“Goldmoon will come to you, if anything happens to me,” Riverwind murmured. He reached into his fur vest and produced a small, silver scroll tube. “When she does, I want you to give her this.”
“Of course,” Caramon answered, his voice choked with emotion. He took the tube from his friend and slid it into his pocket.
“Goodbye, my friend,” Riverwind said, and walked out the door.
Caramon stood alone in the tavern, his head bowed, listening to the sound of the Plainsman’s boots upon the stairs.
Chapter 5
Smoke choked the streets of the town of Myrtledew, rising to blot the sun from the clear, blue sky. Burning ashes floated on the wind, which fanned the flames that crackled all across the village. The air reeked of burning-the rich smell of wood, the wet odor of straw, the sickly sweet stench of hair and flesh. The fire had already consumed the town’s entire southern half and had started to work its way north.
Kurthak the Black-Gazer stood amid the carnage, his scabrous lips curled into a scowl. The ogre warlord scratched his coarse, green-black beard and glowered at the flames, shifting the weight of his great spiked club on his shoulder. His eyes-the left one nothing but an empty socket-narrowed with disgust as he regarded the remnants of the kender village.
“Sloppy,” he growled.
Tragor, his second-in-command, grunted and spat in the soot. He weighed his massive, two-handed sword, watching the blood run down the groove in the middle of its blade. “We did good enough.”
“No,” Kurthak snapped. He glowered at Tragor, gesturing at the warrior’s bloody blade. “We killed too many.”
“Live kender, dead kender,” Tragor rumbled. “What’s the difference?”
Kurthak shook his great, shaggy head, his ox-homed helmet glinting in the ruddy firelight. “I have explained this to you, Tragor,” he snarled. “A dead kender is no good to us.”
“At least they shut up when they’re dead.”
A snort that might have been laughter erupted from Kurthak’s lips. “Still,” Kurthak grunted, “I gave specific orders. Take them alive. Any clan-chief who didn’t heed me will bleed this night.”
The attack had begun at midday. When Kurthak’s war band-a thousand warriors, only a fraction of the total horde-had descended upon Myrtledew from the shattered wastelands to the east, the surprised kender had been unable to raise any defenses in time. There had been no keeping the ogres from running rampant through town. A few of the kender had fought, but most sought to escape-not out of fear, of course, but because they knew they had no hope of winning and preferred to fight another day.
Escape, however, had not been so easy. The ogres had surrounded the town, cutting it off and slaughtering those who tried to flee west, into the depths of the Kenderwood. Their bloodlust awakened by the fighting, Kurthak’s warriors had rampaged through the village, hacking and smashing anything smaller than they were. By the time the fighting was done, nearly half of Myrtledew’s population of several hundred kender were dead. Of the survivors, many were indeed useless to Kurthak-children, the old, the sick. The ogres had put most of them to the sword.
The rest, however, were being rounded up, even now, amid the blazing wreckage. Kurthak watched as a squad of heavily armed ogres locked a cluster of thirty kender in irons and marched them, at spearpoint, toward the edge of the village. The fierce-spirited kender shuffled along, the chains that shackled their ankles rattling as they made their way toward the slave wagons that waited on the east side of town. They looked truly miserable, which only increased Kurthak’s satisfaction as he watched them pass.
“My lord!” the leader of the warriors called. He turned away from his men and hurried toward Kurthak and Tragor. He was a wart-covered brute with a jagged brown snaggletooth jutting from his mouth. The ritual scars on his cheeks and the horsetail plume on his helmet identified him as a low-ranking officer in Kurthak’s band.
“Argaad,” the Black-Gazer responded. “What news?”
“We captured these wretches at the riverside,” Argaad reported, his chest puffing with pride as he gestured behind him. “They tried to escape on a barge, but we stopped them.”
“Good work,” Kurthak said. He slapped the warrior on the shoulder. “You have done your clan proud.”
“Thank you, my lord.” Argaad bobbed his head, beaming with pride. “I give them to you as a gift. It is an honor to serve you. If you should need a bodyguard, or someone to lead the next attack-”
Tragor cleared his throat. “Argaad,” he said in a low voice, “your gift is getting away.”
Argaad whirled. Somehow, in the middle of his speech, the kender had slipped out of their bonds. Now one of his men lay on the ground, bleeding from a knife wound in his gut, and the rest were watching, stunned, as their captives dispersed.
“Don’t stand there, you louts!” Argaad roared. “After them!” He gave Kurthak a quick glance that was half-apologetic, half-horrified, then turned to lope after his men, driving them after the kender.
Tragor started to laugh, but Kurthak cut him off with a baleful glare. “This is no joke,” the warlord snapped. “Each of those kender is valuable to me.” He motioned toward the fleeing prisoners and the ogres who gave chase. “Come. We will help Argaad catch them again.”
“Good,” Tragor declared, hefting his great sword. “I’ve been hoping for some sport.”
They both ran, charging after Argaad and his men. The kender were quick, but the ogres took long strides, and easily kept pace. As they ran, the towering brutes readied large nets to catch their fleeing prey. The kender weaved among burning buildings, splitting up and regrouping as they charged through the streets, but the ogres-Kurthak and Tragor running now in the lead-kept after them, snarling and howling.
At last they reached the edge of the blasted village. A thicket of tall, tangled bushes rose ahead of them, carrying on for five hundred yards before giving way to the dark Kenderwood. The kender sprinted for the thicket, but Kurthak only grinned, waving his arm toward the forest. “Get ahead of them!” he called. “Trap them in those brambles!”
Obediently the ogres fanned out, charging around the bushes toward the woods. Kurthak and Tragor kept on the kender’s heels. The first ones disappeared into the bushes with a rustle, and the others followed without hesitation-all except the last one, a golden-haired youngster who glanced over her shoulder directly at the warlord and his champion and smiled. Then she, too, was gone.
“Pen them in!” Kurthak bellowed, pulling up at the edge of the brambles. He pointed at the branches, which rustled with the kender’s passage. “Watch the bushes! You can see where they are!”
The ogres soon encircled the rustling scrub, then began to close in, thrusting their spears and swords into the thornbushes. The ring tightened like a noose about the fleeing kender.
“Good idea, my lord,” Argaad declared. “We have them trapped-they have nowhere to go. They won’t get away.”
Kurthak nodded impatiently. “Let us hope so.”
The rustling in the underbrush continued to move slowly toward the tree line. Kurthak, Tragor and Argaad watched impatiently as the ogres closed in, flattening the brambles and cutting swaths toward their quarry.
Then, all at once, the rustling stopped.
The ogres stopped too, their brows furrowing with confusion. Involuntarily, Argaad sucked in a sharp breath through his jutting, rotten teeth. Tragor glanced at Kurthak, his eyes questioning, but the warlord was lost in thought, plucking at his beard as he tried to understand what was going on.
“My lord,” Argaad asked, his face the color of bleached bone, “what should we do?”
Kurthak pondered a moment, then pointed at the spot where the rustling had ended. “Keep going,” he bade. “They must still be there.”