The shouting from the hut never ceased, but it changed tone and intensity when Sanda and Kwalu went inside. Soon the guests were bellowing, too, trying to be heard over the sorcerer’s exclamations. Artus could see little of the dim interior, but what he could see was as cluttered as the campsite. Piles of stone and larger hunks of rock seemed to be the hut’s main furnishings.
A particularly loud exchange ended with a crash of stone scattering across a tabletop. Then all was quiet. At last Sanda came outside, a smile on her lips and a gem the size of a small bird’s egg in her hand. “Open your mouth” she said, holding the red stone out to Artus.
He stared at the gem. “I have to eat a stone before T’fima will let me in? Thanks, but I’ll just wait here.”
“T’fima doesn’t speak Cormyrian or Common or any other language you do,” Sanda replied. “Put this on your tongue and you’ll be able to speak Tabaxi for three days. It’s a carnelian, I think.”
The red gem had myriad runes curved into its smooth surface. Artus turned it over in his hand twice, then popped it into his mouth. Like the most delicate of elven candies, the gem melted instantly. However, it tasted more like exceedingly foul orcish goulash or the sole of a soldier’s old boot. Since some claimed orcs used discarded shoes in their cooking, the difference might be purely academic.
Artus spit out what was left of the carnelian, which wasn’t much. “Gods,” he sputtered, “I’ll be lucky if I don’t get sick. Was that really necessary?”
“He’s right. You speak Tabaxi like a native,” Sanda said. “Can you understand me?”
Astonished, Artus nodded. “Perfectly.”
Grandly, Sanda gestured toward the doorway. “T’fima has a few questions for you.”
Artus steered a wide path around the black-furred guardian. The cat watched him go by, then clawed at him playfully as he crossed the threshold. The explorer jumped away from the half-hearted swipe. “I think someone pounded those pearls into his head too hard,” he said facetiously.
“Quiet down or I’ll pound something into your head,” someone shouted from the other side of the huge boulder that stood in the center of the hut. “I put those pearls on that cat four hundred years ago, and he hasn’t complained once!”
Artus’s initial impression of the hut’s decor had been quite accurate. Almost everything in the place was made of stone, or was used to prop up a stone, or was part of some intricate experiment focused, unsurprisingly, on a stone. Glass tubing wound around chunks of crystalline feldspar. Uncut rubies and emeralds churned in beakers full of bubbling liquid. Large rocks served as tables and chairs, though one thick wooden slab was laid across a rock near the door. On it were strewn tools for delicate engraving and dozens of gems, much like the ensorceled carnelian.
And in the center of the hut, as Artus had first noted, stood a monstrous chunk of some sort of indeterminate stone. In a few places, T’fima had carved runes into this central boulder. Mostly, though, it was simply massive and untouched.
A short, fat man waddled around the boulder, as flabby as his furnishings were hard. His eyes were full of barely restrained anger, his mouth gasping open and closed like a beached fish. From the mass of tightly curled hair atop his head to the clenched toes of his bare feet, the man radiated a violent challenge. When he got close to Artus, he stopped and planted his hands on his hips. He trembled like a volcano preparing to erupt before he said, “Well? Why were those fellows spying on me—the goblins and that human?”
The words burst out like magma, full of ready condemnation. Artus was taken aback for a moment. When he gathered his wits, though, his reply was cool and precise.
“The human—whose name is Kaverin Ebonhand—obviously heard from the Batiri you are an important man,” Artus said flatly. T’fima’s title of Ras meant his prestige rivaled that of a duke in the North. “He must have been watching your camp to see who came and went. Lord Rayburton happened to visit at the wrong time.”
“But why take Rayburton?” Ras T’fima asked.
“Kaverin followed me to Chult. He’s looking for Lord Rayburton, mostly because of this artifact he was supposed to have—the Ring of Winter.”
That comment made T’fima pause. “Never heard of it,” he blared, then narrowed his eyes. “Then you’re to blame for those goblins lurking around here, tramping through my garden?”
From a darkened corner near the door, Kwalu said, “The stranger may have brought trouble on his heels, but any problems you have with the Batiri are your own doing. You can come back inside the walls of the city any time you wish. After all, you are still a bara, even if you don’t act like one.”
Artus expected that comment to draw a bitter outburst from T’fima. It didn’t. Instead the sorcerer cocked his head and listened for something on the roof.
The explorer looked up. “What’s—”
Neyobu dashed into the hut. Artus watched, amazed, as the cat leaped from stone table to stone chair without disturbing anything, then scrambled up the large boulder. Before the explorer could finish his question, Neyobu disappeared through a hole onto the roof, a black blur against the bright sky. The commotion that broke out on the tin part of the roof was loud, but brief. An instant later, the cat dropped through the hole again. He held the corpse of a leather-winged albino monkey firmly in his fangs.
Kwalu detached himself from the shadows to examine the strange catch. “It’s not one of Ubtao’s beasts,” he said, taking the monkey from Neyobu.
“It belonged to Kaverin,” Artus said. “He bought the thing from a mage in Tantras. He uses—er, used—it to spy on people.” He lifted the monkey’s head. “I think he could see through its eyes.”
“Lay the thing out on the floor,” T’fima ordered. “Spread it out flat on its back.”
As Kwalu and Artus arranged the winged monkey, the sorcerer went to the wooden-topped table and snatched up a carving pick and two small pieces of colored quartz with a waxy tinge. He scratched a few runes into each of the stones. “The beast is recently enough dead that it will still be linked to its master,” the sorcerer said. “Let us see where he is.”
T’fima placed a piece of quartz over each of the monkey’s pink eyes. A swirl of color appeared in the air over the corpse. It coalesced into a ghostly image of a two-story wooden building, cold torches lining the stairs to its front door.
“That’s the Batiri camp,” Artus exclaimed.
“Just as this Kaverin is seeing it now,” T’fima added.
The image flowed and changed as Kaverin hurried up the stairs, into the goblin queen’s home. Two guards, armed with spears, backed into the shadows of the main hall as the daylight streamed in. Kaverin barely gave them a glance as he rushed toward a door at the end of the hall. A carved human skull grinned from its center.
Skulls lined the room beyond, as well. They covered the walls and rested upon every flat surface, every piece of furniture. In a chair graced with only one such trophy sat Lord Rayburton. The bruises on his face and blood on his tobe told of abuse, but he was alive. A sigh of relief went up from Sanda and Artus.
As Kaverin got closer to Rayburton, Artus found his eyes drawn to the head resting atop the chair. It was a recent kill, missing only some of its skin. Still, the long, stringy hair and round glasses were all Artus needed to see. Phyrra al-Quim had met the treacherous end reserved for Kaverin’s closest allies. He wasn’t pleased by the sight, but he did feel some vague sense of justice.
Kaverin began to look around the room in a seemingly random pattern, almost as if he were dazed. Artus spotted Byrt, crammed into a wooden cage in one corner; Skuld stood over the imprisoned wombat. The silver giant’s eyes were closed, and both sets of arms were folded over his chest. Suddenly Skuld looked up, directly at Kaverin. He wove an intricate pattern in the air before him, his mouth moving in a chant Artus and the others could not hear.