As he came up onto the City wall-deserted here, with no guardpost near-Beldar realized he'd been whispering his question over and over.
He clapped a hand to his beholder eye. It was magical-and all too powerfuclass="underline" Its wounding magic could slay. An appendage of his, now, and not the other way around.
Right?
It felt warm, and-though he knew this was impossible-larger than his entire head. Hastily Beldar slipped his eyepatch up into place.
The world seemed to shift slightly, some of the color going out of it. Beldar stumbled, reeled, and muttered, "What in the name of all the Watching Gods is happening to me?"
He strode a few paces, passing a dark dome beyond the battlements: the top of the great stone head of one of the Walking Statues of Waterdeep. It stood in its niche below the wall-walk, staring blindly out to sea.
Staring blindly. Beldar almost envied it.
Something warm and dangerous stirred behind his eyepatch. The dead hin would soon be found; he must get down off this wall in all haste.
No, that was craven… unworthy. He'd done what he'd done, and must face the consequences.
But a fierce voice rose within him, filling his head and spilling out of his mouth. "Move," Beldar muttered. "Get you gone, idiot! Move!
Just ahead, the next Walking Statue stirred.
Beldar's heart jumped. The Guard had seen his crime! They were causing the Statue to turn and smash him, right here!
"Turn around, blast it all!" he snarled. Must run…
The Statue turned and settled back into its niche.
Beldar gaped.
Staring at it in bewilderment, he found himself wondering just what it was that looked different about this Statue.
Oh. This was the Sahuagin Statue.
He'd see its cruel, monstrous stone face more clearly if it turned a bit that way…
Obediently, with a few grating sounds as it brushed against the mountainside, the titanic stone sahuagin turned to show him its profile.
For a long time Beldar Roaringhorn stood as still as the Statues along the wall he stood on, as the wind whistled past and chilled him thoroughly.
He'd become someone important, after all. The voice commanding the Walking Statues of Waterdeep was coming from his own mind.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
The sky was fading from black to sapphire as Elaith Craulnober strode up the mountainside, his mood as foul as the cold, damp seawind blowing into his face.
He was in Waterdeep, gods cry all! Not Evermeet, not even Suldanessellar. He should have no lord's duties here, not in this noisy, stinking pile of humans and their coins!
Yes, he'd been born noble and raised as a royal ward. Yes, he'd honed skills bright enough to merit command in the royal guard. Yes, he'd been betrothed to a princess of Evermeet-and yes, he was heir to the Craulnober moonblade.
There it all ended. Hadn't he done enough dark work by now to break with all of that?
It must be bred into his bones, this sense of duty. Why else would the slipshields trouble him? Amnestria's ring told him when and where they were used, and slipshield magic-elven magic-had recently been flitting about Waterdeep like starving will o' the wisps rushing to mass drowning.
Though it irked, a few humans could be trusted with such power: oh-so-noble Piergeiron, and even that fat blusterer Mirt. The moneylender might resemble a walrus and outmass a boar, but his wits were almost elder-elf shrewd. Almost.
But now the latest litter of untrained noble whelps held not one, but two slipshields. This was intolerable.
It was also dangerous. They were empty-wits, a flock of bright-feathered, squawking goslings, prancing about blithely and brainlessly unaware that one among them was running with foxes.
How such a reckless fool as Beldar Roaringhorn had managed to acquire a beholder's eye of wounding was bewildering, but whoever was behind that transformation had sent slayers to defend the witless Roaringhorn against the fangs of the Serpent.
That was more than intolerable. Tincheron had gone missing in that battle in Elaith's service, and half-dragons grew not on trees.
Some Craulnobers had been dragon-riders. Matings of dragon and rider brought instant shame, and any offspring were outcast. Elaith had only ever heard of one during his lifetime-the one he'd sought out and befriended, Tincheron. Their long seasons of working together had built Elaith's greatest treasure: trust.
Tincheron would be found, or avenged.
The young noble stood on the city wall gawking down at the Walking Statues like a raw country dullard seeing something larger than his own barn for the very first time.
Marvelous. Not only was young Roaringhorn a fool and a careless waster of magic-really, dispatching an aging halfling with wounding magic when a knife-thrust would do-but, judging by his slack-jawed stupor, he was also a drunkard.
"Lord Beldar," he snapped.
The human spun around. His uncovered left eye-the remaining human one-stared at Elaith alertly enough.
Good. Not drunk, and judging by his expression, sober enough to be insulted by anyone not a close friend using his title and his first name together.
"I am Lord Beldar Roaringhorn," the lordling replied with dignity, putting hand to hilt.
Another insult, but at least the lad had sense enough to know when he faced a foe. Elaith smiled. "Men of your birth are, in Waterdeep, necessarily men of business. I've a shared venture to propose."
Roaringhorn's visible eye narrowed. "I think not," he replied flatly. "Roaringhorn interests couldn't possibly coincide with your affairs."
"Words a trifle grand for one five generations removed from reavers and horse thieves, but let it pass. You've a problem, Beldar Roaringhorn, and I a solution. In exchange for it, there's a small service you could do me."
Remarkably, the noble was managing to school his face into unreadable calm. "What problem might that be?"
"Dead halflings litter the streets so, don't they?"
Beldar Roaringhorn smiled bitterly. "And for a price, you'd make one particular corpse disappear?"
Elaith had already made it vanish, but saw no need to say so. "In return, I ask only for information that might lead to the recovery of a servant of mine you recently met. A half-dragon."
"You set that ready-slayer on me? To what purpose?"
"Obviously not your demise." Elaith inspected his nails. "If I wanted you dead, I'd hardly be standing here enduring this fine weather and the pleasure of your company."
"I asked you a question!"
"I'd noticed as much," Elaith said smoothly, "but you've won time enough to consider my proposal. Have we a bargain?"
"We do not." Beldar gave Elaith a hard stare, proving he was either braver than most men or far more foolish. "What's done is done. I'll take responsibility for my deeds, but I'll make no further alliance with evil."
Elaith didn't bother to hide his amusement. It was rather gratifying to be so clearly and swiftly understood. Mildly entertaining, even, if not quite worth climbing all those steps.
"I did not fail to notice, young Lord Roaringhorn, that you spoke of 'further alliance.' If you should find yourself too deeply mired in whatever evil you now enjoy, do not hesitate to call on me."
Beldar's mouth set in a thin line. "I thank you for your offer, Lord Craulnober, but I must decline."
The Serpent's reply was a small, slightly mocking bow followed by smooth departure.
The wind was rising as he hurried down the mountain. He might yet have use for young Roaringhorn, who seemed to be growing into the sort of human destined for great things-provided, of course, he didn't get himself killed first.
The boy had surprised him. He'd expected insults, and heard none. Nor had Roaringhorn tried to turn aside blame, seeming determined to face the consequences of slaying the halfling. The bleak determination to "do the right thing" was written across his face. Yes, Beldar Roaringhorn was that annoying collision of nobility and stupidity Elaith knew all too well.