'Watch out!' Tazi shouted.
From behind the tree, a soldier suddenly appeared with sword drawn. But as Tazi got a better look, she realized that it was no ordinary man. Its skin had a grayish cast to it and a leathery quality that no living being possessed. $bile its gait wasn't shambling, it lacked the fluid movements of the living. Its equipment was rusted, its clothes tattered.
'Zombie!' she yelled and grabbed Naglatha by the arm, yanking her clear just as the undead creature slashed at where the Red Wizard had been reclining. Suddenly, four more appeared from different areas of the orchard and began silently closing in on the women.
'To me!' Naglatha cried, but no one came. Tazi turned her head toward the carriage and saw that the dwarf and the guards had their hands full as several armed zombies cut them off. The griffon, Karst, reared up against his tether at the approach of the undead.
'Use your powers and do something,' Tazi yelled to the Wizard, who appeared dazed.
'These are juju zombies,' she explained in a low voice full of dread. 'My magic is useless against them.' And she shrunk behind Tazi.
One of the undead charged Tazi with a longstaff held at chest height. When it was nearly upon her, she kicked out at its solar plexus. The zombie bent over slightly and extended its arms forward from the force of her blow but made no sound. Tazi swung up the same leg and kicked the staff from its hands straight into the air. She caught the rod in the center with her right hand and, as the creature tried to charge her again, she bent sideways at the waist and caught the zombie with a final kick to the throat. It flew back several feet and didn't rise again.
No longer weaponless, Tazi swung the staff, which she held against her right arm, in an arc to her left and back to her right to give herself a little breathing room. She carried the staff like an extension of her arm, moving toward a larger clearing in the orchard in an attempt to draw the zombies away from Naglatha, who was proving worthless in the battle. The woman simply frowned and pressed both her hands against her temples but did nothing else. Tazi twirled the staff so that it was parallel to her body and let it slip through her fingers until it touched the ground. She struck a cocky pose and hoped to draw the creatures toward her.
'Come on,' she baited them.
Perhaps sensing she would be more fun than the other woman, the remaining four closed in around her silently. With an evil grin on its face, one soldier drew its sword and charged Tazi. Swinging its weapon straight down toward her head with both rotted hands, the zombie came within inches of striking her. But Tazi swung the staff up with both hands somewhat at an angle and blocked the monster's blow. Simultaneously, while the monster's arms were still high in the air, she kicked it in the midsection, and the creature fell backward.
She turned her head and shoulders in time to block another's attack as it swung a cudgel at her back. She pivoted first and blocked the blow with the staff and continued to twist the rod, so that it struck the creature in the head. The very end of her weapon caught the zombie in the iaw and, as its head turned to one side, its lower jaw broke free with a ripping sound and flew across the orchard.
Tazi turned in time to see the remaining two rush her simultaneously. She threw the staff up with her arms to block them, stopped their sword blows, and pushed them back with the staff. She turned her weapon parallel to her body again and planted it in the fertile soil with a solid thud. Certain that it was anchored, Tazi grabbed the staff and turned sideways, using her momentum and the support of the staff to vault herself off of the ground. She kicked her legs in opposite directions and caught each zombie with one of them. She continued her swing, landed on her feet, and pulled the staff free with both her hands. She swung the weapon in an arc again and surveyed the ground to see who was next.
As suddenly as the attack began, it stopped. The juju zombies that were not completely incapacitated rose to their feet and stood at attention. Tazi turned with a wondering look at Naglatha, but the Red Wizard shook her head in denial. Likewise, the servants and Justikar also looked surprised as their battle had been paused for them as well. Beside Naglatha, the air shimmered.
About the size of a full length mirror, a pool of radiance appeared, and a shape started to coalesce in the center. Tazi, breathing hard, her weapon still in hand, watched in fascinated interest as a man's face and shoulders became clearer. He appeared to be in his forties and had piercing black eyes. With just a touch of gray at the temples of his black mane, Tazi thought he was very vigorous looking and found something about him oddly attractive. Judging by the sour expression on Naglatha's face, Tazi realized the two were not unfamiliar to each other.
'Ah,' began the image in the pool, 'Naglatha. I am so glad you were able to get a message through to me just now.' The image looked at the battered zombie soldiers and Tazi could hear a 'tsk' sound escape the man's lips. 'Luckily, I was able to stop my garrison before any harm could befall you.'
'I am most grateful, Zulkir,' Naglatha addressed him respectfully, but Tazi could see it irked the wizard to do so.
'I am sorry for the confusion,' the image continued, 'but I did not expect any of my guests to be robbing my orchards.' A slow smile played about his lips, and Tazi realized that this could only be Szass Tam, the man Naglatha wanted to destroy. She tried to study him as best she could.
'Well, don't you mean Pyras Autorian's orchards? These are still his lands, aren't they?' Naglatha asked, and Tazi could see the calculating gleam in her eyes.
'Yes, yes,' the necromancer dismissed, 'his orchards.'
'Well,' Naglatha told the image, 'no harm's done.'
'No,' Szass Tam agreed. 'This matter is best forgotten. Considering how close you are, I will make sure that quarters for you, your servants, and your pet are waiting.' Without warning, the image faded away.
Tazi kept a cautious eye on the zombies, but they lined up and filed^away in the direction from which they had appeared. She tossed the staff to the ground and walked over to Naglatha. The wizard had her eyes closed and her brow furrowed. Tazi stood before her and waited until she opened them again.
'Well?' she asked Naglatha.
'I was making sure that no one was watching us any longer,' she explained. 'He is no longer scrying us.'
'Szass Tarn?' Tazi asked
'Yes,' Naglatha nodded. 'You handled yourself well,' she acknowledged to Tazi.
'Not a scratch,' Tazi replied.
'That incident was no accident, though,' Naglatha deduced. 'I wonder how many others attending the council might meet with misfortune before this is all said and done.'
'Right this way,' the elegantly dressed servant said as she led Naglatha down an elaborately carved corridor toward the other visiting dignitaries.
'Please make sure that my servants are treated accordingly for my rank,' she said as she gave Tazi a parting wink. She and Justikar stood in the hall and waited for one of the other servants to assist them. It only took a few moments for a young girl, not nearly as richly decorated as the first, to appear. She smiled easily enough, and Tazi thought she was new and her probationary job was to assist the servants of the lich's guests. Not many of them were likely to complain if their bedcovers weren't turned down, so it was not a critical assignment.
'This way,' she directed them in a high voice.
She took Tazi and Justikar down a narrow but well-lit passageway. There were several doorways open along the corridor, and Tazi could see humans that must have been the trusted servants of the important and wealthy guests of Szass Tam. They looked a bit confused in the large, well-furnished rooms with nothing to do. Tazi saw one young man who simply sat on a huge bed and stared straight at the wall in front of him, totally lost. She shook her head sadly and kept walking.
At the end of the passageway, the servant pointed to a room on the left. 'I hope this will be satisfactory. We did not have any other rooms left, so I am afraid you and your companion must stay together.' And the girl lowered her gaze. Tazi suspected she was almost embarrassed that the two of them, being of opposite sex, had to share quarters.
'It will be fine,' she told the girl.
'You are welcome to maneuver through this corridor and you have access to a few of the work spaces along the next set of passageways. But that is all,' she warned them.
'And how will we know when we've reached our boundaries?' Tazi asked.
