Margaret Weis, Tracy Hickman. Time of the Twins

away. He saw the death knight walk toward her with slow,

steady steps.

The knight raised its right hand and pointed at Crysania with

a pale, shimmering finger.

Tas felt a sudden, uncontrollable terror seize him. “No!” he

moaned, shivering, though he had no idea what awful thing

was about to happen.

The knight spoke one word.

“Die.”

At that moment, Tas saw Lady Crysania raise her hand and

grasp the medallion she wore around her neck. He saw a bright

flash of pure white light well from her fingers and then she fell

to the ground as though stabbed by the fleshless finger.

“No!” Tasslehoff heard himself cry. He saw the orange flaring

eyes turn their attention to him, and a chill, dank darkness, like

the darkness of a tomb, sealed shut his eyes and closed his

mouth….

CHAPTER 8

Dalamar approached

the door to the mage’s laboratory with trepidation, tracing a

nervous finger over the runes of protection stitched onto the

fabric of his black robes as he hastily rehearsed several spells of

warding in his mind. A certain amount of caution would not

have been thought unseemly in any young apprentice

approaching the inner, secret chambers of a dark and powerful

master. But Dalamar’s precautions were extraordinary. And

with good reason. Dalamar had secrets of his own to hide, and

he dreaded and feared nothing more in this world than the gaze

of those golden, hourglass eyes.

And yet, deeper than his fear, an undercurrent of excitement

pulsed in Dalamar’s blood as it always did when he stood

before this door. He had seen wonderful things inside this

chamber, wonderful… fearful….

Raising his right hand, he made a quick sign in the air before

the door and muttered a few words in the language of magic.

There was no reaction. The door had no spell cast upon it.

Dalamar breathed a bit easier, or perhaps it was a sigh of disap-

pointment. His master was not engaged in any potent, power-

ful magic, otherwise Raistlin would have cast a spell of holding

upon the door. Glancing down at the floor, the dark elf saw no

flickering, flaring lights beaming from beneath the heavy

wooden door. He smelled nothing except the usual smells of

spice and decay. Dalamar placed the five fingertips of his left

hand upon the door and waited in silence.

Within the space of time it took the dark elf to draw a breath

came the softly spoken command, “Enter, Dalamar.”

Bracing himself, Dalamar stepped into the chamber as the

door swung silently open before him. Raistlin sat at a huge and

ancient stone table, so large that one of the tall, broad-

shouldered race of minotaurs living upon Mithas might have

lain down upon it, stretched out his full height, and still had

room to spare. The stone table, in fact the entire laboratory,

were part of the original furnishings Raistlin had discovered

when he claimed the Tower of High Sorcery in Palanthas as his

own.

The great, shadowy chamber seemed much larger than it

could possibly have been, yet the dark elf could never deter-

mine whether it was the chamber itself that seemed larger or he

himself who seemed smaller whenever he entered it. Books

lined the walls, here as in the mage’s study. Runes and spidery

writing glowed through the dust gathered on their spines. Glass

bottles and jars of twisted design stood on tables around the

sides of the chamber, their bright-colored contents bubbling

and boiling with hidden power.

Here, in this laboratory long ago, great and powerful magic

had been wrought. Here, the wizards of all three Robes – the

White of Good, the Red of Neutrality, and the Black of Evil –

joined in alliance to create the Dragon Orbs – one of which was

now in Raistlin’s possession. Here, the three Robes had come

together in a final, desperate battle to save their Towers, the

bastions of their strength, from the Kingpriest of Istar and the

mobs. Here they had failed, believing it was better to live in

defeat than fight, knowing that their magic could destroy the

world.

The mages had been forced to abandon this Tower, carrying

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