Read The Mage in the Iron Mask Online
Authors: Brian Thomsen
Carefully, the masked prisoner removed the body of the dwarf from its low-budget shroud, being sure to remove the charm from around its neck. He then pushed the corpse of his recently acquired friend back through the tunnel and up into his cell where he placed it, as instructed, in the shadow-most corner. He then placed his plate back outside of the door, and raced back down the tunnel, pulling the blocking rock back into place behind him, and rushed at breakneck speed back to Hoffman’s cell hoping that he would be able to beat the guards there, be disguised by the powers of the old dwarf’s charm, deceive the guards, and survive the trip downstream and out to sea.
He realized that all of the odds were long, but knew that the gamble would be worth it because it was the only game in town and he was no longer content to just wait for death.
No sooner did he cinch the sack shut from the inside, than Rassendyll heard the lock to the door of the cell being opened, and two guards coming inside. Rassendyll clutched Hoffman’s charm to his bosom, desperately trying to keep it from making contact with the magic-leeching iron mask. Please work long enough to get me out of here, he prayed.
With a heave-ho one of the guards hoisted the burial sack over his shoulder, magically unaware of its newly added bulk.
“Good riddance,” said the guard who opened the doors for his corpse-laden associate. “That’s one less prisoner to keep an eye on.”
“And one less dwarf to blight Mulmaster,” the other added, as they ventured further into the keep’s bowels, toward the entrance to the sewer.
Rassendyll could smell the stench of sewage getting closer when he heard the guard who was carrying him complain: “Gee, I must be out of shape. This dwarf is getting awfully heavy.”
Rassendyll prayed that the spell would last just a little while longer.
The guard stopped for a moment, and the masked prisoner expected to have his presence revealed at any moment.
One guard opened a trap, releasing an aromatic draught of sewage stench. The other guard shifted the weight of his burden and carefully, so as not to entangle himself in the shroud’s downward descent, dropped what he thought to be the corpse-filled sack down into the sewer below.
Before the sack made its splash in the water below, Rassendyll thought he heard an alarm sound in the chambers above. His disappearance had been discovered, but he was already on his way down the drain and out to sea.
In the Tharchioness’s Boudoir
in the Tower of the Wyvern:
“Your majesty,” the ambassador said in urgent hushed tones, momentarily forgetting the breaches of protocol that he had just committed.
“Silence, worm!” the First Princess of Thay ordered. “My husband is on his way. My spy in the Tower of the Blades believes that he intends on confronting
me with evidence of our conspiracy.”
“But your majesty—”
“Silence! Do you wish to join the ranks of your predecessors? Don’t try my patience! I must concentrate before he gets here. It will require all of my feminine wiles to distract him.”
“The prisoner escaped!” the ambassador blurted out, just as the Tharchioness’s backhand made contact with his doughy cheek.
“What did you say?” she asked, her hand poised to strike again.
“My spy in Southroad Keep just informed me that all havoc has broken out due to the escape of a certain prisoner. Two guards have already been executed for gross incompetence.”
“Have they recovered the prisoner yet?”
“Not according to my sources, your highness,” the ambassador answered, his head still ringing from the last blow.
“Is there anything else I should know, worm?”
“Only that the last words of the executed guards were that they were sure he was dead—drowned, or something.”
“Did they find the body?”
“No,” the ambassador answered cautiously. “They believe it was washed out to sea.”
The Tharchioness stroked her own brow seductively.
Well, this does change things, she thought. No body, no evidence. No evidence, no conspiracy. It would appear that my dear husband has snatched a stalemate out of the jaws of victory. I will have to comfort the dear lad.
The Tharchioness let loose a fiendish laugh, and continued to apply her makeup. The ambassador took the opportunity of his mistress’s distraction to
escape from her boudoir with his life in hope that she had already forgotten his several infractions of protocol.
Once in the safety of the public hallway, the ambassador breathed a sigh of relief at having cheated death yet again.
In the Courtyard Between
the Towers of the Blade and the Wyvern:
“What do you mean he’s
gone?
” the High Blade demanded.
“We believe him to be dead, sire,” Rickman explained. “My experts believe that the sheer weight of the iron mask would have made it quite impossible for him to swim, and that he would undoubtedly have drowned before he even reached the open sea.”
“How can we be sure?” Selfaril demanded.
“We can’t, sire,” the Hawk captain conceded. “The men responsible for this severe foul-up have already been executed.”
“That is not good enough,” the High Blade blustered. “Your Hawks have been slipping. First, they could not hold onto a possible witness to our plans, even though you yourself thought him to be nothing but an itinerant thespian. Now, they have allowed the prisoner to escape.”
“There was no way he could have survived, your highness. It is obvious that we underestimated the suicidal lengths a desperate man would stoop to.”
“Indeed,” the High Blade answered. “Rickman, I am holding you personally responsible for cleaning up after this mess. There must be no evidence left that the prisoner ever existed.”
