now. It’s too rife with foppery. But the Harpers”
His features obscured by the dancing shadows from the fire, Artus turned to face his old friend. “I know you’ll tell the Harpers about this … for my own good, of course. But I’ll be gone by morning. Even this city’s fabled web of Harper agents won’t be able to close on me that quickly.” His voice was full of cold resolve, but for an instant that icy tone cracked. “Good-bye, Theron. You’ll be the first to see the ring when I return.”
“Take care of yourself,” Theron said, but the steady thud of Artus’s boots was already echoing back from the hallway.
Kwee returned to the study a moment later. “So it is as you had feared. He refused to alert the Harpers?”
Theron nodded. “I hope this wasn’t a mistake, Kwee. The only thing I can do now is let the Harpers know. They’ll alert the few agents they have in the South. Maybe they can help him.”
The window blew open suddenly, and the heavy drapes ballooned up, borne on the cold wind whipping into the room. “It wasn’t this windy when I let Artus out,” Kwee noted as he ran to close the window.
“Carefully,” Theron hissed, sliding a dirk from under the daybed’s cushions.
As Kwee reached out to fasten the window, a black-gloved hand grabbed him. The young man needed no weapons to defend himself; like many Shou warriors, he possessed deadly hand-to-hand fighting skills. Instead of trying to pull away, he anchored a firm grip on the attacker’s wrist and fell backward into the room.
The figure that tumbled stiffly in from the balcony was completely garbed in black, with a long cloak and heavy cowl hiding his features. The young Shou could feel the cold radiating from the cloaked man and quickly pressed his advantage. Before the assassin could stand, Kwee kicked him in the chest, then dropped to his knees and struck at the invader’s face with the palm of his hand.
The blow, which would have killed most men, only made a sharp cracking sound and knocked the assassin’s cowl back. Kwee didn’t know what he expected to see, but a man made completely of ice was not it. A spider web of fractures surrounded the spot where the blow had struck the ice creature’s forehead. Below this, two eyes burned blue-white in a rigid, expressionless face.
The moment of shocked surprise gave the assassin the advantage he needed. He lashed out with a rock-hard fist, shattering Kwee’s skull. The young Shou dropped to the floor with a grunt.
Theron pushed himself to his feet. The assassin stood slowly and began to walk toward him. A thin film of water now coated his rigid, icy face, running down into his clothes. His wet footprints stained the carpet as he came relentlessly closer. The heat from the fireplace is melting him, Theron realized. If I can keep him at bay long enough, the fire will take care of him for me.
The explorer dropped his dagger and grabbed a boar-spear from the wall, but the polearm was far too heavy for his fever-weakened muscles. The assassin knocked it from his hands with a single blow. It was clear the fire could never finish its work in time.
As the assassin closed its black-gloved hands around Theron’s throat, the explorer’s mind fell away, spiraling back to the goblin camp. He stood at the brink of a circular pit. Some monstrous creature bellowed in the darkness below, waiting for the savages to push him to his doom. Spears prodded the explorer, slicing bloody ribbons from his back. Without warning the air turned numbingly cold. Theron grew certain the snow had come to rescue him once again. “The ring,” he croaked. “Rayburton, use the ring.”
With agonizing slowness, the cold of the assassin’s icy grip became the final chill of death.
Artus had never been a patient man. That restlessness, combined with a healthy streak of irreverence, had dashed his mother’s hopes for his career as a teacher with the clerks of Oghma. It had also done in his
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