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When Kadumi and Ruha reached the summit of the little pass, Lander nodded toward the white sands. “It’s like an ocean.”

Kadumi looked confused. “We call it the Bowl of Loneliness. What do you mean, ‘ocean’?”

Lander started to explain. “It’s a pond of water so large—” A heap of sand sloughed off the northern wall of the pass, and the Harper stopped in midsentence.

“What’s wrong?” Ruha asked.

Before Lander could answer, a black shroud burst out of the sand. At the same time, a swarthy voice called, “Show yourselves!”

The voice was speaking Common, so Lander assumed it belonged to a Zhentarim. Reaching for his sword with one hand and using the reins to whip his mount with the other, the Harper yelled in Bedine, “Ambush! Get out of here!”

Before the camel took two steps, a pair of crossbow quarrels sailed across Lander’s path from the other side of the little pass. The Harper spun around to face the attack and found two men less then ten yards away. They held empty crossbows in their hands. Behind them, four more men were flinging the sand from their black burnooses and rising from their subsurface hiding places, crossbows cocked and ready to fire.

“Move and you die!” warned the figure that had first burst from the sand. “Stay still and perhaps you will live.”

Lander reined his camel to a halt, then slipped his sword back into scabbard and turned to face the speaker. The invader wore the black burnoose the Zhentarim had adopted as their desert uniform. Narrow, steely eyes gazed out from beneath his furrowed brow. Behind him stood another five Zhentarim, sand running from their robes in yellow rivulets. That meant that there were a total of six men on each side of the pass.

The Harper did not answer the leader’s question, for if he showed that he understood their words, the Zhentarim would realize that he was no Bedine. He suspected that the ambushers already knew his identity—or would deduce it from his light skin soon enough—but he saw no reason to make the enemy’s job simpler. Perhaps he might even confuse them long enough to plot an escape.

“Dismount!” the Zhentarim demanded, still speaking Common. While his subordinates kept their weapons trained on the small party, the commander moved toward Lander and motioned for all three of his captives to kneel their camels.

Kadumi started to pull his scimitar from its scabbard, but Lander motioned for the youth to keep his blade sheathed. Ruha was the first to obey the Black Robe’s command, slipping out of her saddle and kneeling at her mount’s side. The widow held the reins drawn tightly to her body, forcing the beast to crane its neck around at an awkward angle. Her mount roared its indignation, but she ignored it.

Puzzled by Ruha’s peculiar action, Lander also couched his own mount, then watched as Kadumi resentfully did likewise.

The Zhentarim walked straight to Lander. “Where are you going? Why are you following us?”

As he spoke, he reached for the Harper’s aba, and Lander knew there was no use in trying to hide his identity. Beneath his aba, Lander still wore the harp and moon pin of the Harpers. After Bhadla had noticed its outline, he had taken care to keep that part of his outer clothing dirty enough to camouflage the pin beneath, but he had not removed the symbol. When Florin had fastened it on his breast, he had sworn to always wear the harp and moon over his heart.

The Zhentarim ripped Lander’s aba open, then looked directly at the symbol. In Common, he called to his men, “This is the Harper. Let’s take them all to Yhekal.”

When the other Zhentarim started to step forward from the sides of the pass, Ruha yelled, “Ride, now!”

Kadumi obeyed immediately, commanding his camel to rise. The widow began chanting in the deep, mystic tones that Lander recognized as a spellcasting.

The Zhentarim commander’s eyes widened in alarm and he pointed at Ruha. “Kill—”

That was all the commander said before Lander struck his shoulder with the edge of an open hand. Without pausing an instant, the Harper went into a well-rehearsed attack. He grabbed the back of the Zhentarim’s neck and smashed the opposite elbow into the commander’s face. When the astonished invader reached to cover his shattered nose, Lander kneed him in the groin, then slapped his open palms against the man’s ears. The Harper finished the attack by slipping an arm around the back of the Zhentarim’s neck, grabbing the chin, and pulling hard. The invader’s neck popped, and the man collapsed into a lifeless heap.

Realizing he was now a target for the crossbowmen, Lander dove forward. The twang of crossbow strings filled the air before he hit the sand, half-a-dozen quarrels whistled past where he had been standing, and his camel roared in pain and terror.

Continuing his dive in one fluid motion, Lander rolled back to his feet, drew his weapon, then turned toward his companions. Most of the Zhentarim were cocking crossbows again. One had drawn his saber and was rushing Ruha, who had picked up two fistfuls of sand and was letting it sift through her fingers. Kadumi drew his scimitar and turned his camel to defend Ruha.

“No, Kadumi!” Lander called, rushing after the youth. “Take the camels and go!”

The youth paused long enough to glance over his shoulder and frown, then urged his mount forward. As he approached the Zhentarim, he screamed his battle cry and raised his sword to strike.

The invader hit the ground and ducked the boy’s wild slash. As the Zhentarim returned to his feet, he lashed out with his saber and cleanly lopped off one of the camel’s rear legs at the knee. The beast fell immediately, spilling Kadumi three feet from the attacker.

The Harper hazarded a glance at the men still fighting with crossbows. They were just securing their bowstrings into place and recocking their weapons. Realizing that he still had a moment or two before they loaded their quarrels, Lander rushed up behind Kadumi’s attacker and brought a vicious slash down on the Zhentarim’s collarbone. Screaming, the man dropped his sword and stumbled forward, falling onto the young warrior. Lander finished the invader with a thrust through the spine and pulled the dead man off of the boy.

Pointing at the string of white camels, Lander yelled, “Take the mounts and go! I’ll protect Ruha!”

Without pausing to see if the wide-eyed youth would obey this time, he stepped past Kadumi. The surviving Zhentarim had reloaded their crossbows and were raising them to fire at Ruha.

Dropping his sword, Lander launched himself at the mage. He struck her full in the body just as the twang of crossbow-strings filled the air. As he hit the ground, the Harper heard more than four quarrels hiss over his head. A heavy groan escaped the throat of Ruha’s mount, then it lay motionless in the sand.

The Harper leapt back to his feet and retrieved his sword. To his relief, he saw that Kadumi had obeyed him and was leading the string of surviving camels down the other side of the ridge. Lander stepped back toward Ruha, expecting to hear a chorus of Zhentarim battle cries. Instead, however, all he heard were screams as the sandy walls of the small pass avalanched down on top of them.

A small hand seized his free arm. “Come!” Ruha urged. “We must hurry!”

Pulling him by the arm, she led the way as they half-stumbled, half-ran after Kadumi and the camels. The pair was thirty yards from the dune’s base before Ruha stopped. Panting and sweating heavily in the terrible heat, Lander turned to look at the ambush site.

All that remained of the small pass was a slight, barely noticeable dip in the ridge of the dune. The sand had rolled forward from both sides, completely burying the ambushers. There was no sign of any of the invaders.

“Do you think any survived?” Lander asked, noticing that the widow still held his hand.

Ruha shook her head. “No. It is one thing to hide in the sand and another to be buried by it. If they are not dead already, they will soon suffocate.”