"I vow on the love and friendship I feel for all of you"-his gaze touched each of his friends, gathered them together-"that I will return to the Inn of the Last Home on the first night of Harvest
Home five years hence."
"I will be back in five years," said Kit, resting her hand over Tanis's. Her expression had softened. Her grip on him tightened. "If not sooner. Much sooner."
"I vow on my honor as the knight I hope to become that I will return in five years," Sturm Brightblade said solemnly. He placed his hand over Tanis's and Kit's.
"I'll be here," said Caramon. His large hand engulfed the other hands of his friends.
"And I," said Raistlin. He touched the back of his brother's hand with his fingertips.
"Don't forget me! I'll be here!" Tasslehoff crawled on top of the table to add his small hand to the pile.
"Well, Flint?" Tanis said, smiling at his old friend.
"Confound it, I may have more important things to do than come back to this place just to see your pasty faces," Flint grumbled.
He took hold of the hands of all his friends in his own gnarled and work-hardened hands. "Reorx walk with you until we meet again!" he said, then turned his head, stared very hard out the window at nothing.
The inn's door had long ago been locked for the night. A yawning barmaid was on hand to let them out. Raistlin said his good-byes quickly. He was eager to go home to his rest, and he waited impatiently at the door for his brother. Caramon embraced Sturm, the two longtime friends holding each other close. They parted in silence, both unable to speak. Caramon shook hands with Tanis, and he would have hugged Flint, but the dwarf, scandalized, told him to "get along home." Tasslehoff flung his arms as far as they would go around Caramon, who playfully tweaked the kender's topknot in return.
Kitiara stepped forward to embrace her brother, but Caramon seemed not to see her. Raistlin was now tapping his foot in irritation. Caramon hurried off, brushing past Kit without a word. She stared after him, then grinned, shrugged. Sturm's good-byes were brief and formal, accompanied by low and respectful bows for Tanis and Flint. Kit arranged a meeting place and then Sturm left.
"I think I'll stay a little longer," said Tas. He was just about to upend his pouches to look over his day's "findings" when there came a heavy knock on the door.
"Oh, hullo, Sheriff," Tas called cheerfully. "Looking for someone?"
Tasslehoff departed in the company of the sheriff. The kender's last words were for someone to remember to get him out of jail in the morning.
Kit stood in the doorway, waiting for Tanis.
"Flint, you coming?" Tanis asked.
The barmaid had taken the candles away. Flint sat in the darkness. He made no response. "The girl's wanting to close up," Tanis urged. Still no response.
"I'll take care of him, sir," the barmaid said softly.
Tanis nodded. Joining Kit, he put his arm around her, drew her close. The two walked side by side into the night.
The dwarf sat there, by himself, until dawn.
Book 6
The blade must pass through the fire, else it will break.
Chapter 1
It was the sixth day of the seventh month. Antimodes stood in the window of his room in the Tower of Wayreth gazing out into the night. His room was one of many rooms in the tower open to mages arriving to study, to confer, or-as was Antimodes-to participate in giving the Test, which would be held on the morrow.
The tower's accommodations were of various sizes and designs, from small cell-like rooms for the apprentice mages to larger and more lavish rooms reserved for the archmagi. The room in which Antimodes was comfortably ensconced was his customary room, his favorite. Since the archmage was fond of travel, known to drop by at unexpected times, Par-Salian saw to it that the room was always kept ready for his friend's arrival.
Located near the top part of the tower, the suite consisted of a bedroom and a parlor, with a small balcony that sometimes overlooked the Forest of Wayreth and sometimes did not, depending on where the magical forest happened to be at the moment.
If the forest was not there, Antimodes would often conjure up a view himself. Vast fields of yellow wheat, or perhaps crashing surf, depending on what he felt in the mood for that day. The forest was not there this night, but since it was dark and Antimodes was tired from his day's travel, he did not bother with landscaping. He had been standing on the balcony, cooling himself in the evening breeze. Leaving the shutters open to keep the air circulating-it was unusually hot that night-he returned to a small desk, continued his frowning perusal of a scroll, a perusal which already had been interrupted by dinner. A knock on the door again interrupted him. "Enter," he called in an irritated tone. The door opened silently. Par-Salian thrust his head inside.
"Am I disturbing you? I can come back."
"No, no. My dear friend." Antimodes rose hastily to his feet to greet his visitor. "Come in, come in. I am very glad to see you. I was hoping we might have a chance to talk before tomorrow. I would have gone to you, but I feared to disturb you at your work. I know how busy you are just prior to a testing."
"Yes, and this Test will prove more difficult than most. You are studying a new spell?" Par-Salian glanced at the scroll on the desk, which was partially unrolled.
"It is one I bought," said Antimodes with a grimace. "And as it turns out, I believe I was swindled. It is not what the man promised me."
"My dear Antimodes, didn't you read it first?" Par-Salian asked, shocked.
"I only glanced over it quickly. The fault is mine, a fact which merely increases my annoyance."
"I don't suppose you could return it."
"Afraid not. One of those deals in an inn. I should know better, of course, but I have been searching for this spell for a long time, and she was so very kind, not to mention pretty, and assured me that this would do precisely what I wanted." He shrugged. "Ah, well. Live and learn. Please, sit down. Will you have some wine?"
"Thank you." Par-Salian tasted the pale yellow liquid, rolled it on his tongue. "Conjured or purchased?"
"Purchased," Antimodes said. "Conjured lacks body, to my mind. Only the Silvanesti elves know how to do it right, and it's becoming harder and harder to acquire good Silvanesti wine these days."
"Too true," Par-Salian agreed. "King Lorac used to bring me several bottles whenever he visited, but it has been many years since he has been to see us."
"He's sulking," Antimodes observed. "He thought he should have been elected head of the conclave."
"I don't think that is it. Yes, he did feel he deserved the position, but he readily admitted that he was extremely busy with his duties as ruler of the Silvanesti. If anything, I think he wanted to be granted the honor so that he could have politely turned it down."
Par-Salian frowned thoughtfully. "Do you know, my friend, I have the strangest feeling that Lorac is hiding something from us.
He doesn't come to see me anymore because he fears discovery." "What do you think it is? Some powerful artifact? Is there one missing?" "Not to my knowledge. I could be wrong. I hope I am."
"Lorac was always one to act on his own, the conclave be damned," Antimodes observed.
"Still, he abided by our rules as much as any elf ever abides by rules not of his own making." Par- Salian finished his wine, permitted himself another glass.