pirouetted, mimicking the movements of the guests within.
Stunk squinted through the dark glass. With considerable effort, he kept his smile on his fat face.
'A bit of entertainment,' he said in a loud voice.
His wife appeared in front of him, tall, elegant, dressed in a gown that he was sure had cost him a fortune.
She looked annoyed, but then, she always did. In a voice lowered so that only he could hear it, she murmured, 'In very poor taste. Did you arrange this?'
Stunk ignored her and reached out a hand to stop one of his men who was hurrying by carrying a tray of wine glasses. 'It is only the usual ghosts. Nothing new. Make that clear to our guests,' he told the man.
Waving another servant to his side, he whispered, 'Send a few of the men outside with lanterns. See if you can scare them off.'
The servant's eyes widened but then he nodded and said, 'We will try, saer.'
'Try?' Stunk growled. 'Succeed, man, or find employment elsewhere.'
The ghosts outside continued to dance. The men dressed in disintegrating satin coats and breeches and high-heeled pumps bowed to their ghastly partners. The women dipped and curtsied, holding out their wide skirts of fading brocade trimmed in tattered lace. Beneath once elegant white wigs or confections of molting feathers, strands of hair drooped across their foreheads. They floated closer to the glass, mouths open in dark smiles, and their faces appeared to be nothing but shadows and empty eye sockets.
The guests within the ballroom came to a stuttering, murmuring, fearful halt before this show. With elaborate bows and curtsies, the dreadful guests outside ended their own dance. With languid elegance, they turned to face the ones within and raised their arms, shaking back silk and lace to reveal hands of rotting flesh or polished bone.
The ghosts took a deliberate step forward. All together, they knocked against the glass. Skeletal fingers curled into claws and scratched the windows while others beat against the panes. The sound resembled hail bouncing off the glass.
'It's only a spirit mist,' faltered one young lady to her escort. 'There's nothing to those.'
'They look a bit more rotted than the usual spirits,' he muttered back.
'They look a great deal more solid too,' answered a friend, taking a quick gulp of his wine.
A glass shattered somewhere in the room, dropped by a nerveless hand, and all the guests jumped and then tittered at their fright.
'It's just the usual ghosts,' someone said, prodded by one of Rampage's servants whispering hasty instructions from his master. 'Nothing to worry about.'
A woman seated at the gaming tables shrieked again. 'That's not any ghost. That's my grandmother! Fanquar, Fanquar'-she shook the sleepy husband at her side-'do you think she knows I sold her favorite necklace to pay my dress bills?'
'Wouldn't be surprised,' Fanquar muttered as he slid deeper in his chair. 'You practically ransacked the old lady's jewel box before the corpse was cold.'
The corpses outside stopped their knocking. Now they pressed close against the glass, so ghastly faces could be clearly seen beneath the wigs and wide hats. They turned their heads from side to side as if seeking someone within the ballroom.
The guests inside drew back a collective pace.
'That does look like my uncle,' said one spendthrift young lord to another. 'The one that wanted his art collection preserved for the glory of Waterdeep.'
'Didn't you sell those statues to buy a new horse?' asked his friend.
'Well, yes.' The young noble shifted uneasily from one foot to the other. 'But I'm thinking perhaps I should give the tapestries to my cousin Lady Alshiraina. She has been wanting to do a public display for the children of Waterdeep, so they can learn their noble history. That might lessen the old boy's frown.'
A wavering face flattened its nose against the pane, empty eye sockets turned toward the young noble. The face neither smiled nor frowned. It seemed to be waiting for something and in no hurry. The lack of expression was terrifying.
Glancing at the shadowed figure now stolidly planted on the other side of the fragile window glass, the young man's friend gulped and blurted, 'Give away the tapestries. An excellent idea. Perhaps we should leave to plan it right now.'
'Close the curtains, close the curtains,' Rampage Stunk bellowed at his servants. He snapped his fingers at the musicians, who sat open-mouthed and staring among their instruments. 'Play, play loudly, or you'll collect no fee tonight!'
The heavy velvet drapes hid the ghastly party outside the windows. The music rippled through the ballroom. A few guests, those most deeply in debt to Rampage Stunk, took to the dance floor again, prodded there by his servants.
But the rest of the uneasy crowd remained huddled against the mirrors, as far away from the windows as possible.
Behind the drapes, a rattling of panes could be heard. A shaking of the casements. Even the ominous cracking of glass.
With whispers and murmurs, the guests began to flee for the tall doors leading out of the ballroom.
Stunk stepped in front of one retreating couple. 'Leaving so early? The evening has hardly begun.'
'Such a lovely party,' the woman murmured, looking toward the door.
'1 did want a word with you,' Stunk said to the husband. The man was deeply in his debt and Stunk was sure the guest would not dare leave against Stunk s wishes.
The woman caught her husband's elbow. He looked at her and then at Stunk, and for a moment at the covered windows. With a bow and a face stiff with fear, he said, 'I am at your service at any other time, saer. However, at the moment, my wife is feeling a bit faint and I really must take her home.'
Within moments, the room emptied. Soon there was no one left but Rampage Stunk, his pale wife standing alone by the banquet table, and his servants.
Stunk's wife turned to face him and mouthed, 'I told you that such entertainment was in poor taste.'
'Do you think I invited them? Are you quite mad, my lady?'
As Rampage Stunk began to rage, he realized one other guest remained within the room. At the far end, nearest the doors, stood Lord Adarbrent, rubbing his chin in a satisfied manner.
The old man plucked a full wine glass from a forgotten tray. With a deliberate smile, he toasted Rampage Stunk and drained it dry.
'An excellent party,' the elderly nobleman said and, with a final deep bow to Stunk's wife, Lord Adarbrent left.
Letting out a howl of fury. Stunk swept the glasses off a nearby table, shattering them upon the floor. His servants fled. His lady wife with a disapproving shake of her head silently glided away.
'I don't know how he did it. I don't know who helped him,' shrieked Stunk, stamping his feet like a small child who has had a favorite toy snatched away. 'But I will find out. And they will pay! They will pay in blood!'
THIRTEEN
Ieaplow Carver rolled his way home, just a little foggy from having had more than one drink. But a man needed to celebrate and soothe a heated constitution. And that bout with the big sailor who thought he was the best wrestler on land or sea had certainly left Leaplow sweating. Still and all, it had gone well. Leaplow had never been to sea, but he could safely say that he was the best wrestler within the walls of Waterdeep.
He rubbed his eye and winced. It would be black and swollen by morning. He should remember to ask Myemaw for some cold meat to cool it when he got home. Glancing at the yellow moon riding low in the sky, he considered his grandmother's temper if he roused her out of bed because he'd acquired another black eye. Better to wait for morning, he decided.
People suddenly filled the silent street. A great crowd of revelers appeared, spinning all around him. The men