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  HAND OF FIRE

  ©2002 Wizards of the Coast LLC

  All characters in this book are fictitious. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  This book is protected under the copyright laws of the United States of America. Any reproduction or unauthorized use of the material or artwork contained herein is prohibited without the express written permission of Wizards of the Coast LLC.

  Published by Wizards of the Coast LLC. Hasbro SA, represented by Hasbro Europe, Stockley Park, UB11 1AZ. UK.

  FORGOTTEN REALMS, D&D, Wizards of the Coast, and their respective logos are trademarks of Wizards of the Coast LLC in the U.S.A. and other countries.

  All Wizards of the Coast characters and their distinctive likenesses are property of Wizards of the Coast LLC.

  Cover art by Jon Sullivan

  Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 2004116891

  eISBN: 978-0-7869-6168-9

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  www.DungeonsandDragons.com

  v3.1

  To Ratty, For All He’s Done For Gaming

  And for Jonathan and Smiffy and Sad and Steve and Alison and Malcolm and Sue and Sean and Baz and Darrell and all who’ve worked with Ratty, towards the same shining aims.

  Novels by Ed Greenwood

  The Shandril Saga

  Spellfire

  Crown of Fire

  Hand of Fire

  The Shadow of the Avatar Trilogy

  Shadows of Doom

  Cloak of Shadows

  All Shadows Fled

  The Elminster Series

  Elminster: The Making of a Mage

  Elminster in Myth Drannor

  The Temptation of Elminster

  Eliminster in Hell

  Elminster’s Daughter

  The Cormyr Saga

  Cormyr: A Novel (with Jeff Grubb)

  Death of the Dragon (with Troy Denning)

  Stormlight

  Silverfall: Stories of the Seven Sisters

  City of Splendors: A Waterdeep Novel

  (with Elaine Cunningham)

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Other Books by This Author

  Epigraph

  Map

  Prologue

  Chapter 1 - More Sparks for the Rising Fire

  Chapter 2 - A Little Trouble Lately

  Chapter 3 - The Sun over Scornubel

  Chapter 4 - Other Lives, Other Dreams

  Chapter 5 - Fallen by the Wayside

  Chapter 6 - Wild Rides

  Chapter 7 - Dark Deeds by Night

  Chapter 8 - Seeing Folk Who Are Hard to Get to See

  Chapter 9 - Daily Disappearances

  Chapter 10 - Small Secrets, Large Swords

  Chapter 11 - Some Strange Sort of Sword

  Chapter 12 - Mere Memories of Mages

  Chapter 13 - Death and Dark Surprises

  Chapter 14 - Fighting for Life in Haelhollow

  Chapter 15 - Fierce Magic Beyond Withstanding

  Chapter 16 - Ruled by a Madman

  Chapter 17 - Pleasing the Bringer of Doom

  Chapter 18 - Fire in the Night

  Chapter 19 - A Failing Hand of Flames

  Chapter 20 - Harping Through Spellfire

  Epilogue

  venit summa dies et ineluctabile tempus

  “We’re no strangers to pain, we who play with fire. Masters of fire or great archmages alike Sooner or later, we all get burned.”

  —The Simbul, Witch-Queen of Aglarond

  vera incessu patuit dea

  PROLOGUE

  The breeze was blowing strong ashore this night, bringing wafts of the salty seacoast tang of dead things with it—and bringing the stink of the harbor to better wards of Waterdeep.

  Both of the men in the many-shadowed upstairs room over The Laughing Lass festhall were used to the smells; they hadn’t bothered to light the perfumed oil lamp that sat on the table between them—nor called for ale or soft and affectionate ladies to serve it to them, for that matter.

  The sensuous, coiling music of the dancers made a muted throbbing beneath their boots on the bare board floor, punctuated by occasional high-pitched cries and peals of laughter—but neither man had a moment of attention for anything but the man across the table from him and the items on that table. Only the occasional scrape of a boot heel from closer at hand—the room outside the door, where bodyguards of both men lounged facing each other in uneasy, silently insolent tension—made the two merchants so much as flicker an eyelash.

