She got her free hand up to block as Rufo’s wide-arcing slap raced in, but his strength blew through the defense and snapped Danica’s head viciously to the side. Dazed, Danica offered no resistance as Rufo hurled her back onto the bed. Then he was atop her, his strong fingers around her throat. Danica grabbed Rufo’s forearm and twisted, but again to no avail.
Then Danica simply stopped struggling, sublimated her strong survival instinct, and did nothing to remove Rufo’s hand from her neck, did nothing to restore the flow of air into her lungs. At that moment, Danica hoped the vampire would kill her, thought death preferable to any other option.
Then there was only blackness.
The trail was a winding way, sometimes looping back on itself through passable areas between towering pillars of stone. At times the view was panoramic and majestic, at others the three companions felt almost as if they were walking along tight underground corridors.
As fate would have it, Cadderly didn’t see the plume of black smoke rising from the southern wing of the Edificant Library, his view blocked by the last tall mountain before they came fully in view of the place. If he’d seen the smoke, the young priest would have sought the song of his god, his magic, and walked with the wind the rest of the way to the library. As anxious as Cadderly was to aid in the battle he thought Dorigen faced, he didn’t listen for Deneir’s song, didn’t want to strain his energies, which had been so sorely taxed in his battle with Aballister and Castle Trinity.
Pikel and Ivan hopped along the trail behind Cadderly, oblivious to any problems at all—except that Ivan was weary of the whole journey and badly wanted to be home again in his familiar kitchen. Pikel still delighted in wearing Cadderly’s wide-brimmed blue hat, thinking it brought out the rich green in his dyed and braided hair and beard.
Ivan just thought he looked stupid.
They moved in silence for a time, and at one point, Cadderly paused, thinking he heard a song. He cocked an ear to the wind. The music sounded like Brother Chaunticleer’s midday offering. Cadderly looked around, gauging the distance still to go, and realized there was no way, even if the winds were perfect, that he could possibly hear Chaunticleer’s song. The library was at least five miles away.
As he moved to keep up with the bouncing dwarves, Cadderly realized that the music he heard was not in his ears, but in his mind.
Chanticleer was singing—it was definitely Chaunticleer’s voice—and Cadderly was hearing it the way he heard the song of Deneir.
What could that mean?
It wouldn’t occur to Cadderly that Chaunticleer’s sweet song might be a ward against some terrible evil. He reasoned that if his own mind was tuned purely to Deneir, that Chaunticleer’s offering, too, was in perfect harmony with their god.
To Cadderly, the song was a good thing. It didn’t remain constant in his thoughts, but came often enough for the young priest to know that Brother Chanticleer was going on and on, far longer than usual. Still, the young priest put no ominous connotations on that, simply figured that the man must be feeling extremely pious that day—or perhaps Chanticleer wasn’t really singing and Cadderly was just hearing the reverberations of that perfect offering.
“Are ye thinking of setting another camp?” the increasingly surly, yellow-bearded Ivan asked some time later, drawing Cadderly from the music and its unfathomable implications.
Cadderly looked at the rocky trail ahead and tried to remember exactly where he was. “Five miles left to walk, at least,” he replied, “through difficult terrain.”
Ivan snorted. The Snowflakes, by the dwarf’s estimation, were not so difficult, not even with winter still holding fast with its last fingers. Ivan was from a place far to the north, wild Vaasa and the rugged Galena Mountains, where goblins and giantkin were thicker than pebbles and the winter wind off the Great Glacier could freeze a man solid in a heartbeat.
The dwarf took one last disgusted glance at Pikel, who chuckled in response then stomped past Cadderly and took up the lead.
“Tonight,” Ivan explained. “We’ll be walking through the front doors before the stars come clear!”
Cadderly sighed and watched Ivan take a fast-paced lead. Pikel was still chuckling when he came hopping past.
