Part 23 (1/2)
”You could have gone after her,” Tanis said sternly.
”Yes, we could have,” said Raistlin smoothly, ”and then where would you be, Half-Elven? Wandering about the mountain searching for the way inside Thorbardin. Tika was in no danger. The route we traveled was one known only to us.”
”I hope so,” said Tanis grimly.
He walked on ahead, biting back the angry words that would have done no good. He had known Raistlin and Caramon for many years, and he knew the twins had a bond that could not be broken. An unhealthy bond, or so he had always considered it, but it was not his place to say anything. He had been hoping that the romance blossoming between Tika and Caramon would give the big man strength enough to break free of his brother's death grip. Apparently not.
Tanis had no idea of what had happened back in Skullcap, but he guessed from the unhappy look Caramon had given his twin that Tika had tried to persuade Caramon to go with her and Raistlin had prevented it.
”If anything happens to her, I will take it out of Raistlin's hide,” Tanis muttered to himself.
At least Tika'd had sense enough to carry the warning to Riverwind. He hoped she had reached the refugees in time and that they would heed the warning and escape. He could not go back there now, much as he would have liked to. His mission to Thorbardin had just become eight hundred times more urgent.
Flint marched along at the rear, following after Sturm, unable to take his eyes from the knight and the marvelous helm he wore-or rather, according to Raistlin, the helm that wore him. The dwarf did not trust magic of any kind, especially magic that had anything to do with Raistlin, and no one would ever persuade him that this was not somehow Raistlin's doing.
Flint was forced to admit that something had happened to change Sturm. The knight could speak a few words of dwarven learned from Flint over time but not many. He certainly could not speak the language of Thorbardin, that was slightly different from the language of the hill dwarves.
After they made camp, Tanis asked the prince to describe the route to Thorbardin. Prince Grallen readily did so, speaking of a ridge line they would follow up the mountain. He told them how far they would travel and how to locate the secret gate, though he would not tell them what to do to open it when they found it.
Tanis looked to Flint for verification. Flint did not know specifically which ridge the prince meant, but it did sound plausible, though he didn't say as much.
All the dwarf would say, grumbling, was that he supposed they'd find out the truth of the matter tomorrow and he wished Tanis would let them get some rest.
As Flint lay down, he looked into the sky, searching the heavens until he found the red star that was the fire of Reorx, Forger of the World.
Flint found he liked the idea of being an emissary. He had protested, of course, when Raistlin first proposed it, simply because it was Raistlin, but the dwarf had not protested too strongly. He'd given in without much of a fuss.
The thought came to him: What if I am truly an emissary? What if I am the dwarf to bring the warring clans together at last?
He lay awake a long time, watching the sparks fly across the sky as the G.o.d went about his eternal task of forging creation, and he saw himself as one of those sparks, only his light would s.h.i.+ne forever.
Chapter 18.
Leaving the valley. Treacherous Trail. The Keystone.
The first day's travel for the refugees had been relatively easy.
They had not gone far on the second day before traveling grew more difficult. The trail wended its way upward, and as it did so, it grew steeper, more narrow, until at last it devolved into a ribbon-thin path with sheer wall on one side and a terrifying drop of hundreds of feet onto the rocks on the other. Beyond lay the pa.s.s. They were almost there, but they had to cross this first.
They would have to walk this perilous part of the trail single-file, and Riverwind called a halt. Many were already terrified at just the sight of the precipice and the fall so close to their feet. Among these, as Tanis had foreseen, was Goldmoon.
She had been born and raised on the Plains of Dust, a flat and featureless land stretching endlessly for miles with nothing between her and the glorious sky. This world of mountains and valleys was new to Goldmoon and she had not grown used to it. Riverwind had been up and down the line, encouraging the others, when one of the Plainsmen came running for him.
”It is Goldmoon,” the man said. ”You had better come.”
The Plainsman found his wife with her back pressed against the side of the cliff, her face deathly pale, trembling in terror. He approached her, and the hand that seized hold of him and gripped him like death was freezing cold.
She was at the head of the line. He had not forgotten her terror of high places, and he had tried to persuade to walk at the end, but she would have none of it. She was cured of that, she said, and she had walked forward confidently. She might have made it, for the distance was not far, but she committed the fatal error of looking down. She could see herself plunging through the air, landing on the rock-strewn ground, bones breaking, skull crushed, blood spattering the stones and pooling beneath her broken body.
