Authors: David Cook
The wizard interrupted her reverie. “Anyway, !wm
tell you how pleased I am—everyone is—with your effi You seem to have.., well, that Harper stuffing in you. i thing, too. So if you want to take a rest for a month or you deserve it.” He looked down at her with the best soling gaze his thin, creased face could manage.
Martine stopped walking and was about to give
very carefully worded protest when Jazrac continued.
“Or,” he said ever so slowly, the corners of his m
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curling up in a tiny smile, “you could take on another mission—a solo job, a chance for you to really show your
mettle. Are you interested?” Taking a slow breath of the bracing autumn air, Jazrac paused and then added, “It could be the big break you’ve been waiting for—a chance to prove you really are a full-fledged Harper.” The wizard waited for some reaction from his protege.
For a moment, Martine kept silent, surprised by Jazrac’s offer. The stream and skittering leaves sounded a soft background to their walk, underscored by the creaking and
scraping of the aged waterwheel driving the grindstone at the miller’s nearby.
“I don’t need rest!” the slight ranger blurted, her alto voice rising eagerly. ‘Well me about this mission.”
Jazrac smiled with smug satisfaction at his protege’s response. “Do you have any idea just how thin we Harpers have been spread of late?”
Martine’s reply was a quizzical look.
He caught her hand, and with his sharp, bony fingers gently recited the litany. ‘WVaterdeep, Impiltur, Thay, Chult, gods know where else. It seems as if every distant land has some problem that needs solving. Now something’s happening in the north, up past Damara. There’s been some
kind of eruption, and we want you to investigate.”
“Some kind of trouble in Damara?”
“I said an eruption, my clean North of Damara, on the Great Glacier. A volcano of ice.” Jazrac shivered slightly in the autumn cold and turned back toward the houses and fields of Shadowdale. Martine fell in step alongside him.
“An ice volcano? You’re teasing me.” The idea sounded too incredible to believe, even from a wizard.
‘q/ou should know me better than that, Martine,’ the wizard chided, head tilted till his goatee seemed to point at her.
“This is Harper business. I’m serious.”
Martine flushed.
Soldiers of !ce
I I
“As I said, we’re dealing with a volcano of ice. It happens sometimes, my dear—a rift in the walls between the worlds.
Elminster and I have been tracking this one. It looks like an opening to the para-elemental plane of ice.”
‘Whe what?”
“Sorry. Wizard talk.”
“Oh.”
“It’s an opening to another—um—plane. You know about the elemental forces—earth, air, fire, and water. Perhaps you aren’t aware of it, but there are others, such as the para-, the quasi-, and who knows what other elemental planes, not as strong or important, and ice is one of those.”
Martine listened avidly. She’d heard of the existence of the planes and knew about the four elements, but the rest was new to her. She hurried to stay alongside him, kicking away the leaves that had already blown back over the path.
“Anyway, sometimes the barrier between our word and one of these planes weakens until a hole opens, spilling elemental matter into our world,” Jazrac continued, warming
to his subject. Scholarly research was his meat and cheese, and he could quickly forget that others did not share his enthusiasm. “Geysers and volcanoes could indicate the planes of steam and magma. Yurpide of Impiltur, I think, even theorizes that rainbows and lightning storms have their origins in—”
“I get the idea. What I don’t understand is why this is so important.” Martine wanted to get the conversation back to her mission. “It sounds as if you know everything already.”
“Ah, yes. Well, there is a danger, you see.”
Her neck tingled with excitement ‘v’hat?”
The path reached the edge of the fields that bordered Shadowdale. A cold wind was rising out of the west, pushing in a bank of flat, gray clouds over Old Skull, the barren granite mount that overlooked the village. The wizard looked up and shook his head, perhaps at the prospect of 12
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bad weather coming. “Sometimes things cross over and enter our world. If it’s only one or two of these elemental creatures, it’s not much our concern, but if the rift should expand, it could prove to be a danger. You’re going to go up there and seal it.”
Martine couldn’t resist a joke. “Suppose I brick it up?”
