Read Dragonlance 17 - Dragons Of A Vanished Moon Online
Authors: Margaret Weis
"No, we don't," Mina said, struggling to free herself. "I ordered most of our forces to march here, to come to Sanction to be witness to the glory of the One God."
Gaidar opened his mouth, snapped it shut.
"I did not think there would be dragons!" Mina cried out.
He saw the image of himself in her eyes growing smaller and smaller. He loosed his hold on her.
"We will not retreat," she stated.
"Mina—"
"Listen to me, every one of you." She gathered them together with a glance, all the tiny figures frozen in the amber eyes. "We must hold this city at all costs. When the ceremony is complete and the One God enters this world, no force on Krynn will be able to stand against her. She will destroy them all."
The officers stared at her, not moving. Some flinched and cast glances skyward. Gaidar felt a twinge of fear twist his gut—the dragonfear, distant yet, but fast approaching.
"Well, what do wait for?" Mina demanded. "Return to your posts."
No one moved. No one cheered. No one spoke her name.
"You have your orders!" Mina shouted, her voice ragged. "Gaidar, come with me."
She turned to leave. Her Knights did not move. They blocked her path with their bodies. She bore no weapon. She had not thought to bring one.
"Gaidar," said Mina. "Kill any man who tries to stop me."
Gaidar laid his hand on the hilt of his sword.
One by one, the Knights stepped aside, cleared a path.
Mina walked among them, her face cold as death.
"Where are you going?" Gaidar demanded, following after her.
"To the temple. We have much to do and little time to do it."
"Mina," he said, his voice low and urgent in her ear, "you can't leave them to face this alone. For love of you, they will find the courage to stand and fight even golden dragons, but if you are not here—"
Mina halted.
"They do not fight for love of me!" Her voice trembled. "They fight for the One God!" She turned around to face her Knights. "Hear my words. You fight this battle for the One God. You must hold this city in the name of the One God. Any man who flees before the enemy will know the wrath of the One God."
Her Knights lowered their heads, turned away. They did not march proudly back to their posts, as they might once have done. They slunk back sullenly.
"What is the matter with them?" Mina asked, dismayed, confused.
"Once they followed you for love, Mina. Now they obey you as the whipped dog obeys—in fear of the lash," said Gaidar. "Is this what you want?"
Mina bit her lip, seemed to waver in her decision, and Gaidar hoped that she might refuse to heed the voice. That she would do what she knew to be honorable, knew to be right. She would remain loyal to her men, who had remained loyal to her through so much.
Mina's jaw set. The amber eyes hardened. "Let the curs run. I don't need them. I have the One God. I am going to the temple to prepare for the ceremony. Are you coming?" she demanded of
Gaidar. "Or are you going to run away, too?"
He looked into the amber eyes and could no longer see himself. He could no longer see anyone. Her eyes were empty.
She did not wait for his answer. She stalked off. She did not look to see if he was following. She didn't care, one way or the other.
Gaidar hesitated. Looking back at the West Gate, he saw the Knights gathered in knots, talking in low voices. He doubted very much if they were determining a strategy for battle. A babble of screams and cries rose from the streets as word spread that hundreds of golden and silver dragons were bearing
down on Sanction. No one was acting to quell the terror. Each man thought only of himself now, and he had only one thought in his mind—to survive. Soon there would be rioting, as men and women devolved into wild beasts, bit and clawed and fought to save their own hides. In their miserable panic, they might well destroy themselves before the armies of their enemies ever arrived.
If I stay here on the walls, I might rally a few, Gaidar thought. I might find some who would brave the horror and fight alongside
me. I would die well. I would die with honor.
He watched Mina walking away, walking alone, except for that shadowy five-headed figure that hovered over her, surrounded
her, cut her off from everyone who had ever loved her or admired her or cared about her.
"You great bitch!" Gaidar muttered. "You won't get rid of me that easily."
Gripping his sword, he hastened after Mina.
Mina was wrong when she told Gaidar that he was the only one who had ever cared for her. Another cared, cared deeply.
