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Alagh?n Watch Sergeant Faholian Tahrass walked through the graveyard and gazed at the dead bodies that had been taken from the crypt by men in his command. One of the corpses lay naked under the misting rain. "Who are these people?" Tahrass asked. He'd been a member of the watch for seventeen years and not much surprised him. He'd been privy to murder and every kind of sadistic abuse a thinking creature could do to another. Dorric Chansin, Tahrass's young aide de camp, knelt beside the stripped man. Chansin wore rain leathers but they did little to mask the lean hardness of his body. A tracker, his hands roamed the area around the bodies. "Priests," Chansin answered. "Priests?" Tahrass shook his head, hoping Dorric was wrong. "What makes you think that?" Chansin took up one of the corpse's hands. "They're dressed in robes. Their hands are soft. The men don't have much coin between them, but they don't look poor." He held up an object that dangled by a string from his fingers. "And they all carried these." "Symbols of Eldath." Chansin closed his fist over the symbol and gazed up, eyes slitted against the rain. "You follow Eldath's teachings?" "It is my wife's faith," Tahrass said, "and my two daughters'. I have my own. Eldath's ways of peace are not for someone like me." Chansin gave a short nod and turned his attention back to the bodies. "There are some who say Eldath is taking a more active hand in the affairs of the lands around the Sea of Fallen Stars, in light of the return of Myth Nantar to the knowledge of men." "Even so," Tahrass said, "why would these men come to this place in the dead of night?" "I don't know." Chansin took a slim-bladed dagger from his boot and used the point to examine the gaping wound in the naked priest's head. "I would like to know what made this. I've never seen the like." "Magic, mayhap," Tahrass suggested. He glanced up from the body, feeling uncomfortable gazing at a fresh corpse in a place where so many old ones were kept. "Maybe they were already dead," he added. "And climbed up out of their graves?" Chansin smiled despite the harsh circumstances. "Could be," Tahrass replied, taking no offense. "During the years I've stood watch over Alagh?n, I've heard several tales of the dead walking out of graveyards or ambushing people when they come into them." "How many have you seen yourself?" "None." 'There you go," Chansin said. "With mages poking into everything, and necromancers tinkering with things best left alone, I know it's possible that such a thing could happen, but I've never seen it." "You're too young to remember," a creaky, hoarse voice said. Turning, Tahrass spotted a thin old man approaching them. Chansin stood, showing respect. "Mage Vorahl, I meant no disrespect." Vorahl was ancient even by standards set by mages. His skin, even though his health and life had been prolonged by spells, clung to his bones like coarse parchment. Age had pulled the man in on himself, collapsing him a lot over the twenty years that Tahrass had known him. Rain had turned Vorahl's gray hair dark, but silver highlights glinted from the lantern light. His dark purple robes held the badges of his office in the watch, and the intricate sigils of his craft. His staff, once just a tool, now supported his infirm steps. He glanced at the assembled bodies. With pain showing on his face from the effort involved, Vorahl bent over to look at the corpse. His sticklike fingers clung to the staff for support. He shook with palsy and perhaps from the cold. "You shouldn't be out here," Tahrass said. "We can take care of this." The soaking cold was almost too much for him, and his rain leathers offered more proof against the elements than the mage's robes. Vorahl waved the watch commander's words away and said, "When I heard about this, I knew I had to come." Tahrass waited, watching the agony the old mage put himself through to examine all the priests' bodies. "Six of them?" Vorahl asked as he gazed at the yawning mouth of the violated crypt. "Yes," Chansin answered. "And you got them all?" "We think so." Anger clouded Vorahl's crumpled face as he turned back to the two guardsmen. "You think so?" "We took out all we found," Tahrass said. In all the years he'd known the old mage, he'd never seen Vorahl so close to losing control. The wind whipped through the graveyard, raking wet whispers through the trees. "We must find them all," Vorahl stated. "Every man who was murdered here this night must be found." "We will," Tahrass promised. He waved toward the lanterns bobbing through the graveyard. "I've got men out looking for any more bodies and whoever did this." "You won't find him here," Vorahl commented, straightening and looking around the ivy-infested stone walls surrounding the graveyard. "He'll be long gone from this place." "Who?" Chansin asked. "Borran Kiosk," Vorahl answered. "These men were priests from the Temple of the Trembling Flower." "How do you know?" "Because," Vorahl said with an air of impatience, "all those years ago the Emerald Enclave, at the behest of Silvanus, entrusted the priests of Eldath here in Alagh?n to lock the creature away." "Borran Kiosk is a myth," Chansin said. "Then a myth killed these men," Vorahl snapped, "and escaped into the night." He turned from the younger man and hobbled around the bodies, taking care to keep even the hem of his robes from touching them. "We need to identify these men," Vorahl said. "I've already sent a man to fetch a priest from the temple," Chansin said. "As soon as these men are identified by the other priests," Vorahl said, "their bodies will have to be destroyed." "Why?" Chansin asked. "If they are not, they will rise again." Vorahl's voice lowered. "All killed by Borran Kiosk stand a good chance of rising once more as a mindless beast bent on the savaging of all living things. If they don't follow Borran Kiosk's leadership, they will kill on their own. A roaring fire is the only way to insure that they don't return-a fire to burn them first then a sledge to shatter their charred bones. Even burned skeletons have been known to walk." A sudden light flared south of the graveyard, climbing over the top of the stone wall. The nimbus of yellow light warred against the night and the storm. "That's a fire," Chansin said. "It has begun," Vorahl said in a solemn voice. "May the gods preserve us."

