The War of the Lance by Weis, Margaret

“Hurry! The storm is strengthening,” Captain Kruug

warned.

The draconians held Vandor over the altar. Recalling

how his blood had sizzled upon touching the hot metal, he

twisted and turned, trying desperately to avoid it. One of

the guards finally used its claw to shove him down.

Vandor yelped, then realized that he was not being

scalded. His relief was momentary, though; a fate worse

than being scalded awaited him.

One of the draconians leaned close and hissed, “If you

say one more word, thief, I’ll bite off your tongue and eat

it! I’m sick of your chatter!”

Vandor clamped his mouth tight. Trapped, he

searched frantically for some way out. His gaze lighted

upon the eyeless visage of an armored ghost, rising above

the rail.

In its brown, skeletal hands it held two chains. One

was the skull talisman Stel had given it for the search. The

other, much heavier, chain held a black crystal encased in

an ivory clasp.

“Master Stel, look!” Vandor cried. “You don’t need

me. He has returned!”

Thanks to Shinare! Grizt added silently.

The cleric beckoned the ghost to him. His ungodly

servant raised the pendants high. Stel snatched his

talisman back, but seemed hesitant to touch the darkly

glimmering creation in the undead’s other hand.

“Magnificent! Perfection!” Stel danced back and

forth. Then, recalling where he was and who was

watching, the prefect quieted and carefully reached for his

prize. All sound silenced, save for the wind and the waves

beating against the sides of the minotaur ship.

Vandor Grizt’s ancestor did not at first seem inclined

to relinquish the prize, but a muttered word of power from

the cleric forced it to release its hold. Skull mask eyed

skull face for a breath or two, then Prefect Stel forgot the

impudence of his unliving slave as he looked down at the

pendant.

“The power has leeched away from most of the other

prizes, but this still glows with life! It is all I hoped for

and more! At last it shall serve its purpose! At last I will

take my own rightful place as the greatest of my Lord

Chemosh’s loyal servants!”

Stel raised the thick chain over his head and lowered

the pendant onto his chest. No crack of thunder or blare of

horns marked the cleric’s triumph, but a horrible,

breathless stillness momentarily passed over the region.

Captain Kruug was the first who dared interrupt the

cleric’s worship. “Is that all, then? Are we soon to leave

this place?”

“Leave?” Stel was surprised by the suggestion. “We

can’t leave now! If this artifact still survives, there MUST

be others! I will send them down again! And, with this

pendant, I can summon hundreds of blindly obedient

searchers!”

“You push our luck, human! There are limits – ”

“There are no limits! I will show you!” Raising his

hands high, Prefect Stel cried strange words. The black

crystal began to shine with an eerie, grayish light.

Now, thunder rolled and lightning crashed. An

enormous swell of water shook the TAURON. Rain and

hail poured down.

“Come to me!” roared the ghastly priest.

The water began to froth around them, as if the entire

sea were coming to life. Captain Kruug was either

swearing or praying beneath his breath. He began

bellowing orders. The two draconians, absurdly obedient,

fought to keep Vandor over the altar.

A huge wave broke over the deck, drenching Vandor

and his guards. It became clear to Vandor that he might

DROWN before he could be sacrificed.

Stel ignored the tempest, ignored the maddened sea.

He stared at the water in expectation.

Up and down the TAURON rocked, tossed about like

a toy in a rushing stream. Another wave knocked both

Vandor and the draconians away from the altar. His two

guards maintained their hold on him and saved him from

being washed overboard. One of the draconians grabbed

ahold of the rail and pulled Vandor and the other

draconian closer. All three held on for their lives.

And then …

“Shinare!” Vandor gasped, spitting sea water from his

mouth. “Has he raised ISTAR?”

It seemed so, at first. In the darkness, all Vandor

could see was an enormous, irregular landmass rising

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