Chapter 46
By Reorx, I won't go out like this, he vowed to himself.
"Hey," he said aloud. "Where do you think you're going?"
Ta.s.slehoff was standing impatiently in front of doors at the end of the vestibule, waiting for Flint to come open them. "I'm going to help you get the Hammer."
"No, you're not," said Flint gruffly. "You're going to find Arman."
"I am?" Tas was amazed, pleased but amazed. "Finding Arman is awfully important, Flint. No one ever lets me do anything awfully important."
"I'm going to this time. I don't have much choice. You're going to find Arman and warn him that the thing he thinks is Kharas isn't Kharas, and you're going to tell Arman you know where the Hammer is. Then you're going to bring him back here."
"But if I do that, he'll find the Hammer," Tas argued. "I thought you wanted to be the one to find the Hammer."
"I have found it," said Flint imperturbably. "No more arguments. There isn't time. Off you go."
Tas thought it over. "Warning Arman is is awfully important, but I guess I'll pa.s.s. I really don't like him all that much. I'd rather stay here with you." awfully important, but I guess I'll pa.s.s. I really don't like him all that much. I'd rather stay here with you."
"You're going," said Flint firmly, "one way or another."
Tas shook his head and took hold of the door handle and held on tight. After a brief tussle, Flint managed to pry the kender's fingers loose. He got a good grip on Tas's s.h.i.+rt collar and dragged the wriggling, protesting kender across the floor and tossed him bodily out the door.
"And," Flint added, "I'll need this."
He deftly twitched the hoopak out of the kender's hand, then slammed the door in his face.
"Flint!" Tas's voice sounded m.u.f.fled and far away through the bronze doors. "Open up! Let me in!"
Flint heard him rattling the door handle, kicking the door and beating on it with his fists. Hefting the hoopak, Flint turned and walked off. Tas would get bored with the door soon enough, and for lack of anything better to do, he'd go in search of Arman.
Flint did feel a twinge of guilt at sending the kender off to encounter that ghost, ghoul, or whatever it was that was claiming it was Kharas, He quickly banished the guilt by reminding himself that the kender had a remarkable talent for survival.
"He just gets other people killed. If anything," Flint muttered, "I should be worried for the ghost."
The truth was that Flint could not risk having the kender witness what he was about to do. Ta.s.slehoff Burrfoot had never ever kept a secret. He would solemnly swear on his topknot that he would never ever tell, and five minutes later he would be blabbing it to everyone and his dog, and this secret had to be kept. Lives depended on the keeping of it. Countless thousands of lives...
Flint struck the double doors with his hand, and they opened with a resounding boom, and he walked inside the Ruby Chamber.
Chapter 22.
Flint's Secret. The Hammer. Tas Makes An Amazing Discovery.
Inside the Ruby Chamber, sunlight gleamed red through the ruby-colored gla.s.s ceiling, filling the room with a warm glow.
Flint walked out onto the ledge and marveled that he was here. He was humble, overwhelmed, triumphant.
He watched the Hammer swing back and forth in a slow arc, as it had done for three hundred years. Had Kharas suspended it from the ceiling? Flint craned his neck to see. The rope on which the Hammer was suspended hung from a simple iron hook. Flint had the impression that perhaps Kharas had suspended the Hammer, but that other hands had added the magic. Other hands had fas.h.i.+oned the gongs that struck the hour and had crafted the beautiful ruby ceiling. The same hands had dragged the tomb out of the Valley of the Thanes and set it floating in the sky, hands that were somewhere around here still, perhaps waiting to close around Flint's throat.
He watched the Hammer count the minutes as they pa.s.sed, as the Hammer had counted all the minutes of Flint's life as they had pa.s.sed, from birth to this moment, as it counted the beating of his weak old heart.
Each dwarf dreams that he or she will be the one to find the fabled Hammer of Kharas. They talk of it over their mugs of ale. They tell the story to their children, who make hammers out of wood and play at being the dwarven hero. Flint had dreamed of it, but he'd been pragmatic enough to know that his was nothing more than a dream. How could he, metal-smith, toy-maker and wanderer, alienated from his own kind, ever be the hero of his race?
