At that moment, Tanis stopped resisting the pull of the whip. Instead, he dove toward the minotaur, inside the arc of the ax.

Tanis drove his sword deep into the minotaur. Before Toj's companions had a chance to react, Tanis and Caven were racing toward the waiting Splotch and Golden Wing. Within minutes, the two men were circling high above the seething army again.

Delged, the scout, shouted to Tanis and Caven. 'Hurry!' He and his owl darted to the south. The roar of the battle had receded behind them when Delged urged his owl into a descent. He pointed again. Tanis saw the slash of blue-gray in the seemingly endless snow, saw the shadow that Delged had said masked the entrance to the Valdane's castle. Golden Wing and Splotch landed, waiting until Tanis retrieved his pack, bow, and sword, and Caven his own weapon. Then the owls leaped into the air again and, with Delged, headed back toward the battle without so much as glancing back.

Tanis stepped cautiously to the edge of the crevasse. Caven followed and poked at the grayish snow with his toe. 'I hope the scouts have the right crevasse,' Caven muttered. Suddenly a chunk of snow broke away, followed by the entire slab that had hidden the glacial crack. The two gaped into the depths. The sides of the crevasse emitted weird blue light; they could see no bottom to the plunge.

'Just jump, Delged said,' Caven muttered softly. 'And to think I used to be afraid of heights.'

Tanis smiled, his smile masking his own fear.

'Tell me again why I'm doing this,' Caven continued, his face sweaty, his gaze unwaveringly set on the crevasse.

'The poem,' Tanis replied. ' 'Lovers three'… That's you and me and Kitiara. The 'spell-cast maid' is Lida.'

'So you've said,' Caven muttered. 'But move ahead a bit to the part about 'frozen deaths in snow-locked waste.' Is that us, too?'

'I believe we all have to be together, with the ice jewels, for Lida's magic to be able to defeat the Valdane and his mage,' Tanis said. 'I hope it's their deaths that are mentioned in the verse. Anyway, it's too late to go back now.'

'It's never too late,' the Kernan said in a low voice. As Tanis was about to reply, Caven leaped into the crevasse. The half-elf bounded after him.

Soon they stood safely at the bottom, staring at the dungeon's walls and the corpses. 'To starve in such a place,' Caven whispered. 'That's no way for a warrior to die.' His hands clenched his sword so tightly that his knuckles turned white.

Tanis pointed to the portal some height above the floor. 'If I stood on your shoulders, I could pull myself up through there and then haul you up.'

'What about the ice wall?'

'Let's hope the cleric's ointment works.'

'Cheerful thought,' Caven said. The Kernan sighed, bent over, and interwove the fingers of his hands. Tanis placed a booted foot in Caven's hands, climbed onto his shoulders, and after the Kernan stood upright, gingerly placed an ointment-daubed finger on the edge of the portal. His finger didn't stick. The half-elf pulled himself through and tossed the rope that hung from a peg next to the portal down to Caven. Tanis felt edgy. 'This is too easy,' he muttered.

Caven heard him. 'You're too suspicious, half-elf. Even if they knew we were coming, they probably thought we'd get caught in the dungeon or stuck to the walls like the rest.'

Swords drawn, they stood quietly in the hallway. 'Not a sound,' Tanis observed.

'We're a long way underground,' Caven added doubtfully.

'Aren't there any guards?'

The two men crept through the hall. The illumination from the ice was so even that it cast no shadows, but it cast both men in a ghostly mien. 'Maybe it's a good sign that Kitiara and Lida weren't in the dungeon,' Caven whispered. 'Maybe the Valdane is treating them well.'

'And maybe the women have gone over to his side,' Tanis said.

'Kitiara, maybe. But not the lady mage.'

They came to the end of the hallway. Other halls branched to the right and left. A short way down, each branched again. Caven swore. Tanis picked the far right one and headed down it. 'It's as good as any,' he explained to Caven.

Just then, Caven reached the end of the hall. As he hesitated, a hairy form lunged at him. A second form caught Tanis from behind. Three more ettins waited behind the first two.

The two men struggled, but they were woefully outnumbered. Soon the ettins had overpowered and disarmed them.

'Caught, caught,' one ettin sang out. 'Master right. Big dumb guys walk right in trap.' He snickered and hopped up and down, cracking Caven's head against the wall twice in his enthusiasm.

'Big dumb… You idiot, Res-Lacua!' Caven spat out. 'Stop that jumping!'

The ettin halted and gazed at the Kernan with both pairs of eyes. 'You know Res?' the right head asked suspiciously.

'I fight for the Valdane, you dolt! Don't you remember me?' When the right head continued to look stupefied, Caven turned to Lacua. 'Do you remember me?'

Lacua nodded slowly. 'Long time ago. Not now.'

'Let go of me,' Caven ordered. 'The Master would be furious.'

Tanis held his tongue. Slowly the ettin loosened his hold on Caven Mackid. The Kernan straightened his clothing. 'Now take me and my prisoner to Captain Kitiara.'

Res-Lacua gazed from Caven to Tanis. 'Prisoner?'

'Yes. A… a gift for Captain Kitiara.'

Two sets of eyebrows furrowed. 'Not captain.'

'Yes, the Captain.'

'General.'

Caven barely suppressed a double-take. 'Yes… Well, take me to General Kitiara.' He drew himself erect. 'Now!' he added. The ettin's four eyes turned toward Tanis, who slumped and tried to look as much like a prisoner as possible. The other ettins mumbled, but in no language that the half-elf understood.

'Master said to bring to him,' Res-Lacua insisted.

'To General Kitiara. He meant to say General Kitiara,' Caven insisted. 'He told me so. After you left him-ah, just now. I just came from him.'

Two pairs of pig eyes squinted. Res-Lacua frowned. 'Take to Master,' Lacua said stubbornly. 'Yes, yes,' added Res. Just as Caven appeared about to insist once more, the ettin's left face brightened. 'But,' Lacua said happily, 'General with Master!'

'Marvelous,' Tanis hissed to Caven as the two were escorted down one hallway, then another, then a third. 'Pay attention to the route,' Tanis added. 'We may need to leave in a hurry.'

'Up through the crevasse? How?' Caven attempted to pause to talk to the half-elf, but Res-Lacua hauled him down the corridor.

'Don't forget-with luck, we'll have a mage with us,' Tanis reminded him.

Several twists and turns later, Tanis and Caven stood before the Valdane in his chambers. The Valdane lounged on a gilded throne, his red hair bright against the purples and blues of his loose silk shirt. Behind him, Janusz worked over a wide bowl on a table set before what looked like a window. Lida assisted him, handing him salvers holding what appeared to be herbs. She didn't meet the captives' eyes. Kitiara, dressed in polished black leather leggings, a tight bodice under chain mail, and a sealskin cape trimmed with thick white fur, had no such reservations. Her stare was cold. She stood motionless at the side of the Valdane's throne.

The view in the window shifted, and suddenly Tanis was gazing at the battleground he'd just left. But it was different now. Puffy white clouds, looking almost friendly, floated above the attacking army, where before the sky had been clear. The Valdane's troops were edging out from under the clouds, but the attacking army seemed not to have noticed.

'By the gods!' Caven murmured. 'Magefire?'

'I see you remember the Meiri, Mackid,' the Valdane said. 'But, no, not magefire. Something much better.

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