The War of the Lance by Weis, Margaret

ground, the breath blasted from her, and the bow flung

from her hand.

Guarinn saw the wolf first. The sight of it – eyes redly

blazing, fangs gleaming – triggered instinct. In the very

moment the wolf leaped, the dwarf snatched his throwing

axe from his belt – and tumbled over the edge of

nightmare.

*****

The wolf smelled fear and loved it – the scent of easy

prey. He sensed no threat in the smaller male, standing

motionless; nor was the young female – struggling for

breath, fighting to rise from the ground – any danger.

These he could ignore for now. But the third, the bigger

male . . . from him came the fiery scent of a pack-

defender. He was the danger and the threat.

*****

The wolf hurtled past Una. Choking on the sudden,

cold rush of air, she heard the impact of bodies – the wolf

snarling and Roulant’s grunt of shock and pain.

And she saw Guarinn standing still as stone, his

throwing axe gripped in a nerveless hand.

“Guarinn!” she cried, clawing at the ground in desperate

search of the bow. “Help him!”

Guarinn never moved . . . and she found the bow,

string-broken, useless. Roulant screamed, a raging curse

turned to pain as the wolf’s fangs tore at his shoulder. The

cry of pain became a chant – her name, gasped over and

over in the staggering rhythm of his ragged breathing as

he struggled with the beast.

Una gained her feet, running. She flung herself at the

wolf’s back, dagger in hand. Clinging to the writhing

beast’s neck, choking on the smell of blood, she struck

wildly. Poorly. Hurting, but not killing.

The wolf heaved up.

“Guarinn! Help me! The wolf is killing him!”

The beast twisted sharply, and threw her off. Its fangs

dripped frothy red, and behind it, Roulant lurched to his

feet, gasping his terrible chant. The wolf turned, leaped at

him. Una didn’t know which of them screamed, man or

wolf. The sound of it tore through the night, a wild

howling.

*****

Guarinn Hammerfell stood at the center of a

maelstrom of wild moaning and screaming. GUARINN!

HELP HIM! Hands clawed at him, shreds of livid flesh

falling away to expose bones as white and brittle as ice.

THE WOLF IS KILLING HIM! Hollow voices accused

him, and the foul names – child-killer! murderer! faithless

friend! – turned the ice-mist filling his lungs to poison.

A wind rose to pound at him, tear at him, with such

violence that even the dead hands, shedding tattered flesh,

rattling bones, fell away before it. Howling, screaming,

deafening wind.

ROULANT! Familiar with everyone who haunted this

nightmare realm, Guarinn knew that name had no

business being spoken here. He snatched at it, clutched it

tight for a lifeline. He was choking, fighting for air,

falling . . . and staggering on the deer trail, his axe

clenched tight in his fist.

The wolf lunged again at Roulant, leaping for his throat.

In the only instant of sanity he might get before the dead

snatched him back into the Spoiler’s trap, Guarinn sighted,

threw, and didn’t miss.

The wolf fell to the ground, its spine severed. Hard

and dark, the beast’s eyes held Guarinn for a long moment.

Then they softened, and the night filled up with silence.

The dying wolf became man. A moment, the man had,

and he used it to speak. Only whispered words, barely

heard.

“Roulant… are you hurt?”

Roulant ignored the question. “Thorne! You’re . ..

dying! No, Thorne. This isn’t how it’s supposed to be!

You said…”

Thorne smiled, shifting his gaze to Guarinn.

“You,” Thorne said. “Old friend, you knew I wouldn’t

survive, didn’t you?”

Guarinn heard grieving, Una and Roulant, one

sobbing softly in shock and the aftermath of terror, the

other offering comfort in the face of his own astonished

grief.

“And you killed the wolf. Knowing.” Thorne closed

his eyes. “Thank you.”

Guarinn lifted his friend’s hand and held it, very

gently, close against his heart until he felt the last pulse,

and some time longer after that.

*****

Limping, leaning on Una for support, Roulant knelt

beside his friends, the living and the dead.

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