Margaret Weis, Tracy Hickman. Time of the Twins

said so. My map was drawn before the Cataclysm struck and

took the sea away. But you have to take me with you, Cara-

mon! I’m supposed to meet Lady Crysania. She sent me on a

quest, a real quest. And I completed it. I found” – sudden

movement caught Tas’s attention – “oh, here she is.”

He waved his hand, and Tika and Caramon turned to see the

shapeless bundle of clothes standing in the door to their bed-

room. Only now the bundle had grown two black, suspicious

eyes.

“Me hungry,” said the bundle to Tas accusingly. “When we

eat?”

“I went on a quest for Bupu,” Tasslehoff Burrfoot said

proudly.

“But what in the name of the Abyss does Lady Crysania want

with a gully dwarf?” Tika said in absolute mystification. She

had taken Bupu to the kitchen, given her some stale bread and

half a cheese, then sent her back outside – the gully dwarf’s

smell doing nothing to enhance the comfort of the small house.

Bupu returned happily to the gutter, where she supplemented

her meal by drinking water out of a puddle in the street.

“Oh, I promised I wouldn’t tell,” Tas said importantly. The

kender was helping Caramon to strap on his armor – a rather

involved task, since the big man was considerably bigger since

the last time he’d worn it. Both Tika and Tas worked until they

were sweating, tugging on straps, pushing and prodding rolls

of fat beneath the metal.

Caramon groaned and moaned, sounding very much like a

man being stretched on the rack. The big man’s tongue licked

his lips and his longing gaze went more than once to the bed-

room and the small flask Tika had so casually tossed into the

corner.

“Oh, come now, Tas,” Tika wheedled, knowing the kender

couldn’t keep a secret to save his life. “I’m sure Lady Crysania

wouldn’t mind -”

Tas’s face twisted in agony. “She-she made me promise and

swear to Paladine, Tika!” The kender’s face grew solemn. “And

you know that Fizban – I mean Paladine – and I are personal

friends.” The kender paused. “Suck in your gut, Caramon,” he

ordered irritably. “How did you ever get yourself into this con-

dition, anyway?”

Putting his foot against the big man’s thigh, Tas tugged. Car-

amon yelped in pain.

“I’m in fine shape,” the big man mumbled angrily. “It’s the

armor. It’s shrunk or something.”

“I didn’t know this kind of metal shrinks,” Tas said with inter-

est. “I’ll bet it has to be heated! How did you do that? Or did it

just get real, real hot around here?”

“Oh, shut up!” Caramon snarled.

“I was only being helpful,” Tas said, wounded. “Anyway, oh,

about Lady Crysania.” His face took on a lofty look. “I gave my

sacred oath. All I can say is she wanted me to tell her every-

thing I could remember about Raistlin. And I did. And this has

to do with that. Lady Crysania’s truly a wonderful person,

Tika,” Tas continued solemnly. “You might not have noticed,

but I’m not very religious. Kender aren’t as a rule. But you

don’t have to be religious to know that there is something truly

good about Lady Crysania. She’s smart, too. Maybe even

smarter than Tanis.”

Tas’s eyes were bright with mystery and importance. “I think

I can tell you this much,” he said in a whisper. “She has a plan!

A plan to help save Raistlin! Bupu’s part of the plan. She’s tak-

ing her to Par-Salian!”

Even Caramon looked dubious at this, and Tika was pri-

vately beginning to think maybe Riverwind and Tanis were

right. Maybe Lady Crysania was mad. Still, anything that

might help Caramon, might give him some hope –

But Caramon had apparently been working things out in his

own mind. “You know. It’s all the fault of this Fis-Fistandoodle

or whatever his name was,” he said, tugging uncomfortably at

the leather straps where they bit into his flabby flesh. “You

know, that mage Fizban – er – Paladine told us about. And

Par-Salian knows something about that, too!” His face bright-

ened. “We’ll fix everything. I’ll bring Raistlin back here, like we

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96

Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *