Read Crypt of the Moaning Diamond Online
Authors: Rosemary Jones
Zuzzara pulled a large silk handkerchief out of her waistcoat pocket. “Blow.”
Gunderal blew, delicately of course, and sighed. “Oh, that’s better. I felt my ears pop.”
Ivy chewed her lower lip and thought about a possible magical threat following them. Well, it was not treading on her heels like the bugbear, so she decided to ignore it for now.
“If we are heading back toward Tsurlagol,” said Zuzzara, who was always the most optimistic of the Siegebreakers (as long as her sisters Mimeri and Gunderal were happy), “then maybe we can find our wall again. The one that we are supposed to knock down.”
“The Thultyrl gave us two days,” Ivy said. “And I don’t think that we have even finished out half of the first day.” She thought about the number of fights, wrong turns, and other disasters that had befallen them. “Well, maybe more than half.”
Sanval answered softly, “The Thultyrl may not wait. I did not go back to the camp. They would have investigated and found your tunnel collapsed.”
“And presume that we are dead?”
“Or unable to complete your task.”
“What will they do then?” Ivy asked.
“Charge the wall without your help.”
“Wonderful thought.” Now she had to worry about an entire troop of Procampur’s finest trying to scale the western wall and overrun Fottergrim’s ores in the holdings at the top. Even without Archlis opposing them with his fire spells, it would not take much to turn the charge into a rout.
“Well, this looks like trouble,” said Ivy.
A pair of oaken doors blocked the way. The lock had been burned open, and the blasted doors hung half off their hinges.
“Waste of magic,” Mumchance said when he saw the condition of the doors.
“He has magic to waste, dear sir,” replied Kid with a significant wink toward Archlis. The magelord stood behind them, flanked by his bugbears, and was obviously waiting for them to survey the room beyond.
Peeking through the ruined doors, they could see a corridor with a checkered floor made from huge stone slabs. Some had a fine cross-hatch pattern cut into them. Others were marked with a spiral of stars, and still others with wavy lines. A few squares were polished smooth and blank.
“Earth, sky, ocean,” said Mumchance. “And that which we find on the other side of death.”
“Nothing,” said Ivy, because this was an old lesson, one that her mother had taught when she had taken Ivy hunting for treasure in the wild. She had seen such patterns in ruins before. They invariably led to a tomb or crypt. “It’s a path to the dead.”
“A bit more dead than usual, my dears,” pointed out Kid.
For the floor was littered with the bodies of hobgoblins and ores, a ragged and rather squashed looking troop. Their lifeless, muscular bodies were limp, their blank yellow eyes staring at nothing, their hide and rough hair poking out from breaks in their once bright armor. Shields were as flat as plates, and swords smashed.
“More of Fottergrim’s?” asked Ivy.
“They pursued us through this section,” said Archlis, “but they did not know the secret of the squares. The ceiling crushed them as it does anyone who does not know the pattern.”
At this pronouncement, they all glanced up. The ceiling was low and gleamed with a spectral light, clearly showing a lattice of iron suspended above the floor. A long pointed spike was welded to the corner of each tiny square formed by the ironwork. Some of the spikes were clearly blunted by repeated poundings on the stone floor below. Others still dripped with bits and pieces of the unfortunates who had passed below without the knowledge of the floor’s pattern. Chains ran from the lattice into square holes cut into the stone ceiling above.
“The floor is constructed in such a way that if four people move across the squares in unison, the trap stays in the ceiling. Should one make a misstep, the trap comes crashing down. I have the pattern here,” Archlis withdrew his spellbook from his pouch and unfolded a page twice as large as the book from its center. The parchment was blotched with terrible stains, but a series of gray-brown lines and rust red symbols could be seen on one side.
“You and you,” said Archlis, pointing at Sanval and Zuzzara, “should go first, as you appear to be about the same weight. Then”he nodded toward Ivy and Mumchance “you will follow. You must step exactly as I say.”
“And then what?” asked Ivy.
> Archlis pointed with the head ofhisAnkh to the doors visible at the opposite end of the room. “There is a lever on the left-hand side. Turn it three times to the right. The lock handle must be turned delicately and correctly, but if done right, the trap will remain locked long enough for the rest of us to cross.”
“Then it resets itself?” asked Mumchance.