  “Come, Mirt!” the man with the slender, oiled-to-points mustache said, just a hint of anger in his brisk impatience. “Dawn comes, and I’ve other deals to make. I grant the quality, the amount is ideal, even the casks are to my liking. So let’s sign and seal and be done.”

  The older, fatter, walrus-mustached man across the table rumbled, “There remains the small detail of price. Crowns of old Athalantar are good gold, heavy, and all too rarely seen. Them I like. The number of them on offer, however, seems less satisfactory.”

  “Six per cask seems generous to me.”

  “So ’twould be, were we at your sheds in Luskan,” Mirt the Moneylender returned, “with me looking about in vain for someone else to take my wine. Yet—behold—we sit in fair Waterdeep, where men clamor to outbid each other … even for rare Evermeet vintages.”

  The man who wore the silks of Luskan—black, shot with irregular clusters of tiny white stars—sighed, ran one finger along his mustache, and said, “Seven per cask.”

  “Eight per cask and one crown more,” Mirt replied, sliding the one small hand-cask that stood on the table forward a little, so that the Luskanite’s eyes strayed to follow the movement.

  “Seven.”

  “Seven and one crown more.”

  “Seven,” the trader from Luskan said flatly, gathering himself as if to rise from his chair.

  Mirt the Moneylender lifted an eyebrow—and calmly slid the hand-cask back to stand close by his own shoulder. “Have a pleasant day trading,” he rumbled, lifting his hand toward the door.

  The Luskanite stared at him. Cool, expressionless eyes locked with cool, expressionless eyes like two gauntlets softly touching knuckles—then strained against each other.

  There was a moment of silence. Both men drew in breath, a longer silence, and the trader from Luskan said flatly, “Seven crowns per cask, plus one crown more.”

  “Acceptable,” Mirt replied, without the slightest trace of a smile on his face.

  “Agreed,” snapped the Luskanite, giving the usual formal response. He spilled the contents of a cloth purse out in front of him, planted his fingertips atop four coins, and slid them into the painted ring in the center of the table. He reached back his hand and slid four more. In this smooth, deliberate manner he made up the sum, then reached for the hand-cask by Mirt’s elbow.

  “Not so fast, Bronor,” Mirt growled, placing one hairy hand atop the cask and dropping the other beneath the table. “Like yer kind, not all of these coins are … what they seem.”

  Bronor of Luskan stiffened, eyes suddenly blazing like two green flames. “You insult my city?�


  “Nay, Blood of Malaug,” the old Waterdhavian moneylender replied softly. “I care not who sired ye or where ye hail from. ’Tis your coins I mislike.”

  Tentacles suddenly exploded through the air at Mirt, roiling across—and under—the table in a stabbing array, seeking to wrench and slay.

  Inches shy of the walrus mustache and the battered nose above it they met something searing, which hurled them back amid sparks.

  “A spell-shield!” the Malaugrym hissed.

  Mirt blinked at the shapeshifter. “Come, come … you’ve seen such magics before, and used them, too. Why so touchy about yer heritage? Here we all thought ye were proud of it!”

  The creature who wore the shape of Bronor of Luskan regarded the old merchant with furious green eyes. “ ‘We all’? Just how many are these ‘we’ who know of my lineage?”

  The old moneylender shrugged. “About two dozen traders in this city, I’d say. Yer secret has spread slowly, but any good merchant likes to know just who’s sitting across the table when deals are closing. None of us sees any need to tell all the Realms, though.”

  Mirt spread his hairy hands. “Six years now, I’ve known—and have ye heard a word whispered in the streets? Killing me for knowing it, though. That would set tongues a-wagging—and Khelben and his ilk striding yer way with spells a-flaming in their hands, too! So put away yer tentacles, and let’s haggle over these, ahem, altered coins, here. Got them from Radalus, I’ll be bound. Learn this, if you learn nothing else about Waterdeep: The man simply can’t be trusted!”

