Black Wolf Read online




  It was like being drunk, but only faintly. As the sensation grew stronger, Tal felt a sudden flush of fear. His concentration broken, he felt the cold steel bars of the cage pressing against him. A cramping pain wrenched his lower back, and he twisted onto his side with a groan.

  TALBOT USKEVREN

  He curled like a child as the pain rushed up into his shoulders and down each leg. He cried out and instantly prayed that neither Chaney nor Eckert would heed him. Now the sound of rushing water filled his head, almost deafening him to his own cries and shouts. Hot rain pelted his brain, and a warm surge filled his whole body, pushing it out in shapes it was never meant to take. Lightning coursed through his nerves, leaving agonizing spasms in its wake.

  HIS CURSE IS HIS FAMILY’S SOLE HOPE

  Despite the darkness, Tal saw a crimson wall rise to surround him, closing in to press against his eyes, then through them to his panicked brain. The red fury penetrated his body, filled him to bursting, and blasted his conscious thoughts to oblivion.

  SEMBIA: GATEWAY TO THE REALMS

  Book I

  The Halls of Stormweather

  EDITED BY Philip Athans

  Book II

  Shadow’s Witness

  Paul S. Kemp

  Book III

  The Shattered Mask

  Richard Lee Byers

  Book IV

  Black Wolf

  Dave Gross

  Book V

  Heirs of Prophecy

  Lisa Smedman

  Book VI

  Sands of the Soul

  Voronica Whitney-Robinson

  Book VII

  Lord of Stormweather

  Dave Gross

  BLACK WOLF

  Sembia: Gateway to the Realms, Book IV

  ©2001 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, Wizards of the Coast, D&D, 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: Raymond Swanland

  eISBN: 978-0-7869-6281-5

  For customer service, contact:

  U.S., Canada, Asia Pacific, & Latin America: Wizards of the Coast LLC, P.O. Box 707, Renton, WA 98057-0707, +1-800-324-6496, www.wizards.com/customerservice

  U.K., Eire, & South Africa: Wizards of the Coast LLC, c/o Hasbro UK Ltd., P.O. Box 43, Newport, NP19 4YD, UK, Tel: +08457 12 55 99, Email: [email protected]

  Europe: Wizards of the Coast p/a Hasbro Belgium NV/SA, Industrialaan 1, 1702 Groot-Bijgaarden, Belgium, Tel: +32.70.233.277, Email: [email protected]

  Visit our websites at www.wizards.com

  www.DungeonsandDragons.com

  v3.1

  DEDICATION

  For Chris Perkins,

  Friend and comrade.

  Contents

  Cover

  Other Books in the Series

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Map

  Chapter 1: Old Wounds

  Chapter 2: Negotiations

  Chapter 3: Cages

  Chapter 4: Perivel’s Sword

  Chapter 5: The Wine Cellar

  Chapter 6: Moonshadow Hall

  Chapter 7: The Arch Wood

  Chapter 8: The Audition

  Chapter 9: The High Hunt

  Chapter 10: Riding the Moon

  Chapter 11: Black Blood

  Chapter 12: Masks

  Chapter 13: The Moonlion

  Chapter 14: Opening Night

  Chapter 15: Double Dealing

  Chapter 16: Behind Bars

  Chapter 17: Betrayals

  Chapter 18: Territory

  Chapter 19: The Black Moon

  Chapter 20: Packs

  Chapter 21: The Baiting Pit

  Chapter 22: Bargains

  CHAPTER 1

  OLD WOUNDS

  Hammer, 1371 DR

  The Year of the Unstrung Harp

  Darrow slapped his arms against the cold and silently cursed his employer. Silently was the only way anyone ever cursed Radu Malveen. The finest swordsman in the city of Selgaunt was not one to suffer insults, especially not from his own carriage driver.

  “Been in there a long time,” observed Pons, the master’s bodyguard. Twenty years older than Darrow, the old veteran had a voice full of smoke and pebbles. His breath turned to fog as it passed through his muffler.

