Authors: David Cook
Martine could read in the gnoll’s flattened ears and curled lips the warnings of a dog about to fight. So intent had she been on the confrontation that it came as a surprise when she suddenly noticed that she was alone. Her guard had vanished, apparently joining the onlookers who circled the pair. The ranger needed no More prompting. Grabbing up her bundle, she wriggled through the door and immediately sprinted for the woods. Having already failed once
because she had been too cautious, she decided now to act boldly and trust Tymora’s wheel. By its spin, she’d either make it or be captured once More.
“WordMaker!” The elemental’s shrill cry made the
Harper’s heart drop, for in that moment, she was certain Soldiers of Ice
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her flight had been discovered. Panic forced her to increase her speed.
I’ve got to reach the woods before them. I’ll be safe there.
Martine knew her skills as a ranger would serve her well in the forest. The forest would become an ally. She knew how to travel without leaving a clear trail, how to conceal herself in the shadowed spaces between the trees.
“WordMaker!” Vreesar shrilled again, its buzz keening like a furiously spun grindstone. “Do not defy me!”
Even as she sprinted across the last bit of open ground, Martine breathed a sigh of relief, for behind her the drama had not played out as she had feared. The onlookers would still be watching, her guard still away from his post, and her escape might yet go unnoticed.
There was a jumble of voices behind her, none of which Martine could hear clearly, and then Vreesar’s stinging drone once More pierced the damon “I do not care for your advice or your customz, WordMaker. Get out of my sight before I kill you, too. Hide in your hut, weak one. Do not come into thiz hall again!”
The elemental’s orders gave Martine very little time. If Krote went to the hut, he was sure to discover her escape.
Nonetheless, at the very edge of the clearing, the Harper deliberately veered from her course. The shelter of the thickets beckoned to her, but the woman resisted plunging through the unbroken snow. Just ahead was what she
sought, a well-used trail that wound through the woods.
Her plan, quickly formed, was to follow it until she was well away from the village and then strike out on her own. With luck, she’d hide her own escape route among the footprints of her captors.
At the entrance to the pine forest, she paused to scan for pursuers. Success hinged on secrecy, and if she had been discovered, the ranger wanted to know now. There were no gnolls in sight. She didn’t wait for the cry of pursuit. Turn 130
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.ng onto the path, she plunged into the welcome gloom of the winter forest. The trail almost instantly twisted out of sight of the camp, bending past tall pines, birch thickets, and the bare canes of last summer’s berry bushes.
The temperature was frigid, whipped colder by the
strong winds that swirled through the trees. She welcomed the wind, though, for the fine powder it swept along with it would quickly drift over the trail, making it harder to distinguish her tracks from all the others. Without weapons,
food, or proper gear, Martine needed every advantage possible.
Even though the snow was fairly well packed, following the trail was arduous without skis or snowshoes. It didn’t take long before the cold was forgotten. Sweat worked into the thick weave of her clothes, where it froze, making her legs and arms crackle with each step.
A half-mile along the trail, perhaps More, the ranger heard the first sounds of alarm. A series of baying howls, like jackals calling together the pack for a hunt, drifted through the woods. In the silence of the forest, the voices of the gnolls were unmistakable from the hoots of the owls or even the occasional call of a lone wolf.
Maybe they won’t find the trail right away, Martine thought as she ran. No, wishful thinking like that gets people killed, her warrior instincts reminded her. They’ll find my path soon enough. It’s time to get off the trail.
With that in mind, Martine stayed on the path until it skirted a granite upthrust, one of many that marked the lower slopes of the surrounding mountains. The weathered stones rose from the undulating snow in a series of spires, tilted and tumbled to form irregular terraces. Few trees grew around the base, leaving a windswept area where the snow had thawed and frozen with each sunny day until the snow was a hard crust of wind-rippled ice.
It was the perfect place, since she would leave no tracks on the hard bare ice, so Martine abandoned the trail and Soldiers of Ice
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clambered over the rock, taking care to avoid the patches of snow that clung to the cracked stone. Slipping through a deft in the spires, she came out on the back side of the outcropping.
