Don Bassinghtwaite - The Binding Stone

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Guidance that had led him and Natrac to the daelkyr's shadow, not away from it. Geth's belly tensed and he knew that they weren't meant to run from this fight.

His growl rose into a roar. He jumped up onto the rail of the balcony, caught his balance-and leaped to the floor of stone floor below. To the sound of Natrac's frightened astonishment, he darted forward and thrust his flaming hunda at the daelkyr's muscular chest.

The spirit slid aside with an eerie grace and its hand came up to swipe at the hunda. The wood bucked in Geth's grip, then fell into burning chunks where the daelkyr's bladed fingers had cut it. Geth stared at the truncated section of staff still in his grasp.

Ten flailing swords stabbed at him. Geth yelped and threw himself back. The daelkyr's hands swept the air in front of his chest, so close he could hear the metal sing. He tumbled to the side, trying to stay out of the way of the shadow's lethal reach. His shifting-granted toughness wouldn't protect him from those steel claws; Geth wasn't sure that even his gauntlet would have stopped them!

And he wasn't at all certain he wanted to put the protection of the Gatekeeper's stones to the test.

Geth spun again. He ducked and blades hissed above him. The daelkyr's shadow moved in absolute silence except for the clash of its long fingers. Geth lunged in under its reach, extending himself to jab what was left of his hunda stick right into the shadow's belly.

It was like attacking mist. The flames that still clung to the stick flickered and dimmed. The daelkyr barely seemed to notice. Geth rolled quickly as its fingers darted at him again. "Tiger's blood!" he spat. The spirit could hurt him, but he couldn't hurt it?

"Catch!" Natrac called. He had his hunda stretched out, offering it to him. Geth cursed and shook his head.

"It's not going to do me any good!" The shifter dodged back again as the daelkyr's shadow pressed forward. "I need something else!"

He tried to duck around the thing, to get to its back at least, but it wouldn't let him pass. It surged ahead in a storm of bright metal, forcing Geth back by three fast paces. Abruptly, his heels hit the low stone steps of the dais he had glimpsed across the room and he stumbled. The daelkyr's claws flashed. Geth wrenched his body around, one palm planted on the steps, and tumbled out of the way as the blades met the stone in a skittering impact that sent sparks flashing in the shadows. He scrambled to his feet and leaped to the top of the steps, seeking the frail advantage of higher ground.

The black stone altar atop the dais was like a block taken from the walls of Jhegesh Dol, rough but greasy slick. Blood had gushed over in the stone in centuries past, drying thick in its pitted crevices. The altar's top was scarred, gashed and slashed by ancient blades like a butcher's wooden board.

In the middle of the altar lay a sword, its blade wide and heavy, flaring into a spreading fork like a serpent's tongue at its end, deeply notched along one edge. The metal had a weird sheen to it, dark and purple as twilight-but the sword was clean, as if none of the horror and corruption of the place had clung to it.

Geth vaulted onto the top of the stone and snatched up the sword. As the shadow of the daelkyr came charging up the steps, he whirled and swept the sword up to block its outstretched hands.

The twilight blade clashed against the spirit's steel claws-and cut through them. Falling metal clattered against the altar. The shadow staggered, mouth open in a soundless scream that revealed a dagger tongue. Its severed fingers trembled and black blood pumped out of the living steel.

Geth slammed the sword up in a chopping blow that cut under the daelkyr's arm and deep into its chest. The notched edge of the weapon bit deep in shadowy flesh. The spirit shuddered. For a moment it seemed that it might pulled itself backward off the blade. Geth grabbed the amulet around its neck, holding the foul ghost close as he jerked the sword higher.

The shadow of the daelkyr made no noise, but suddenly it seemed as if all of the tortured spirits of Jhegesh Dol gave one last wail.

The black fortress and the daelkyr faded into pearl-gray mist on an empty marsh. Geth froze. Natrac, standing on a low hillock of grass gasped and pointed with his hunda stick. The shifter spun around.

Less than ten paces away, Batul, Krepis, and Orshok stood under the branches of the tree that marked the edge of Jhegesh Dol. Behind them, the eastern sky showed the pale pink of dawn. Geth leaped down from the broken chunk of rock that he stood on and sloshed across the wet ground to face them.

"We're here," he spat, still breathing hard from his phantom battle. "Satisfied?"

But all three druids were simply staring at him. Even Batul's eyes were wide. Geth looked down at his hands. In his left he held the notched sword. In his right, the big amulet that had hung from the daelkyr's neck. There was something inside the amulet he saw now, a coarse, dull black object nearly as large as his palm.

"Gatekeeper legends," said Batul in an awestruck voice, "tell that when the daelkyr lord of Jhegesh Dol was brought down, two treasures vanished from Eberron. One was the sword, forged by Dhakaani smiths, of the hobgoblin hero who struck the killing blow. The other was a sacred relic, a scale from Vvaraak, the dragon who taught the first druids." He swallowed, his eyes fixed on the amulet.

Geth held it out to him. "Keep your word and stand with us against Dah'mir," he growled, "and you can have one of those treasures back."

CHAPTER 14

They arrived at the Bonetree camp with the sun high in the sky. The young hunters leaped out of the boats and splashed through the shallows to draw the vessels up on shore. On the riverbank above, there were excited shouts that rose into one of the fluting trills that Singe had learned to identify as Bonetree hunting calls.

"What are they saying?" he asked Ashi.

"That Dah'mir has returned," the hunter whispered. "That the hunt was successful."

There was no emotion in her voice. She'd said almost nothing to him since the night Dandra had woken screaming, but neither had she strayed far from his side. The young hunters were always watching Singe now, at least as much as they watched Ashi. True to Ashi's prediction, there had been two more challenges for her sword. The second challenger she wounded as she had the first. The third she killed, her face hard.

That hardness hadn't lifted.

As they climbed out of the boats, one of the young hunters began shouting at the others, forming them up into a pack, ready to lead Dah'mir and Medala up the riverbank. A ragtag honor guard, Singe realized. Out of the corner of his eye, he saw anger flicker in Ashi's eyes. She started to move toward the hunters but Dah'mir glanced at her. "Stay with the prisoners, Ashi," he told her.

"My place is leading the hunters, Revered," she said, but the green-eyed man shook his head.

"You have a greater honor," he said and once again Singe could feel the persuasive touch of his presence. "Bring the prisoners behind me so that the clan can see them."

Even Ashi's anger softened before his charm. She nodded and moved forward obediently. Dandra needed no encouragement to follow Dah'mir, of course. She stumbled after him like a zombie. Even after days of travel, it still hurt Singe to see the proud, bright woman reduced to a dim automaton.

Singe, though, froze on the river's edge. This was the end of their journey-and Geth hadn't come for them. The hope of rescue that he might have nurtured over the past several days wavered like a candle flame.

Ashi reached back and took his arm. "Come," she said.

At the top of the riverbank, the Bonetree encampment spread out around them, a scattering of rough shelters that seemed to be half hut and half tent. Men, women, and children-the first of the Bonetree clan he had seen, Singe realized, who were not hunters-hurried forward, calling out to the hunters and kneeling down to Dah'mir. The young hunters marched with all the self-conscious stiffness of fresh recruits to the Blademarks, but Dah'mir smiled and held out his hand, offering blessings freely. At his side, Medala's eyes darted across the gathered clan as if seeking out any hint of a threat to her lord.

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