  Mirt regarded the nails of his right hand for a moment and added lightly, “Unlike those of us who know how to keep silence …”

  Tentacles slithered back across the coin-littered table and melted into the shoulders they’d burst from.

  “How much is your silence worth?” the Malaugrym asked silkily.

  Mirt shrugged. “One thing only: that ye not try to slay, maim, or detain four persons. Myself, m’lady Asper—and the lass Shandril Shessair and her lad Narm.”

  It was the shapeshifter’s turn to shrug. “We—”

  He hesitated, then added, “That is, those of my kin whom I associate with—had already decided to abandon all hunting after spellfire. The cost has been too great already.”

  Showing his teeth in a sharklike smile, he added, “After the long slaughter is done and the last survivor holds spellfire in wounded hands … then it will be time to snatch the prize.”

  Mirt regarded him with old, calm eyes. “And ye’ll break this agreement with me without hesitation or thought for the cost I may make ye pay?”

  The false merchant shook his head. “I won’t need to. When the Zhents stop using their wastrel magelings and the Cult its ambitious fools, and attack in earnest, there’s little chance of the survivor being an overly lucky kitchenmaid from Highmoon named Shandril Shessair.”

  1

  MORE SPARKS FOR THE RISING FIRE

  I’ve always had a particular hatred for foes who attack by night. Don’t they know a Realms-rescuing hero needs his sleep?

  Mirt of Waterdeep

  Lines I’ve Lived By

  Year of the Harp

  Shandril came awake knowing they were no longer alone. She was aware of a presence, of being watched from very close by … even before Narm’s hand clutched her thigh in a clawlike warning under the sleeping-furs.

  Tessaril had promised that this chamber at least, of all the Hidden House, was safe, warded with the strongest spells she could muster. That meant someone had broken the power—and probably ended the life—of the lady mage who’d been so kind to them.

  The Lord of Eveningstar must be dead.

  Dead … or less a loyal friend than she’d seemed.

  Without moving or opening her eyes properly, Shandril tried to peer through lowered lashes at all of the small, cozy, tapestry-hung bedchamber around her.

  Someone was standing at the foot of the bed. No, two someones.

  “Shan,” came a low, gentle voice she knew, from one of them. “Shan, I know you’re awake. Please do nothing hasty—let there yet be peace between us.”

  Tessaril! Treachery!

  With a wild shriek Shandril flung herself into the air, using spellfire to propel herself aloft out of a tangle of the sleeping-furs blazing up in flames. Narm cursed as he ducked and twisted away from them.

  A wizard had been glaring down at Shan as she slept. He was shorter and much stouter than Elminster, with a high, wrinkled forehead, knowing eyes, and a beard streaked with black, gray, and white hairs, doing battle together on his chin. He had a jowly face, bristling eyebrows, many years on his shoulders, rich garments, and an imperious look. Shandril hated him on sight. Tessaril Winter was standing at his side, a drawn sword in her hand, its slender blade glowing with awakened magic.

  “Traitor!” Shandril spat at her, pointing with a finger that flamed with spellfire. The palm of her other hand filled with searing flames, ready to hurl, as she turned to the wizard and snarled, “Mutter one word of a spell—just one—and I’ll blast you to ashes, whoever you are!”

  The old wizard nodded very slightly and said nothing.

  The Lady Lord of Eveningstar shook her head sadly. “Did I not tell you I’d never betray you, Shan? I meant it. I always mean what I say.”

  “How can I trust that, when one spell from him and we could be dead?” Shandril growled, wrestling her fury down so no more of the room around would be burned.

  Narm had kicked the smoldering furs onto bare flagstones and now crouched uneasily beside the bed, naked and too far from his clothes to even snatch up his belt-knife—but very much wanting to.