Jazrac turned his attention back to her with a vexed scowl. “Very funny. As a matter of fact, that’s what I’ve been doing for the last few weeks—preparing the seals. Now that I’ve finished, it’s time for you to put them in place. The frigid north is not one of my favorite places.”
“So that’s my big break, eh?” the woman deduced,
adding a flip of her bangs to give just the right touch of sardonic nonchalance.
“If it all goes well,” Jazrac said with pointed emphasis.
Martine realized her flippancy was wasted on the humorless wizard and assumed a serious expression. Still, her earlier nervousness was gone, and she felt the need to
celebrate somehow. Wrapping an arm around the older man’s waist, she tugged him toward the town before he could resist. “I promise not to fail you. Come on. It looks like snow. You can buy me an ale at the Old Skull and give a toast to my success.”
“For that, I’ll have to buy you a bucketful of ale, my eager young tyro,” Jazrac protested as he allowed himself to be pulled along. The last summer songbirds scolded loudly at the approaching storm as the two hurried across the fields for the warmth of the thatched-roof inn.
Over mugs of spiced ale that warmed away the chill, Jazrac outlined the mission in detail. He spoke softly, for there were a few others in the taproom, and Harper business was none of their concern. From his pocket, he produced five stones, polished and smooth. They glittered like ice with blue fire at their cores. “Opals from the south,” the wizard explained once he noted Martine’s interest. “You’ll Soldiers of Ice
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have to set them around the rift like this. I assume it will be a crater.” Jazrac spread four of the stones in a circle, deftly tracing the points of a star with his thin fingers, leaving one point empty. “Exactly equal from each other. Don’t worry, the stones will glow when they’re in the proper position.”
He nudged the fifth stone into place, and suddenly five points of blue luminescence glittered before Martine’s eyes.
‘q’hat’s it?”
The wizard broke the ring before the tabletop glow could attract the attention of Jhaele or the beet-faced Dalesman who sat near the fire. “Not quite.” He produced another stone from a separate pouch. ‘Whis is the capstone. Touch it to each stone as you put it in place. That activates the seal.”
“Okay,” Martine nodded, taking the stone from his fingers.
It looked like a fading ember, dull red and pitted, rather than a powerful magical artifact.
“Be careful. Keep it separate from the others. You don’t want an accident triggering the seal while you’re traveling.”
“Is it dangerous?” The woman looked at the stone with new respect as she prudently set it back on the table.
Jazrac shook his head as he swept the opals into a pouch.
“Not very—but an accident would ruin all my work.” The words reminded Martine that Jazrac, at least, considered her journey impor tant
“Another thing. The red stone is a temporary fx. You have to bring it back so I can cast the finishing spells. Be careful not to bang it around too much. It’s not as solid as it looks. Once the seal is activated, if the stone breaks, the seal breaks. So be careful and bring it back with you.
Understood?”
Martine nodded. As she took the pouch of opals, the stones rattled softly in her hand. “Sounds clear enough,”
she added to cover a sudden twinge of nerves. Her first important mission… It seemed simple enough, but she 14
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couldn’t help but worry whether she was up to it.
Across the table, Jazrac smiled, his goatee making him look cheerfully fiendish. “Good. Now, I want you to stay in touch with me while you’re up there.”
“How?”
“I’m a wizard, my dear, remember?” the older man
chortled, letting a tone of condescension slip back into his voice. He tipped back in his chair. “I’ll use my crystal ball. I can’t hear you or talk to you, but I can see you through it.”
Martine wasn’t sure she liked the idea that Jazrac would be checking up on her. She hastily took a sip of her ale to cover a grimace.
“I’m not spying on you. If you write a letter, I’ll be able to read it through the ball. Take this. I’ll need an object to fo’us, on, something to track you by.” From deeper still in his pOCket, Jazrac produced a small dagger. “I know your fondness for knives. All you have to do is pin your letter up with this dagger. That way I can find it with the crystal ball.
I have to know what I’m looking for, after all.’
Still uncertain, Martine took the knife and turned it over in her hands.!It was a decorative knife with a carved bone handle and a Fed garnet set in the hilt, but the blade was short, hardly Practical. A typical wizard’s choice, she noted somewhat contemptuously. “If you insists’
Her sponsor ignored the reluctance in her voice. “That’s it, then. How soon can you be ready?” he asked, elbows on the table, leaning forward till the tip of his goatee brushed his tented fingers.