“Yes. There is no way to lock it open permanently. But it takes some time for it to reset. After we had left this room, Fottergrim’s trackers were able to cross it safely when they followed us. We eluded them in the maze that it is beyond those doors, but were forced back. We locked the trap from that side when we crossed the room again so more than half the trackers escaped with their lives and continued to hunt us into the room where you found us.”
“So when the ceiling comes down, it comes down fast,” said Mumchance with a speculative note in his voice. “And it probably goes up very slowly.”
“Whether it is fast or slow does not matter. I hold the pattern here. We used it to cross once before. Once you have reached the other side, the dwarf will turn the lock and secure the room as I have instructed. That should be within his skills,” said Archlis. Mumchance snorted. “Then we will follow you,” continued Archlis. “Now take one step right, one step forward, and one step left, and repeat that pattern until you reach the other side.”
“It sounds like a court dance,” said Sanval, readying himself to cross by the usual straightening of his helmet and a quick check of his weapons.
Ivy looked across the room and at the corpses that littered many of the squares. She laid one hand on Sanval’s arm to keep him from stepping out. “But there are extra bodies on the floor, and that will make it harder. Hate to trip over someone else’s feet as we glide along.”
“Or someone’s severed head, more likely,” said Mumchance, eyeing the carnage.
“Can we do it?” questioned Zuzzara. “If one is off count or stumbles …”
“All of us die,” said Ivy, turning to Archlis. “I don’t like this.”
The magelord adjusted his grip on his Ankh, one rusty ring on his hand grating unpleasantly against its smooth metal surface. “If you refuse, you will die faster. Then the others can choose which danger is greaterthe floor ahead or myself. I only need four to cross and turn the key.”
“If he is so clever, why can’t he break the trap’s spell?” Gunderal whispered.
“It is not a spell,” Kid whispered back. “Do you feel any magic here?”
Gunderal’s pretty face smoothed into that look of perfect serenity that meant she was feeling along the Weave of magical forces. She slowly shook her head.
Mumchance nodded in agreement with Kid. “It’s all mechanical.”
Ivy backed away from Archlis, fingering the hilt of her sword. Sanval also had a firm grip on his weapon. Archlis did not look worried, which was worrisome. The bugbears were a bit too relaxed as well, just leaning on their glaives and watching with interest. They obviously felt no threat.
“Waste of time,” said Mumchance, who had been studying the floor and then the ceiling while carrying on a whispered conversation with Kid. He squinted at the little thief, who nodded very firmly this time. “All that hopping back and forth. Kid, get ready. Come up here, Zuzzara.”
“No,” said Archlis, “it must be two of almost equal weight who start the pattern.”
“Don’t care about the pattern.” Mumchance scratched
Wiggles’s head as he contemplated the room. “Zuzzara, how far can you throw a dead hobgoblin?”
“Same as a live one,” she said with grin. “Halfway across the room without much trouble.”
“Should work. Let’s get you a little help. Hey, you, big guy,” Mumchance said, crooking a finger at the nearest bugbear. “Hook me a hobgoblin with that stick of yours. The little one near the door will work fine. He’s almost intact.”
The bugbear growled at Mumchance, but he went to the threshold of the room. The hairs on the back of the bugbear’s neck were clearly visible just below the line of his battered helmet and just as clearly standing straight out. The bugbear muttered and grumbled, very softly in the back of his throat, as he looked beyond the room to the doors on the far side. Still, he obeyed Mumchance’s orders, ignoring the scowling magelord. The bugbear leaned through the doors, carefully keeping his feet out of the room and off the carved pavement. He thrust his glaive into the nearest hobgoblin and dragged it back through the door.
“You get one end. Zuzzara, you grab the other,” instructed Mumchance. “Kid, get ready to jump.”
Kid crouched in the center of the door. Zuzzara and the bugbear swung the body twice and then sent it sailing over Kid’s head and into the room. It fell heavily on the tiles. With a screeching of gears above the ceiling, then the clash of unwinding chains, the ironwork grid dropped from above them and crashed to the floor, again impaling the dead hobgoblins and ores.
“Go! Go!” shouted Mumchance at Kid.
