He wanted to throttle her, there and then. He wanted to blast her into a hundred thousand bits. After everything she had done to the Wizards, who had taken her in, taught her, sheltered her—
He just sat and shook for a long time, while she, oblivious, chattered on as if she was old friends with them all.
He didn't know how long it was that he sat, encompassed by anger so hot it burned away every vestige of thought. But finally, it ebbed, and when it did—
Unholy glee flooded in, replacing the anger with savage joy.
He had her now. Finally,
He had to get back, though, before he could lay any charges. And to do that, he had to get far enough away from here that the noise of the transportation spell wouldn't be noticed.
And he mustn't get caught. Not now, not when victory was so close he could taste it.
He opened his mind as he never had before, paying obsessive attention to the whereabouts of all of the sentry-slaves. When he moved, he did so only when he knew that they were nowhere near, and the sounds of his movement would not reach them. He literally felt his way along the path that had brought him here, moving loose twigs out of the way so that he wouldn't step on them and betray himself. At least now the sodden nature of this forest worked for him rather than against him; thick moss apparently covered every surface, and the fallen leaves he encountered were too wet to crackle.
When he was finally far enough away that he felt safe in doing so, he kindled a mage-light once again, got to his feet, and shoved his way along the first clear path he spotted. He didn't particularly care where he was going— and it really didn't matter. He could get back to the Citadel from practically anywhere; what really mattered now was that he get away from
The further he got, the brighter he made his light; at first, as the light itself frightened nocturnal animals out of his path, he was afraid that the disturbances
nitions by the stupid dragons that one shouldn't hunt an area out, but apparently that Elvenlord paid as little heed to such things as
The violent shaking of the bushes was the only warning he got. Then he was engulfed in something horrid, and slimy, and his mage-light went out. There was a moment of absolute surprise, followed by an eternity of hellish pain, and in the end, only ... nothingness.
And then there was no sound at all on the trail, except the noises of something feeding in the dark.
30
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Keman and Shana elected to remain with Kyrtian and his men, but only after modifying their appearance to that of ordinary humans. That was a precautionary measure, easy to maintain, but vital just in case someone came looking for Kyrtian—or decided to scry for him.
Besides, as Keman pointed out, they'd been in these woods before. They'd helped rescue a pen full of slaves from Lord Cheynar by taking them into this forest, and even if they didn't exactly know every trail and rock, at least they knew enough about the dangers to keep Kyrtian's people from walking into trouble. Or rather,
And they were both rather good
teered their services. Shana went with Kyrtian and his people, to act as a lookout for alicorns, ambush beasts, and other un-pleasantries, while Keman went off on his own.
It didn't take Keman very long at all to come haring back to the main party with a find in his hands and a grin on his face.
'Where did you find
'Up that way—' Keman pointed. 'You know dragons can tell where caves are—'
He could tell immediately by Kyrtian's expression that, no, he
'—I've just been cruising at treetop level, probing for caverns. I found a place where there
'I haven't the vaguest clue,' Kyrtian replied, turning it over in his hands with every evidence of fascination. 'But feel it! Feel how light it is? Is it any metal that you recognize?'
'Well, no,' Keman admitted. The lightness, and the lack of corrosion, had been what attracted him in the first place. The dull grey bit of debris, twisted and distorted, had blended very well into the fallen rocks, and only a dragon would have been able to spot it at once, by the different 'feel' associated with it.
'And look at this—' Kyrtian pointed to a tiny line of engraved figures, incised deeply enough that not even the mist collecting on the surface obscured them. 'You see? That's ancient script—