There she waited, crouched in the lee of the stone, screened from the wind-driven snow, listening to the brutal squawks of the ravens answered by the titters of the chickadees. Already her fingers were cold and her feet numb inside her fur-wrapped boots, but her patience was at last rewarded when she heard the barking voices of gnolls nearby. The hunters were on the trail.
She set off into the deep snow, this time heading back toward the gnoll village. Martine knew she didn’t have to leave the rocks. She knew she didn’t have to go back. She could have turned her footsteps south and made for the pass to Samek. Still she slogged through the drifts that coiled around the pine trunks, always taking care to stay in the deep woods, well away from any trails.
Duty drove her back.
Jazrac’s key was still in the village, against the wall in the main lodge, and she had to go back and get it. It’s my duty as a Harper, she thought. That’s what Jazrac or Khelben or any of the others would tell me. I’ll never be a true Harper if I’m afraid to go back. I’ll have failed, and they’ll all know it. I have to go back.
It’s all part of a plan, she convinced herself. First I lure the gnolls out of their village, then I slip behind them, get the stone, and escape. They’ll never find me, because I’ll be behind them. It’s a brilliant plan—or is it? Martine didn’t know, couldn’t know, until it either succeeded or failed.
Using the sun and a few landmarks she had noted, Martine backtracked slowly. The voices of the gnolls grew
louder until she was certain they were just off her left flank.
The huntress took shelter in a thicket until they passed and the voices had faded farther up the trail.
When their barked commands were no More than dim
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echoes, Martine angled back onto the trail. It was a risk.
There might be a straggler or even a second search party, but she needed to make better speed. Breaking trail through the deep snow was exhausting her, and that was a condition she couldn’t risk, especially without food. With exhaustion would come uncontrollable shivering, then frostbite, collapse, and a dreamlike death as the cold overcame her. As a precaution, she found a stout branch. Swung with two hands it would make a fair club—the crudest of weapons, but a weapon and therefore useful.
As she trudged along the trail and read the signs of her pursuers, Martine caught a flash of movement off to her left. As quickly as she could focus her vision on the spot, the shape vanished, leaving only the glimpse of a burly, stoop-shouldered shadow. A gnoll? She couldn’t be sure. It could be a bear, or even a change in shadow as clouds drifted across the sun. Hefting her cudgel, the ranger slowly approached the spot where she had sighted it, silently picking her way from shadow to shadow.
Ten feet and several moments later, a gnoll suddenly stepped from behind a tree trunk, sword drawn but oblivious to her presence. With a great roundhouse swing, Martine smashed her stick against the side of the creature’s head and was rewarded with the metallic twang of wood cracking against a helm. Her cudgel split with the force of her blow, and the jolt rang down through her arms. The gnoll dropped like a felled ox.
Martine sprang astraddle the body, doubting that she’d killed her foe. With numb hands, she fumbled in the snow to recover the dropped sword. Stepping clear, she pressed the blade to the gnoll’s throat just as the creature began to stir.
“What… what happened?” the gnoll groaned, and the Harper instantly recognized the voice. By some capricious whim of Lady Tymora, it was the WordMaker who lay
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sprawled before her. A trickle of blood soaked the fur that stuck out from beneath his helm, but the wound didn’t appear to be serious.
“Lie on your back, arms up, hands together,” Martine ordered, all the while smiling in grim amusement at this sudden reversal of their situations. The shaman groggily complied, and she quickly bound his wrists with some of the sinew she had salvaged from the hut. “Not one sound,”
she ordered next, sword still held at his throat.
Krote obeyed, clearheaded enough to recognize the peril of his situation. She began searching him for other weapons.
“Why are you here?” the shaman asked in a whisper.
With the blade held close to his jugular, he took care not to alarm his captor.
‘q’he rock.., the one in my gear. I need it. Is it still in the lodge?”