”I am sorry, but I cannot do this, husband,” she said in a low voice. When he urged her gently forward, she went stiff. ”Give me a few moments.”
”Goldmoon,” he said softly, looking back down the trail, where the line of refugees stood waiting. ”Others are watching you, looking to you for courage.”
She stared at him pleadingly. ”I want to go. I know I must go, but I can't move!”
She glanced over the edge at the sheer side of the cliff face, the rocks, trees, and the valley that seemed so far, far below her feet, and she shuddered and shut her eyes again.
”Don't look down,” he counseled. ”Look up. Look ahead. See that V-shape cut up there. That is the pa.s.s through the mountain. We have only to cross that and we are on the other side!”
Goldmoon looked, shook her head and pressed her back against the wall.
”Have you prayed to the G.o.ds for courage?” Riverwind asked his wife.
Goldmoon gave him a tremulous smile. ”The courage of Mishakal is in my heart, husband, but it has yet to make its way to my feet.”
He loved her very much at that moment, and he kissed her cheek. She flung her arms around him, clasping him so tightly that she nearly cut off his breathing. He led her back off the trail onto solid ground and wondered what he was going to do.
There would be others like his wife who would find this trail difficult, if not impossible, to walk. He had to think how to help them.
He told the people to stop to rest while he considered this problem. As he was pondering, one of the advance scouts came hastening back down the trail. He motioned to Riverwind.
”We have found something strange,” the Plainsman reported. ”Up ahead, at the opening to the pa.s.s, the dwarf's pick-axe lies on the ground.”
”Perhaps it grew too heavy for him to carry,” he suggested.
The scout smiled and shook his head. ”I have no great love for dwarves as you know, Chieftain, but I never yet met the dwarf who could not carry the weight of this mountain on his back, if he were so minded. It is not likely that he would leave behind a pick-axe.”
”Unless there was some good cause,” Riverwind said thoughtfully. ”There is nothing else? Nothing to suggest he and Tanis were attacked or met with some other terrible fate?”
”If there had been fighting, we would see signs of a battle, but there is no blood on the stones, no gouges in the dirt, and no packs or other pieces of equipment left behind. To my mind, the pick-axe was left deliberately, as some sort of sign, but what it means, none of us can say.”
”Leave it where it is,” said Riverwind. ”Let no man touch it. I'll come look at it. Perhaps I can read this puzzle.”
The Plainsman nodded and returned to his fellows. The scout, whose name was Eagle Talon, walked the trail with the sure-footed ease of a mountain lion. Riverwind watched him go and eyed the trail ahead. It widened in some places, enough for two or even three people to walk abreast. He could post men like Eagle Talon, who had no problem with the heights, at each of those places, prepared to offer a strong arm and rea.s.suring hand to those who made their way along the path.
Riverwind explained his plan, and called for volunteers, choosing men who were stout, st.u.r.dy, and had no fear of the dizzying heights, posting them at various points along the trail. He went to Goldmoon, told her what she should do, and indicated the first man, who stood on a ledge only a few feet away, his hand outstretched.
”You just have to cross a short distance on your own,” he said to her. ”Don't look down. Keep your back to the wall and look only at Nighthawk.”
Goldmoon gave a tremulous nod. She had to do this. Her husband was counting on her. She whispered the name of the G.o.ddess, then, s.h.i.+vering, she edged her way along the trail, moving her feet an inch at a time. Her heart pounded in her chest, her mouth was dry as stone. She made it and clasped Nighthawk's hand with convulsive strength. He helped her sidle past him, holding onto her firmly and speaking to her encouragingly. The next man was farther away, but she looked back at Riverwind and smiled a triumphant, though shaky smile and crept on.
Riverwind was proud of her. His plan seemed to be working, but it was slow going, so very slow. Some of the people would have no difficulty, of course. Maritta, coming after Goldmoon, traveled the trail with confidence, waving away Nighthawk's helping hand. Others, like Goldmoon, hung on for dear life. Some could not stand but were forced to crawl along on their hands and knees.
At this rate, it would take all day or longer for the people to reach the pa.s.s. Leaving Elistan in charge, Riverwind went on ahead to see for himself the pick-axe the dwarf had unaccountably left behind.