  Shan let herself sink down until her bare feet were planted on the bed once more, spellfire still raging ready around her hands. Narm hastily scrambled up to stand beside her, raising his own hands to cast—he frowned—whatever paltry magic might be most useful.

  “Be easy, both of you,” the wizard grunted. “I’ve not come to do you harm. We’ve spoken before—when the King gave you his royal blessing, remember? I’m Vangerdahast, Court Wizard and Royal Magician of Cormyr, and a chamber-load of other titles besides … and I’d like to see the pair of you safely out of Cormyr before you turn into another problem for me. I collect problems and find I have more than enough on my hands just now without the little lass some amused god gave spellfire to—and an overswift temper, it seems.”

  “Oh?” Narm asked, his tone half a challenge and half-curious. “So why creep in here? And, Lady Lord, why the ready steel and risen magic on it?”

  Tessaril shrugged. “We had an … interesting journey hither through the Hidden House. Things dwell here that, ah, respond to the Royal Magician’s presence.”

  Vangerdahast grunted wordless agreement to the Lady Lord’s words and strode around the bed toward Shandril, clasping his hands behind his back and peering at the two naked folk standing on the tangled bed like a slaver surveying wares he’s thinking of buying.

  “So you’re here to—?” Shandril asked sharply, crouching to point both her hands at his face like loaded crossbows, her spellfire flaring warningly.

  “Cast a magical disguise on you both,” he replied, ignoring the menacing flames dancing not all that far from his nose. Calmly he gazed past them, studying Narm until the young mage blushed.

  Vangerdahast promptly waved at Narm in an imperious “turn around” gesture and nodded when the young mage hesitantly complied. “No personal marks or brands or the like. Good. Now you, lass.”

  Shandril gave him an angry look. “Must every wizard I meet gloat over my bare flesh?”

  “No,” Vangerdahast replied—a little wearily, Shan thought. “Just the ones who have to see the body they’re trying to disguise, to weave a good spell and not merely a swift and easy one. And this lucky lad of yours, too, I suppose. Gods above, girl, how many unclad women d’you think I’ve seen, in all the years of serving the king?”

  “Ah,” Narm said, eager to find something
to say that wasn’t cold word-dueling or menace, “so all the tales are true!”

  “Those tales and a lot more besides,” Vangerdahast told him gravely, “but if it keeps the Dragon of Cormyr from being a tyrant to the good folk of his kingdom and away from his war-saddle and all the graves that follow in the wake of such ridings, he can craft a dozen new tales every night with my full blessing!”

  He ca me back around the bed to look at Narm directly. “You’ll learn, lad, to count lives wasted and stalking fear and blood spilled and broken trust as far greater sins than a little rutting, if you live long enough to use your eyes. Now, turn around again. I need a good look at your scrawny backside if I’m to spin a good false seeming for you.”

  “You were followed?”

  “Of course. This is Scornubel, Thoadrin.”

  “And so?”

  “And so,” the slender man in dark leather replied with a crooked smile, holding up a wicked little knife that Thoadrin hadn’t seen him draw from a sheath anywhere, “this drank thrice. The last one was merely an opportunist who hoped to catch me in a vulnerable moment, during a fight. His hopes were met; he did.”

  “You’re hurt?” Thoadrin asked sharply.

  The slender man flipped long black hair back out of his eyes with a languid toss of his head and smiled more brightly. “One mask, sliced to ribbons. It pains me—my old foe had three quara in his purse, and even a crude replacement will cost me at least five.”

  Thoadrin sighed. “Marlel, can’t you ever be serious?”

  “Oh, now, Thoadrin,” Marlel said softly, “don’t make that dangerous mistake. I’m always serious.” Somehow the little knife had vanished again, though the Cult warrior hadn’t seen it go.

  Thoadrin frowned. “The masks, the skulking, all these grand passwords and scrawled warning messages on doors—that’s tavern-tale stuff. We of the Scaly Way—”