnezhara stated with a clear air of condescension.
Kane stared at her for a few moments but did not reply.
"Pray tell us why you have come to see us," Tazmikella intervened, guessing correctly that the monk wasn't willing to label the purpose of his visit as such.
"That this drow and human in your employ walked out of that castle, while King Gareth's niece, a knight of the order, did not, is worrying," the monk admitted. "That this drow and human walked out of that castle, while Mariabronne the Rover, a hero of the realm by all measures and a student of Olwen, did not, is worrying. I would be ill-serving my king and friend Gareth if I did not investigate the circumstances of his niece's death. And I would be ill-serving my friend Olwen if I did not investigate the circumstances of his student's death. It is no mystery why I have come."
The sisters looked at each other.
"Do you vouch for the character of the drow and human?" Kane asked.
"They have not disappointed us," Tazmikella said.
"Yet," added her sister.
Tazmikella looked from Ilnezhara to Kane, trying to judge the monk's response, but reading his emotions was like trying to find footprints on hard stone.
"We are not well acquainted with the pair, truth be told," Tazmikella offered.
"You were not responsible for importing them to Damara?"
"Certainly not," Tazmikella answered, and Ilnezhara echoed her words as she was speaking them. "We learned of them in Heliogabalus, and decided that we could put their talents to use. It is not so different from the methods of Spysong, and I am certain that if we had not hired the pair, your friend Celedon would have."
"They are talented at what they do," Ilnezhara added.
"Stealing?" asked Kane.
"Procurement," Tazmikella corrected.
Kane actually offered a bit of a smile at that equivocation. He snapped up to stand on the chair again, and dipped a low bow. Without another word, he turned and walked out of Tazmikella's house.
"Those two are going to get themselves killed," Tazmikella remarked when the monk was far away.
"At least," said her sister, with more concern than Tazmikella expected. She glanced over to see Ilnezhara staring at the open door and the back of the departing Kane.
Indeed, Tazmikella thought, few creatures in all the world could unnerve a dragon more than a grandmaster monk.
"You have heard about the fight at Great Fork Ford?" Ilnezhara said, obviously noticing Tazmikella's stare. "Two reds and a mighty white seemed about to rout one of Gareth's brigades."
"And Grandmaster Kane rushed in," Tazmikella continued. "He dared their breath, fire and frost, and avoided it all."
"And even deceived the dragons into breathing upon each other," Ilnezhara added.
"The white—Glacialamacus, it is rumored—was severely burned, and none know if she has survived her wounds. And both reds were wounded, by the frost and by the blows of Kane, followed by the charge of Gareth's warriors."
"It is all rumor, you know," Tazmikella remarked.
"Perhaps, but a plausible rumor, no doubt."
After a long pause, digesting the implications, Tazmikella added, "I grow weary of those two."
"Jarlaxle troubles me," Ilnezhara agreed.
"Troubles?"
"But he is a fine lover," Ilnezhara went on unabated. "Perhaps I should keep him close."
Tazmikella just rolled her eyes at that, hardly surprised.
From the outside, the black hole in the mountainside seemed like just another of the many caves that dotted the region of towering stones and steep facings of the high peaks of the Galenas, east of the Vaasan Gate. Anyone who entered that particular cave, though, would find it to be much more, full of comforts and treasures, inviting aromas and magically lit walkways.
Of course, anyone who entered it uninvited would likely find himself dead.
Chased from Heliogabalus after the fall of Zhengyi, Timoshenko, the Grandfather of Assassins, and his mighty advisor Knellict, had moved the band to their remote, well-defended location. Suites of rooms went far back into the mountain, some carved by hired stonemasons and miners, and many others created by Knellict's magic. Timoshenko's band lived in comfort and security, but were not too remote from their dealings in Damara, for Knellict and his mage companions had also created and maintained a series of magical portals to strategic locations within Gareth's kingdom.