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Death of the Dragon - Ed Greenwood [53]

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helped their kings keep for so many centuries. "Azoun will do it. If the scepter is to work, I fear it must be wielded by a king."

15

"Tears of Chauntea!"Azoun swore. "Even if they raid so savagely and so unopposed as to strip the land bare, fair Cormyr's northern reaches can't feed this many goblins! Where are they all coming from?"

The grim, weary officers around him didn't bother to answer. After hacking a bloody way through two walls of goblins already this day, the king's army had crested another hill to find the rolling country ahead awash in hooting, chittering goblins. The little humanoids waved their banners tauntingly at the sight of the royal standard, but held their positions as if they were the claws of a well-disciplined foe, rather than charging in their usual wild flood. The way south, it seemed, was blocked by several thousand sharp and waiting goblin blades.

"Hold ranks!" a swordlord snapped, as some of the men ahead surged forward, armor clanking.

"To Talos with orders and ordered formations now!" a nobleman roared, raising his blade. "In at them, and slay-for Azoun and for me!"

Others took up the cry. "For Azoun and for me!"

The king watched them charge to their deaths with frustration and pleasure warring behind a tightly expressionless face. He couldn't afford swift-tempered, disobedient idiots of nobles here in the field-or, for that matter, flourishing anywhere in the realm-but it did feel good to hear that battle cry, and see the excitement around him as men joined in, waving their blades but holding their positions under the watchful gazes of growling swordcaptains and cold-eyed lancelords.

"Let no true Cormyrean leave this height without orders to do so!" a swordlord roared, and Azoun doffed his helm to let the eyes he knew would be turning his way clearly see him nodding in agreement. He needed capable swords, not glory-seeking corpses. He also needed a way south to Suzail that would be swifter and less bloody than carving his way through all of these waiting goblins.

The war wizards had already agreed grimly that wild nursery tales notwithstanding, the army was much too large to teleport. Not even by draining all their magic items and trying a combined spell, even without ghazneths racing to pounce on any significant use of magic, could they guarantee to pluck more than a few hundred men south. Their best efforts, therefore, could only serve to scatter the army and even slay a few men with the roiling energies of the translocational magic. Even that was assuming nothing at all went wrong, and something would, they all knew. On battlefields, something always did.

There had to be another way. Even if he'd had time and men enough to march wide to the east, his Purple Dragons couldn't outrun eager goblins, or avoid running into the barrier of the Wyvernwater. That left only the forest. It would be something of a shield against spying eyes and a deadly maze for both his men and any goblins who plunged into it in search of them.

Unless, of course, he had a guide as expert as the foresters who accompanied him on his rarer and rarer stag hunts. That meant finding Duskroon's, or one of the other dozens of foresters' cottages, along the edge of the forest. Feldon was a local man…

He turned to the lancelord standing nearest and said crisply, "Swordcaptain Feldon to me, at once!"

The man scurried to obey, and it seemed like the space of only two long, goblin-surveying breaths before Feldon's familiar ragged mustache was bobbing before him. "Your Majesty?"

"Good Feldon," he said, "I need the nearest royal forester of skill brought before me, well guarded and in a trice."

The swordcaptain's weathered face split in a broad smile. "Would the Warden of the King's Forest do, my liege? He's staying at Ilduiph's stead, not three bow shots west."

"With all his family? In the very teeth of all these goblins?"

Feldon's smile disappeared. "Well the way of it's like this, your majesty," he muttered. "Lord Huntsilver and Goodman Ilduiph are both of the mind that the royal writ is a shield for all

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