Read Spellstorm Online

Authors: Ed Greenwood

Spellstorm (7 page)

“When we reached Oldspires, there was a … fog around it.”

“A storm,” said the farthest arcanist.

“A field of magical chaos,” the nearest one chimed in. “We saw lesser mages try to
move through it, and be rendered witless. Drooling.”

“Their minds gone,” groaned the arcanist held next to him.

“A few more powerful wizards were there as well … some we recognized,” said the farthest
captive.

“I recognized,” the nearest one corrected sharply. “Manshoon—once of Westgate, and
before that, the Zhentarim—and Malchor Harpell, once of the Harpells of Longsaddle;
his image is in the Gallery of Seemings Vangerdahast of Cormyr created for his wizards
of war, as a wandering adventurer to watch. Even they tried and failed to magically
force ways through the field. One could tell they marked the waiting danger to their
minds and sought to push back the chaos storm and make themselves safe passage. Push
it back they could—a few feet, and for a few instants. So they stayed outside, and
sane, but mightily displeased that something could defy their magic. We departed.”

“To seek easier targets?” Maraunth Torr asked mildly.

“We dare not return to the Three empty-handed,” another of the arcanists said grimly.

“So we sought among the mages we could find thereabouts, for word of more talking
skulls, and were told of your tower.”

“So you could bring your superiors a talking skull, and if it knew no Lost Spell,
well then, the rumors or the old noble selling it must have been mistaken?” their
captor asked the helpless quartet arrayed on the iron frame.

“Yes,” one confirmed. “Exactly,” Another echoed eagerly. “That’s it,” chimed in a
third.

“Thank you,” Maraunth Torr told them. “You’ve been most helpful—for arcanists. Which
means your usefulness is at an end.”

He waved his hand, and the frame erupted in leaping lightnings. Four bodies jerked,
convulsed in arching, agonized spasms … and then fell limp and lifeless, amid wifts
of drifting smoke and the spreading reek of burned hair.

Their slayer gazed down at the crisped bodies with a thoughtful air.

These had been Netherese—overconfident emptyheads, young and inexperienced even among
the deluded and preening Thultanthans. Of course they had failed at a task one step
beyond “utterly simple.”

He had none of those faults, and a kindling interest in something that lured so many
long-lived mages of power. It was time to try his own luck at Oldspires.

CHAPTER 4
It’s All Up To You

M
IRT INSPECTED THE BOTTOM OF HIS TANKARD, FOUND IT EMPTY
, and stirred himself to call for more.

He was just drawing breath when a fresh tankard descended to the smooth-worn tabletop
in front of him, then slid forward to come to a gentle stop under his nose.

He regarded it, and then the gaunt, white-bearded man behind it, and grew a slow smile.

“Heh. It’s been awhile, Old Mage. Well met.”

“Well met again,” Elminster replied dryly, sitting down. “I see ye’ve grown tired
of the company of nobles.”

Mirt grunted and reached for the tankard. “Their
chatter
. Drives a man to drink—elsewhere.”

Elminster surveyed the dim and none-too-clean surroundings. The ceiling of this particular
dockside tavern taproom was low, and braced with many old, stout, and diagonal beams
that had been “improved” by the—mostly rude—carvings of many previous patrons’ belt
knives. His eyes wandered over a few of them as he replied, “This is certainly elsewhere,
I’ll give ye that.”

“You,” Mirt growled, “want something. Aside from me to have this free tankard of no
doubt excellent ale, that is.”

“I am as transparent as always,” El replied serenely.

“Well?”

“How would ye like to be the seneschal and cook for a country lord of Cormyr gone
mindless? For a tenday or less, but not more?”

“What’s the pay like?”

“Generous,” El replied, sliding a slender whetstone case of oiled and polished wood
across the table. Mirt shielded it within practiced hands as he opened it just enough
to see the row of large sapphires inside for a moment; in the next instant, it had
vanished up his sleeve.

“Indeed. So how many archmages or eye tyrants or awakened and angry dragons will I
be fighting—or roasting for his lordship’s table?”

Elminster shrugged. “The future hides so much from us all.”

Mirt snorted. “Indeed. ’Splain, Old Mage. If I’m walking into a lion’s den, I like
to know how many lions are waiting, and how hungry they are.”

