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Authors: Philip Athans

BOOK: Scream of Stone
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“I am Captain Olin of the ransar’s black firedrakes,” the man in the black armor said. “I have come on the orders of Ransar Pristoleph to place you both under arrest for the murder of Senator Horemkensi.”

Surero’s heart sank and his hands began to tingle and go numb.

Don’t faint, he told himself. Do what Ivar does.

Devorast heaved a tired sigh, seemed not the slightest bit surprised, and said nothing.

“We didn’t kill him,” Surero heard himself say, then he coughed and clenched his teeth together hard.

“I don’t care,” said Captain Olin.

25

15 Nightal, the Year of Wild Magic (1372 DR) Pristal Towers, Innarlith

TRie jailer dragged Devorast from his cell, but in only a few steps, the prisoner’s legs got under him and they walked side by side. At the end of the short, dark corridor, the jailer rapped on a steel door, which was opened from the other side by one of the guards. The guard grabbed Devorast by his filthy, sacklike gown and pulled him through into a little room lit by smoking candles. A line of buckets sat on the floor. The jailer barked an order at Devorast, who hesitated then saw the buckets and pulled off the tattered garment. The time it took him to disrobe betrayed the stiffness in his arms and shoulders, but his face remained stern and impassive.

The jailer lifted a bucket and threw the contents—water that from Devorast’s reaction must have been ice cold—into the prisoner’s face. Devorast shook, but stood and took two more buckets before he began to scrub at his pale skin, his elbows and shoulders still stiff and slow. When they’d thrown the last bucketful of water at him, Devorast appeared disappointed. The jailer handed him a rag barely less filthy than the discarded gown, but Devorast did his best to dry himself with it without getting any dirtier than he still was. Next he was handed trousers and a tunic, which he pulled on with a touch more fluidity of movement.

“He looks awful,” Wenefir said.

Pristoleph sighed, and still watching the scene that played out in the crystal ball in front of him, said, “You

wouldn’t look much better yourself, considering how long he’s been in there.”

“Was it long enough?”

Pristoleph watched the silent image of the clothed Devorast being dragged from the room, then stepped to a different crystal ball, which had been set on an ornate stand in one of the rooms of his mazelike suite of offices. He’d “rescued” the crystal balls from the Palace of Many Towers and—for a substantial fee, of course—had had them retuned for him by one of Marek Rymiit’s wizards. The new crystal ball showed him a long, steep stairway lit by torches. The jailer led Devorast up, and Pristoleph was happy but still surprised to see that Devorast’s hands were unbound, just as the ransar had ordered.

“Was it long enough?” Pristoleph repeated. “I’d say it was long enough for an innocent man.”

Wenefir shrugged.

Devorast and the jailer passed out of the view of the crystal ball and Pristoleph stepped away, turning to one of the four doors—one on each of the square room’s walls.

“Shall I attend?” asked Wenefir.

Pristoleph paused at the door and thought about it for a moment, then turned to his old friend and said, “I don’t think so, no.”

“I will not be far away, should you need me, my ransar,” the priest said with a scowl.

“Thank you, Seneschal,” Pristoleph replied with a grin that Wenefir didn’t return.

Pristoleph passed through the door and into a room that had been cleared of all furniture. There was another door on the opposite side and the window on the wall to his right had been bricked up. A single glowball, again purchased from the Thayan Enclave, lit the room. In the middle of the floor was a circle of polished stones, each of which glowed with a diffuse light.

Pristoleph took a deep breath when he felt the hair on his arms begin to stand on end. He blinked at the flash

of blue light that announced Devorast’s arrival. The man stood in his borrowed clothes, in the middle of the circle of stones, blinking and looking around himself, taking in the bare walls, then letting his eyes settle on Pristoleph.

“Welcome, Master Devorast,” Pristoleph said. “Please, step out of the circle.”

Devorast stepped over the stones and looked back over his shoulder.

“Another of the little toys I’ve acquired from the Thayan,” Pristoleph explained, though he knew he didn’t have to.

“Where am I?” Devorast asked.

His voice was strong and full, though from his appearance Pristoleph had expected something less voluminous—as thin, anyway, as the man himself.

Pristoleph walked across the room, passing close to the man but otherwise ignoring him until he reached the other door and pulled it open.

