Dragons of Autumn Twilight by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman

“What was all that about?” Sturm asked gruffly as Caramon returned to the group.

“Oh, nothing,” the big man mumbled, flushing guiltily.

Stunn cast an alarmed glance at Tanis.

“What is it, Caramon?” Tanis asked, putting the rolled map in his belt and facing the warrior. “Anything wrong?”

“N-no-” Caramon stuttered. “It’s nothing. I-uh-tried to get Raistlin to let me go with him. He said I’d just be in the way.”

Tanis studied Caramon. He knew the big man was telling the truth, but Tanis also knew the warrior wasn’t telling all the truth. Caramon would cheerfully shed the last drop of his blood for any member of the company, but Tanis suspected he would betray them all at Raistlin’s command.

The giant looked at Tanis, silently begging him to ask no more questions.

“He’s right, you know, Caramon,” Tanis said finally, clapping the big man on the arm. “Raistlin won’t be in danger. Bupu will be with him. She’ll bring him back here to hide. He’s just got to conjure up some of his fancy pyrotechnics, create a diversion to draw the dragon away from her lair. He’ll be long gone by the time she gets there.”

“Sure, I know that,” said Caramon, forcing a chuckle. “You need me anyway.”

“We do,” Tanis said seriously. “Now is everyone ready?”

Silently, grimly, they stood up. Raistlin rose and came forward, hood over his face, hands folded in his robes. There was an aura around the mage, indefinable, yet frightening-the aura of power derived and created from within. Tanis cleared his throat.

“We’ll give you a five hundred count,” Tanis said to Raistlin. “Then we’ll start. The secret place marked on the map is a trap door located in a building not far from here, according to your little friend. It leads beneath the city to a tunnel that comes up under the dragon’s lair, near where we saw her today. Create your diversion in the plaza, then come back here. We’ll meet here, give the Highbulp his treasure, and lie low until night. When it’s dark, we’ll escape.”

“I understand,” Raistlin said calmly.

I wish I did, Tanis thought bitterly. I wish I understood what was going on in that mind of yours, mage. But the half-elf said nothing.

“We go now?” asked Bupu, looking at Tanis anxiously.

“We go now,” Tanis said.

Raistlin crept from the shadowy alley and moved swiftly down the street to the south. He saw no signs of life. It was as if all the gully dwarves had been swallowed up by the mist. He found this thought disturbing and kept to the shadows. The frail mage could move silently if there was need. He only hoped he could control his coughing. The pain and congestion in his chest had eased when he drank the herbal mixture whose recipe had been given him by Par-Salian-a kind of apology from the great sorcerer for the trauma the young mage had endured. But the mixture’s effect would soon wear off.

Bupu peered out from behind his robes, her beady black eyes squinting down the street leading east to the Great Plaza. “No one,” she said and tugged on the mage’s robe. “We go now.”

No one-thought Raistlin, worried. It didn’t make sense. Where were the crowds of gully dwarves? He had the feeling something had gone wrong, but there wasn’t time to turn back-Tanis and the others were on their way to the secret tunnel entrance. The mage smiled bitterly. What a fool’s quest this was turning out to be. They would probably all die in this wretched city.

Bupu tugged on his robe again. Shrugging, he cast his hood up over his head and, together, he and the gully dwarf flitted down the mist-shrouded street.

Two armor-clad figures detached themselves from a dark doorway and slunk quickly after Raistlin and Bupu.

“This is the place,” Tanis said softly. Opening a rotting door, he peered in. “It’s dark in here. We’ll need a light.”

There was a sound of flint striking metal and then a flare of light as Caramon lit one of the torches they had borrowed from the Highbulp. The warrior handed one to Tanis and lit one for himself and Riverwind. Tanis stepped inside the building and immediately found himself up to his ankles in water. Holding the torch aloft, he saw water pouring in steady streams down the walls of the dismal room. It swirled around the center of the floor, then ran out through cracks around the edges. Tanis sloshed to the center and held his torch close to the water.

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