  Darrow looked up to spot the moon. Selûne was full and bright, a glittering trail of shards forming her wake against the dark winter sky. The black silhouette of House Malveen had only barely touched her silver body.

  “Not so long,” said Darrow. “Seems longer ’cause it’s so damned cold.”

  The great black draft horse snorted and clapped its hooves on the cobblestones, as if to agree. Darrow pressed his hands against one of the copper lanterns that flanked the driver’s perch. The frost on his mittens sizzled.

  “Dark!” cursed Pons. “Seems long ’cause it is long.”

  “You want to go in and tell him to hurry? Here’s the key.”

  Pons shot Darrow a dirty glance. He had been on duty the previous summer, when Souran Keel decided he didn’t want to piss in the courtyard and went inside to find a garderobe. Radu Malveen emerged alone soon after and ordered Pons to drive home. No one dared to ask about Souran, and no one ever saw him again.

  Darrow looked up at the slumping hulk of House Malveen. Even before it had been abandoned two decades earlier, the manor was the sole residence in an area increasingly overrun by salt houses and shipyards. In its day, it had been one of the premiere social landmarks of Selgaunt. Now, moldering crates and barrels spilled out of its sagging walls to fill the central courtyard. Even the once-fabulous fountain was piled with graying boxes, between which sad nereids and locathah yearned skyward on waves of verdigris.

  He wondered only briefly what the interior looked like before thrusting the thoughts away. Radu entrusted his driver with the key to the north wing with strict instructions to enter with a warning only if the city guards approached. The Scepters were notorious for accepting bribes, and Darrow had little doubt they had been well paid to avoid House Malveen. He assumed his stewardship of the key was more a test of loyalty conducted by a man who enjoyed inflicting punishment on the disobedient. Radu Malveen was not intimidating for his swordsmanship alone. To his employers and peers alike, he gave the impression that he could do anything, without concern for the repercussions. Darrow admired that ability to live completely beyond fear of consequences. It seemed like power.

  Pons blew into his mittens, then pressed them against the lantern beside Darrow’s.

  “Ever wonder why they don’t just buy it back?” he asked. Behind him, strange gargoyles crouched as if to listen to their gossip. Moonshadows crawled slowly over their crustacean limbs, scaly hides, and blank, piscine eyes.

  “Best not to talk about the master’s business,” said Darrow.

  “The ’Skevren were broken for piracy, too,” Pons said, oblivious to the warning. “The Old Owl’s lord of Stormweather again and practically running the city. Why not the master and Pietro? What about Laskar? He’s the eldest.”

  Darrow glared at Pons. Gossiping about the master’
s business was almost as stupid as disobeying his orders. Pons should have known better, having worked for the Malveens so long.

  “So they do a little black business,” said Pons, jerking a thumb over his shoulder to indicate the north wing. “They all do.”

  “Shut up, Pons.”

  “Don’t you ever wonder what’s going on in there?”

  “No. Shut up.”

  “Don’t tell me to shut up, boy. I’ll—Wait, what’s that?”

  Darrow listened but heard only the distant shush of the surf crashing on the sea breaks around Selgaunt Bay. Straining his hearing, Darrow imagined he could also hear the hubbub of watermen and their families in the huddled community of their boats. No matter the season, the boaters lived on the water, lashing their rafts and barges together when the day’s work was done. The proper folk of Selgaunt would have it no other way, since the alternative was to let the riffraff roam the streets.

  Pons and Darrow peered into the courtyard, down the narrow alley formed between the north wing and a wall of crates. All they could see was a thin path of glistening cobblestones where the moon slanted down between the black shadows of crates and casks, the cargo that overflowed from the warehouse. Sometimes beggars would combine their efforts to push aside a few barrels to create a windbreak, but Darrow couldn’t imagine anyone trying that tonight. Without four walls and a fire, any beggar hiding here would have succumbed to the deadly cold long ago.

  “I didn’t hear anything,” said Darrow at last.