“Lord Halaunt is an unwed old nobl—”


Him
. Haughty old ironbottom who came to town to sell the Lost Spell to anyone with more
coins than brains. Didn’t end well. Someone got him out of that fire, then?”

“Someone did. Not before spells had made him witless, probably forever. He was bundled
back to his mansion in the country in some haste. Thy new friend Manshoon—”

Mirt snorted again.

“—and half a dozen other powerful wizards subsequently showed up on his doorstep and
tried to get inside, but have been prevented from doing so by a, uh, spellstorm that
has thus far kept them out.”

“But you, of course, can get me in. Why me? I’ll be naught but a swift target for
mages with blasting spells up their sleeves.”

“Ye, because I need someone to play seneschal and actually cook, for those very mages
and for me and some others I’ll be bringing with me, who’ll handle any spellwork any
of us manage. Which shouldn’t be much; magic isn’t to be trusted inside the Halaunt
mansion.”

“Or anywhere else, for that matter. Which others?”

“Two ye should have heard of: Myrmeen Lhal and the Princess Alusair—or rather, her
ghost.”

Mirt took a long pull from the tankard, set it back down with a satisfied sigh, belched,
and observed, “This sounds like a right disaster in the making, El. So, why?”

“Mystra wants it.”

“Wants mages to kill each other, and no doubt destroy the mansion and the vicinity
while they’re at it? I thought she wanted magic preserved and nurtured and spread
out among us all!”

“She does. This gathering of the powerful is an attempt to instill in them some sort
of inner personal creed or code, so they’ll instinctively work against the reckless
excesses of others who wield magic.”

“And if they somehow, incredibly,
do
decide to work together—and come charging out of the place welded into a tiny army
of spell-hurling mages bent on destroying all of Cormyr that they can’t conquer? What
then?”

“Outside the spellstorm, once all of the mages are safely inside the mansion, a force
of Cormyr’s war wizards will assemble and cast a wall of force around it all. A great
ring to keep warriors with knives and grudges against wizards out, and the mages—who
can’t successfully hurl disintegrating spells through the spellstorm at this ring—in.
Mystra will make sure the ring works, even if someone miscasts, or the coordination
of the Crown mages involved is less than perfect.”

“Penning—
imprisoning
—a bunch of egotistical, ruthless, used to getting their own way in
everything
wizards together, in hopes that rather than tear each other’s eyeballs out, they’ll
fall into firm friendships and everlasting trust.”

“Aye,” El said dryly, “that’s more or less it. ’Tis my private belief that Mystra
is not a foolish misjudger of mortals so much as she’s heartily sick of the way some
powerful and long-lived mages have been behaving, and wants them to cooperate—or,
yes, kill each other. Their choice.”

Mirt shook his head. “The goddess of magic giving foolheaded wizards a
choice
?”

“ ’Tis what she’s always done,” El said softly. “The way forward for mortals to flourish
is to choose freely, for good or ill, not be slaves to any deity.”

“Yes, yes, I’ve heard priests say as much many times down the years,” Mirt sighed,
then squinted hard at Elminster and growled, “She
really
thinks they’ll behave reasonably, and even reach some accord, or even trust?”

“She really
hopes
,” El replied.

Mirt rolled his eyes. “Madness.” And then he grinned and leaned forward across the
table and declared, “But I’m in. Despite the fool-headed danger.” He studied Elminster’s
face and added, “As you knew I would be. That stone face of yours is anything but.”

“Thy boredom,” Elminster replied gently, “is apparent to all. Yet it’s good to find
thee willing.”

Mirt shrugged, drank deeply again, and set down the tankard with the thunk of mostly
emptied metal. “I want to be
alive
again, part of ‘important doings’ once more. But I’ll need a little more in the way
of payment.”

El arched an eyebrow. “No knighthoods, now. Or country mansions. Unless Halaunt’s
somewhat decayed manor survives our little get-together; if so, I’d not be surprised
if I could convince the Crown of Cormyr to gift it to ye.”

Mirt waved a dismissive hand. “Nay, nay, nothing like that. Just some truths from
you, to satisfy my curiosity. How Alusair came to be a ghost, how Vangerdahast went
from being a dragon to a spider-thing and then a man again, and how Myrmeen Lhal went
from being a dragon, back to human form—and not a wrinkled old totterer, either.”

