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Dragons of the Autumn Twilight - Margaret Weis [180]

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his gaze to Eben.

The fighter shrugged. “Enough said. I’m with you.”

“What is your plan, Gilthanas?” Tanis asked, noticing with irritation that Sturm and Caramon and Eben exchanged quick glances, three humans sticking together against the elves, he caught himself thinking. But perhaps I’m just as bad, believing in Gilthanas because he’s an elf.

Gilthanas saw the exchange of glances, too. For a moment he stared at them with an intense, unblinking gaze, then began to speak in a measured tone, considering his words, as if reluctant to reveal any more than was absolutely necessary.

“Every evening, ten to twelve women are allowed to leave their cells and take food to the men in the mines. Thus the Highlord lets the men see that he is keeping his side of the bargain. The women are allowed to visit the children once a day for the same reason. My warriors and I planned to disguise ourselves as women, go out to the men in the mines, tell them of the plan to free the hostages, and alert them to be ready to strike. Beyond that we had not thought, particularly in regard to freeing the children. Our spies indicated something strange about the dragon guarding the children, but we could not determine what.”

“What sp—?” Caramon started to ask, caught Tanis’s eye, and thought better of his question. Instead he asked, “When will we strike? And what about the dragon, Ember?”

“We strike tomorrow morning. Lord Verminaard and Ember will most certainly join the army tomorrow as it reaches the outskirts of Qualinesti. He has been preparing for this invasion a long time. I do not believe he will miss it.”

The group discussed the plan for several minutes, adding to it, refining it, generally agreeing that it appeared viable. They gathered their things as Caramon woke his brother. Sturm and Eben pushed open the door leading to the hallway. It appeared empty, although they could hear faint sounds of harsh, drunken laughter from a room directly across from them. Draconians. Silently, the companions slipped into the dark and dingy corridor.

Tasslehoff stood in the middle of what he had named the Mechanism Room, staring around the tunnel lighted dimly by the puffball. The kender was beginning to feel discouraged. It was a feeling he didn’t get often and likened to the time he’d eaten an entire green tomato pie acquired from a neighbor. To this day, discouragement and green tomato pie both made him want to throw up.

“There’s got to be some way out of here,” said the kender. “Surely they inspect the mechanism occasionally, or come up to admire it, or give tours, or something!”

He and Fizban had spent an hour walking up and down the tunnel, crawling in and out among the myriad chains. They found nothing. It was cold and barren and covered with dust.

“Speaking of light,” said the old magician suddenly, though they hadn’t been. “Look there.”

Tasslehoff looked. A thin sliver of light was visible through a crack in the bottom of the wall, near the entrance to the narrow tunnel. They could hear voices, and the light grew brighter as if torches were being lit in a room below them.

“Maybe that’s a way out,” the old man said.

Running lightly down the tunnel, Tas knelt down and peered through the crack. “Come here!”

The two looked down into a large room, furnished with every possible luxury. All that was beautiful, graceful, delicate, or valuable in the lands under Verminaard’s control had been brought to decorate the private chambers of the Dragon Highlord. An ornate throne stood at one end of the room. Rare and priceless silver mirrors hung on the walls, arranged so cunningly that no matter where a trembling captive turned, the only image he saw was the grotesque, horned helm of the Dragon Highlord glowering at him.

“That must be him!” Tas whispered to Fizban. “That must be Lord Verminaard!” The kender sucked in his breath in awe. “That must be his dragon—Ember. The one Gilthanas told us about, that killed all the elves in Solace.”


Ember, or Pyros (his true name being a secret known only to draconians, or to other dragons—never to common mortals)

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