“At least he is not in Thayan hands, sire.”
“That is small consolation. Evidence of their seditious plan was all I needed to castrate my bitch of a wife. Now things are just back to status quo.”
A Thayan courtier appeared out of nowhere.
“Your majesty,” the courtier said, “the First Princess is waiting for you in her boudoir. She saw you coming across the courtyard from her window, and was troubled by what was possibly detaining you. Is everything all right?”
“Everything is fine,” the High Blade announced with a roll of his eyes that only Rickman noticed. “Tell my dearest bride that I will be there directly.”
The courtier gave one final message.
“Sire, the First Princess said to tell you that she would be counting the minutes,” the Thayan said, and returned to his post.
As am I, the High Blade thought, to your death!
Selfaril turned back to Rickman, delaying his trip back to his wife even further. A thought had just crossed his mind, and he was grinning in fiendish glee.
“Have your men returned from the Retreat with the bloodstained wand yet?” he inquired.
“No, your majesty,” Rickman replied.
“Notify me immediately when they do,” Selfaril instructed. “The Retreat was under Mulmaster’s protection, and I would hate to see the unfortunate slaughter of those wizards turn into a diplomatic hot potato, if you know what I mean.”
“Yes, your majesty,” Rickman replied, understanding what the High Blade was planning. “It wouldn’t be the same as a plot against the throne.”
“No,” Selfaril agreed, “but sometimes we have to settle for the next best thing.”
At the Retreat:
“Where did you find that?” Volo asked the lovely Chesslyn.
“Over by the ugly monk’s body, out by the gate,” she replied. “It’s obviously Thayan in origin. That’s why I checked your head for tattoos. I thought you might be one of those Red Wizard murderers.”
“So you believe that this mass slaughter was the product of a Thayan invasion?”
“That’s what it looks like to me,” she replied.
Volo fingered his beard and thought for a moment. The master traveler was no stranger to matters of bloodshed and the like, having survived numerous deadly altercations on his journeys around Toril. Pteramen, murderous Mazticans, and deadly dopplegangers—he had survived them all.
“That still doesn’t explain why there was no sign of a struggle,” he asserted, suspicious of the circumstances at hand. “Though the elders of the Retreat welcomed all refugees, I see little reason that they would open their gates to an armed contingent of Red Wizards. I—”
“Quiet!” she hushed with great urgency. “I hear horses. We’d better hide.”
Volo looked from side to side, and then at his trusty steed.
“What should I do with him?” he inquired in a whisper.
“In here,” she instructed, quickly leading him to a shed, then explaining, “It’s where I put my horse when I heard you coming.”
“If you heard me coming, why didn’t you respond to my whistle?”
“Later,” she answered.
When they had stowed the master traveler’s horse
next to that of the secret Harper agent, they closed the doors, and took a ladder up to the shed’s roof.
“This gives us a perfect vantage point to see and hear our new arrivals without being seen or heard ourselves,” Chesslyn explained.
“Are you sure?” the master traveler asked.
“Well, it worked when I was watching you,” she replied.
They had no sooner reached their vantage point when the Hawks named Wattrous and Jembahb entered the courtyard.
“Look at this mess!” Wattrous said. The older weasel-like Hawk was barely able to control the gorge that was working its way up his throat.
“What are we supposed to be looking for?” the younger and taller Hawk inquired, apparently oblivious to the stench of the rapidly rotting bodies.
“Captain Rickman said there should be something by the body of the bald guy at the gate,” the shorter and senior Hawk instructed, “but there doesn’t seem to be anything there.”
“How did he …” Chesslyn said a little louder than Volo felt comfortable with.
“Quiet!” the master traveler hushed, then added in a whisper, “Later.”
“Well, if it’s not here, let’s leave,” Jembahb said. “This place gives me the creeps.”
Volo cupped his hands together, and blowing through them, carefully made the sound of an un-dead specter advancing into the daylight. He could tell that Wattrous recognized the sound; the Hawk instantly became wide-eyed and frantically looked from side to side.
“Good idea,” he quickly replied to his junior Hawk, valiantly trying not to show his fear, but then adding, “but you have to be the one to tell Rickman.”
“No problem,” Jembahb replied as they remounted their horses. “But where will you be?”
“I have business in Hillsfar,” the weasel-like Wattrous quickly replied, saying the first thing that came to mind. He thought to himself, knowing how Rickman dealt with an undesirable report, maybe Hillsfar wasn’t such a bad idea. Perhaps he could join the Plumes. Jembahb was a nice enough guy, trusting and naive, and would, therefore, be the perfect scapegoat for their failure to complete their mission as directed. Yes. Hillsfar would be just far enough to save his own skin.
As the two Hawks set off back for Mulmaster, the Harper secret agent and the master traveler lowered themselves from their hiding place.