Выбрать главу

So it went throughout the city. Kender led ogres along, dividing them, trapping them and leading them to their deaths in Kendermore’s twisting, mazelike streets. But there were still hundreds of ogres, and there was no stopping them all. Whenever one fell, another stepped over its body to take its place. Though a great many died, they continued to push deeper into the city, down Strawberry Boulevard, up winding Straight Street, along Whitehare Lane and Horsetail Avenue. Hundreds of unlucky kender perished when they stumbled as they ran or tarried too long to taunt their foes.

Inexorably, the ogres overwhelmed Kendermore, pressing inward on all sides, toward the middle of town. In the end, barely two thousand ogres remained-but they had conquered the kender capital.

Which was just what the kender wanted.

The glow of the magma pool faded behind Riverwind and Kronn as they marched onward, following the sinuous, obsidian tunnel. They walked for an hour in silence, pausing only long enough for the kender to light another torch when the shadows grew too deep to see. From time to time, Kronn looked up at the old Plainsman, a question on his lips, then looked away when he saw the fierce scowl that twisted Riverwind’s face.

The passage began to wind upward, like a snake rising to strike. The floor’s glossy surface gave their feet little to grip, slowing them considerably as they fought to keep from slipping. They gripped the walls, pressing their hands against the smooth stone to keep themselves upright. Their legs burned with pain at every faltering step, and the tunnel’s slope grew ever steeper. Once Kronn’s right foot slid out from beneath him, and he stumbled, grunting with pain as his knee struck the floor. He slipped back several feet, scrabbling to stop himself, before Riverwind’s strong hand caught his sleeve. Straining, the Plainsman pulled Kronn back to his feet.

At last the tunnel leveled out, its slope becoming more and more gentle, until finally they could rest without fear of falling. They sank to the ground, panting as they leaned back against the walls. Riverwind groaned, holding a hand against his belly, then leaned over sideways and retched, his chest heaving violently. When the spasm passed, he sat back upright, wiping his mouth with a weak, shaking hand. He smeared blood across his lips.

“Riverwind?” Kronn asked.

The old Plainsman’s eyes rolled toward the kender. A moment passed before they lit with recognition. “Kronn.”

“How long have you known you are dying?” Kronn asked.

“Many months. That’s why I was in Solace when you and Catt arrived-to say goodbye to my friends.”

“And you still came with us?” the kender asked, astounded. “Why?”

“Because I knew no one else would,” Riverwind replied softly.

After another ten minutes of walking, a light glimmered before them once more. The air grew warm, and a sound rose-a slow rhythm of rushing air, like the pumping of elephantine bellows.

Kronn doused his torch, and they crept stealthily onward through the gloom. The light before them brightened. The passage wound sharply to the left, then arrowed straight for nearly a hundred yards. At its end, they could see, it opened into another chamber.

They traveled that last hundred yards on their bellies, listening to the steady whoosh of the dragon’s breath. Finally, they reached the end of the tunnel.

It opened out into a vast, vaulted cavern, even larger than the magma chamber. Orange firelight danced upon the walls, casting shifting shadows that seemed somehow alive. Looking up, they saw the wide shaft in the nest’s ceiling and the telltale clawmarks in the stone at its edges. Swallowing, the kender and the Plainsman shifted their gazes down, to the floor of the cavern a hundred feet below. Riverwind sucked in a sharp breath.

Malystryx covered the floor of the cave, her wings tucked in at her sides, her head held low to the ground. Her scaly, scarlet sides moved in and out as she breathed. Her body was coiled, wrapped around something in the middle of the chamber. They couldn’t see what she encircled, but they guessed.

The dragonfear that rose from her motionless form crushed Kronn and Riverwind into the ground, paralyzing them where they lay even as their minds screamed at them to flee. Madness clawed at them, and they quivered with terror and dread.

“Blessed goddess,” Riverwind hissed. Kronn whimpered softly beside him.

They lay upon the ledge at the tunnel’s mouth for what seemed like hours, listening to Malys’s breathing, waiting for her head to snap up and her golden eyes to fix upon them. The dragon, however, took no notice of them. Her attention was elsewhere, many leagues away.

Malystryx’s presence was a white-hot cinder in Kurthak’s mind as he and Tragor strode down Elbowpoke Way, toward the center of Kendermore. The street was littered with corpses from both sides of the battle, but there were three slain ogres for every kender who lay broken upon the ground.

The dragon’s voice swelled within him. Black-Gazer, it whispered, menacing. What has happened?

“My people,” Kurthak answered. “Slaughtered…”

Slaughtered? the voice shrieked, forging a stabbing pain behind the hetman’s eyes. By the kender? How?

“Trickery,” he replied. He spat angrily on the ground.

Then you are beaten?

“No!” he snarled. He raised his spiked club, which was stained with kender blood. “We have them cornered now. We will destroy them.”

“There, my lord!” Tragor said suddenly, pointing with his sword. Kurthak looked past the red-dripping blade and saw what his champion had spotted. A group of kender-he counted ten-had stepped out from a side street onto Elbowpoke Way. They froze, staring at the hetman and his champion.

Kurthak glared back at them balefully. “Wait,” he said as Tragor started forward. “It could be another trap.”

Obediently, his champion stopped, waiting tensely. Kurthak’s brow furrowed as he regarded the kender. Seeing the unfeigned fear on their faces, he smiled. This was no trick. The kender were caught, paralyzed by the sight of the two ogres. He charged, his club held high. Tragor ran with him.

The kender faltered, too surprised to react before the ogres struck. Kurthak brought his club down on a female kender’s head, crushing her where she stood. Tragor waded into the battle a heartbeat later. He swung his sword low, cutting a male in half across the stomach. He reversed the stroke, sending another kender’s head skipping away across the cobblestones. Kurthak savagely smashed a fourth. It crumpled, its back broken.

Panicking, the remaining kender tried to flee. Tragor slashed two of them in half with one sweep of his sword. Kurthak swatted a third into the air. The kender flew across the width of Elbowpoke Way, its neck flopping limply, and struck the side of a house before sliding to the ground. The two ogres turned to face their remaining opponents. Two warriors faced them, one armed with a hoopak and the other wielding a battak. Just behind them was an old, unarmed male, quivering with fright as he squinted through a pair of bottle-thick spectacles.

“Run, Arlie!” the hoopak-wielder shouted. He glanced over his shoulder at the old man. “We’ll try and hold-”

Before he could finish, Tragor drove his sword through the kender’s body. The other warrior charged toward Kurthak, swinging his battak. The hetman batted aside the desperate blow with his club, then lashed out in response, crushing his attacker’s skull.

Arlie Longfinger backed away, terrified. Kurthak strode forward, snarling, and slammed his club down on the old herbalist’s head. The Black-Gazer pounded Arlie’s body until nothing remained but a lifeless pulp.