The War of the Lance by Weis, Margaret

Master Stel!” Vandor protested, insulted. But the protest

was halfhearted.

Chemosh – lord of the undead. The mask should have

been sufficient evidence, and the undead dog the ultimate

proof, but the confused and frightened Vandor had not

made the connection. Vandor was in the hands of a

necromancer, a priest who raised the dead for vile

purposes, vile purposes that usually required a

SACRIFICE. But why specifically Vandor Grizt? The

shape-shifting sivak had come for him and no one else.

The sailing ship rocked again in the turbulent waters.

A wave splashed over the rail, soaking everything but the

magical torches and – oddly enough – the cleric. Stel’s tiny

skull gleamed brighter now. His clothes were perfectly

dry.

Thunder crashed. A series of heavy thuds continued

on after; the noise caused Vandor to look up to the

heavens to see what could create such a phenomenon. A

massive form came up beside him and Vandor

immediately realized that what he had taken for part of the

storm had actually been footfalls.

“Prefect,” the newcomer rumbled, his voice louder

than the thunder.

“Yes, Captain Kruug?”

Kruug appeared ill-at-ease before the cleric. Odd,

since the minotaur was over seven feet tall and likely

weighed three times more than Prefect Stel. Vandor had

no idea how long the beastman lived, but Captain Kruug

looked to have been sailing the seas for all of Vandor’s

thirty years and more. Such experience made Vandor’s

chances of surviving the rough waters and threatening

storm much better, but that didn’t hearten the captive. It

only meant that he would live long enough to confront

whatever fate the cleric of Chemosh had in mind for him.

“Prefect,” Kruug repeated. The minotaur’s very stance

expressed his dislike for the necromancer. “My ship is

here only because you and your Highlord ordered my

cooperation.”

Vandor’s hopes rose. Perhaps the minotaurs would

refuse to sail on, destroy whatever dread plan the

necromancer had in mind.

“My crew is growing anxious, cleric,” the captain

said. Minotaurs did not like to admit anxiety. To them, it

was a sign of weakness. “The storm is bad enough and

sailing through it at night is only that much worse. Those

two things, though, I could handle at any other time,

PREFECT.” Kruug hesitated, unable to stare directly at

the mask for more than a few moments.

“And so?” Stel prompted irritably.

“It’s time you tell us why we are sailing to this

location in the middle of the deepest part of the Blood Sea.

There are rumors circulating among the crew and as each

rumor grows, they, in turn, become more uneasy.” Kruug

snorted, wiping sea spray from his massive jaw. “We find

it most interesting that a priest of Chemosh has spent so

much time paying homage to the Sea Queen that it seems

he has forgotten his own god!”

The dreadwolf snarled, its pupil-less eyes narrowed.

Stel petted it.

“You are being paid well, captain. Too well for you to

ask questions. And I would think that you would approve

of my efforts to appease the Sea Queen. Is she not

deserving of respect, especially now? We are in her

domain. I give her tribute as she deserves.”

Vandor Grizt’s heart sank. MY LUCK HAS BECOME

LIKE A POUCH FILLED WITH COIN . . . ALL LEAD!

Kruug apparently did not trust Stel’s smooth words.

He snorted his disdain, but glanced around uneasily. A

creature of the sea, the captain had to be more careful than

most in maintaining a respectful relationship with the

tempestuous Sea Queen.

The storm worsened. The sea mist that drenched all

save the cleric was accompanied by a light sprinkle, a

harbinger of the torrential downpour to come. Lightning

and thunder broke overhead.

“You had better pray that Zeboim has listened to you,

prefect,” the minotaur retorted. “Else I shall appease her

by throwing you and your stinking mutt over the side. My

ship and my crew come first.” He grumbled at no one in

particular. “It’s easy for the Highlord to agree to mad plots

when he’s safe in his chambers back on shore! He isn’t the

one who’ll suffer, just the one who’ll reap the benefits!”

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