step that would center his black shadow over Rkard and his spell.
The woman screamed again, this time the mul’s name, “Rkard!”
A red-haired streak shot through Hamanu’s shadow. It wrapped itself around the enthralled youth and heaved him sideways. The spell broke free, a diminutive sun hovering an arm’s length above the mosaic. In a heartbeat, it had begun to strengthen. In another, Hamanu had thrown himself on top of it. The ground shuddered. For an instant, Hamanu was freed from his black-boned body. Then the instant was gone, and he was himself again, reforming the flawless illusion of a tawny-skinned man.
Sadira cradled the mul’s head and shoulders in her lap. He was exhausted, unable to speak or move, but otherwise unmarked, unhurt. Hamanu’s spirits soared.
“It could be done! We could do it. We could go to Ur Draxa and repair your ward-spells. We could save Urik. Together nothing could stand against—”
The sorceress’s eyes narrowed. She wrapped her arms protectively over Rkard. “Stand with you?” Her expression said the rest: I’ll kill him myself before I let that happen.
Hamanu tried to explain what had happened when Rkard’s sun-spell struck him. Sadira listened; he perceived the spirals of her thoughts as she considered everything he said, but none of her conclusions included helping a champion save his city.
“I took the sun-spell inside, into my heart and spirit. Your shadow-sorcery doesn’t go that deep,” he warned. “You’d be consumed.”
“So you say, but I don’t believe you. Dragons lie, and you’re a dragon. You’d deceive us and betray us. While even one of your kind exists, Athas can never be free.”
“Free,” Hamanu muttered. He had a thousand arguments against such foolishness, and none of them would sway her. Better to let her learn the hard way, though she wouldn’t survive the lesson, and there was no guarantee Rkard would cooperate afterward. “For Athas, then, and your precious freedom—go carefully to Ur Draxa, look at what’s happened to the lake where you sealed Rajaat’s bones beside the Dark Lens. Look, then come to Urik at dawn, three days from now. I’ll be waiting for you.”
Chapter Fourteen
Enver stood in the map room doorway. “Omniscience, a messenger approaches.”
“I know,” Hamanu assured his steward.
The sharpest mortal ear could not pick out the sounds of sandals rapidly slapping the tiles of the palace corridors as the messenger neared the end of her journey. Her journey continued because Hamanu didn’t rely on his immortal ears. He’d known about the message since it passed through Javed’s hands in Javed’s encampment south of the market village ring.
“Good news or bad, Omniscience?”
Hamanu smiled fleetingly. “Good. Nibenay sent it with our messenger, alive and intact. I believe he has accepted my terms. We’ll know for certain in a moment, won’t we?”
Enver nodded. “For certain, Omniscience. Our messenger alive, that’s certainly good news.”
The dwarf’s tightly ordered mind accepted that the Shadow-King was also a living god, and that gods, all other aspects being equal, weren’t omniscient with regard to one another. His eyes were wide with awe and dread when the dusty half-elf slapped to a halt beside him. She clutched Gallard’s black scroll-case tightly in both hands, as if it were a living thing that might try to escape or attack her. Nibenay’s nine-rayed star glowed faintly on the case’s wax seal, which protruded between her thumbs.
Knowing what she carried, although not the message it contained, she’d pushed herself to her limit and beyond, as had every other relay-runner who’d touched it.
“O Mighty One—” she gasped, beginning to cramp from her exertions.
Enver steadied her. He put his own powerful short-fingered hand around hers, lest the scroll case slip through her trembling fingers and shatter on the floor.
“Give it to me,” Hamanu suggested, reaching across the sand-table where he’d recreated Urik and its battle lines.
The half-elf doubled over the instant Enver took the case. The trembling was contagious; the dwarf’s fingers shook as he handed it to Hamanu.
“See to her needs, dear Enver,” the Lion-King said, dismissing them and their mortal curiosity with a nod of his head.
Ah, the predictable frailties of his mortal servants… the pair stopped as soon as they were out of sight and wrung their hands together in desperate, silent prayers: Good news. Good news. Whim of the Lion, let the news be good.
Hamanu slid his thumb under the scroll-case seal. The hardened wax popped free, and a tiny red gem rolled onto the sand pile that stood for the village of Farl. Never one to believe in omens, Hamanu fished