“Give me that,” Cadderly snapped, seeing the source of Ivan’s ire. He plucked the hat from Pikel’s head, brushed it off, and tapped it atop his own crown. Then he pulled from his pack the cooking pot, the impromptu helmet the green-bearded dwarf had fashioned for himself, and plopped it over Pikel’s head.
Pikel’s chuckle turned into a sorrowful, “Oooo.”
Some miles from the three, to the northwest, a scrambling noise in the boughs above brought Shayleigh from her Reverie. Angled in the hollow of a thick branch near the trunk of a wide elm, the elf, to an unknowing observer, would have appeared in an awkward and dangerous predicament. But a slight twist brought agile Shayleigh completely around, her back flat on the branch and her longbow somehow clear of the tangle, out and ready above her.
The elf’s violet eyes narrowed as she considered the busy canopy, searching for the source of the noise. She wasn’t too worried—the sun was still high above the western horizon—but she knew the natural sounds of the forest’s animals, and recognized that whatever had come so noisily into the boughs of this tree had done so in wild flight.
A leaf danced, not so far above her, and back bent her bow.
Then the foliage parted, and Shayleigh eased the string back to rest, and smiled to see a familiar white squirrel staring down at her.
Percival came down in a frenzied rush, and Shayleigh’s smile faded into an expression of confusion. Why would Percival, whom she’d met long ago, be so far from the library? she wondered. And what had so obviously upset the creature?
Unlike Cadderly and the dwarves, Shayleigh had seen the pillar of smoke, and at that time, had thought to turn back and investigate. She figured it was only a ceremonial fire, though, perhaps a communal burial cairn for those priests who had died over the winter months and were finally being put to rest. She didn’t think it was her business, that her responsibility was, after all, to return to Shilmista with all speed, where King Elbereth no doubt greatly anticipated her information.
She had taken her Reverie early, with the sun still high, thinking to travel through the night.
But seeing Percival there, hopping around and chattering frantically, Shayleigh regretted her choice to continue. She should have gone straight to the library, straight to Danica, her friend, who might have needed her help … and still might.
Shayleigh swung under the branch, her feet touching lightly on the next lowest. She bent her legs and fell backward, hooking the branch with her knees, and swung down so that she caught the lowest branch in one hand. She kept with the flow of her momentum to spin lightly down to the ground. Percival, following, was hard-pressed to keep up.
Shayleigh held her arm out and made a ticking noise, and Percival leaped from the lowest branch to her, accepting the ride as the elf maiden ran full speed back to the east, back to her friend.
FOURTEEN
TWILIGHT
I feared I had killed you.”
It was Rufo’s voice, from far away, but rushing closer.
Danica opened her eyes. She was on the bed, in the same room as before, but her wrists and ankles were securely bound to the bed’s four strong posts. There was a throbbing, burning pain in her wounded left leg, and the monk feared the bonds would cut through her skin and sever the already tattered ankle.
Worse still, there was Rufo, leaning over her, his white face softened with concern.
“My dear Danica,” he whispered. He came closer, trying to soften his angular features, trying to be gentle.
Danica didn’t bother to spit in his face. She was beyond any further symbolic, ineffective protests.
Still, Rufo recognized her disgust. “Don’t you believe I can love you?” he asked quietly, and a twitch on one cheek told Danica he was fighting hard to hol
d his calm.
Again Danica offered no response.
“I have loved you since you first came to the library,” Rufo went on. “I’ve watched you from afar, delighting in the simple grace of your every movement.”
Danica steeled her cold gaze and did not blink.
“But I’m not a pretty man,” Rufo went on. “Never have I been, and so it was Cadderly—” a bit of venom bubbled over at the mention of that name—”and not I who caught your fairest eye.”
The self-deprecation was pitiful, but Danica held little sympathy for Rufo.
“A pretty man?” she questioned. “You still cannot comprehend how small a thing that is.”
Rufo backed off, perplexed.
Danica shook her head and told him, “You would love Histra if she was still a pretty woman, but you have never been able to see beyond the skin. You have never cared for what was in someone’s heart and soul, because your own are empty.”