But he had. Somehow. By some miracle, the G.o.ds had brought him here. They had brought him for a reason, and he was certain he knew what that reason was.
The Hammer swinging above him made a gentle whoos.h.i.+ng sound as it sailed through the air. He could feel the breath of its pa.s.sing on his face, and he fancied it was the breath of Reorx. Moving stiffly, grimacing at the pain, Flint knelt down awkwardly on the ledge. His old knees creaked in protest. He hoped he could get up again.
"Reorx," he said, gazing into the ruby glow, "you're not one of the G.o.ds of Light, like Paladine and Mishakal. You're a G.o.d who sees both the light and the darkness in a man's soul. You know why I'm here, I guess. You know what I mean to do. Paladine would frown at it, if he were here. Mishakal would throw up her pretty hands in horror.
"I am being dishonest, I suppose," Flint added, stirring uncomfortably, "and what I propose to do is not honorable, though Sturm did go along with it and he's the most honorable person I know.
"You see, Reorx," Flint explained, "I'm only borrowing the Hammer. I'm not stealing it. I'll make sure the dwarves get it back. I just want to use it to forge the dragonlances, and once that's done and we win the battle against the Dark Queen, I'll return the Hammer, switch the true one for the false. The dwarves will never know the difference. Because they think they they have the real Hammer, they'll choose a High King, open the gates to the Thorbardin to the world, bring in the refugees and all will be well. There's no harm to anyone and much good. have the real Hammer, they'll choose a High King, open the gates to the Thorbardin to the world, bring in the refugees and all will be well. There's no harm to anyone and much good.
"That's my plan," said Flint, struggling to stand again. He managed, but only by propping himself up with the kender's hoopak. "I guess if you don't like it, you'll knock me off this ledge or deliver some such punishment."
Flint waited, but nothing happened. The double doors shut behind him, but so slowly and so softly that he never noticed.
Taking silence for a sign that he could proceed with the G.o.d's sanction if not his blessing, Flint walked out to the very end of the ledge. He stared down into the shaft below. All he could see was red light. He wondered how far the drop was then, shrugging, put the thought out of his mind. He gazed up at
Flint stretched out flat on his belly on the ledge. Grasping the hoopak, he held out his arm as far as it would go and made a swipe at the rope with the forked end of the hoopak as the Hammer whistled past.
He missed, but he was close. He had to scoot out over the ledge just another couple of inches. He clutched the end of the stone ledge with his hand and waited for the Hammer to pa.s.s him again.
Flint swung his arm with all his might, and his momentum almost carried him off the ledge. For a heart stopping moment, he feared he was going to fall, but then the hoopak snagged the rope, and like an angler with a fish on the line, Flint gave the hoopak a sharp jerk.
The leather sling dangling from the end of the hoopak tangled itself around the rope, and Flint, his heart beating fast and wild, slowly and carefully drew in the hoopak and the rope attached to the Hammer.
Dropping the hoopak, Flint grabbed the Hammer and hauled it up onto the ledge. At that point he had to pause, for he couldn't quite catch his breath. He was light-headed and dizzy, and strange swirling lights were dancing in front of his eyes. The sensation pa.s.sed quickly, however, and he was able to sit up and take the blessed Hammer in his lap and gaze at it in reverence and awe.
"Thank you, Reorx," said Flint softly. "I'll do good with it. I'll use the hammer to bring honor to your name. I swear it by your beard and mine."
The Hammer was a wonder and a marvel. He could not stop looking at it. The false hammer was like the true but did not feel like it. He put his hand on the Hammer of Kharas, and he felt it quiver with life. He felt himself connected to an intelligence that was good, wise and benevolent, grieving over the weaknesses of mankind, yet understanding of them and forgiving. Some dwarves swore Kharas had carried the Hammer for so long that it was imbued with his spirit, and Flint could almost believe it.
He realized, then, that any dwarf who had ever touched the real Hammer of Kharas could never mistake the false for the true. Fortunately, no dwarf now living had ever touched the real Hammer. Not even Hornfel would know the difference. The counterfeit looked the same, and it weighed about the same, since Raistlin had magicked it. Both hammers were light-weight, easy to carry. The runes were same on both. The color was nearly the same. The true Hammer had a golden sheen that the other did not. He'd just have to keep the real one concealed in his harness.
