the chamber.
Firelight flickered off coppery walls of living wood, leaving knots and burls in shadow but exposing the smoother, rounded portions of the tree's interior. Several passages appeared to open onto the chamber, much like enormous hollow roots.
Off to his left, Fleetfoot sighed and nickered, seeming finally to be emerging from the panic of the moments before. The mule looked around, an expression of torpid curiosity rising in her eyes. Then the creature spied what appeared to be an enormous water trough in the very center of the oaken room, and, mulelike, she acted immediately upon her impulse. She shuffled over to the wooden trough and snuffled the edge with quivering nostrils.
Clear liquid filled the basin, which was about five feet across. On the surface floated a lily-a golden lily, with the leaves of a normal water flower but a blossom of pure gold. Flint reached forward and touched the blossom with a reverent finger. Something so beautiful could not be evil, he thought.
As he touched it, the blossom opened and the pure voice of an elven woman chimed through the chamber:
'Well met, well met, the portal is set, the star is silver, the sun is gold, cast your coin where you're going, then take hold and touch the gold.'
Flint drew back, casting a suspicious glare around the room, as though expecting a beautiful elf with a voice like a bell to step out from one of the rootlike caverns. 'What should I do?' he whispered and turned, as if for an answer, toward Fleetfoot, who gazed back dimwittedly. 'Oh, of all the creatures to get trapped in a magic tree with,' the dwarf said disgustedly. 'Well, it said to cast in a coin, that the portal is set. A portal's a door,' he explained to Fleetfoot. 'And it seems to me I see no real door hereabouts, so perhaps this flower will help us. As my mother would say, 'A bird in the hand makes light work.' '
Flint dug into a pocket and drew out the sum total of his winter's wages from Solace: one gold coin. 'Well, if I starve here, it doesn't matter if I'm broke or not,' he reasoned, and tossed the coin into the honeylike fluid.
The liquid lit up as though a lamp burned deep within it, within the woody flesh of the oak. 'Reorx!' Flint muttered, and grabbed Fleetfoot's mane for support. The sweaty animal nuzzled him again, as if to encourage him. 'Oh, all right,' he snapped, then continued more thoughtfully. 'Maybe I should've tossed the coin into the flower; the lily seemed to be doing the speaking.' He touched one golden petal and…
… Warmth suddenly flooded the dwarf's body, and, turning to the mule-whom Flint now realized he had never appreciated for the dear, devoted creature that she was-he saw a similar warm glow glisten in Fleetfoot's limpid eyes. Flint would later swear that the music of a hundred lutes filled the cavern at that moment. The room faded around them. Flint saw the mule's heavy eyelids begin to close, and he let his own drift shut as well.
Suddenly the room grew noisy, and Flint felt stone, not wood, beneath his feet. His eyes flew open.
He stood, daubed in mud, pine needles, and mule sweat, embracing the odoriferous Fleetfoot. Around him, and slightly below, stood the open-mouthed figures of Tanis, Miral, and several elven courtiers. Flint gazed around him.
He was on the rostrum of the Tower of the Sun. With Solostaran, Speaker of the Sun. And a mule.
Fleetfoot opened her mouth and brayed. Flint took that as a suggestion to speak.
'Well,' he said. 'I'm back.'
Chapter 8
In a guest room at the palace, the dwarf lay floating in a huge bath mounded with blossom-scented bubbles, happily digesting the huge meal the Speaker had ordered prepared for him-wild turkey basted with apricot sauce, and robust Solace ale from Flint's own saddlepack. All but one of the flasks had leaked; the rough ride certainly had not improved the last container of ale, but the beverage was drinkable, at least by Flint's standards.
Off in the palace stable, the dwarf knew, Fleetfoot also was being treated to a fine feed. The animal, apparently still awash in warm feelings from being teleported with Flint, had initially refused to be separated from the dwarf. As Flint told his tale to Solostaran and the rest of the court-and heard Xenoth explain that other elves had spotted a rare, magic-wielding tylor west of the ravine during the past few weeks-the gray mule followed the dwarf around the Tower of the Sun, nuzzling him with a fond muzzle, resting her hairy chin on his shoulder, and aiming a deadly kick at anyone who came too close. She finally consented to leave the dwarf after he led her to the stable himself, fed her a carrot and half a peach, and introduced her to the stablehand who would wash her and give her a proper feeding.
Flint had paused in his tale only when the Speaker ordered a troop of Tower guardians out to hunt for the tylor. The search was made more difficult because the dwarf was uncertain exactly where he'd been attacked. He knew only that it was along a trail several miles from Qualinost, and the pell-mell pace through the underbrush had left him utterly confused as to where he'd encountered the oak tree.
The Speaker, worried about leaving Flint unattended so soon after such a potentially devastating attack, insisted that Flint rest for a few hours at the palace, attended by Miral, who, if need be, might be able to assist the dwarf. Flint protested, professing himself as hale as a dwarf half his years, but Solostaran proved astonishingly stubborn.
Now, as Miral lounged on a bench near the bath, Flint soaked in the bath water, holding his thick salt-and- pepper beard underwater and watching little bubbles escape through it to the surface. He wondered if he could equip his regular quarters at his shop with such a wondrous invention. Dwarves normally hated water-cold, running water, that is, inhabited with fish and frogs and worse, and deep and dangerous enough to gather the unwary dwarf to Reorx's smithy-but this was something else entirely.
'You encountered
'Oh, no, I don't believe so,' Flint rejoined distractedly. 'Lord Xenoth said that lizard was a tylor. Unless tylors and
The mage wiped a patina of sweat from his face and pushed his carmine hood back. His pale face appeared gaunt; circles smudged the skin below his eyes. Yet he spoke patiently. '
He had Flint's attention now. 'Where do these… these '
'To important places, obviously,' Miral said matter-of-factly. 'After all, you ended up on the rostrum in the Tower of the Sun.' He paused, seemingly gathering his thoughts, and his normally hoarse voice sounded raspier. 'Some elves even say the Graystone could be found in a
'There's more than one
Miral waited for the dwarf to surface. 'There have been tales from the oldest elves that the area around Qualinost is host to several
The dwarf had sat up and was gazing about the luxurious room with a worried expression.
'I'm looking for the bucket,' Flint said.
'The bucket?' Miral asked. Suddenly, the mage laughed. 'No, we don't empty the water with buckets.' He stood and walked to the foot end of the tub.
'Magic, then? You know how I feel about magic,' Flint said, worry creasing his face again. 'Is this bath magical?' Such a creation would almost have to be aided by magic, he said, suddenly sad. Hill dwarves distrusted