Artus pulled Ibn aside. “There’s something not right about this,” he said. “He’s describing Kaverin, but I just can’t believe that vermin is dead.”
“I can tell you this,” Ibn said. “I have met Judar once before, not long ago, and this one seems to be the same boy. He may be working for Kaverin, but you have no choice but to trust him if you wish to get moving, do you see? Without a guide you will be lost in the jungle.”
“And with a guide, I may be walking into a trap,” Artus concluded.
As Artus turned to Judar, the young man smiled obsequiously. “I will help you, master. I know the jungle for miles in every direction,” He cocked his head, and his large, pale eyes flashed strangely in the sunlight.
“Perhaps,” the explorer murmured. He looked past the others to the graveyard.
“If you do not go on,” Ibn whispered in his ear, “the Cult of Frost will have already won. Sir Hydel will have died in vain.”
That statement of common sense jarred Artus’s conscience. The despair he’d been wallowing in, the self-pity, fell back before the shocking realization he was doing his old friend a disservice by not moving ahead with the quest. “I have a map,” Artus said. “It’s in the hut. We can look at it… in a little while. All right, Judar?”
Without waiting for a reply, Artus walked toward Pontifax’s grave. Clean and white, its edges still undulled by rain, the headstone hunched before the dark mound. Ibn had carved a graceful scroll around the inscription: Sir Hydel Pontifax of Cormyr.
The explorer crouched down, feeling the sun pound down on his pale back and shoulders. The medallion’s chain seemed to drink in the heat, and soon it was stinging the back of his neck. He ignored the discomfort.
After a time, Inyanga appeared and crouched beside Artus. “It is a good marker,” Artus said, “but it’s missing something … and I think I know what it is.”
The boy followed at Artus’s heels as he crossed the compound to his hut. Inside, the explorer tore open Pontifax’s pack and scattered the mage’s clothes. It has to be here.
Artus told himself. Pontifax never went anywhere without it. Maybe it’s in with his spell components. … Ah, success!
Artus held up a small medal, made of the purest Cormyrian silver, with a lightning bolt engraved upon it. Around the edges wound the inscription: Order of the Golden Way. He handed it to Inyanga. “Sir Hydel was awarded this for his service to our king on a great crusade,” Artus said. “He was very proud of it.”
“My father can set this in the stone,” the boy said, nodding sagely.
“And I think I know what other words need to be written beneath it,” Artus added.
By sunset that evening, Ibn had set Pontifax’s medal beneath the scroll that held his name. Across the face of the white stone, he chiseled these final words: Healer & Loyal Friend. Artus could think of no better words to accompany his comrade to the Realm of the Dead.
The expedition set off into the jungle two days later—Artus, Judar, and six bearers. The guide went about his duties, trying hard to earn the explorer’s respect. The youth quickly proved his knowledge of the area, or at least the route Theron’s map delineated.
Artus missed Pontifax’s expertise as soon as he left Port Castigliar. The bearers spoke only their native Tabaxi, and Artus only knew enough of the tongue to struggle through the most rudimentary exchanges. Judar, who spoke fluent Common, was an amiable, if somewhat self-deprecating, conversationalist. He smiled readily and was quick to laugh, though his chuckling was coarse, as if he were amused at some obscene jest everyone else had missed. Artus found it hard to talk with him, so he ordered the guide to march in front once they got underway. Letting the young man set the pace meant he could watch him closely and scan the brush for signs of an ambush.
For the whole day, they followed a well-trodden path, where the vines and undergrowth had been chopped back or crushed underfoot by the local tribesmen. The few natives they passed on the road went silently on their way; the Tabaxi had seen such expeditions before—hunters of treasure or monsters or fame. Such parties offered little threat to the well-armed natives and were rarely interested in trading on fair terms. Artus didn’t blame them for their silence, not when ships like the Narwhal scoured the coast on behalf of operations like the Refuge Bay Trading Company.
The jungle itself was lush and ominous. Creatures called to one another or warned others off with shrieked claims of territory. The cries were sometimes low and rumbling, sometimes high and piercing. It often proved easier to locate an animal by sound or scent than by sight, so thick was the vegetation.
In the high canopy, dark shapes sailed gracefully from branch to branch, tree to tree. Once, Artus saw a child-sized ape, its dark face ringed by a wild frill of white and yellow fur. The creature hung over the road, suspended from a branch by one impossibly long arm. As the company approached, it bared blood-red fangs and snarled. This was only so much show, for it soon fled higher into the tangle of vines and branches. Artus noted with awe that the ape’s back was covered with bristling spines.
The heat drained the life from the party like a massive leech. Artus was hit hardest, though he found unexpected relief in the tunic Theron had left for him. The hooded garment proved to be woven of some magical thread. It kept his body cool and remained unsodden by sweat.
So it went, with the trail becoming more and more overgrown, more and more difficult as they traveled. As dusk called a halt to their sixth tedious day on the winding trail, they set up camp at a crossroads, drawing the tents and foodstuffs from the fifty-pound loads each bearer carried. The cost of the supplies and the wages for Judar and the bearers had taken what little money Artus had left. As the explorer watched the freed slaves struggle with the heavy burdens, he wondered if one day he might be working at the port to earn his way back to Cormyr. More likely, it he failed in this venture, he would be dead. If he succeeded and the ring was half as powerful as the legends told, he’d have no need of a boat to carry him back home. Some claimed the ring gave a man the ability to fly. Others said it had been enchanted in such a way that its wearer need only wish to be someplace to go there.
Artus had managed to keep to himself for much of the trip, but it proved impossible to avoid Judar that evening. The guide came to him as soon as the meal was finished and the watch set. “You are not a talkative man,” Judar observed, more a question than a statement.
Quietly, Artus ran his dagger along a sharpening stone. The light from the gem in its grip cast long shadows across his face, making him look quite dangerous. “I just don’t have anything to say to you, Judar.”
The guide pursed his lips. “I… I have heard about the death of your friend,” he began tentatively. “I am sorry. I just lost my brother, so I know what you feel.”
“Perhaps.” Again Artus scraped the blade along the stone. “We’ll be at Kitcher’s Folly by tomorrow night, if I read the map right.”
“If we keep up this pace, we will have time to make camp at the statue before the sun sets.”
“And the trail ends there?”
Judar paused. “You know it does, Master Cimber. The map says so.” His expression darkened. “I know you do not trust me. A man who has assassins of ice trying to take his life should trust no one.” To Artus’s suspicious look, the guide replied, “The bearers told me about it. Don’t think I could have been in camp a day without hearing of such fantastic things.”
“You’re right. I don’t trust you,” Artus warned. “But if you can figure that out, you should be wise enough to leave me alone.”
Judar abruptly stood. “When the trail ends, you will need to trust me, Master Cimber.” He laughed coarsely, eyes flashing in the firelight. “I do not mean to mock, but you will get nowhere in the jungle without trust.”