“I won’t be gone long. I just want to have a quick word with these fiends. You never know, I might be able to talk them into redemption. I’ll be right back, I promise-”
“Atta! Guard!” Rhys ordered, and pointed at the kender.
The dog took a stance in front of Nightshade and fixed him with her intense stare. When he moved, she moved. She never took her eyes from him.
“Rhys! It’s fiends!” Nightshade wailed. “Fiends from the grave! You wouldn’t want me to miss that, would you?”
The smoke was thicker and they could hear the crackle of flames. Mina began to cough.
“I think perhaps you should take your charges to my chambers, Brother,” said the Abbot. “The air is clearer there.”
A priest came up to the Abbot and spoke to him in urgent tones. The Abbot gave Rhys a reassuring smile, then left with the priest. Mina continued to cough. Rhys’ eyes were beginning to sting. Cinders and ash and soot rained down onto the garden outside the loggia, touching off small grass fires.
Rhys picked up his emmide. “Come with me, both of you-”
“Rhys, I honestly think I could help against the fiends,” Nightshade argued. “Depending on what sort of fiend it is, of course. There’s your Abyssal fiend and your-”
“Mina!” called a harsh voice.
She turned toward the sound of her name to see a fearsome figure clad in bone armor emerge from the coils of smoke.
“I’ve come for you,” Krell intoned. “Chemosh sent me.”
Rhys understood immediately what was going on. The battle in the street, the fire started by priests of Chemosh-all a diversion. Mina was the prize. Rhys lifted his emmide and placed himself between Krell and Mina.
“Nightshade, take Mina and run!”
The kender leaped off the bench and grabbed hold of Mina’s hand. The shouts and screams, the smoke and the fire confused and frightened her. She clung to Rhys.
Clinging to his robes, she shouted at Krell, “I won’t go!”
“Mina, we have to run,” Nightshade urged, trying to pry her loose.
She shook her head and only held more tightly to Rhys.
Krell displayed an iron ball decorated with golden bands.
“See this, Mina? This little toy is magic. When the ball strikes you, the magic will bind you tight. You won’t be able to move, and you’ll have to come with me. I’ll show you how it works. Watch this.”
Krell flung the iron ball. Nightshade made a desperate attempt to deflect it by jumping in front of Mina. The sphere had not been aimed at Mina, however.
The ball struck Rhys on the chest.
“Bind!” Krell shouted.
Golden bands uncoiled, springing out from the sphere, and encircling Rhys, clamping over his arms and legs. He struggled against the binding bands, trying to free himself, but the more he struggled, the tighter the bands clamped down on him.
Krell, smirking beneath his skull-face helm, strode toward Mina. Atta barked at him savagely and made a lunge for him. Krell grabbed hold of one of the sharp bony protuberances from his shoulder, broke it off, and made a swipe at the dog with the sharp bone. Nightshade grabbed hold of her by the scruff of her neck and dragged the snarling dog underneath a bench.
The golden bands constricted, digging painfully into Rhys’ arms, pinning his arms against his body and cutting off the circulation to his legs. Mina tried pulling and tugging on the bands with all her might, but her might was that of a child, not a god. Atta quivered in fury and continued to lunge at Krell.
Krell leered at Nightshade and jabbed at him with the spear. Laughing to see the kender cringe and the dog try to bite him, Krell stood over Mina, who was still tugging on Rhys’ bands. Krell watched her with amusement.
“Never a god around when you need one, eh, Monk?” Krell jeered. He reached out with his index finger and, roaring with laughter, poked Rhys in the chest.
Rhys tottered. With his legs and arms bound, he could not keep his balance. Krell poked him again, harder this time, and Rhys went over backward. He had no way to break his fall and he landed hard, striking his head on the stone floor. Pain flared. Bright light burst behind his eyes.
He felt himself spiraling downward into unconsciousness and he fought against it, but when he hit bottom, darkness closed over him.
7
Nightshade lost his grip on Atta. The enraged dog charged out from beneath the bench and went for Krell’s throat. Using the bone bracer on his forearm, Krell backhanded her across the muzzle. She slumped down beside Rhys and lay there, shaking her head, dazed. At least she was still breathing. Nightshade could see her ribs move. He couldn’t say as much for Rhys.
Mina was on the floor beside him, shaking him and begging him wake up. Rhys’ eyes were closed. He lay quite still.
Krell stood over Mina. He had tossed the bone spear onto the floor, and he flourished another iron ball in his hand. “Are you ready to come with me now?”
“No,” Mina cried, raising her hand to ward him off. “Go away! Please go away!”
“I don’t want to go away,” said Krell. He was enjoying this. “I want to play catch. Catch the ball, little girl!”
He threw the iron ball at Mina. The ball struck her on the chest. Golden coils whipped out, fast as slithering snakes, and wrapped around her arms and legs. Mina lay helpless on the floor, staring up at Krell with terror-filled eyes.
“Mina, you’re a god!” Nightshade cried. “The magic won’t work on you! Get up!”
Krell whipped around to glare at the kender, who shrank down as small as he could manage, using the bench as cover.
Mina either didn’t hear him or, more likely, she didn’t believe him. She lay on the floor, sobbing.
“A god! Hah!” Krell leered at her, as she screamed in terror and tried pathetically to wriggle away from him. “You’re nothing but a sniveling brat.”
Nightshade heaved a resigned sigh. “I guess it’s up to me. I’ll bet this is the first time in the history of the world a kender had to rescue a god.”
“We’ll leave in a moment,” Krell said to Mina. “First I have a monk to kill.”
Krell broke off another bone spear and stood over Rhys. “Wake up,” he ordered, jabbing Rhys in the ribs with the spear. “It’s no fun killing someone who’s unconscious. I want you to see this coming. Wake up!” He jabbed Rhys again. Blood stained the orange robes.
Nightshade wiped away a trickle of sweat that was rolling down his neck and then, stretching forth his sweat-damp fingers in Krell’s direction, the kender began to softly sing.
“You’re growing tired. You cannot smile.
You feel as though you’ve walked a mile.
Your muscles ache.
You start to shake.
And very soon you’ll start to quake.
And as you ease down to your knees now’s the time
I end my rhyme, you great big sleaze.”
The “sleaze” term wasn’t really part of the mystical spell, but Nightshade added the word because it rhymed and was expressive of his feelings. His chant had been interrupted a couple of times when smoke went down his windpipe and he had to cough, and he worried this might ruin the spell. He waited a tense moment as nothing happened, and then he felt the magic. The magic came from the water and seeped through his shoes. The magic came from the smoke and he breathed it in. The magic came from the stone, and it was cold and made him shiver. The magic came from the fire, and it was warm and exciting.
When all the parts of the magic had mixed together, Nightshade cast his spell.
A ray of dark light shot from his fingers.
This was Nightshade’s favorite part-the ray of dark light. He liked it because there could be no such thing as “dark” light. But that was how the spell was named, or so his mother had told him when she taught it to him. And, in point of fact, the light wasn’t really dark. It was a purplish light with a white heart. Still Nightshade could see how one might describe it as being a “dark” light. If he hadn’t been so worried about Rhys and Atta, he would have really enjoyed himself.