here.'

Tika turned to Otik. He seemed about to protest, but, at that moment, there was a flaring light from the kitchen. A scream from the cook indicated that the grease had caught fire again.

Otik hurried toward the swinging kitchen doors.

'He's harmless,' he puffed as he passed Tika. 'Let him do what he wants-within reason. Maybe he's throwing a party.'

Tika sighed and took two chairs over to the old man as requested. She set them where he indicated.

'Now,' the old man said, glancing around sharply. 'Bring two more chairs-comfortable ones, mind you-over here. Put them next to the firepit, in this shadowy corner.'

''Tisn't shadowy,' Tika protested. 'It's sitting in full sunlight!'

'Ah'-the old man's eyes narrowed-'but it will be shadowy tonight, won't it? When the fire's lit…»

'I–I suppose so…' Tika faltered.

'Bring the chairs. That's a good girl. And I want one, right here.' The old man gestured at a spot in front of the firepit. 'For me.'

'Are you giving a party. Old One?' Tika asked as she carriedmover the most comfortable, well-worn chair in the Inn.

'A party?' The thought seemed to strike the old man as funny. He chuckled. 'Yes, girl. It will be a party such as the world of Krynn has not seen since before the Cataclysm! Be ready, Tika Waylan. Be ready!'

He patted her shoulder, tousled her hair, then turned and lowered himself, bones creaking, into the chair.

'A mug of ale,' he ordered.

Tika went to pour the ale. It wasn't until she had brought the old man his drink and gone back to her sweeping that she stopped, wondering how he knew her name.

BOOK 1

1

Old friends meet. A rude interruption

Flint Fireforge collapsed on a moss-covered boulder. His old dwarven bones had supported him long enough and were unwilling to continue without complaint.

'I should never have left,' Flint grumbled, looking down into the valley below. He spoke aloud, though there was no sign of another living person about. Long years of solitary wandering had forced the dwarf into the habit of talking to himself. He slapped both hands on his knees. 'And I'll be damned if I'm ever leaving again!' he announced vehemently.

Warmed by the afternoon sun, the boulder felt comfortable to the ancient dwarf, who had been walking all day in the chill autumn air. Flint relaxed and let the warmth seep into his bones-the warmth of the sun and the warmth of his thoughts. Because he was home.

He looked around him, his eyes lingering fondly over the familiar landscape. The mountainside below him formed one side of a high mountain bowl carpeted in autumn splendor. The vallenwood trees in the valley were ablaze in the season's colors, the brilliant reds and golds fading into the purple of the Kharolis peaks beyond. The flawless, azure sky among the trees was repeated in the waters of Crystalmir Lake. Thin columns of smoke curled among the treetops, the only sign of the presence of Solace. A soft, spreading haze blanketed the vale with the sweet aroma of home fires burning.

As Flint sat and rested, he pulled a block of wood and a gleaming dagger from his pack, his hands moving without conscious thought. Since time uncounted, his people had always had the need to shape the shapeless to their liking. He himself had been a metalsmith of some renown before his retirement some years earlier. He put the knife to the wood, then, his attention caught, Flint's hands remained idle as he watched the smoke drift up from the hidden chimneys below.

'My own home fire's gone out,' Flint said softly. He shook himself, angry at feeling sentimental, and began slicing at the wood with a vengeance. He grumbled loudly, 'My house has been sitting empty. Roof probably leaked, ruined the furniture. Stupid quest. Silliest thing I ever did. After one hundred and forty-eight years, I ought to have learned!'

'You'll never learn, dwarf,' a distant voice answered him. 'Not if you live to be two hundred and forty- eight!'

Dropping the wood, the dwarf's hand moved with calm assurance from the dagger to the handle of his axe as he peered down the path. The voice sounded familiar, the first familiar voice he'd heard in a long time. But he couldn't place it.

Flint squinted into the setting sun. He thought he saw the figure of a man striding up the path. Standing, Flint drew back into the shadow of a tall pine to see better. The man's walk was marked by an easy grace-an elvish grace, Flint would have said; yet the man's body had the thickness and tight muscles of a human, while the facial hair was definitely humankind's. All the dwarf could see of the man's face beneath a green hood was tan skin and a brownish-red beard. A longbow was slung over one shoulder and a sword hung at his left side. He was dressed in soft leather, carefully tooled in the intricate designs the elves loved. But no elf in the world of Krynn could grow a beard no elf, but…

'Tanis?' said Flint hesitantly as the man neared.

'The same.' The newcomer's bearded face split in a wide grin. He held open his arms and, before the dwarf could stop him, engulfed Flint in a hug that lifted him off the ground. The dwarf clasped his old friend close for a brief instant, then, remembering his dignity, squirmed and freed himself from the half-elf's embrace.

'Well, you've learned no manners in five years,' the dwarf grumbled. 'Still no respect for my age or my station. Hoisting me around like a sack of potatoes.' Flint peered down the road. 'I hope no one who knows us saw us.'

'I doubt there are many who'd remember us,' Tanis said, his eyes studying his stocky friend fondly. 'Time doesn't pass for you and me, old dwarf, as it does for humans. Five years is a long time for them, a few moments for us.' Then he smiled. 'You haven't changed.'

'The same can't be said of others.' Flint sat back down on the stone and began to carve once more. He scowled up at Tanis. 'Why the beard? You were ugly enough.'

Tanis scratched his chin. 'I have been in lands that were not friendly to those of elven blood. The beard-a gift from my human father,' he said with bitter irony, 'did much to hide my heritage.'

Flint grunted. He knew that wasn't the complete truth. Although the half-elf abhorred killing, Tanis would not be one to hide from a fight behind a beard. Wood chips flew.

'I have been in lands that were not friendly to anyone of any kind of blood.' Flint turned the wood in his hand, examining it. 'But we're home now. All that's behind us.'

'Not from what I've heard,' Tanis said, drawing his hood up over his face again to keep the sun out of his eyes. 'The Highseekers in Haven appointed a man named Hederick to govern as High Theocrat in Solace, and he's turned the town into a hotbed of fanaticism with his new religion.'

Tanis and the dwarf both turned and looked down into the quiet valley. Lights began to wink on, making the homes in the trees visible among the vallenwood. The night air was still and calm and sweet, tinged with the smell of wood smoke from the home fires. Now and again they could hear the faint sound of a mother calling her children to dinner.

'I've heard of no evil in Solace,' Flint said quietly.

'Religious persecution… inquisitions…' Tanis's voice sounded ominous coming from the depths of his hood. It was deeper, more somber than Flint remembered. The dwarf frowned. His friend had changed in five years. And elves never change! But then Tanis was only half-elven-a child of violence, his mother having been raped by a human warrior during one of the many wars that had divided the different races of Krynn in the chaotic years

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