“Take care with your words,” Rufo warned.
“They hurt because they’re true.”
“No!”
“Yes!” Danica lifted her head as high as the bonds would allow, her glower forcing Rufo to retreat farther. “It’s not Cadderly’s smile I love, but the source of that smile, the warmth of his heart and the truth of his soul.
“Wretched Rufo, I pity you,” she decided then. “I pity that you never fathomed the difference between love and ego.”
“You are wrong!” the vampire raged.
Danica didn’t blink, but she did slip back to the mattress as Rufo closed over her. She scrunched her head down on her shoulders and even whimpered a bit as he continued his advance, thinking he meant to take her against her will. For all her training and all her strength, Danica was unable to accept that possibility.
The monk, though, had touched a weakness in the vampire’s heart. “You are wrong,” Rufo said again, quietly. “I do love.” As if to accentuate his point, Rufo brushed his hand softly down Danica’s cheek, under her chin, and along her neck. Danica recoiled as much as possible, but the bonds were strong and she was weak from loss of blood.
“I do love,” he said again. “Rest, my sweet. I will return when you’re stronger, and I will show you.”
Danica breathed a sincere sigh of relief as Rufo backed away, gave a final look, and swept from the room. Her relief was temporary, she knew. She tested her bonds again, and finding no luck, lifted her head to consider her wounds.
She couldn’t even feel the cord holding her injured leg, only a sourceless pain. She saw that her ankle and calf were bloated, and the exposed skin, where it was not caked with dried blood, was badly discolored. Danica felt the infection within her, adding to the weakness from the loss of blood, and she knew she could not get free. Even if she could, her broken body wouldn’t give her the strength to get out of the library.
Danica rested, falling back into a sense of hopelessness greater than anything she’d ever known. She saw between the boards over the room’s one small, west-facing window that the sun had already crested on a new day, to begin its journey to the horizon. Danica knew Rufo would return with the night.
And she would have no defense.
The Edificant Library came into sight late in the afternoon, a square, squat structure peeping through the more rounded and natural lines of the surrounding terrain.
That first, distant glimpse told Cadderly something was very wrong. His instincts, or maybe the subtle warnings from Chaunticleer’s song, screamed at him, but he didn’t understand. He thought it was his own feelings for the library that had given him such a start.
The building was soon out of sight again, blocked by high rocks as the group rounded another bend. Ivan and Pikel, after whispering together, rushed past Cadderly and set a tremendous pace, explaining that they planned to prepare a delicious supper that very night.
The sun had not yet dipped below the mountains when they came back in sight of the library, the companions cutting in at the side of the grove that lined the structure’s long front walkway. All three skidded to an abrupt stop, Pikel’s ensuing, “Oooo,” pretty much summing things up for them all.
Wisps of gray smoke still filtered from several windows on the southern wing, and the smell of burned wood hung thick in the air.
“Oooo,” Pikel said again.
Those inner pleas, Chaunticleer’s continuing call to Deneir, erupted in Cadderly’s mind, shouting for him to flee, but he ran to the doors of the place that had been his home. He should have paused there, should have taken note of the hole in the wood.
Cadderly grabbed at the handles and tugged hard, to no avail. He turned back to Ivan and Pikel, his faced screwed up curiously.
“They’re locked,” he said, and it was the first time Cadderly had ever known the doors to the Edificant Library to be locked.
Ivan’s tremendous axe came sweeping off his shoulder, and Pikel lowered his club into battering ram position and began scraping the ground with one foot like a bull about to charge.
Both relaxed and straightened unexpectedly when they saw the doors open behind Cadderly.
“Ye’re sure about that?” Ivan asked the young priest.
Cadderly turned and eyed the opening skeptically. “Swollen from the heat of the fire,” he decided, and with Ivan and Pikel beside him, the young priest entered the library.
All the silent cries that he should flee flew from Cadderly the moment he crossed the threshold. He took it as a good sign, a confirmation that he’d overreacted.
