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“You know I haven’t.”

“Unfortunately, I don’t. My father and I parted company some time ago.”

“Oh?” Kall didn’t bother to hide his disbelief. “When you left, you seemed bent on staying by his side, in spite of everything. ‘Don’t come after him,’ you said. ‘I’ll have to kill you, if you do.’ ”

“I was a child. I didn’t know what I wanted.” Aazen searched his eyes. “Can you grant me that, Kall? Can you believe I may have found other companions, as you have, or do you think I’ll say anything to protect him?”

“I don’t know,” Kall said. “But I never held any hope or desire to get at Balram through you. I only prayed he hadn’t killed you.”

“But think, if you’d found me dead, you would have had yet another reason to slay him.”

Kall didn’t comment. There was too much tension in the room already. “If you can stay long enough, I’d like to introduce you to my companions,” he said, changing the subject.

“I’ve heard many whispers about the beauty of the Lady Morel,” said Aazen. “You’ve done well for yourself, even without my constant looking after you.”

“Yes, Cesira is a beauty, and were she mine, I’m sure my manhood would be subjugated to her will within a tenday,” Kall said, laughing. “Luckily for me, her affections are not settled on me.”

“Aren’t they?” Aazen seemed surprised. “Then why—”

“She’s playing the part of my wife until affairs here settle down,” Kall explained. “Two other friends are looking out for my physical well-being. I’m sure we can find them if we look. They haven’t managed to conceal themselves all evening—I don’t see why they should start now.”

A terrific crash from the dais had both men turning, their hands straying to their sword hilts in a mirrored gesture. The lute player had apparently decided to finish her tune with a flourish, smashing her instrument against the floor. The startled crowd backed away as she crouched to gather the broken bits.

“Lovely,” Kall murmured. “The musicians have obviously taken more than their share of spirits for the evening. Excuse me, old friend.”

The crowd blocked his path, but Kall could see the woman clearly. She knelt in the center of the stage, cradling a mass of what appeared to be mud and protruding roots that she’d hidden inside the lute. Her gaze was feverishly bright as she stared at the mass.

A wave of trepidation swept over Kall. He was no wizard, but he knew the effects of mind magic all too well. He pushed through the crowd, shouting, “Everyone, stand back! Dantane!”

Shocked gasps rang out as the woman began shoveling the strange mass into her mouth. She swallowed and immediately began to choke, the mass lodging grotesquely in her throat.

Black veins speared out beneath her skin, spreading from her windpipe to her shoulders and up her face. Her tan skin bulged, turning purple-black as her head lolled to one side.

A woman in the crowd screamed and fainted. People tripped and fell over her in their rush to get away. Kall found a gap and jumped onto the dais, his sword raised.

“Laerin!” he shouted.

The half-elf appeared below him, lifting the senseless guest over his shoulder. Morgan stood across the room, herding the crowd to the exit. “We’ll get ’em out,” Morgan assured Kall. “Cesira’s coming.”

“Find Dantane!” Kall’s gaze remained fixed on the grim transformation unfolding on the dais.

The lute player’s flesh rippled and shimmered like a heat mirage, her form lengthening and filling out into that of a young man with shoulder-length brown hair and finely tailored clothing. Kall could not tell his identity, for the black blemish remained on his face and continued to spread, exploding up from the flesh of his arms, legs, and torso as boils and bleeding wounds. He seemed to be filling up everywhere, and the strange, oozing black substance had nowhere to go but through his skin and vital organs.

The thing that had been human lurched up to its legs and swiped with a too-long arm at Kall’s face. Kall raised his sword and felt the blade sink into the ooze. The creature howled and pulled back, leaving a trail of black gore that sizzled into the wooden platform.

“Tarshz mephran!” came a shout from the balcony, and a spray of electricity yanked the hairs on Kall’s arms. Bolts of energy ripped into the creature, spraying black blood in all directions.

Kall jumped back, cursing as drops hit his exposed arm and burned.

Dantane climbed onto the balcony rail and floated to the ballroom floor, his robes flaring at the sleeves as his hands shaped another spell. He aimed the Art directly over Kall’s head at the creature. Kall dived behind a harpsichord, pulling its heavy bench over onto its side as a shield when the spell erupted.

Bolts of ice burrowed from Dantane’s palms, then streaked across the room to impale the oozing mass. Gore sprayed the bench, burning black pockmarks into the wood.

Kall rolled to his feet behind the creature. He hacked at it, the emerald sword finding flesh that was human and monster and sometimes a bizarre hybrid. The blade penetrated, and what was left of the lute player’s voice rang out in screeches of pure agony.

A tentacled arm whipped out from where the woman’s stomach had been, catching Kall in the midsection. The blow threw Kall back; he smelled melted leather. He fumbled at his armor buckles, flinching when he felt hands come around him from behind. Fingers pressed flush against the acidic burning.

“Get back!” roared Kall when he recognized Cesira’s chanting voice. Damn her, the last thing he wanted was for her to be acid-seared while protecting him.

Steam rose in a cloud, hissing and stinging Kall’s eyes, but the burning sensation eased. The druid touched the base of his neck, and Kall felt a faint, humming tingle spread across his skin. It lingered in his ears like the last thrum of a fading song. Silently, Cesira drew away to stand beside him.

You’ll have protection from the acid, she told him, for a time. She cocked her head, listening to Dantane’s chants, watching the measured release of power. Go now!

Trusting her, Kall charged in under another rain of bolts, but they seemed targeted only to the creature and sailed harmlessly around him. Tentacles burst at random from the creature’s hips and groin—Kall hacked them off, forming a buffer for Dantane and Cesira.

“Kall!” Dantane’s voice was thick with magic. “The root in its throat—carve it out. Destroy it!”

Kall risked a glance at the throng retreating from the ballroom. A few stragglers had stayed behind—Lord Rays among them—to watch the horrific spectacle.

Kall yelled to Cesira. “Don’t let them see!” The last thing he wanted was for the merchants to witness him butchering the girl, even if she no longer resembled anything human. He waded into the mass of tentacles as the druid backed down the dais’s steps, chanting a familiar spell and arching her arms above her head.

The air immediately grew thick and moist. Dense fog billowed from the portal of Cesira’s arms, curling around the dais in a concealing bubble that hid Kall, Dantane, and the creature from view.

Behind the vapor wall, Kall wedged his sword in the harpsichord bench and grabbed blindly at the creature with his gloved hands, trusting Cesira’s protective spell to hold long enough for him to finish his grim task. He punched into the thing’s mouth and felt teeth and tongue give way with a wet crunch.

Kall fought down a rush of bile. Whatever shape it took now, the thing still had a woman’s head, and Kall had just rendered it a ruin. Steeling himself, he bore down, ignoring the choking and mewling sounds coming from the monster. When his hand met an obstruction, Kall didn’t allow himself to think. He yanked the mass of mud and root straight up.

The creature’s head disintegrated around his arm. Kall lurched backward, hurling the root ball across the dais. It landed, writhing, at Dantane’s boots.