The Rise and Fall of a Dragonking - By Lynn Abbey Page 0,42

metal in their purses to buy a night’s protection beside a templar fire.

“There were children with them,” Kalfaen explained.

Despite their strong tribal attachments to kith and kin, elves weren’t sentimental about their offspring. They’d abandon anything, anyone if the need arose. On the other side of the coin, a tribe with children in tow appeared both prosperous and fearless. Kalfaen’s thoughts were tinged with shame. He’d succumbed to metal-coin bribes, women’s charm, and the prejudices of his own race.

Hamanu returned that shame as a thousand sharp needles lancing Kalfaen’s inmost self. The youth gasped involuntarily.

“I die,” he whispered.

Trust and prejudice together were just another two-sided coin. When the Lion of Urik trusted his mortal templars, he got their prejudices in the bargain. Kalfaen wasn’t the only Urikite who’d bought the Gulgan deception. Hamanu’s spell kept the youth alive as surely as it kept him standing.

“Recount,” he demanded. “What next? What of the others? Recount!”

The rest was as simple as it was predictable: something had been slipped into the wine. Immune to their own poisons, the false refugees had slipped away during the night, leaving the templars to death at dawn. But the militant had drunk less than Kalfaen and the rest. He saw telltale dust on the eastern horizon and sounded an alarm, then kicked each of them soundly in the flanks until they roused. By the time Kalfaen was on his feet, the sound of hobnail sandals slapping the barren soil was all around them.

There was nothing more to say or learn. Hamanu released Kalfaen. The elf collapsed in stages—to his knees, his elbows, his face. Belatedly, he clapped his long-fingered hands over his ears and scalp, as if scraps of mortal flesh could have protected him from Hamanu’s inquiry. He reeked of vomit and worse, but he’d live. He’d been tempered in the Lion’s fire and, having failed to die, was doomed to survive.

Hamanu’s thoughts were already moving away from the elf. Scanning the remains of the camp, he looked for the missing pieces in the puzzle Inenek had left for him. Her plans had gone awry: he’d arrived early, trying to save his templars, triggering her traps out of sequence. But she had meant for him to come—why else tamper with the mind of his militant or set a whirlwind to wait for him in the Gray?

The militant, then, was the key. Inenek had meant for the templar to use his medallion to summon him to this barren place, though not during the fighting. The poisoned wine and the netherworld disruption were both designed to keep him away while his templars were slain… While all save one of his templars were slain…

Did the Oba think Urik’s templars were fools? No war-bureau templar would admit to being the sole survivor of monumental stupidity. He certainly wouldn’t summon his immortal king to witness the debacle. A militant would have needed a better reason.

“Stand down!” Hamanu’s voice roared beyond the battlefield.

The surgeon-sergeants continued their work, but the templars who’d been gleaning armor, weapons, and other valuables from the corpses of friend and foe alike stood at attention with their arms at their sides. Hamanu’s head throbbed—had been throbbing since he stepped from the netherworld. It was a minor ache compared to the agonies he customarily ignored, and no surprise, considering the unnatural power that had been expended in this unlikely place.

Massaging an illusory forehead with a human-seeming hand, Hamanu dissected his aches. Sorcery and mind-bending, his and Inenek’s, had caused much of the harm, and beneath that, the War-Bringer’s spoor. The smell of Rajaat was not just in the netherworld, where Hamanu had glimpsed the Black as he battled Inenek’s whirlwind, but here, amid the battle refuse.

Hamanu bestrode his lifeless militant, who’d fallen exactly where he’d stood when he raised his medallion. The man’s mind was cold; when a champion subsumed a mortal spirit, there was nothing left behind for necromantic interrogation.

With a roar, the Lion of Urik cursed himself, Inenek, Rajaat, and the useless militant. He kicked the corpse aside and knew before it struck ground again that he’d found his missing piece.

Already wrapped in silk and leather, this second shard was smaller than the one Javed had found in the Nibenese camp. Its dark power pulsed in rhythm with Hamanu’s throbbing veins—or the other way around. It wanted destruction, but he dared do nothing with it while the surgeon-sergeants drained him for their healing power.

Impatiently, Hamanu cast a net into the netherworld.

Windreaver!

Nearly a quinth had passed since Hamanu

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