“This way, please,” the ransar said then stepped through the door without waiting to see if Devorast followed him.

The sitting room was comfortable, but not as garish as the more “public” rooms of Pristal Towers. The artifacts and art were from the far corners of Faerun, the furniture upholstered in Shou silk, the carved sandstone that surrounded the fireplace imported from Zakhara. Pristoleph went to a delicately crafted cart made from what looked like spun gold and poured himself a glass of Sembian wine.

“Would you like one?” he asked Devorast.

When Pristoleph turned he saw that Devorast had stepped to the tall, arched window that looked out over the city, facing west.

“Pristal Towers,” the ransar said. “Welcome to my home.”

“Am I free to go?” the man asked, still looking out at a sky he hadn’t seen in a very long time.

“Are you refusing my hospitality?”

“I have been your guest for…”

“Fourteen months,” Pristoleph said.

“What more could you wish of me?”

Pristoleph took a long sip of wine and said, “It’s quite good, really. Are you sure you wouldn’t like a glass?”

Devorast nodded, and the gesture betrayed impatience. Pristoleph made sure to take his time pouring the wine, but Devorast made no complaints. Instead, he continued to stare out the window.

“The city hasn’t changed much in fourteen months, has it?” Pristoleph said, stepping to the window and holding out the tallglass.

“No,” Devorast said as he took the glass. “It has not changed at all.”

Pristoleph smiled at the subtext apparent in Devorast’s cold gaze. He sat and motioned for Devorast to do the same. Devorast lowered himself with a barely-audible grunt onto the divan across from Pristoleph.

“There we are,” said the ransar. “Now we can converse like two gentlemen.”

“I am not a gentleman, Ransar,” Devorast said. “You may be, but I am a prisoner.”

“You are no longer a prisoner.”

“Then I am free to go?”

Pristoleph nodded, but Devorast did not stand.

“I imagine you’re curious as to the state of the canal,” Pristoleph said.

Devorast replied, “Only if there is something I can do about it.”

“Well,” said the ransar, “I do hope so. Progress over the last fourteen months has been deplorable. They’re barely farther than they were when you were first detained.”

“And so you’ve dug me out of the hole you buried me in so I can finish it?”

Pristoleph found himself smiling, though by all rights he would never have allowed such impertinence from someone in Devorast’s position. But the truth of the Cormyrean’s words gave him some leeway.

“I’ve dug you out of your hole because I know you didn’t

kill anyone,” Pristoleph said. “At any rate, I know you didn’t kill Senator Horemkensi.” “And Surero?”

“Your friend is being released and sent on his way even as we speak.”

Devorast nodded and Pristoleph knew that was as much of a “thank you” as he was ever going to get—and maybe more of one than he deserved.

Pristoleph took another sip of wine, noticing that Devorast hadn’t touched his, then he said, “Though I know you didn’t kill him, I do know that you made him … well, let’s say a sort of ‘cuckold’ for some months while you led the construction of the canal in secret. Do you deny that?”

Devorast looked him in the eye and took his first sip of wine.

“Let’s say that was worth fourteen months,” Pristoleph said. “Just to keep up appearances, you understand.”

Devorast took another sip of wine.

“There’s something I have been waiting some months to ask you,” Pristoleph said.

“You knew where to find me.”

Pristoleph laughed, ignoring the part of himself that told him he should have been offended, and said, “Indeed. At any rate, I wonder if you can tell me now—why?”

Devorast lifted an eyebrow.

“Why would you work so hard to finish a canal that Little Lord H would have gotten all the credit for? Why help him? Why build it in the first place if so many people, so many powerful people, especially since the death of Osorkon, were aligned against you?”

“You wouldn’t understand.”

And from that answer, Pristoleph understood everything. He set his tallglass on the table between them and rubbed his hands together so Devorast wouldn’t see them shake.

“I have made some inquiries,” the ransar said, “andfind that you have very few close associates and no wife. No family.”

Devorast nodded.

“So you have never known the love of a woman?” asked the ransar.

“I wouldn’t say that,” Devorast answered, and seemed content to leave it at that.

“I have,” Pristoleph pressed on. “I do, I mean. At least, I believe I do. Her name is Phyrea.”