As for other differences, the false hammer would probably not strike as hard or hit its mark as surely as this Hammer would do. Flint longed to test it, for he had heard that the Hammer of Kharas fused with the dwarf who wielded it, reacting to mind, more than touch; however, Flint would have to wait until he and his friends had put the dwarven kingdom far behind them before he could try it out.
Remembering that Arman might show up at any moment. Flint took the false hammer from his harness-thinking, as he did so, how cheap and shoddy it looked in comparison to the true. He slid the Hammer of Kharas into the harness on his back, tied the false hammer onto the end of the rope then, pulling back the rope as far as it would go, he let loose of the hammer and set it swinging again.
The false hammer swung back and forth as its momentum carried it. But then, slowly, it came to a stop and hung motionless from the ceiling. Flint experienced a moment of panic. Now that it had quit swinging, the hammer might well be out of reach!
He lay down and extended the hoopak. He couldn't touch it, and for a moment he despaired. Then he remembered that Arman's arms were far longer than his, and Flint breathed easier. This was actually good, for it provided him with an excuse for why he'd failed.
Flint walked over to the double doors and opened one and peeped out into the vestibule. No sign of Arman. Just the body of Kharas. The empty eyes seemed to stare at him accusingly. Flint didn't like that, so he shut the door and went to sit down on the ledge. The Hammer of Kharas pressed against his spine, sending a glow of warmth through his body that eased his aches and pains.
Flint waited.
After Flint had so very rudely banished him from the Ruby Chamber, Ta.s.slehoff wasted several moments trying every trick he knew to open the doors, with no result. He then spent a few moments lamenting the loss of his hoopak, the crankiness of dwarves, and the general unfairness of life. Then, seeing as how the doors were not going to open, Tas decided he'd do as Flint had told him and go off to find Arman.
The kender did not have far to look. He had only to turn around, in fact, and there was Arman emerging from a tower to the kender's right.
"Arman!" Tas greeted him with joy.
"Kender," said Arman.
Tas sighed. Liking Arman was hard work.
"Where is Flint?" Arman demanded.
"He's in there," said Tas, pointing at the doors. "We've made the most wonderful discovery! The Hammer of Kharas is inside."
"And Flint is in there?" Arman asked, alarmed.
"Yes, but-"
"Get out of my way!" Arman gave the kender a shove that sent him sprawling on the flagstones. "He must not get the Hammer! It is mine!"
Tas stood up grumpily, rubbing a bruised elbow.
"There's a body in there, too," he said. "The body of Kharas Kharas!" He laid emphasis on that. "Kharas is dead. Quite dead. Been dead a long time, I should imagine."
Arman either wasn't paying attention, or he didn't catch the connection, or maybe it didn't bother him that he'd been hobn.o.bbing with a Kharas who was lying in a mummified state in the vestibule. Arman walked up to the double doors and put his hand on the handle.
"They're locked," Tas started to tell him.
Arman flung the doors open wide and walked in.
"How do they keep doing that?" Tas demanded, frustrated.
He made a spring at the door, just as Arman Kharas shut it in his face.
Ta.s.slehoff gave a dismal wail and pulled on the handles and pushed on the doors. They wouldn't budge. He slumped down disconsolately on the door stoop and sulked. Dwarves opening doors left and right, and he, a kender, shut out. Tas vowed from then on that he would carry his lock picks in his smalls if he had to.
After a moment, he realized that even if he couldn't be present, he could at least see what was happening inside the chamber. He ran over to the roof and pressed his nose against the ruby gla.s.s. There was Arman and there was Flint, standing off to one side, and there was the hammer hanging from the rope that wasn't swinging anymore. Arman had something in his hand.
"My hoopak!" Tas cried indignantly. He beat on the gla.s.s. "Hey! You put that down!"
"I don't think he can hear you," said Kharas.
Kender are not subject to fear, so it couldn't have been fear that made Ta.s.slehoff leap several feet into the air. It must have been because he felt like leaping. He gave a few more light-hearted leaps after that, just to prove it.