  “Don’t make us come in there after you,” Pons warned the unseen intruder. Darrow grimaced at the dark passage and pitied anyone foolish enough to make a shelter so close to the house. Pons didn’t know when to hold his tongue, but he was ruthless and efficient when dealing with beggars. No vagrant who’d felt the wrong end of Pons’s club came back for more.

  Pons drew his short sword and stepped into the alley. Darrow did the same. Despite their caution, both men were caught flat-footed by the attack.

  Something swept Darrow’s legs from under him, and he hit the street hard. His boiled leather helmet spared his skull from cracking on the stones, but the impact blasted his breath away.

  Where Pons had been, Darrow heard a low voice speaking but couldn’t make out the words. He heard Pons’s reply, “No! I can’t!”

  The answer was a savage roar and a rough shout, and a hot stream of liquid splashed Darrow’s face, filling his open eyes.

  For a second, he panicked, trying to scramble away on all fours. Behind him, a painful wheezing filled the alley. Pons needed help, so Darrow found his courage and turned, blinking away the blood. Then he heard a sound of butchery, a ripping and tearing worse than anything he’d experienced slaughtering sheep as a boy. In the darkness, something wet and heavy hit the cobblestones.

  He stared, paralyzed with fright as a towering figure rose up from the shadows. It was a man who stood almost a head taller than Darrow. The full moon made a bright halo of his long white hair, and a beaded headband held a copper medallion of a ragged claw to the man’s brow. Short gray whiskers bristled on his cheeks and chest, which was bare but for a thick woolen vest that hung loosely on his lanky, muscular body. The man’s left shoulder was a bleeding stump, a few strips of pink flesh testament to an inadequate healing spell. In his right hand, the big man gripped Pons by the hair. The guard’s eyes were wide and blank in death.

  The stranger moved forward and put his face close to Darrow’s. The man’s teeth were white in the moonlight, and his canines were inhumanly long and sharp. His breath was hot and smelled of fresh blood.

  “Can you open the door?” he rumbled.

  Darrow thought about the master’s displeasure. Then he thought about Pons’s guts steaming on the ground nearby. Finally, he weighed his chances of killing or escaping this gigantic stranger who had eviscerated Pons in the time it took to blink.

  “Yes,” said Darrow, “I can.”

  Darrow stood in the antechamber, the one-armed man close behind him.

  The hall before them was dark but for the tongues of continual flames licking from brass sconces set in the walls. Between them hung sea-colored tapestries. Darrow saw an oak door to his left, another one at the end of the hall, ten feet away. The wood of the far portal gleamed in the magical firelight. The whole room was surprisingly clean for an abandoned edifice.

  “Go in,” said the stranger.

  Darrow complied. As he reached the middle of the hall, a painful spasm gripped his back. His breath caught in his chest, and for a terrifying moment he thought he was strangling. He tried to move, only to discover that he was completely paralyzed, and not by his own fear this time.

  “Go,” said the stranger. A moment later, he muttered, “Ah …”

  Darrow heard the stranger chant a low, rhythmic song. He recognized only one word, the name of a dark god. Malar the Beastlord was no friend to city dwellers, nor to farmers like Darrow’s father. The old man had sacrificed to Chauntea not only for bountiful crops but also for protection against the ravages of Malar and his wild hunts. The Beastlord’s followers believed they were placed above all living creatures, and their favorite prey was the most cunning: humans and their ilk.

  The magic that held him vanished, and Darrow slumped to one knee before recovering. He thought of the copper coin he wore on a chain around his neck, a symbol of the goddess Tymora, Lady Luck. He dared not touch it in sight of this cleric of Malar, but he framed a silent prayer in his mind: Lady Luck, please spare me from this monster.

  Darrow’s thoughts were interrupted. The cleric of the Beastlord was casting another spell. His fingers first pressed the medallion on his headband, then wiped his eyes, which flared briefly with unholy purple light.

  The cleric looked up and down the hall. He chuckled as his eyes rested on the handle of the far door. “Open it,” he said, stepping back.

  Seeing the look in the stranger’s eyes, Darrow realized the man saw something dangerous about the door. “It’s trapped, isn’t it?”

