The Mage in the Iron Mask (33 page)

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Authors: Brian Thomsen

BOOK: The Mage in the Iron Mask
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He quickly pulled back his hand as the ladder continued to dance back and forth for a few seconds, before coming to a hanging rest.

Whoever was just using this seems to have arrived at his chosen destination, Rassendyll thought.

Still in hot pursuit, the High Blade’s twin brother paused for a few seconds more, listening for new movements on the ladder, then proceeded to climb upward to where he now knew his brother had fled.

Rickman watched the assassination of High Blade Selfaril from his safe haven of the closet through which he normally entered the High Blade’s sanctuary when the utmost secrecy was required. The ambassador had hidden himself behind Selfaril’s chair, barely obscuring himself from view with the help of a hanging tapestry that provided a barrier of insulation between the seated High Blade and the cold and
drafty stone walls of his chambers.

The stupid ninny, the captain of the Hawks thought. Selfaril will certainly notice the unusual tumor that seems to have grown on the wall behind the tapestry. If he sees that worm, I may have to lend a hand in his disposal.

Rickman thought that he knew all of the secret passages in and out of Selfaril’s study until he saw the High Blade make his entrance on hands and knees through some passage within the hearth.

I will have to have the local engineers make up a floor plan for all of the entrances and exits to this room once I become High Blade, he noted mentally, adding as an afterthought that they would have to be executed when it was completed.

Selfaril was out of breath and distracted as if he had been in a chase and was only now able to take a rest. As a result he failed to see the tumorous bulge against the wall that was the more-or-less concealed assassin.

A feeling of warmth and joy entered the captain of the Hawks’ heart when he saw the wormlike ambassador plunge the crystal wand into the High Blade’s heart, recognizing it as the twin of the one that had been left at the Retreat barely a week ago.

The High Blade is dead! Long live the High Blade! he thought, his own dagger ready to silence Selfaril’s assassin. Next he would sound the alarm, alerting Mulmaster to the tragedy that had occurred; that an agent of the First Princess has killed her husband.

Just as he was ready to make his grand entrance, the sound of scuffling came from the hearth, and a second figure entered the secret chamber.

Rassendyll felt the slickness of sweat on his face as the exertion of the past few hours began to take its toll. All of my training in the Retreat never prepared me for this, the High Blade’s twin thought, pausing for only a moment to get his breath. Holding the ladder firmly with one hand he wiped the perspiration from his brow and face with the other, simultaneously slicking down his recently unshorn whiskers with the discarded sweat before resuming his climb.

Another few steps upward, he felt the end of the ladder and carefully pulled himself up onto the ledge to which it was anchored.

Fighting the desire to stop and rest again, Rassendyll frantically scanned the darkness for some indication of where to go next. A hint of a crack of light to the left provided the only clue so, carefully feeling forward on hands and knees, he crawled to it until he felt the fabric of a curtain, which he lifted up just enough to slip under it.

Rassendyll crawled forward, momentarily blinding himself with the light of the High Blade’s study. Withdrawing back slightly into the shade of the hearth, he allowed his eyes to adjust for a moment before once again penetrating the room.

When he opened his eyes he saw the feet of a robed individual standing by a great desk. Carefully and silently he took to his feet, ready to do battle if necessary.

The wormlike ambassador turned when he heard the noise from the direction of the hearth—only to confront the man he thought he had just killed bearing down on him with a sword.

The ambassador looked at the figure slumped in
the chair, the crystal wand still embedded in its chest, and then back at the apparition approaching from the hearth.

They are one and the same! the Red Wizard realized. He has already come back from the dead to acquit his honor!

Frantically, the portly and soft Thayan civil servant retreated to the place on the wall against which he had previously hidden, but was unable to slip back behind the tapestry. He thought for a moment that perhaps he could extract the wand from the corpse’s chest, but quickly realized that it would do no good against one who had already been killed; and besides that, the corpse’s double was already upon him.

The wormlike ambassador embraced the darkness of fear and panic and fainted dead away, falling to the floor inches from the feet of the approaching twin of the High Blade.

Rassendyll glanced down at the pathetic heap of flesh that was his brother’s assassin, and then looked to the corpse of his brother, the stain of blood slowing in its spread across his chest.

“I only wish that it had been my own hands that had the honor of taking your life,” Rassendyll said out loud to his unhearing twin.

A voice from behind the nearly exhausted Rassendyll replied, “I am sure you do, and, I assure you, you aren’t alone in that wish.”

Rassendyll spun around, careful not to become entangled in the mass of flesh that was the Thayan ambassador’s unconscious body, and immediately recognized the figure stepping out of his closet hiding
place as the man who had accompanied the High Blade on the night upon which the events that would forever change his life had begun.

“We meet again,” Rickman said acidly, “and might I say the beard becomes you much more than the mask your brother insisted upon.”

Far below the High Blade’s sanctuary, four figures pressed onward through the darkness, trying to catch up with the twins. Without the benefit of a torch, or even the fleeting traces of sound left by the one being pursued, the party was unable to keep up given the lead and pace that the younger men possessed. The four hastened guardedly through the black of subterranean night.

Honor led the group, who linked hands in order to stay close together. The blind swordmaster used his acute senses of hearing and touch, and his excellent memory of years earlier to retrace the route he took along these paths many years ago.

“Merch was always fond of these tunnels as a means of getting around Mulmaster without being seen. If I know his damned son Selfaril, and I believe I do, he will no doubt be heading to the High Blade’s study,” Honor asserted, his voice echoing through the underground chambers.

“Don’t you think you should lower your voice?” Passepout said in a hushed tone.

“No,” the blind swordmaster replied, “I am using it to help keep my course. Given the shape and width of the tunnel around us, I am fairly certain that we are going in the right direction as the echo of my voice is traveling further to our rear than it is in front of us.”

Volo thought he understood the principle that the aged Fullstaff was using and decided to make a mental note that he should study and experiment with it before undertaking his
Guide to the Underdark
.

“Now if memory serves,” Honor instructed, “there should be a ladder hanging against the wall to my left.”

“Here it is,” Passepout announced proudly.

“Good,” Honor replied. “Now up we go.”

“Up?” asked the stunned thespian.

“Indeed,” the blind swordmaster confirmed. “Now scoot. The High Blade’s study awaits at the top of this ladder, and Rassendyll may need our help.”

Passepout paused for a moment to look up. The fact that he couldn’t see the top of the ladder frightened him to death.

“Now!”
Honor insisted. “We’re burning daylight!”

Passepout shot up the first few steps of the ladder at a speed that surprised the rest of the group, causing Volo to chuckle at both Honor’s jibe, and the panic that had urged the thespian into action.

“I’ll go next,” McKern replied, pausing only long enough for a body length to separate him from Passepout before joining the climb upward.

“Now you,” Honor told Volo, “and don’t look down. I’ll see you upstairs.”

Volo waited for the prescribed body length to separate himself from the old mage, and joined the climb, proceeding accordingly.

The progress upward continued slowly, with the older mage and the corpulent thespian stopping every few steps to take a breath. On one of these intervals Volo paused for a moment to look down at Fullstaff, who he was sure would be climbing right behind him.

The ladder below the master traveler was completely empty.

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