Kid leaped lightly on top of the ironwork and raced across the grid. A ponderous tick-tick of gears sounded in the ceiling. “It’s starting up again,” yelled Mumchance. Kid spurted ahead and dropped in front of the doors. He grasped the lever and
twisted it savagely around to the right. There was a grinding noise that came from the ceiling and then a distinct sproing sounded through the room. The spiked grid remained where it had landed on the floor.
“See,” said Mumchance, hoisting himself on top of the ironwork and strolling straight across. “Much easier to break it than to go dancing across the floor.”
If the magelord was pleased, it did not show in his scowl. The bugbears looked on, expressionless, but then Ivy did not expect any sort of expression on a bugbears squashed furry face.
When they reached the far side of the room, Ivy said to the dwarf, “That was just too easy. What terrible thing happens next, do you suppose?”
“Look, these old tomb builders weren’t exactly mechanical geniuses,” said Mumchance. “Well, one or two were good at it, and the others just copied them. I would bet you a good night’s sleep that the gears are rusted out, the chains have weak links, and a couple more drops would have broken the whole thing. But the most delicate gears are always in the lock mechanism. The magelord was right. It’s all about balance and counterbalance, the right pressure at the right time. Archlis had already forced it open twice today, so it was sure to be a bit bunged up.”
“And if the ironwork went back into place while Kid was racing across?”
“Wouldn’t move that fast. Archlis said there was enough time for a bunch of Fottergrim’s raiders to follow him through and out once already, which meant some type of gear rotating in the lock and, most likely, the same sort of gear powering the resetting of the trap. Of course, if there had been any magic behind it, that would have been different, but Gunderal didn’t smell anything. But, Ivy, that’s all done and in the past. You
should be worrying about something else.” “What?”
“Whatever chased them back into this room. You heard the magelord. They went through once, doing that hop-jump-hop across the floor. Fottergrim’s hounds followed them and then something forced Archlis back across that room one more time. It wasn’t those hobgoblins and ores. He roasted them as soon as they caught up to him.”
The dwarf had a point. Ivy just hated that. A magelord unhindered by hobgoblins and unflustered by stray warriors appearing in the middle of his battles (even if those warriors were a battered troupe like Ivy’s) would only retreat from something very large and fairly fireproof. And deadly. She doubted that anything short of deadly would stop him. What came next must be far more dangerous than Fottergrim’s fighters.
“I knew this was too easy,” said a rueful Ivy. Staying next to Mumchance, she squeezed to one side to let Zuzzara, Gunderal, and Sanval pass into the corridor beyond. Archlis and his bugbears followed. “Well, at least we got through that trap with minimum fuss.”
Kid sidled next to her, stamping from hoof to hoof.
“Those early tomb builders lacked sophistication.” Mumchance poked at the broken mechanism that locked the trap into place, wiggling the long brass handle that disappeared into a square hole carved into the stone. Like any dwarf, he never could resist trying to pull something apart just to see how it worked. Ivy almost expected him to pry the mechanism out of the wall, just so he could examine it later. “Not like today. If I had built that bit back there, there would be some secondary trap or…”
Ivy never heard the rest of the sentence. The stone slab under her feet slid open with a sharp click and the rattle of chains running through a stone channel. She and Kid dropped
into the darkness below. As she was falling, she caught a brief glimpse of Mumchance’s surprised face, his mouth still open, before the stone trapdoor snapped shut above her.
The day after a fifteen-year-old Ivy had been dug out from under a dead horse by a kindly dwarf, she had wanted to stop at the nearest temple and make a few offerings. Mumchance had dissuaded her.
“I wouldn’t,” he had said. “Over the last three hundred years, the one thing that I have learned is that it is best to ignore the gods. Take no notice of them, and they will take no notice of you.”
It had seemed like good advice at the time. Now Ivy wondered if she had angered some god somewhere. Nothing else could account for her foul luck.
She sat up slowly in the darkness beneath the trapdoor, unsure which parts of her body still worked after her fall. Her ribs ached, her back hurt, and the rubble covering the floor was making itself felt through the leather of her breeches. But none of the pains felt fatal, just more bruises on top of the bruises collected in her earlier falls that day, not to mention the buffeting by kobolds, the squeezing of that snake, andoh now she remembereda few well-placed blows from the hobgoblins. Once she was free of this tangle of tunnels and traps, Ivy intended to march herself to the largest,