Elminster nodded. “That I can do, in brief. The deeper details—the decisions each
made, to result in their transformations—are for them to divulge, not me.”

“Fair enough. Say on.”

“So … Alusair died, as all mortals must. Died while in disagreement with her nephew
the king—the fifth Azoun. Not over his policies, but over his mishandling of their
implementation, which she saw as having deepened divisions between the realm and its
nobles and hastened the death of her mother, Filfaeril. There were other, deeper reasons
for their quarrel, but those remain matters of state.”

Mirt nodded acceptance, but waved at El to continue.

He obliged. “So Alusair died, ye might say, in the saddle, still riding the border
wilderlands of the realm she loved, defending it against beasts and brigands. I happen
to know more than a dozen invasions of Cormyr planned by greedy and wealthy Sembian
citizens were canceled because of how well-known her tireless vigilance became. Alusair
died unreconciled, feeling her duty to defend was unfinished and passed on to no competent
replacement, so she lingers yet.”

“As a ghost.”

“As a ghost, defending Cormyr in ways not even the current Royal Magician and Obarskyrs
fully know. Already accomplished at taking down Zhentarim, Thayan, and Sembian spies,
she got very good at felling Thultanthan spies and agents undetected, so they simply
vanished without
trace—dozens of them, over the years.
That
worried Telamont Tanthul so much, it bought Cormyr decades more of peace.”

Mirt nodded. “And Vangerdahast the Mighty?”

El smiled. “A term of mockery in Waterdeep in thy day, as I recall. The man ye so
labeled was one apprentice of mine who did very well for himself. When he finally
tired of being Mage Royal—long after the realm had tired of him—he willingly bound
himself in stasis as a dragon, with the song dragon Ammaratha Cyndusk at his side,
also out of love for Cormyr. He awaited his awakening to defend the kingdom in a future
time of need. Later, Myrmeen Lhal joined them, one more wyrm in stasis.”

“Until something either went wrong, or they were awakened because the realm was in
need.”

“Indeed, though its defenders knew that not. Szass Tam was greatly weakened after
his failed attempt to become a god, during what’s come to be known as the Spellplague.
He has always hungered for magic—the stored magic of items, if he can get such power
in no other way—and of course, he forever finds himself in need of more. He knew of
certain vaults beneath yonder Royal Palace, and tried to break into them from afar,
but succeeded only in shattering the outermost ward. That was enough to rouse Vangey
and his fellow guardian dragons.

“Wisely, Szass Tam abandoned his attempt right then, but—”

Mirt grinned. “There’s always a ‘but’ in this world, when you’re talking wizards!”

“Indeed. ‘But’ the arcanists of Thultanthar had their spies here in Suzail, for Cormyr
was the largest and best stable source of food near the preferred location for their
city, and one of them reported the destruction of the ward to his superior, who was
competent enough to pass it on to the ruler of the Thultanthans, a man as overconfident
as his self-proclaimed title suggests, and—”

“Oh, the ‘Most High’?”

“Aye, Telamont Tanthul. Another who had endless hunger for enchanted items. He presumed
that there would be only one more ward, and that Cormyr had no defenders who could
hold the vault against a strike force led by half a dozen arcanists. So weak did he
think the defense would be that he sent along eight untried novices to lead the assault,
as a test of their abilities.”

“And the guardian dragons destroyed them.”

“Handily. So aghast was the senior arcanist assigned to scry on them from afar that
he abandoned his duty in the opening moments of the fray to go and convince one of
the Princes of Shade—without telling the Most High, mind ye—that there was a serious
threat to Thultanthar under the Royal Palace of Cormyr. He succeeded; that prince
came racing back with a much stronger force.”

“And broke into the vault?”

“And failed, fleeing battered but wiser, leaving most of this second wave of arcanists
dead. However, the song dragon Ammaratha also perished in the fray, Myrmeen Lhal was
forced back into human form, and Vangey only survived through Laspeera’s desperate
intervention; she forcibly merged him with a spiderlike guardian monster he’d imprisoned
in stasis down in the cellars centuries earlier. Hence the way he looked until recently,
a human head mated to a spidery body. The goddess Mystra herself restored him to hale
and whole human form.”

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