Martine rolled the knife in her hands, letting the light from the inn’s fire play off the blade. “A day or two, I’d guess. Three at the most. It depends on how long it takes me to get supplies. Astriphie’s fit and ready for travel.”
Indeed, her mount was growing restless in the stables.
“Excellent. The less time wasted, the better. Here’s to a safe journey and a successful mission, my dear.” With Soldiers of Ice
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tankard raised, Jazrac toasted her success.
The next day Martine, suffering from a slight hangover, set to work preparing for her departure. Shadowdale wasn’t a large city, nor even a border town where outfitters thronged, so it took only the better part of the day to gather all that was needed—flour, salt, jerky, dried fruit, flatbread, sugar, lard, arrowheads, oil, extra bowstrings, needles, thread, and More. She especially wanted soap, since she had no desire to do without the luxury a bath might offer, even in some glacial lake. By nightfall, as he stretched her legs before the fire at the Old Skull, the ranger was relieved to be through haggling with the village’s only trader, the irascible Weregnnd. Her status as a Harper, which it seemed
everyone in town knew about, didn’t make much of an impression on him, and every purchase had been a battle.
Her supplies were finally complete, though, even the soap, and tomorrow she and Astriphie could hit the trail. As she gingerly sipped at her ale, she toyed with Jazrac’s little knife, playfully refracting the flames of the fire from its blade.
‘
ou’ll be leaving us tomorrow, then?” Jhaele asked, her hair the bloody color of a hunter’s moon in the blazing firelight.p>
Pot in one hand, she offered up a fresh ladle of ale.
“Old Weregund told me you were at his place buying SUly plies.”
Martine nodded, tossing back the dregs of her mug. The innkeeper sloshed another round into Martine’s cup. ‘Whis one’s on the house.”
“Well, thank you, Jhaele.” Suddenly flustered by the landlady’s kindness, it was the best Martine could manage.
“Call it a traveler’s blessing. May Tymora’s wheel turn in your favor.”
“And may your house know the joy of Lliira’s smile,”
Martine replied. She reluctantly raised her mug to Jhaele, unwilling to get into another night of toasting.
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“Fair enough. Here’s to the ladies of luck and joy.” She raised her ladle to match Martine’s toast. Draining it in a long draught, she wiped the foam from her chin and looked down with a kindly expression at the younger woman, still stretched in the chair. “I’ll see that the stableboy has Astriphie fed and ready in the morning. You’d better rest up for tomorrow.”
‘q’hank you, Jhaele.’ The landlady was already leaving as Martine spoke. Left again to herself, Martine settled back into the small firelit cocoon that surrounded her chair. The knife blade resumed its flashing in the light, somehow less playful than before.
Although she’d only been staying at the inn for a few weeks, Martine hadn’t expected the farewells to sting so much. After all, besides Jhaele and Jazrac, there were few people she really knew here. She’d been pointedly avoiding most of the Dalesmen with a Harper’s natural instinct for secrecy. Now, slightly tipsy and pleasantly tired, she felt a poignant stab of regret at the prospect of leaving the sleepy little hamlet. The flowing river, the winter-stripped trees, even the cracked, barren slopes of Old Skull seemed somehow homey and comforting. I could live here as well as anywhere else, the Harper thought idly, but she knew she
wasn’t ready to settle anywhere just yet. I’ll be back, she told herself before draining her mug and trundling off to bed.
The dawn came with Martine feeling ill-rested and anxious.
Journeys always do this to me, she noted irritably as she climbed out of bed. She could never sleep soundly the night before a trip, always waking up at hours only marked by their darkness, always jittery with the hopes and the tensions of wanderlust.
Astriphie’s shrill cry from the stable yard got the ranger’s sluggish blood moving. It was time to shake off the numbness of town and return to the wilds where she really
belonged.
After a quick splash of chill water that passed for a rinse and a struggle with her traveling clothes, Martine clomped down the worn wooden stairs and into the yard. The pale morning sun washed over the cobblestones, the light having yet to reach the full richness of the day.