Читаем The Nether Scroll полностью

"All over. I tried—My mind went blank of everything except dust," he said sobbing, "and I couldn't get it cast. I panicked. I hid, Dru. I hid. When they lifted their fog and called off their minions, I just stayed here where I'd hidden myself. Even when they ransacked the wagons and set them ablaze, I couldn't make myself move. I should have died."

Druhallen closed his good hand over Galimer's. "It didn't matter. They had us beat from the first scent. At least you know what they did and said. I tangled with something undead and wound up out cold, two hundred paces away from everyone."

"At least you fought! You cast what you could and then you fought." Galimer pulled his hand away from Dru and covered his face. "I should have died."

"What's cut, stays cut," the carpenter's son advised. "If you hadn't hidden, you might well have died, and I'd be facing the road to Elversult with only a broken wrist for company."

Galimer expressed concern for his friend's injury, but Druhallen wasn't interested in sympathy.

"Can you stand? Walk? We need to find your mother. You said you saw them—"

"Heard them," Galimer corrected as he grabbed Dru's shoulder and sat himself up. "I didn't see anything."

"Kept your eyes closed, eh?" Dru laughed and stood.

"I got hit by something bright when it all started. Everything's been blurred since." He flailed for Dru's arm with an awkwardness that lent credence to his claim. "I heard them, and that's about it. I didn't recognize their language. They came a damn long way to steal that girl and her dowry."

Druhallen pitied the misbegotten girl, but cut was cut and his pity was worthless. He hoped she was dead. The dead didn't remember ... usually.

Leaning on each other, the friends surveyed the killing ground. It was just as well that Galimer's eyes weren't working too well. He was spared what Dru saw all too clearly once the sun was up. Whatever had killed Ansoain had torn her apart like so much stale bread. He recognized her by pieces: bits of cloth and scalp, a bloody chunk of her hand with fingers and rings still attached.

Fighting nausea, Druhallen retrieved her rings. They were magically potent, not to mention intrinsically valuable. It was difficult, for many reasons, to understand why they'd been left behind.

"She'd want you to have them," he told Galimer as he pressed the metal bits into his friend's hand. "Now, let's get out of here. I can see a few of the horses. You be the hands, I'll be the eyes ..."

Galimer balked. "Guide me to the hilltop. Maybe those bastards left something traceable behind."

"Cut is cut," Druhallen muttered, but he led Galimer through the grass.

The scents of spellcraft and malice lingered on the hilltop, and something else: a palm- sized glass disk. The disk was dark, but neither black nor completely opaque. So smooth and slick that it slipped through Druhallen's fingers when he tried to retrieve it. The disk was colder than the claw of winter when he finally had it in his grasp.

Ignoring numbed fingers, Dru held it up to the risen sun. Gold flecks sparkled within the icy glass.

"There's something written on the edge," Galimer interrupted.

"I thought your eyes were bad."

"My body's eyes. My mind's eye sees clearly enough. That thing reeks of sorcery and there's writing on the edge."

Dru rearranged his fingers and saw the truth of Galimer's statement. "I don't recognize the script."

"Doesn't it tell you something through your fingertips?" Galimer asked.

"Only that it's colder than winter."

Dru balanced the lens in his left hand. It was an agonizing error. He gasped and the disk thumped to the grass. While Druhallen swore at himself and his pain, Galimer swept the grass with his hands.

"Sweet Mystra!" the gold-haired mage swore as he clutched, then dropped, the glass. "Cold's not the half of it!"

"Aye, but what is that other half?"

Galimer pinched his fingertips to the scripted edge and lifted the disk carefully. "How about a way to control their undead minions?"

Dru considered the possibility. "Did you see the robes they were wearing when they first appeared?"

"That was the last thing I did see. Their robes were red."

"Red robes. Red-robed wizards. The Red Wizards of Thay. They pool their magic and one wizard casts the spells for all of them. Nobody—nobody—knows how they do it. Until now."

Druhallen fumbled with his folded magic box. It would have been easier to manipulate with both hands, but he'd designed it for single-handed work. As the hidden locks opened, the box unfolded, increasing in size and complexity. Reagents filled the revealed compartments. Dru's traveling spells were etched into the compartment dividers. With the third unfolding, he found an empty compartment large enough to hold the disk.

Galimer squirted the disk into the empty compartment. "Being cold and dark, it's more likely a device for controlling the undead."

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