Devorast sipped his wine, and there was something in the way his eyes moved that made Pristoleph’s inner heat flare for the briefest moment. Devorast blinked, noticing the rise in temperature.

“You know her,” Pristoleph said.

“We have met.”

“I never thought, when I was a younger man, that I would ever love a woman the way I love her. Women for me were always… difficult. At first I didn’t have enough gold, then I had too much. But then Phyrea. I had only to look upon her once—and if you’ve met her, then you certainly understand—and that was it. It was as though she ensnared me, or was it that she embraced me? I don’t know.”

Devorast just stared at him, but it was Pristoleph’s turn to refuse to speak.

“I don’t know what to say,” Devorast finally said, and Pristoleph felt in that moment as though he had achieved the impossible.

“In ways I’m often loathe to admit,” said Pristoleph, “I have surrendered a part of myself to her, a part that I will never get back, that is hers to do with as she will. And no matter what she does or what intrudes from outside, I will never regain that part of myself, and will never want to.”

“I couldn’t do that,” Devorast said, and Pristoleph got the feeling it was something the Cormyrean didn’t want to admit to himself, let alone to another. “I don’t know how to do that.”

“Yes you do,” Pristoleph dared. “You have done the same with this canal of yours. That is why you would be content to work in the shadow of a buffoon like Horemkensi. That is why you will sit in a dungeon for more than a year and

come out wanting nothing more than to go back there and start digging again.”

“Are you asking me to do that?” Devorast asked. “As the Ransar of Innarlith?”

Pristoleph said, “I am.”

“And who will the men pretend to take their orders from?” Devorast asked.

“They will take their direction from you.”

“And who will I answer to?” Devorast asked.

“You will answer to me,” said the ransar.

“No,” said Devorast.

Pristoleph closed his eyes and sighed.

“I will finish it,” Devorast went on, “but I will do it for myself. I will do it for the work, for the doing of it, not for you, or for Innarlith, or for any ship captain who expects to make an extra silver piece from it. If you mean for me to do it, leave me alone to do it.”

“Your own way,” said the ransar, “with no oversight? No budget? No restrictions?”

“I can tell you precisely how much it will cost you,” Devorast said, and Pristoleph almost winced at the power of the sheer self-confidence the man radiated, “down to the last copper.”

Pristoleph said, “On your way out, write that figure on a sheet of parchment. Gather yourself—eat, sleep—find your man Surero, and get back to work. Build it for whomever you please, however you please, but I will hold you to the number on that sheet of parchment. Down to the last copper.”

26_

16 Nightal, the Year of Wild Magic (1372 DR) The Thayan Enclave, Innarlith

A-nd what will it cost me to ensure that this stays between us?” Wenefir asked as he hefted the mace, obviously impressed with its perfect balance.

Marek Rymiit didn’t tell the priest what he was thinking, of course, but instead lied. “My dear Seneschal, I assure you that all our transactions are made within the confines of the strictest, most impenetrable confidence. In fact, I won’t even ask you who it is you intend to hide this beautiful piece from.”

Wenefir rolled his eyes and said, “I am willing to pay for your silence, Master Rymiit, but if you assure me I already have it, I will have to hold you to that.”

“And you wouldn’t hold me to it if I did ask for coin?” the Red Wizard risked, and was answered with just the frigid glare he’d expected from the Cyricist. Time to calm things down. “I jest, of course.”

“Fire and ice?” the priest asked, examining the platinum-inlaid mithral head of the enchanted weapon.

“You have merely to speak the word ‘inflae’ and the head of the weapon will burst into flame,” the Red Wizard explained. “It will burn hotter than ordinary fire—but as long as you hold the mace, it will not burn you.”

“And the ice?”

Marek took note of the strange look that fell over the priest as he asked that question. Though it wasn’t an emotion he was personally plagued by, Marek thought the seneschal looked guilty.

“The word is ‘cahlo’, “said the wizard.

“Netherese____” Wenefir sighed.

“You’re familiar with the ancient tongue?”

Wenefir shook his head and laid the mace back into the felt-lined duskwood box. He closed the lid with a gentle touch and flicked the clasp closed.

Marek sank into a leather chair and regarded the priest with a curious eye. The door opened and Marek nodded to the apprentice wizard who looked in.

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