  “That’s why you are the one opening it,” said the stranger. “Quickly, before you become more vexing than useful.”

  Another painful spasm of paralysis was preferable to Pons’s fate. Darrow closed his eyes as he gripped the latch. When he touched the brass handle, a cold thrill coursed through his body, followed by a warm flush. He opened his eyes, expecting a column of fire or lances of ice, but there was nothing—no pain, no paralysis, no harm that he could discern. Slowly, he pushed the door open and entered.

  Beyond the door was a vast hall of marble veined in blue and black. Rippling light rose from a long, winding stream that bisected the room, and the smell of salt water filled the air. The stream ran from a cascading fall in the north wall before winding its way through the grand hall to fill a large round pool in the south. Where the grand stream curved, smaller fountains nestled in its embrace, adding their lesser voices to the rushing flow. Each was ringed with coral seats carved in the likeness of creatures from an alien sea. Green pillars rose from the fountains, and from the stream itself, glistening with clear water that ran perversely up toward the ceiling over the half-visible fragments of crustacean eyes and invertebrate tendrils until it vanished in the darkness beyond the second-floor balconies.

  Beyond the grand pool stood a wide pair of shelves and a cabinet of many tiny drawers, clearly out of place in the fabulous hall. They formed the borders of an island in the marble hall, a strange haven of books and papers. Between the shelves, on a richly woven carpet, stood a clerk’s desk. The oil lamp on its corner still flickered as if disturbed by a fleeing ghost. Beside the lamp lay a stack of white vellum, an inkpot, and a stylus, still rolling across a page of figures. Even from forty feet away, Darrow spotted the fresh lines glistening wet and black. He crept closer for a better view but halted beside a pillar, afraid of attracting the attention of the room’s hidden occupants.

  The stranger shoved past Darrow and stamped toward the table.

  “Show yours
elf, Malveen!” he roared. His voice echoed briefly before the sound of moving water devoured it. “I’ve come for the scrolls.”

  When no one answered his challenge, the stranger flipped the table over, scattering its contents across the marble floor. The inkpot shattered and sent a black spray across the marble floor beyond the carpet.

  The cleric threw back his head and unleashed a terrific howl. The sound filled the vast hall and echoed in distant chambers. Darrow covered his ears and crouched beside the pillar, more afraid to be noticed than to remain still.

  The room’s guardians hissed in warning to the challenge. Against the far wall, three figures slunk out of the shadows. They were man-shaped, hairless, with glistening black skin. Their long, clawed fingers were webbed with translucent purple membranes. Long, needle-sharp teeth flashed in their impossibly wide mouths. They crept forward, crouching like ghouls.

  Suddenly, one of the creatures turned its head and sucked in the air as if tasting it. Its fellows imitated its gesture. As one, they froze in place, then darted away from the illuminated water to find shelter in the darkness.

  The light from the northern wall faded. Darrow saw the waterfall turn black, a great inky stain spreading in the tumult below. As the shadow moved along the stream, the light returned in its wake. The dark cloud flowed with the water, at last to reach the grand pool. The stranger looked down at it, then stepped back as the darkness surged up toward him.

  The darkness rose to the surface, taking shape as it emerged from the water. What appeared looked like a muscular, hairless man except for a prominent dorsal ridge running from the top of its skull down its spine. Its skin was smooth and dark as an aubergine, slick and glistening. Golden rings pierced the creature’s brow and the flaps where ears should be. From them hung a veil of fine chain links, obscuring the creature’s face except for its golden eyes. The veil fell netlike over the creature’s thick chest, ending in a thousand tiny hooks. Among them hung dozens of tiny arcane charms.

  The creature gazed at the one-armed stranger briefly before turning to Darrow cowering by the pillar. Above its veil, the creature’s eyes churned like boiling gold. It had no pupils, only black flecks that rose to the surface and sank away again. As those inhuman eyes turned on him, Darrow felt a surge of awe fill and warm his body. His fear vanished as he realized he was in the presence of a majestic, flawless power. Darrow sank to one knee and lowered his gaze.