The War of the Lance by Weis, Margaret

any surviving furniture). This time, when they broke, the

Highlord’s sword separated from its owner, burying its

point in the china cabinet (shattering the last of the

unbroken teapots). Oster brought his sword around in a

mighty blow, aimed at his opponents’ throat, as smooth

and as level as carpenter’s beam.

Kali stepped forward and, in a loud voice, shouted,

“Oster, don’t do it! It’s your Columbine!” Or rather, he

fully intended to. A great, soft explosion blossomed at the

base of his own skull and he toppled forward. The room

pitched and the floor rose up to meet the gnome. He was

dimly aware of two other forms striking the floor before

he reached it, one the shape of a full human helmet, the

other resembling a human sans both helmet and head. A

part of Kali’s mind paused to calculate how long it would

take a plummeting gnome, a falling severed head, and a

crumbled body to all hit the ground at the same time. Then

the void closed up over him.

Kali awoke to find himself in his own bed, looking up

at a grim Oster and a worried-looking Eton. The

expression on his fellow gnome’s face told the story – that

shamed-dog look of gnomish responsibility when an

invention goes slightly awry, combined with a mild sense

of pride that the idea proved feasible. He still had his

combination plowshare-shovel in his hands.

Oster’s face was human and therefore unreadable.

Gray. It looked like that of a gnome who has realized his

invention is unworkable, and nothing could change that

fact. A look of defeat, tinged with worry.

“She’s dead,” Kali croaked. Not a question, but a

notation, a footnote.

“They both are,” said Oster, putting a hand on the

reclining gnome’s shoulder. “And the priest, too, I’m

afraid.”

“Both?” Kali’s brow clouded.

“The Highlord, and . . . and . . .” Oster shook his head.

“Eton showed me the tomb you made for her. It is very

sweet. Almost as if she were alive. When I pointed the

priest toward the bedroom, the Highlord was waiting. If

you hadn’t come home, he would have caught us both.”

Kali looked hard at Eton, hoping to elicit from his

fellow gnome an explanation that would at least bring him

up to date.

Eton avoided his eyes, and instead grabbed Kali’s big

toe and looked at his wrist. “Hmmm, confused from a

lateral conclusion. He’ll need his rest. If you don’t mind,

Oster?”

The human nodded and saw himself out. The

bedroom door had been replaced with a roughly-hung

carpet, and Kali could hear the human busying himself

outside.

Eton leaned over to check the dressing wrapped at the

base of Kali’s skull. The small healer grabbed his

caretaker’s beard and pulled him close, hissing so Oster

could not hear.

“How did you keep him from finding out?”

“Quick presence of mind,” whispered Eton. “Before

he could examine the body, I told him that if the Highlord

was near, other enemies may be around as well. Oster

scouted. I gathered up the pieces. By the time he had

returned, I had placed the body, still in its armor, on the

pyre.”

“And Columbine?”

“Still in her crypt. The Clockwork Hero made up his

own story, and did a better job than we did. He’s broken

up about it, but he’ll get over it. I think. Humans are so

difficult-to figure out.”

“Why the . . .?” Kali glowered at the destructive

weapon Eton held.

The other gnome sighed and said, “Because you

created something that worked, and I did not want you to

throw it away.”

Kali’s head hurt, perhaps just from the shovel blow,

but he wasn’t sure. He frowned, but remained silent. And

silence for gnomes means agreement.

“You created a hero, Kali,” Eton said quietly, gently.

“Oster arrived as a prisoner, a failure as a merchant and a

rebel. But because of all the lies you spun – the tale of

Columbine, the errands to fetch useless items – he found a

purpose in life. I knew you had decided to tell him the

truth, and I had to stop you. If you had told him, he might

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