Silvanoshei hurried after her, shoving and pushing his way through the crowds that now milled about in panic in the streets, trying to keep her in sight.
He had stayed in Sanction to hear some word of Mina.
Silvanoshei's joy when he heard she was alive was heartfelt, even as
her return plunged him once more into danger. People suddenly remembered having seen an elf walking about Sanction.
He was forced to go into hiding. A kender obligingly introduced
Silvanoshei to the system of tunnels that criss-crossed beneath Sanction. Elves abhor living beneath the ground, and
Silvanoshei could remain in the tunnels for only short periods of time ^efore he was driven to the surface by a desperate need for air. He stole food to keep himself alive, stole a cloak with a hood and a scarf to wrap around his face, hide his elven features.
He lurked about the ruins of the totem, hoping to find a chance to talk to Mina, but he never saw her there. He grew
fearful, wondered if she'd left the city or if she had fallen ill. Then he overheard a chance bit of gossip to the effect that she had moved out of the Temple of the Heart and had taken up residence in another temple, the ruined Temple of Duerghast that stood on the outskirts of Sanction.
Built to honor some false god dreamed up by a demented cult, the temple was notorious for having an arena where human sacrifices were sent to die for the entertainment of a cheering crowd. During the War of the Lance, Lord Ariakas had appropriated the temple, using its dungeons to torture and
torment his prisoners.
The temple had an evil reputation, and there had been talk in recent days, during the reign of Hogan Bight, of razing it. Tremors had caused gigantic cracks to open in the walls, weakening the structure to the point where no one felt safe even going near it. The citizens of Sanction had decided to let the Lords of Doom complete the destruction.
Then came the news that Mina was planning to rebuild the temple, transform it into a place of worship of the One God.
The Temple of Duerghast lay on the other side of the moat of lava that surrounded Sanction. The temple could not be reached overland, not without bridging the moat. Therefore, Silvanoshei reasoned, Mina would be forced to enter the temple via one of the tunnels. He traipsed about the tunnel system, losing himself more than once, and at last found what he was
searching for—a tunnel that ran beneath the curtain wall on the southern side of the city.
Silvanoshei had been planning to explore this tunnel when the alarm was raised. He saw the dragonrider fly overhead and land outside the West Gate. Guessing that Mina would come to take charge of the situation, Silvanoshei concealed himself in the crowds of people who were eager to see Mina. He pressed as close as he dared, hoping against hope just to catch a glimpse of her.
Then he saw her, surrounded by her Knights, speaking to the dragonrider. Suddenly one man broke from the group and raced into the crowd, shouting -out that silver and gold dragons were coming, dragons ridden by Solamnic Knights. People swore and cursed and started to push and shove. Silvanoshei was jostled and nearly knocked down. Through it all, he fought to keep his eyes on her.
The news of dragons and Knights meant little to Silvanoshei. He thought of it only in terms of how this would affect Mina. He was certain she would lead the battle, and he feared that he would have no opportunity to talk to her. He was astonished beyond measure to see her turn around and walk off, abandoning her troops.
Their loss was his blessing.
Her voice carried to him clearly. "I am going to the temple to prepare for the ceremony."
At last, maybe he could find a way to speak to her.
Silvanoshei entered the tunnel he had found, hoping that his calculations were correct and that it led beneath the moat of fire to the Temple of Duerghast. Hope almost died when he found that the tunnel roof had partially collapsed. He made his way past the chunks of rock and soil, continued on, and eventually found a ladder that led to the surface.
He climbed swiftly, had sense enough to slow as he neared the top. A wooden trapdoor kept the tunnel opening concealed from those above. As he pushed against the door, his hand broke through the rotting wood. A cascade of dirt and splinters
fell down around him. Cautiously, he peered out of the hole in the trapdoor. Bright sunshine half-blinded him. He blinked his eyes, waited for them to become accustomed to the light.
The Temple of Duerghast stood only a short distance away.
To reach the temple, he would have to cross a space of open ground. He would be visible from the walls of Sanction.
