both, with canes and belt-knives and table legs in their hands. 'That's young Hawkwinter!' someone shouted. 'And the Thongolir heir, by the Mountain!'
Lord Eremoes Hawkwinter shot to his feet from where he'd been bandaging and comforting the injured among the tables. He dragged out a wicked warsword, cast aside its jeweled scabbard, and bellowed, 'A Hawkwinter? Where?'
His lumbering run brought him into the forehall in time to see Taeros Hawkwinter smash aside a lion-headed man's sword with his own, snarling as fiercely as if he himself had lion-fangs, and sink his dagger hilt-deep in a leonine throat.
'Blood and valor! Taeros!' Eremoes cried in pleased wonder. He pointed at his son with his sword and roared in a voice that echoed around the shattered hall, 'Rally to Hawkwinter, men!'
'I hate this,' Piergeiron raged. 'To stand here doing naught, while brave folk of Waterdeep fight and die before my eyes! Friends, this is killing me!'
'Nay,' Mirt growled, 'any attempt on an over-foolish paladin's part to get out there will result in me killing ye. Take your brains out o' your sword-scabbard for once and sit tight. Your staying inside the shielding here is all that stops whoever's behind all these man-beasts from burying us all! If they can make the Statues Walk, they need no blasting-spells to bring the Silks down on our heads! Only knowing this magic is protecting your head stops them, as 'tis your head they want!'
'Mirt's right,' Madeiron Sunderstone said quickly, seeing the lack of logic in the moneylender's words but praying the First Lord would not. Stones had bounced from the golden shield-hardly the actions of a foe who wished to take Piergeiron alive! 'So sit down again and belt up. For once.'
The wizard Tarthus was doing more than sitting down: he was lying down, face pale and sweat streaming from it. Holding up the shielding under a succession of swift, hard probing spells was exhausting. It was flickering on the verge of collapse. 'We're… we're going to have to risk it,' Tarthus gasped.
'Right,' Mirt growled, lurching as far away from the others as he could get. Drawing a little carved gem from its own inner belt-pouch, he set it on the floor, joined it with a good deal of huffing and puffing, and touched it with his outstretched arm, muttering, 'Fancylass, I need ye.'
There was a flash, the shielding pulsed with a throbbing groan that made them all wince-and there was suddenly a fifth person standing under the golden dome.
She was female, of mature years, and wore a revealing ruffled nightgown and a startled, less-than-pleased expression.
Most mages of the Watchful Order were frankly scared of 'Mother' Amaundra Lorgra. There was something forbidding about a woman who refused all rank but gave no polite word to anyone and whose glares and simple utterances could cow noble lords and senior Guard officers alike. Her bare feet were covered with corns, her thin legs a-crawl with blue veins, and her eyes were already beginning to flash in exasperation.
'Mirt, what by all the lusts of Sune have you and these idiot lads gotten themselves into this time? Can't a woman get some sleep in Waterdeep these nights? Must you little boys always be waving swords and shouting around the place?'
'Fancylass,' Mirt growled back, not a whit abashed, 'I'd not have disturbed ye had the present threat not been too great to deal with by lesser means. Consider yourself our sharpest blade, if ye will.'
'How so?'
'Ye have the strength and the skill to join with Tarthus, here, and keep the shielding up. They've made the Statues walk and are trying to bring this festhall down on all our heads.'
Amaundra shook her head, went to the floor with the fading remains of graceful agility, and clasped hands with Tarthus. 'You can tell me who 'they' are later-and why young Piergeiron here can't just send the Statues back to their places. Right now, let me dispute something more immediate with you. Are 'they' sane? That is, do they intend to still have a city left to rule, once they've prevailed?'
Mirt shrugged. 'I presume so. Why do it, else?'
'Well, then, if our foes are sane and have enough wits to know anything about magic-and they must do, to move the Statues- they won't want to bring this place down.'
'Oh?'
'Don't act the wide-eyed innocent with me, Mirt-you do it poorly indeed. You are a Lord of Waterdeep, no matter how secret you little boys like to keep such things, so you know about Ahghairon's wards-and all the embroidery Khelben and others have added since.'
Mirt nodded. 'The phantom city walls, the dragon-wards, aye.'
'Aye, indeed. Such castings have multiple anchors. One is a stone in this building's foundation. If this place falls and those stones get shattered or shifted, spell after spell will collapse in a rolling, ever-increasing chaos only Khelben or Laeral can fix-unless Azuth or Holy Mystra herself happen to be strolling by.'
'Barring that, the collapse comes, and what then?'
Amaundra shrugged. 'Nothing much, perhaps. Wards that won't work when we call on them, later, city walls that won't appear when the orcs come howling… that sort of thing. On the other hand, the breaking spells might shatter others nearby, in magical mayhem none can predict-mayhap awakening spells any of Waterdeep's defenders can use or causing old enchantments to fail here and there.'
'Making buildings fall, and all that.'
'And all that, indeed. The problem isn't so much the wards we know about. It's all the ancient, half-forgotten, lingering Ahghairon-cast-this magics everywhere.'
'Oh, tluin,' Mirt growled.
'Oh, tluin, indeed,' the magist agreed tartly, 'which is a fine word for a woman to be using while she's lying flat on her back wearing only a bit of rag with three lusty men about!'
Madeiron Sunderstone promptly stood up, unbuckled his ornate revel-cloak, and laid it gently over Amaundra. 'I believe the appropriate phrase is: 'The things I do for Waterdeep.''
'That, young sir,' came the tart reply, 'is the appropriate phrase for us all.'
'I thought they were just young ne'er-do-wells, wasting our coins and their days wenching, mocking and breaking things,' Ulb Jardeth growled. 'For once, I was wrong, and I don't regret my error one whit.'
'Likewise!' Eremoes Hawkwinter laughed. 'Gods, but that was splendid! Our new young lions, fighting for Waterdeep!'
'And some older lionesses, too,' Lord Jardeth added, looking down at his wife.
There was dried blood all over Allys Jardeth's hand and bodice and dagger, none of it her own, but she was nestled in the crook of his arm quite happily, with none of her usual fussing about how she looked or who was wearing a better gown.
She grinned up at him. 'So is it all over?'
'You sound disappointed,' her proud husband observed. Lord Eremoes Hawkwinter gave the handful of surviving monster-men a hard look-where they were spread out bound on the floor, with swords held to their throats-and shook his head, frowning.
'We're still prisoners in here,' he said quietly, 'with the Walking Statues blocking all ways out, and there's something wrong with Piergeiron, or he'd be commanding them elsewhere. Moreover, the Lord Mage of Waterdeep, who could do the same with a wave of his hand, seems nowhere to be found. I've been hearing rumors no one's seen him for days-including some powerful outlander mages who came a long way to climb the steps of Blackstaff Tower. I'd say we're far from out of the shadows yet.'
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT