A fight broke out in the hall. Only the jester and I were left in the corridor.
“Harold, don’t get involved, they’ll manage without you,” Kli-Kli suggested.
It was an excellent idea, so I did just that and observed the skirmish from a distance. Meanwhile, the ogre had become really furious. He had only one target—that cursed man with yellow hair who was spinning the heavy ogre-club above his head. Limping on its right leg, the monster flailed the ax about in front of itself like the sails of a windmill, hoping to catch the Wild Heart. The giant Honeycomb, who looked tiny compared to the ogre, waited, drawing all of the ogre’s attention to himself.
Then the right moment came. Loudmouth ran in from behind with a crooked grin and slashed his sword across the ogre’s other leg, then darted back out of range of the ax. The monstrous beast fell to its knees with a dull groan and Honeycomb’s ogre-club slammed into its head, crushing the bones of its skull.
Loudmouth walked up to the ogre’s body and kicked it.
“Yu-uck,” Honeycomb drawled, wiping his sweaty forehead with his sleeve. “Bringing down one of them takes years off your life!”
“And I hear that from someone who once did away with six of them in a single day?” Loudmouth chuckled. “Strong, mature ogres, too, not young and green like this one.”
It was all over. Our enemies had been crushed. Tired after their night battle, guardsmen started sitting down on the floor. Not a single supporter of the Nameless One had survived; they had all preferred to die fighting.
“Harold, come on!” the jester cried, wriggling his way between the soldiers like a little fish. He climbed up on the ogre’s body. “Hey, how about this!”
“I’ll give you hey!” Lamplighter said, and spat. This time Mumr didn’t have his huge bidenhander with him and he had had to fight with an ordinary sword. “Just what am I doing fighting ogres so far away from the Desolate Lands?”
“Hey there!” Arnkh protested. “I thought whining was Loudmouth’s favorite pastime, not yours. . . .”
“We must check all the corridors and every room. Some of the villains might have survived,” the prince said.
“I’ll give instructions immediately,” Alistan said with a nod.
I tried not to push myself forward, so that I could slip away as inconspicuously as possible, but I was afraid of going back to my room on my own. What if I ran into someone? It didn’t really matter who it was—enemies who had survived or zealous guardsmen, ready to thread anyone on their spears just to rack up the numbers. Then they could figure out later who I was—friend or foe.
“Come on, Harold, we’re not appreciated here,” Kli-Kli said, walking over to me.
“And where are we going?”
“We can have a drink at least!”
“Oh, no! I have to be on the road this morning, and I intend to get a bit of sleep first.”
“Ah, you’re always such a bore!” the goblin complained, but even so he tagged along to see me to the door.
Deler and Hallas joined us. The dwarf was intending to look for his favorite hat that had been lost in the heat of battle, and the gnome wanted to have a friendly drink with Kli-Kli.
“How’s Marmot?” the jester asked the dwarf a little while later.
“The shield saved him. He sprained his arm, but his ribs are all right. And his head, too. What else do you need?” Deler scratched the back of his own head. “Our Marmot’s always collecting things. He managed to grab a shield from somewhere.”
“But if the ogre had belted Tomcat with that handle . . . ,” the gnome said slowly.
Yes indeed, Tomcat had been fighting in nothing but his drawers.
“Deler, will you join us?” Kli-Kli asked, jumping over the sprawling body of a guardsman in a gray and blue uniform, but with a white armband.
“I should think I will!” The dwarf didn’t need to be invited twice to wet his whistle.
“See, Harold,” the jester taunted me. “Not everyone’s a spoilsport like you.”
I gave the goblin a sour glance, and he shut up, realizing that my patience was exhausted for the day. The gnome muttered something to himself, stuck his mattock under his arm, and started sticking out the fingers on both hands. He was counting how many enemies he had felled. The count came to forty-five. When he heard this figure, Deler stumbled over his own feet and said that some gnomes’ conceit was even longer than their beards.
“What are you haggling for?” Hallas asked, annoyed. “How many do
“Nine of them,” said the dwarf, picking his battered hat up off the floor.
“How many?” the gnome asked indignantly. “Why, the gnomes are fighters like—”
“You’re lousy fighters,” Deler interrupted. “You wore yourselves out on the Field of Sorna. We know, we know.”
“Who wore themselves out?” The bearded gnome was ready to start an all-out fight. “We kicked your backsides!”
“Our backsides!” The dwarf stopped and clenched his fists. “You kicked our backsides? How come you didn’t have a single magician left after that battle?”
“Never mind that, we’ll have magicians again.”
“Oho! Sure you will!” said the dwarf, setting his thumb between two fingers and sticking it under his friend’s
