Dragons of the Autumn Twilight - Margaret Weis [106]
Raistlin did not reply. He stared at the knight malevolently with his strange golden eyes, then turned to Bupu. “They will not trouble you further, little one,” he whispered.
Bupu looked around to make certain they were properly cowed, then she walked forward and knocked twice on the wall with her grubby fist. “Secret door,” she said importantly.
Two knocks answered Bupu’s knock.
“That signal,” she said. “Three knocks. Now they let in.”
“But she only knocked twice—” Tas began, giggling.
Bupu glared at him.
“Shhh!” Tanis nudged the kender.
Nothing happened. Bupu, frowning, knocked twice more. Two knocks answered. She waited. Caramon, his eyes on the alley opening, began moving restlessly from one foot to the other. Bupu knocked twice again. Two knocks answered.
Finally Bupu yelled at the wall. “I knock secret code knock. You let in!”
“Secret knock five knocks,” answered a muffled voice.
“I knock five knocks!” Bupu stated angrily. “You let in!”
“You knock six knocks.”
“I count eight knocks,” argued another voice.
Bupu suddenly pushed on the wall with both hands. It opened easily. She peered inside. “I knock four knocks. You let in!” she said, raising a clenched fist.
“All right,” the voice grumbled.
Bupu shut the door, knocked twice. Tanis, hoping to avoid any more incidents and delays, glared at the kender, who was writhing with suppressed laughter.
The door swung open—again. “You come in,” the guard said sourly. “But that not four knocks,” he whispered to Bupu loudly. She ignored him as she swept disdainfully past him, dragging her bag along the floor.
“We see Highbulp,” she announced.
“You take this lot to Highbulp?” One of the guards gasped, staring at the giant Caramon and the tall Riverwind with wide eyes. His companion began backing up.
“See Highbulp,” Bupu said proudly.
The gully dwarf guard, never taking his eyes off the formidable-looking group, backed into a stinking, filthy hallway, then broke into a run. He began shouting at the top of his lungs. “An army! An army has broken in!” They could hear his shouts echo down the hallway.
“Bah!” Bupu sniffed. “Glup-phunger spawn! Come. See Highbulp.”
She started down the hallway, clutching her bag to her chest. The companions could still hear the shouts of the gully dwarf echoing down the corridor.
“An army! An army of giants! Save the Highbulp!”
The great Highbulp, Phudge I, was a gully dwarf among gully dwarves. He was almost intelligent, rumored to be fabulously wealthy, and a notorious coward. The Bulps had long been the elite clan of Xak Tsaroth—or “Th” as they called it—ever since Nulph Bulp fell down a shaft one night in a drunken stupor and discovered the city. Upon sobering up the next morning, he claimed it for his clan. The Bulps promptly moved in and, in later years, graciously allowed the clans Slud and Glup to occupy the city as well.
Life was good in the ruined city—by gully dwarf standards, anyway. The outside world left them alone (since the outside world hadn’t the foggiest notion they were there and wouldn’t have cared if it did). The Bulps had no trouble maintaining their dominance over the other clans, mostly because it was a Bulp (Glunggu) with a scientific turn of mind (certain jealous members of the Slud clan whispered that his mother had been a gnome) who developed the lift, putting to use the two enormous iron pots used by the city’s former residents for rendering lard. The lift enabled the gully dwarves to extend their scavenging activities to the jungle above the sunken city, greatly improving their standard of living. Glunggu Bulp became a hero and was proclaimed Highbulp by unanimous decision. The chieftainship of the clans had remained in the Bulp family ever since.
The years passed and then, suddenly, the outside world took an interest in Xak Tsaroth. The arrival of the dragon and the draconians put a sad crimp on the gully dwarf lifestyle. The draconians had initially intended to wipe out the filthy little nuisances, but the gully dwarves—led by the great Phudge—had cringed and cowered and