Her belly rumbled. The goblin’s mention of food reminded she couldn’t remember the last time she’d eaten, but knew it was at least five year ago. “All friends now.” Glissa nodded. “So let’s eat.”
The meal was set out like a feast, though compared even to the meals that Glissa’s mother had prepared for special occasions, the pickings were sparse. The leonin royal family-of which Glissa guessed she was now a part-had obviously fallen on hard times, to say the least. Still, no food had tasted so good in quite a while.
“All right,” Glissa began without ceremony, “I’ll tell you what I know, or what I’ve been able to figure out. You fill in the rest, and we’ll go from there.” She arched an eyebrow when she saw her sister, Dwugget, Yshkar, and Bruenna exchange furtive looks. “We’re all going to level with each other,” she added.
Before she could continue, a goblin guard scuttled into the room and whispered something in Dwugget’s ear. The goblin rose politely with the gingerness of the aged. “Excuse, my friends,” the old goblin said. “A theological dispute has broken out.” Without another word, the goblin followed the goblin out of the dining room.
“Theological dispute?” Glissa asked.
With a wave, Yshkar dismissed the remaining goblin guards, who scuttled after Dwugget. The Kha nodded to Bruenna, who continued.
“When the green sun rose into the sky five years ago, the goblin tribes very nearly degenerated into complete anarchy,” Bruenna explained. “The event confirmed many prophecies that the shamanic leaders had long held to be heresies, and hundreds of goblins had been exiled or executed for espousing them.”
“The Cult of Krark,” Glissa said. “Heretics.”
“But the only surviving group of heretics out there, thanks to you,” Lyese said. “The goblins didn’t want to destroy their own society. Nor could they follow the old leadership. Dwugget saw an opportunity, and when he marched right into the shamans’ tunnels and started preaching to the tribes about Krark and his journey, about Mother’s Heart-well, the goblins lapped it up.” Her sister shrugged. “They made him the new shaman. Renamed the mountain Krark. But it wasn’t easy for Dwugget to maintain order at first. He’d be the first to tell you he worked with some shady characters to keep the goblins in line back then. Once Raksha and I managed to get in to see him, Dwugget was more than happy to talk about an alliance. For one thing, it let him get rid of thugs like Alderok Vektro.”
“Vektro is dead?” Glissa asked.
“Once the alliance was sealed,” Lyese said, any of the Vulshok mercenaries that Dwugget knew had been abusive or murderous to goblins ended up breaking ore in the mines. And now, Dwugget personally intercedes whenever theological arguments break out.”
“Why?”
“Have you ever seen a goblin theological dispute?” Lyese asked.
“Right,” Glissa said. From what Slobad had told her, such disputes were usually considered finished when one side was roasting in the Great Furnace.
Glissa wanted to ask again how her sister had ended up the wife of a leonin monarch, but she decided to wait until the two could talk privately. She catalogued everything else she knew for them, and finally, showed them Geth’s head after servants cleared the table of food.
Yshkar’s reaction was violent and immediate. “Abomination!” the leonion cried and drew a longknife.
“No, wait!” Glissa shouted. She held her arms protectively over Geth’s head. “He’s on our side. I know it stinks, but …”
“My Kha,” Lysese purred, placing a hand on her husband’s sword arm, “Please.”
The leonin growled, but relented at the elf’s touch. Keeping one eye on Glissa’s grisly companion, he replaced the blade and returned to his seat but still stared daggers at Geth’s head.
It wasn’t until then that Glissa noticed she’d readily protected Geth. She chalked it up to the fact that she was still convinced the necromancer’s head would prove useful somehow. And it wasn’t as if he took up much space, or ate anything. He hadn’t even talked for days. In fact …
Glissa flipped open the lid to make sure the smelly thing hadn’t finally expired. “You all right?” she asked.
“Don’t start that,” Geth’s head replied. Glissa shut the flap and set the bag next to her chair. Good thing they had finished eating. Opening Geth’s bag was always an olfactory adventure.
“Now what no one’s told me, but I’m starting to guess,” Glissa told them all, “is that you’ve learned something new. You thought I was dead, then you didn’t.” She locked eyes with Bruenna. “Tell me you’ve learned something. Tell me anything.”
“What would you like to know first?” Bruenna asked.
“What happened to Raksha?” Glissa said.
The dining room fell silent except for the clink of silverware on silver plates. Finally, Yshkar sighed. “Very well. We had hoped we could cover this later, but you have the right to know.”
“And Glissa, it’s important you know it’s not your fault,” Lyese added.
“How could it be my fault?” Glissa asked. “I’ve been frozen or something.”
“Our cousin, the noblest, most honorable Kha since the days Great Dakan walked the plains, disappeared three years ago,” Yshkar said.
“Impossible,” Glissa said.
“It’s true,” Bruenna said.
“He saw the end coming, I think,” Lyese said, “and decided he would rather all of us die than lose the den home. Glissa, Raksha destroyed Taj Nar. If I hadn’t caught him in the act, we all would have perished.”
“Raksha destroyed Taj Nar? That’s insane!” Glissa said, slamming her goblet to the table. “How? Why?”
“I told you why,” Lyese said sharply. “I found him planting some kind of explosive-”
“It was called a mana bomb,” Bruenna broke in. “Apparently Raksha had gotten one from the vedalken. The vedalken created them, but never had reason to use them. Just one can wipe out several acres. Fortunately, Taj Nar itself protected most of us from the brunt of the blast, though at a terrible cost.”
“Afterward, Raksha blamed me,” Lyese said. “If it weren’t for Yshkar, he might have killed me.”
“Our cousin was raving, a madman,” Yshkar said. “But we could not execute him. Not even after what he had done. No Kha, no matter how insane, can be allowed to face death anywhere but on his feet. Yet we could not allow him back onto the field to face an honorable end, either.”
“For one thing, there was no battlefield,” Lyese added. “It was all we could do to get the survivors up here, to Krark-Home.”
“Exile was the only solution,” Yshkar said. “He was given a longknife, a zauk, and cast out in the dead of night.”
“That’s it?” Glissa said. “Do you know where he went?” Something about this was rubbing her the wrong way.
“A few of our scouts reported seeing a leonin on zaukback headed into the Tangle the night he disappeared,” Yshkar replied bitterly. “That alone should tell you his fate. We should have sent someone to record his death, according to ancient law, but no scouts could be spared, of course. He was mad, but in the end he did the honorable thing. The creatures of the Tangle are fierce, our wife tells us.”
“And naturally, you were next in line,” Glissa said.
“The men-all of us, after the fall of the home den-needed a leader. A sane leader. If Raksha is not dead, he might as well be. He is beyond redemption for his act.”
“Sounds to me like there’s plenty of blame to go around,” Glissa said. “All right, I’ll accept that Raksha’s out of the picture. I’ll even accept that you’re the Queen-”
“Khanha,” Lyese interrupted.
“Khanha,” Glissa said. “And I’ll accept Taj Nar’s gone. But how did you find me? What-well, what have I been doing all this time?”
“A year ago,” Bruenna said, steering back to the subject, “I figured out a way to work around the vedalken’s dampening fields. They communicate telepathically, now, entirely. It’s tied to the serum.”