His answer was a choked laugh. Before she could demand what was so funny, her hands patted a hard lump in one of the shaman’s pouches. Quickly she opened it and pulled out the familiar reddish cinder that was Jazrac’s stone. In the same pouch, she discovered the wizard’s bone-handled knife.
“I knew you wanted it, so I took it,” Krote explained, grinning.
“Am I right? Is the rock why you came back? It is the thing Vreesar seeks, true? The way back to his home?”
“Get up,” she ordered abruptly, ignoring his questions.
The discovery of the rock and the knife eliminated the need for several steps in her plan, but now it left her with a new problem. She couldn’t leave the WordMaker behind.
Already the shaman had correctly guessed too much. Vree.
sar would almost certainly learn the truth from the gnoll.
Nor could Martine bring herself to kill the shaman now that she’d caught him. The practical soIution was too coldblooded for her to stomach.
Like it or not, I’ve got myself a prisoner, she thought rue 134
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“Move,” the ranger snapped, furious with the situation, herself, and her ever-present sense of right and wrong.
Once More she doubled back, this time turning in the direction of Samek. Dragging along Krote as a prisoner didn’t improve her chances of reaching the gnomes safely.
She doubted he’d be of much value as a hostage, and there was every chance the gnoll would betray her at the first opportunity.
With the shaman in the lead, the pair followed the gnoll trail once More, traveling the same direction as she had before. It was a good plan. Certainly any tracker would be confused, although there was considerable risk that they might run into the returning gnolls. Knowing these things did nothing to lessen her nerves, which were as jittery as a rabbit’s.
They reached the granite outcropping that marked the place where she had begun to backtrack. Kneeling, Martine examined the trail she had not taken. It was with some relief that she noted the tracks of the hunting party continued on. They missed my backtrack, she thought, pleased
with herself even though she knew they might return at any time.
Leaving the trail once More, the Harper guided her prisoner over the ice and rocks, rousing the dark ravens from their roosts. As before, she used the hard surfaces of granite and ice to make their trail disappear, although this time she did not backtrack toward the village but instead headed south toward the dark saddleback ridge that was the pass to Samek.
Descending from the rocky ledges, Martine plunged into the darkest heart of the woods. At sword point, she forced Krote to plow through drifts that sometimes reached well beyond his knees. There was no hiding their trail now, should her pursuers somehow find it. Speed was all-Soldiers °flce
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important, and the race was against cold and exhaustion as much as those who hunted for her.
The forest here was virgin pine, the kind cut elsewhere for their long, straight logs. The Harper doubted that any axe had ever touched most of this wood, for the trees were incredibly tall and barren except for bursts of needled boughs near the top. The drab green canopy was laden with snow, casting the forest floor into a perpetual quasi-twilighL
Their journey wasn’t easy. The snow ranged from shallow to deep as it drifted around the tree trunks. Frequently brambles conspired to block the way, and steep ravines stood in their path at several points. Massive deadfalls, where several trees had fallen in a single storm, created impassable snarls that could only be bypassed. All around these falls, uprooted pines leaned perilously on their neighbors.
The woods softly resounded to the creaking trunks
and the dismal hiss of the wind. Ravens spoke of their passage, the birds’ harsh voices ringing far through the mute woods.
Although Martine was born to the outdoors and knew it well, this forest was different from others she was familiar with. The endless tracts of pine were not like the woods of oak and elm in Sembia and the Dalelands. The forest here was tall, muffled, and cold.
A feeling of dark watchfulness tingled at the back of Martine’s neck, and she knew it was the spirit of the forest.
Others, townsfolk and farmers, never felt it. That sense was knowledge only true woodsmen knew by the way the wind rustled the leaves, the direction the water flowed, or even how a rabbit left its tracks. This forest’s spirit was ungenerous and unforgiving, barely tolerant of intruders. Martine didn’t feel any warmth in these woods like those of her homeland.
Exhausted, the Harper finally called a stop as she leaned, 136
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perspiring in the chill, against the trunk of a tree. Krote squatted, his jaw slack and tongue hanging as he panted clouds of frost, almost as spent as she and glad for the rest.