The foyer wasn’t badly damaged, though the scent of soot was nearly overwhelming. To the left sat the small chapel, obviously where the fire had been most intense. The place’s heavy door was apparently closed, though the friends couldn’t see it. A thick tapestry had been draped over it.
Cadderly eyed that tapestry for a long while. It showed elves, dark elves. Cadderly knew how valuable that tapestry was, among the finest artwork in all the library. It had belonged to Pertelope, and Ivan had used its depictions to fashion the small hand-crossbow that Cadderly now wore on his belt.
What’s it doing here? the young priest wondered. Who would think to use such a precious piece of irreplaceable art to block out clouds of soot?
“Seems like the fire was contained,” Ivan offered.
Of course it had been contained, both dwarves and Cadderly realized when they took a moment to think about it. The library was more stone than wood, and there really was very little to burn in the place.
What, then, had caused so intense a fire?
Ivan started right, Pikel bobbing after, for the kitchen, but Cadderly caught him by the arm and swung him and his ducking brother around.
“I want to check the main chapel,” the young priest stated, his voice detached. Ivan and Pikel looked to each other, shrugged, then turned curious gazes at Cadderly, who stood still for a long while, his eyes closed.
He couldn’t hear the song of Deneir, he realized. And he could no longer hear Chaunticleer’s singing, though the priest was surely closer than when they were out in the mountains. It seemed as if Deneir had flown from the place.
“What are ye thinking?” the always impatient Ivan asked.
Cadderly opened his gray eyes and looked at the dwarf.
“Well?” Ivan prompted. “What are ye thinking?”
“This place has been desecrated,” Cadderly replied, and it wasn’t until he had spoken the words that he understood what he was saying.
“Been burned,” Ivan corrected, looking at the tapestry, not understanding what Cadderly was talking about.
“Desecrated!” Cadderly yelled, the word echoing off the stone walls and filtering up the stairway. The significance of the word, and the weight with which Cadderly had shouted it sent shivers coursing through both brothers.
“What are ye talking about?” Ivan asked.
Cadderly just shook his head and spun off, making all speed for the main chapel, the holiest place in that holy place. He expected he would find
priests there, brothers of both host orders, praying to their respective gods, fighting to bring Deneir and Oghma back to the library.
But the chapel was empty.
Thick soot covered the intricate designs on the massive, arching pillars closest to the doors, but little else seemed out of place. The altar across the way seemed intact, all the items—the bells, the single chalice, and the twin scepters atop it—exactly where they belonged.
Their footsteps resounding, the three huddled close together and made their way toward the apse.
Ivan saw the body first, and pulled up to a quick stop, holding out a strong arm that bent Cadderly over at the waist and forced him to hold as well.
Pikel continued forward a step, but came around when he realized that the others weren’t following. He used their stunned expressions to guide his own eyes.
“Oooo,” the green-bearded dwarf muttered.
“Banner,” Cadderly explained, recognizing the burned corpse, though its skin hung in flaps away from the bone, and its face was half skull and half blackened skin.
The eyes rotated in their sockets, settling on Cadderly, and a grotesque smile erupted, the remaining flaps of the body’s lips going wide.
“Cadderly!” Banner cried with excitement. He catapulted to a standing position, bones rattling, arms bouncing wildly, and head bobbing about. “Oh, Cadderly, how good of you to return!”
Ivan and Pikel gasped in unison and fell back. They had fought undead monsters before, alongside Cadderly in the catacombs of that very building. But they looked to the young priest for support. The chapel was his domain.
Cadderly, stunned, overwhelmed, fell back, too, and grabbed his hat and more particularly, the holy symbol set in its front.
“I knew—I simply knew!—that you’d come back,” the grotesque Banner rambled on. He clapped his hands, and one of his fingers, held by a mere thread of ligament, fell from the others and dangled in midair several inches from his hand.
“I keep doing that!” the exasperated thing wailed, and he began reeling in his dropped digit as though it were some empty fishhook.