Silvanoshei doubted if anyone would see him or pay attention to him. All eyes would be turned skyward.
Silvanoshei wormed his way out of the hole and ran across the open patch of ground, hid himself in a shadow cast by the temple's outer wall. Constructed of black granite blocks, the temple's curtain wall was built in the shape of a square. Two towers guarded the front entrance. Circling around the wall,
hugging the building, he searched for some way inside. He came to one of the towers, and here he found two doors, one at either end of the wall.
Heavy slabs of iron controlled by winches served for gates. Although they were covered with rust, the iron gates remained in place and would probably still be standing when the rest of the temple fell down around them. He could not enter there, but he could enter through a part of the outer wall that had collapsed into a pile of rubble. The climb would be difficult, but he was nimble. He was certain he could manage.
He started toward the wall, then halted, frozen in the shadows.
He had caught movement out of the corner of his eye.
Someone else had come to the Temple of Duerghast. A man stood before it, gazing at it. The man stood in the open, the
sunshine pouring down on him. Silvanoshei must have been blind to have missed seeing him. Yet, he could have sworn that there had been no one there when he came around the corner.
Judging by his looks, the man was not a warrior. He was quite tall, above average height. He wore no sword, carried no bow slung across his shoulder. He was clad in brown woolen hose, a green and brown tunic, and tall leather boots. A cowl, brown in color, covered his head and shoulders. Silvanoshei could not see the man's face.
Silvanoshei fumed. What was this simpleton doing here? Nothing,
by the looks of it, except gawking at the temple like a kender on holiday. He had no weapon, he wasn't a threat, yet Silvanoshei was reluctant to have the man see him. Silvanoshei was determined
to talk to Mina, and for all he knew this man might be some sort of guard. Or perhaps this stranger was also waiting to speak to her. He had the look of someone waiting.
Silvanoshei wished the man away. Time was passing. He had to get inside. He had to talk to Mina. Still the man did not move.
At last, Silvanoshei decided he could wait no longer. He was a swift runner. He could~ outdistance the man, if the stranger gave chase, lose himself in the temple confines before the man figured out what had happened. Silvanoshei drew in a breath, ready to run.
The man turned his head. Drawing back his cowl, he looked straight at Silvanoshei.
The man was an elf.
Silvanoshei stared, riveted, unmoving. For a petrifying moment, he feared that Samar had tracked him down, but he
recognized immediately that this was not Samar.
At first glance, the elf appeared young, as young as Silvanoshei.
His body had the strength, the lithesome grace of youth. A second glance caused Silvanoshei to rethink his first. The elf's face was unmarred by time, yet in his expression held a gravity that was not youthful, had nothing to do with youth's hope and high spirits and joyful expectations. The eyes were bright as the eyes of youth, but their brilliance was shadowed,
tempered by sorrow. Silvanoshei had the odd impression that this
man knew him, but he could not place the strange elf at all.
The elf looked at Silvanoshei, then he looked away, turned his gaze back to the temple.
Silvanoshei took advantage of the elf's shift in attention to sprint to the opening in the wall. He climbed swiftly, one eye on the strange elf, who never moved. Silvanoshei dropped down
over the side of the wall. He peered back through the rubble to see the elf still standing there, waiting.
Putting the stranger from his mind, Silvanoshei entered the ruined temple and set off in search of Mina.
30
For Love of Mina
Mina fought her way through the crowded streets of Sanction.
Her movement was hampered by the people who, I at the sight of her, surged forward to touch her. They cried out to her in fear of the coming dragons. They begged her to save them.
"Mina, Mina!" they shouted, and the din was hateful to her.
She tried to block it out, tried to ignore them, tried to free
herself from their clutching, clinging hands, but with every step she took, they gathered around her more thickly, calling out her name, repeating it over and over as a frantic litany against fear.
Another called her name. The voice of Takhisis, loud and insistent, urging her to make haste. Once the ceremony was
complete, once Takhisis had entered the world and united the
spiritual realm with the physical, the Dark Queen could take any form she chose, and in that form she would fight her enemies.