Tas turned to confront the white-haired, white-bearded, stooped-shouldered dwarf. The kender raised a scolding finger. "I'm sorry if I hurt your feelings when I say this, but I don't believe you are Kharas. He's dead inside that vestibule. I saw his corpse. He was stung to death by a scorpion, and it's been my experience that a person can't be alive here and dead there at the same time."
"Perhaps I'm the ghost of Kharas," suggested the dwarf.
"I thought you might be, at first," Tas poked his finger into the dwarf's arm, "but ghosts are insubstantial, and you're substantial."
He was quite proud of those long words. They ranked right up there with Ramification and Speculation.
That gave him an idea. His gla.s.ses! The ruby gla.s.ses had let him read writing he couldn't read and see through a wall that wasn't there. Perhaps they would reveal the truth about this mysterious dwarf.
"Hey! Look behind you! What's that?" Tas cried, and pointed past the dwarf's left shoulder.
The dwarf turned to look.
Tas whipped out his spectacles and put them on his nose and stared through the ruby gla.s.s.
He was so amazed by what he saw that he forgot to take them off again. He stood staring, his body going limp, his mind stumbling about in a foggy daze.
"You're..." he began weakly. "You're a..." He swallowed hard, and the word came out. "Dragon."
The dragon was an enormous dragon, the biggest Ta.s.slehoff had ever seen, bigger even than the horrible red dragon of Pax Tharkas. This dragon was also the most beautiful. His scales glittered gold in the sunlight. He held his head proudly, his body was powerful, yet his movements were made with studied grace. He didn't appear to be a ferocious dragon, the kind who considered kender a toothsome midday snack. Although Tas had a feeling this dragon could look very fierce when he wanted to. Right now the dragon only looked troubled and disturbed.
"Ah," said the dragon, his gaze fixed on the ruby spectacles perched on the kender's nose, "I wondered where I'd put those."
"I found them," said Tas immediately. "I think you must have dropped them. Are you going to kill me?"
Tas wasn't really afraid. He just needed to be informed. While he didn't want to be killed by a dragon, if he was going to, he didn't want to miss it.
"I should kill you, you know," the golden dragon said sternly. "You've seen what you're not meant to see. There'll be h.e.l.l to pay over this, I suppose."
The dragon's expression hardened. "Still, I don't much care. Queen Takhisis and her foul minions have returned to the world, haven't they?"
"Does this mean that you're not not a foul minion?" Tas asked. a foul minion?" Tas asked.
"You could say that," said the dragon, with the hint of smile in his wise, s.h.i.+ning eyes.
"Then I will will say that." Tas was relieved. "Yes, the Dark Queen is back, and she's causing a great deal of trouble. She's driven the poor elves out of their beautiful homeland and killed a lot of them, and she and her dragons killed Goldmoon's family and all her people, even the little children. That was really sad." The kender's eyes filled with tears. "And there are these creatures called draconians who look like dragons except they don't, because they walk on two legs like people, but they have wings, tails, and scales like dragons and they're really nasty. There are red dragons who set people on fire, and black dragons who boil the flesh off your bones, and I don't know how many other kinds." say that." Tas was relieved. "Yes, the Dark Queen is back, and she's causing a great deal of trouble. She's driven the poor elves out of their beautiful homeland and killed a lot of them, and she and her dragons killed Goldmoon's family and all her people, even the little children. That was really sad." The kender's eyes filled with tears. "And there are these creatures called draconians who look like dragons except they don't, because they walk on two legs like people, but they have wings, tails, and scales like dragons and they're really nasty. There are red dragons who set people on fire, and black dragons who boil the flesh off your bones, and I don't know how many other kinds."
"But no dragons like myself," said the dragon. "No gold dragons or silver..."
Ta.s.slehoff had a squirmy feeling then. He had seen gold and silver dragons somewhere. He couldn't quite place it. It had something to do with a tapestry and Fizban... The memory almost came back, but then it was gone. Disappeared in a puff ball.
"Sorry, but I've never seen anyone like you before." Tas brightened. "I saw a woolly mammoth once, though. Would you like to hear about it?"
"Perhaps some other time," said the dragon politely. He looked even more troubled and very grim.
"I'm Ta.s.slehoff Burrfoot, by the way," said Tas.
"I am called Evenstar," said the dragon.
"What are you doing here?" Tas asked curiously.