like cast. The Princess of Callidyrr accompanied the King of Gnarhelm and his son as they approached the giants. Alicia took care to keep the monarch between herself and the prince. She didn't think she could keep her composure if he talked to her.
The three firbolgs were hulking brutes, ten feet tall or more, with craggy faces and dark, scowling eyebrows. They wore crude garments of linen, and their feet were bare. The one in the center of the group, however, was distinguished by a huge black cape. The cloak was tied around his shoulder, with the hood thrown back to hang down his back.
'We seek the king,' said the largest of the firbolgs.
'I'm the king,' declared Svenyird. 'What do you want?'
'No.' The firbolg shook his head defiantly. 'We seek the true king.'
'What?' The monarch's eyes bulged. 'You insolent castaways! I'll see you flogged at the post. You won't insult my-'
'Excuse me,' said Tavish, smoothly sidling past the sputtering King of Gnarhelm. She eyed the cloak as she addressed the center firbolg. 'Is it King Kendrick of Corwell you're looking for?'
The giant looked at her, his brows deepening into a scowl that carved gullies and ravines across his stony face. Alicia gripped Keane's arm as she saw the firbolg's expression.
'Is she in danger?' she whispered.
Keane, studying the giant, disengaged his arm and raised his hands before him-ready with an instant spell, Alicia realized.
'I think,' the firbolg said finally. 'King Tristan?'
'Yes,
'Bard lady?' said Yak, his brows lowering still further as recognition came.
'Yes-I'm Tavish!'
'Good music,' remarked the giant in a softer tone. 'I still dream your harp sound.'
'Why, Yak, you old charmer,' replied Tavish, nudging his hip with her elbow.
'You
'It's a long story,' she explained. 'He helped your father in the final battle against Bhaal.'
'Enough!' barked the giant, his voice surprisingly harsh. The topic obviously annoyed him. 'We bring news.'
His words, in crude Commonspeech, were barely understood by the listeners. Nevertheless, the gist of his tale was clear to those close enough to follow.
'Many humans killed on Grayrock by dragon with fire-breath and fish-men from the sea. They slay and then they go. Make it look like other humans did killing. Or firbolgs. We come to tell you not us.'
'Sahuagin?' asked Brandon, initial disbelief quickly converting to certainty.
'With a dragon,' Tavish observed.
Yak shrugged. 'Flew away, over sea.'
'And so there are more even than these in alliance. Those were
'That's a lot of enemies,' Keane noted. 'And evidence of conspiracy, if they all serve one master.'
'But finally we have an enemy before us!' Brandon proclaimed. 'And now we know where to start-with the bandits of Olafstaad! We can hoist sail with the dawn and be there in a day and a half. Even if they're on horseback, we shouldn't have trouble picking up the trail!'
'Proof,' noted Alicia grimly. 'We'll find out what's behind this.' Privately she reminded herself that the matter of Brandon Olafsson was not settled, but perhaps she could postpone its resolution until this matter was concluded.
'Tomorrow before sunrise!' cried the Prince of Gnarhelm, throwing up his arms and addressing the hundreds of men who flocked forward, pledging to serve as his crew. 'The
The cries of the men of Gnarhelm rang across the shore, and for once, the people were so loud that they drowned out the steady beat of the rain.
Robyn, High Queen of Moonshae, lay in a stillness little distinguished from death. Her second daughter, raven-haired Deirdre, looked down at her mother with a certain sadness. Nevertheless, the young woman was surprised at the remoteness of her feeling, as if a wall had grown around the softer portions of her heart, and so she felt emotion through a gray, stony filter.
Some emotions, she reminded herself, as her eyes drifted to the window. Others burned as hot-or hotter- than ever they had before.
Her thoughts turned to Malawar, as they often did when she took even the slightest moment for reflection. Many days had passed since she had last seen him, and despite the long hours of concentration required for her meditation and studies, she couldn't get the images of his golden hair, his benign smile and shining eyes, out of her mind.
A tapping at the door to her mother's chambers broke her reverie, and she opened the portal to reveal a steward.
'Lady Deirdre, a visitor has come to the castle and would desire an audience at your convenience. He is Earl Blackstone of Fairheight.'
Her heart quickened, for she knew from Malawar that the earl was a confidant of the golden wizard's, and Blackstone's visit here, she hoped, might bring her news.
'See that he is fed and given rooms in the keep.' This would place him close to her should they desire a surreptitious counsel. 'And tell the Lord Earl that I shall attend him … in the throne room, in two hours.'
'Aye, my lady.'
The servant withdrew, and Deirdre cast another glance at the queen. Robyn, of course, had not moved. The princess felt a moment of guilt. She had intended to sit with her mother throughout the morning, but she shook off the feeling easily, for she was now called to an important matter.
Two hours later, dressed in a gown of emerald silk trimmed with a ruby broach and a stole of white fur that set off her hair dramatically, Deirdre entered the Great Hall. It was midafternoon, but the light that spilled through the high windows was dim, filtered by cloud cover, and the room remained cloaked in various levels of shadow.
The Earl of Fairheight bowed deeply, and Deirdre raised her hand, which he kissed gallantly. He wore a black cloak with a silver clasp, and his heavy leather boots had obviously been polished since he had reached the castle, for they gleamed with an inky shine that seemed more willing to absorb light than to reflect it. His dark mane of hair and beard had been brushed into a semblance of control.
Deirdre felt mature, older than her years, and yet a small part of her tingled with excitement as she embarked on matters generally reserved for rulers and their trusted and noble advisers.
They exchanged formal pleasantries, and she sensed that the earl studied her, as if he looked for some response that would key the matter that had brought him to Callidyrr.
'And the matter of the Moonwell?' Deirdre inquired after a few minutes. 'Did my sister render a verdict consistent with the king's wishes?'
'Alas, lady, she did not,' said the black-bearded lord with a sigh. He related his version of Alicia's visit to the Moonwell, including the mysterious creature that the princess said attacked her, but of which no clue could be discovered.
'Now the place remains ensorcelled, and I've had reports that herders and woodsmen are calling the thing a miracle! Of course, the good men and dwarves of the Fairheight Earldom put no stock in the stories.'
'It seems she may have been rash,' Deirdre agreed. Privately she wondered at the tale of the transformation. To her, it bespoke more than mere illusion, and she wondered what power might lie behind it.
'To be sure,' added the earl. 'I left my older son, Gwyeth, in charge of the cantrev, with instructions to burn