He was overcome with an urge to stop what he was doing and walk toward-something to his left.
“Do you mind, I’m a little busy here,” he muttered, waving an arm past his ear, as if that would help. “Look, unless you’re a good-looking woman-or, frip, even a bad-looking one-I’m going to be very put out when I beat you into submission for interrupting my-”
Suddenly, Rol couldn’t move.
For all his life, Rol had prided himself on being in tune with his body. If you were going to make a living at physical violence, you needed to be in control of your movements and be fully aware of what you were capable of. You had to know your own strength down to the last iota. This was useful not only when he was beating up bandits or killing an anakore, but also in his dealings with women, who appreciated his strength and self- control.
So to find himself suddenly unable to control his limbs pissed him right off.
Unfortunately, he couldn’t even shout his outrage to the skies-or even to Gan, who wasn’t all
His legs awkwardly started to amble across the sand to his left, farther from the dune where he’d been relieving himself. More than once he fell forward, only to clamber clumsily to his feet.
It was magic of some kind, that was painfully obvious. Rol had been on the receiving end of the Way before. But that usually had some impact on the thoughts of the person being affected. More than one mage had subsumed Rol’s will to his own, but on those occasions, Rol only had the vaguest recollection of the time he was controlled.
This, though, was wholly different. He was fully aware of what was happening. If this was the Way, it was a kind Rol had never encountered before.
And that, quite frankly, was pretty damned unlikely.
Whatever controlled him didn’t seem to know how the human body worked. About six years back, Rol had been injured in his left leg so badly that he couldn’t walk for months. Gan and Fehrd had managed to find a healing potion that cured him-a nobleman’s son couldn’t actually pay for services rendered, but he was able to get his hands on the potion-but after being bedridden for so long, he had to virtually relearn the simple act of walking.
Even then, though, he did better than whatever controlled him was capable of making him do.
After a few more minutes of ridiculous walking, Rol found himself standing before the corpse of a creature unlike any he’d seen in this or any other part of the desert. It was gray-at least the parts of its skin that were still intact-with four legs in varying degrees of decay and destruction. Bones jutted through cracked, desiccated flesh, rotted organs dotted about.
Rol barely registered any of that, because his eyes were forced to be focused upon a tiny pool of crimson and silver flecked liquid in the chest cavity. For several seconds, he just stared at it. Rol wondered what it was. It was the wrong consistency to be blood …
Then it started to roil and bubble, and Rol heard a voice that was at once everywhere and nowhere.
Rol had all of about two seconds to wonder who the frip Tharizdun was before the liquid shot upward like a waterspout to his face.
It covered his visage, blinding him, leaving him unable to breathe.
Then it began to ooze into every opening: his eyes, his nose, his mouth, his ears. All at once, his eyes stung, he gagged, he suffocated …
Hot knives of pain sliced through his mind as he tried desperately to scream, but he couldn’t even breathe, nor even attempt to draw breath.
He collapsed face first onto the sand, thinking that this was a really stupid way to die …
Gan was rather surprised when Rol walked right past him without acknowledging his presence.
He was even more surprised to realize that he hadn’t closed his breeches.
“Rol, what’re you doing?”
“Hm?” Rol stopped and stared at Gan as if he’d never seen him before. “What?”
Gan just pointed at his groin.
Looking down, Rol said, “Oi! Sorry about that.” Quickly, he adjusted his clothes.
“After your whole ‘family jewels’ nonsense, I can’t believe you’d just wander around like that.”
“Sorry,” Rol said, “I was distracted.”
Gan frowned. “You feeling all right?”
“Of course. I feel great, why?”
“Rol, I’ve known you for ten years, and this is the first time you’ve ever apologized for anything.”
Rol shrugged and again said, “Sorry.”
That was twice Rol used that word in the last minute and also in Gan’s lifetime. “Rol, what’s the matter?”
“Nothing. I just had to pee. Gonna go get some sleep.”
As Rol walked past him, Gan called out, “Aren’t you gonna try to sleep with Tirana?”
Rol ignored him and kept walking.
Gan assumed he was just refusing to rise to the bait. He rarely did, truth be told, which was one of Rol’s more annoying qualities. Especially since Gan always allowed himself to be baited by the other two.
Turning, he continued his walk around the caravan perimeter. He had seen the same dead cacti that Rol mentioned, and that meant that there might be anakores nearby. The nomadic creatures tended to burrow underground and eat roots, leaving the plants above to wither.
Of course, the creature could have come through days before. Gan certainly hoped so-anakores were pains in the ass.
Naturally, that meant that one leaped out of the sand right toward him.
Gan barely had a chance to slash at the creature with his bone knife before it was on top of him. Weighing in at somewhere around three hundred pounds, the creature had Gan pinned to the sandy ground before he consciously knew what was happening, the anakore’s clawed hands holding him down, rendering him unable to take a second swipe with his knife.
The first swipe, sadly, barely made it through the anakore’s skin, and it wasn’t even bleeding very much.
In the flickering torchlight, Gan couldn’t really see the creature’s tiny eyes, but its spinal ridge and flat ears stood out in the light.
Gan couldn’t move his arms, but his legs were completely free, so he wrapped his legs around the anakore’s torso and locked his ankles. It didn’t do too much to immobilize the anakore in and of itself, but an anakore’s spinal ridges weren’t just decorative: they had cilia on the ends that enabled the anakore to detect movement against the shifting sands. The ridges were there to protect the ultra-sensitive cilia, but they were still exposed on top, which meant that Gan’s legs clamping down on them caused the anakore distress.
With a howl, the anakore thrashed between Gan’s knees, and its grip on Gan’s shoulders loosened a bit.
That was enough for Gan to yank his right arm loose and stab the anakore in the left bicep.
The creature’s tough skin meant it wasn’t much more than a flesh wound, but it distracted the anakore enough that Gan was able to flip the creature over with his interlocked legs, slamming it into the ground to Gan’s left.
Such a move would have been more effective on solid ground, but at least it gave Gan the opportunity to get to his feet. He held his bone knife out, taking the anakore’s measure.
As he studied the creature, he saw that the anakore was a bit on the skinny side. Usually when you found an anakore alone, it had gotten lost from its tribe, and this one had apparently been lost for a while.
That meant it was desperate and wouldn’t go down easily.
Anakores also had long arms and claws, so he was better off with a weapon that had a longer reach. He pulled out Fehrd’s father’s staff, hoping that the one lesson he took from Fehrd would take.
He swung the staff toward the anakore’s head, not actually coming anywhere near it. The anakore snarled