Sheemzher find egg. Sheemzher tell already, good sir.'
'You've been told,' Rozt'a chided. 'Pay attention to what he tells you from now on.'
Dru didn't know if she was joking. 'Do I understand that there's an entrance to the old mines at the bottom of the quarry? Do we have to climb down these tiers to reach it? Do we have to meet Ghistpok? You said that wouldn't be necessary.'
He'd been paying attention when Sheemzher assured them they didn't have to meet Ghistpok in order to steal the scroll.
'Many ways in, good sir. One way all rocks, no good. One way below, yes. Other ways. Many other ways. Sheemzher find. Not worry, good sir.'
A strange sound filled the quarry. It started soft, grew louder, and as hard as Druhallen listened, he couldn't decide if it came from an animal or some kind of horn, and, if an animal, whether from a single beast or many. He was thinking magic when Rozt'a slapped his arm and pointed to the southern tiers. About twenty goblins were marching down the zigzag stairways. His imagination rebelled. Goblins couldn't make such a noise and twenty of them couldn't fill the quarry with echoing sound.
Then Sheemzher added his note to the chorus. The goblin's eyes were shut and his head was thrown back. His lips shaped the sound which he made in the depths of his throat.
'Sheemzher! Stop! Quiet!'
Sheemzher didn't obey. He didn't appear to have heard Druhallen's words. He opened his mouth wider; the sound deepened in pitch. Dru felt it beneath his ribs more than he heard it in his ears.
'Enough!' he shouted and seized the goblin's shoulders. 'When I say to stop something, you stop! Understood?'
The goblin quaked and nodded his head vigorously. 'Sheemzher understand. Sheemzher forget. Hunters return. Pots full.' He pointed at the goblins on the zigzag stairs. 'Welcome hunters. Sheemzher forget.'
A trickle of goblins left the midden, racing southward.
Druhallen pulled off his ring and squinted through it. The descending goblins had spears very similar to the one Sheemzher carried slung between their shoulders and animal carcasses slung from the spears, none was larger than a swamp rat. He realized that goblins weren't herders or farmers. Maybe it had been different when the Zhentarim ran their slave market in the quarry. Maybe they'd seduced the goblins with food, but since Amarandaris abandoned the market, the bog forests were the goblins' sole source of food. No wonder Amarandaris believed Ghistpok's goblins were starving.
And, no wonder that the sight of hunters returning with meat had roused an instinctive welcome from their own goblin.
'You're not one of Ghistpok's goblins any more,' Druhallen reminded Sheemzher. 'Your loyalty lies with us- with your good lady.'
'Sheemzher not forget, good sir. Sheemzher remember. Sheemzher find way now, good sir?'
'Soon.'
'Soon?' Rozt'a sputtered. 'How long are you planning to stay here? I'm for getting this damned scroll today, if we can, and getting our tail feathers out of these mountains before they're plucked.'
The goblin nodded. 'Sheemzher say yes! People eat now. People happy. Nobody look. Nobody see. Nobody know.'
Druhallen thought of the spells he'd memorized last night. They weren't the ones he'd planned to use when he tried to crack the Beast Lord's egg. 'We don't want to rush ahead blindly. We want to be prepared.'
'You want to wait until after midnight.' Rozt'a saw through Druhallen's caution. 'You want to change your mind.'
'I'd feel safer with different spells. You'd be safer.'
Dru withered a little in their disappointment and when Rozt'a suggested that she could follow the goblin as he searched for a way into the mines that didn't expose them to scrutiny, he agreed even though a part of him felt that they shouldn't be splitting up.
There were more mysteries in Dekanter than a man could count, starting with ancient Netheril and working forward in time to the Beast Lord and the real reason Amarandaris and the Black Network had pulled their slave market out of this place. If he'd had the time, the magic, and the muscle, Dru would have liked to unravel a few of those mysteries. Lacking all those things, he easily stifled his curiosity and hoped only to escape with the golden scroll.
He returned to the horses and Tiep, scouting campsites along the way.
'You and I make the night's camp,' he told the youth when they were together. 'Rozt'a's gone off with the goblin to find tomorrow's way in. I spotted a blind gully with runoff pool. If we can get the horses in, they'll have plenty of water and won't go wandering. We'll take them in one at a time. You grab Hopper-' He took Star's rein. If they could get him and Hopper up the path, the others would follow peacefully.
Tiep proved a non-cooperative partner. 'You let Rozt'a go off alone with Sheemzher?' He'd folded his arms across his chest.
'Do you think Rozt'a can't handle a goblin, Tiep? Should I mention that to her when she gets back?'
'Tymora protect me! Don't do that!' Tiep snatched Hopper's rein and fell in behind Druhallen.
'What then? I thought you and the goblin had made peace.'
'We did,' Tiep replied with a notable lack of enthusiasm. 'As much peace as an honest man can make with a liar.'
'Right,' Dru agreed with a sigh.
Star sulked and balked, but he was thirsty and the smell of running water got him down the last slope.
'You're sure we're going to be able to get them out of here?' Tiep asked when he and Hopper were beside the water.
The slope had been steeper than Dru imagined. They'd all had a few sliding, frightening moments. Dru had wrenched his shoulder keeping Star upright and Hopper was favoring the hoof he'd cracked before they got to Parnast.
'Well push 'em out one at a time, if we have to. It was here or leave them on the bogs. If the goblins catch sight of them, they'll eat them all.' After emptying one of the forage-filled nets, Dru handed the green wood poles to Tiep. 'Strip them down while I heat the pitch and dip the rushes.'
They had three torches finished when Rozt'a and Sheemzher returned.
'He found it,' Rozt'a announced. Dru watched Tiep roll his eyes skyward. 'We went down as far as we could- as far as I could without light. Why Ao made their eyes better than ours is something I'll never understand.'
Dru wound another length of pitch-dripping greenery around the working end of a torch. Rozt'a wouldn't have given up sunlight or far-sight for all the moonlight in the world, but that didn't keep her from complaining. He understood the frustration-and a few of the races did have undisputedly better vision than humans did-but not the goblins. One had only to look at Sheemzher's watery eyes to know that.
Rozt'a hefted one of the finished torches. She tested the pitch to see if it would light. 'We could take these and check it out, Dru-go down and really see what we're up against before you're up against midnight decisions.'
Druhallen advocated caution. In truth, he was anxious… afraid. Rozt'a, Sheemzher, even Tiep were cut from different cloth than he. They were fighters, hunters, or gamblers and would rather be in the middle of a situation than mapping it from the outside. Dru had probably done more damage to life and limb than the three of them combined, but always in reaction. He didn't start fights, didn't deliberately expose himself to danger 'We won't steal the godsforsaken thing,' Rozt'a chided. 'We're just going to try to get a look at it so we can decide how we'll steal it tomorrow… is that better?'
She tossed her torch Dru's way. He caught it without hesitation.
Tiep grabbed the other two. 'Who says we won't steal it?' he asked as he scrambled up the rocks.
Dru made them wait until he'd checked his folding box and pulled soft rope from their gear. He wouldn't deny the wisdom in Rozt'a's words-or in Tiep's for that matter. If they could snatch the scroll, then, by gods, they would, but he wasn't plunging underground without embers enough to kindle his fire spells five times over and all the rope he could comfortably carry.
Sheemzher's way into Dekanter was a gap in the gray rocks that was generously wide for him, tight for Rozt'a and Tiep, and downright painful for a man with Druhallen's shoulders. He went in feet first. When he got