The War of the Lance by Weis, Margaret

cloth, it was covered with blood.

“Fix me my drink!” he ordered Caramon, his lips

forming the words for he had momentarily lost the power

of speech. Collapsing in a comer, he closed his eyes and

concentrated on drawing breath. Those near could hear the

air whistle in his lungs.

Caramon peered through the crowd, attempting to find

the barmaid, and shouted for boiling hot water. Raistlin

slid a pouch across the table toward his brother, who

picked it up and carefully measured out some of its

contents into a mug. The inn’s proprietor himself came

bustling over with the hot water in a steaming kettle. He

was just about to pour when a sudden shouting rose up

around the door.

“Hey, there! Get out you little vermin! No kender

allowed!” cried several of the guests.

“Kender!” Kettle in hand, the proprietor ran off in

panic.

“Hey!” shouted Caramon after the flurried innkeeper

in exasperation, “you forgot our water!”

“But I tell you I have friends here!” A shrill voice rose

up from the doorway. “Where? Why,” – there was a

moment’s pause – “there! Hi, Caramon! Remember me?”

“Name of the Abyss!” muttered Caramon, hunching

up his big shoulders and ducking his head.

A short figure, about the stature of a twelve-year old

human, with the face of a man of twenty and the wide-

eyed innocent expression of a babe of three, was pointing

gleefully at the booth of the warrior and his brother. The

figure was clad in a bright green tunic and orange striped

hose. A long tassel of hair was twisted round his head and

hung down his back. Numerous pouches containing the

possessions of everyone who had been unfortunate enough

to cross his path hung from his belt.

“You’re answerable for him, then,” said the proprietor

grimly, marching the kender across the room, one hand

gripping the slight shoulders firmly. There was a wild

scramble as men stuffed their purses inside their shirts,

down their pants, or wherever else they thought their

valuables might be safe from a kender’s light and nimble

fingers.

“Hey! Our water!” Caramon made a grab for the

innkeeper but got a handful of kender instead.

“Earwig Lockpicker,” said the kender, holding out his

hand politely. “Friend of Tasslehoff Burrfoot’s. We met at

the Inn of the Last Home. I couldn’t stay long. There was

that misunderstanding over the horse. I told them I didn’t

steal it. I can’t think how it came to follow me.”

“Maybe because you were holding firmly onto the

reins?” suggested Caramon.

“Do you think so? Because I – Ouch!”

“Drop it!” said Raistlin, his thin hand closing tightly

over the kender’s wrist.

“Oh,” said Earwig meekly, releasing the pouch that

had been lying on the table and was now making its way

into the kender’s pocket. “Is that yours?”

The mage cast a piercing, infuriated glare at his

brother, who flushed and shrugged uncomfortably. “I’ll get

that water for you, Raist. Right now. Uh, Innkeeper!”

“Well, look over there!” said the kender, squirming

around in his seat to face the front door as it dosed behind

a small group of travelers. “I followed those people into

town. You can’t imagine,” he said in an indignant whisper

that carried clearly across the room, “how rude that man

is! He should have thanked me for finding his dagger,

instead of – ”

“Greetings, sir. Greetings, my lady.” The proprietor

bobbed and bowed officiously. The heavily cloaked man

and woman were, to all appearances, well dressed. “You’ll

be wanting a room, no doubt, and then dinner. There’s hay

in the stable for your horses.”

“We’ll be wanting nothing,” said the man in a harsh

voice. He was carrying a young boy in his arms and, as he

spoke, he eased the child to the floor, then flexed his arms

as though they ached. “Nothing except a seat by your fire.

We wouldn’t have come in except that my lady-wife is not

feeling well.”

“Not well?” The innkeeper, backing up, held out a

dish cloth in front of him as a sort of shield and eyed them

askance. “Not the plague?”

“No, no!” said the woman in a low, cultivated voice.

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