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

Morning light woke Druz Talimsir. She rose with slow deliberation, keeping her back to the cave wall. The druid and the bear were gone. Though she knew that neither Haarn nor his animal companion would have thought twice before abandoning her, the druid shouldn't have been able to move so quickly. Her legs tingled with weakness from all the climbing the day before, and the smell of cooking meat filled her nostrils and caused hunger pangs to erupt in her stomach. She turned to the mouth of the cave and started out. Pausing at the entrance, she took up a defensive position and lifted her sword in front of her, ready to strike. Straining her ears for any noises outside the cave, she peered around the entrance. A campfire nestled in a ring of stones on the ground in front of the cave. A brace of coneys hung from a spit over the fire. The slender rabbits' bodies dripped grease, sending flames leaping up at them. Haarn knelt at the disturbed grave, a curious look on his face. "What made this?" he asked without lifting his eyes from the hole in the ground. Druz didn't answer, her irritation growing at the druid's uncanny ability to know she was up and about. She'd made no noise. "Did you hear me?" he asked, facing her. "Yes," she replied. "I heard you." "Do you know what made this?" "A skeleton." Druz sheathed her sword, wondering if the druid intended to eat all the coneys or if there would be any left over. Her stomach rumbled again. "Did you summon it?" "How would I do that?" Druz said. "I wouldn't even have known it was down there." Haarn turned his gaze back to the deep hole. "Where's the bear?" Druz asked. "Foraging." Haarn examined the muddy ground around the hole, but Druz was sure he'd done that once before at least. For the first time she also noticed he was still nude save for herbal poultices that clung to his wounds. "How are you?" she asked. "I'm fine," replied the druid. "Your wounds-" "Are only inconveniences." Haarn stood and gazed down the mountainside into the forest. He peeled the poultices from his body to reveal wounds that had already knitted together and were well on their way to healing. "The skeleton left a good set of tracks," he added. Following Haarn's gaze in the direction of the rising sun, Druz said, "It's headed east." "For now," Haarn agreed. "I was surprised when it didn't try to kill us," Druz said. "Why would it just leave?" "That's something I'd like to know too." Haarn glanced at her then walked to where his clothing hung on a branch. "You'd have been better off getting out of those clothes before sleeping last night," he said. "They would have been dry by now." Druz didn't say anything. As a mercenary, she was used to nudity. Living in the field was a hardship that didn't differentiate between genders. The druid was different, though, but she didn't know why. She looked at the coneys steaming on the spit and said, "I thought you didn't like to kill animals." Haarn dressed, showing only a little stiffness in his movements. "The rabbit population is rising too quickly here," Haarn said, settling his scimitar around his lean hips. "We need the meat after the way we've been pushing ourselves." He padded barefoot through the mud, hardly leaving an impression despite the looseness of the ground. Druz watched him in wonder. The wolf had savaged him the night before, but Haarn hardly showed any sign of injury. Haarn took one of the spitted coneys and handed it to Druz. "Thank you," she said. She sat, a dull headache throbbing at the base of her skull and spreading up through her temples. She pinched meat from the coney and dropped it into her mouth. The meat was almost too hot, but the flavor was amazing. "It's very good." Haarn nodded, but he seemed a little uncomfortable with the compliment. His eyes kept drifting to the hole in the earth. "Where are the wolf pups?" Druz asked, remembering them for the first time that morning. "I gave them to the pack," Haarn answered. "They made it through the night and seemed strong enough to survive." Druz looked around and asked, "What of the pack?" "They've gone." "With no more trouble?" Haarn shrugged. "They tried to hide Stonefur's body," he said, "but I found it." He pointed at a hide-covered lump back by the mouth of the cave. "I took Stonefur's head so you would have it as proof." Druz pulled more strips of meat from the coney and continued eating. "Are we heading back today?" she asked. A hot bath followed by a night in a feather bed seemed too good to be true. She promised to treat herself to both those things when she got back to Alagh?n. "I'm not," Haarn said, making a neat pile of bones in front of him, each one broken where he had sucked the marrow from it. "What are you going to do?" Haarn looked east and said, "I'm going to follow the skeleton."