me to Sulalk.â
The mirror obliged, showing them both bedded down for the night, the colt in a pasture, Ember stripped down to his breeches and smiling as he dreamt in his narrow bed. Alassra envied them a momentâMystraâs Chosen didnât need to sleep; their dreams were mostly daydreams, pale imitations of the real thingâthen, without prompting, the quicksilver roiled. The Simbul, expecting the unimaginable, readied a potent barrage of spells.
The mirrorâs image resolved into four men hunched around a plank table in a dirt-floor room. Alassra recognized the room. Sulalk was too small to have an inn or tavern. When folk gathered or strangers visited, theygathered and visited in the sacking room behind the mill. The four men were strangers, travel-stained traders with gamblersâ eyes. Town merchants sent such men into the countryside each summer to measure the coming harvest. The traders drove hard bargains and werenât beloved by the farmers, but theyâd been part of Aglarondan life longer than the Simbul.
Alassra saw no reason for alarm. Though sheâd constructed the mirror, she didnât always understand its workings: It had shown her scenes both unexpected and trivial before. She was releasing her uncast spells when she read a word as it formed on one manâs lips.
Horse
, heâd saidâin what tone Alassra couldnât say because the mirror didnât reflect sound. She thought she saw him add the word
tomorrow
. She was no lip-reader; she couldnât be sure, but a grain trader could easily become a horse trader for a day. Heâd have no trouble finding a buyer for Emberâs colt. Sheâd have to buy it from him herself, if she didnât get to the boy first.
The Simbul had advantagesâpowers of persuasionâno trader could match. Alassra needed a bit of time to assemble her traveling gear and to remind herself of the spells no traveling wizard should be without, but after that sheâd would be off to Sulalk to purchase a birthday present Elminster would have to visit Aglarond to claim.
She planned to reach the village in the late morning hours. Judging by the amount of ale the four men had already drunk, sheâd arrive with time to spare.
3
Thazalhar, in eastern Thay
Midnight, between the thirteenth and fourteenth day of Eleasias, The Year of the Banner (1368DR)
In a silent crypt beneath an isolated estate of Thazalhar, two men, both of them necromancers, neither of them alive, awaited the arrival of a third. They waited patiently because patience was all they had, bound as they were in bandages and seated in ebony chairs that flickered with the turquoise light of unbreakable warding. The pair was also bound by ties of blood and ambition that went deeper than the misunderstandings that had led Gweltaz to slay Chazsinal who sat on his right.
The blood was between fathers and sons. It reached beyond the crypt to a third living man whose footfalls echoed outside. The ambition, cherished by all three, was nothing less than the destruction of Szass Tam, Zulkir of Necromancy.
A century ago, when Gweltaz had been an aspiring necromancer, heâd caught the zulkirâs undead eye. For a while, heâd been Szass Tamâs favorite. In the time-honored tradition of Thayan treachery, Gweltaz had coveted Tamâs place atop the necromancersâ hierarchy. He plotted against his mentor. His plots failed, spectacularly. Gweltaz paid for that failure with his mortal life and a final lesson: Tam, who understood tradition without respecting it, did not teach any pupil, however favored, enough to threaten his own position.
Chazsinal, by then a novice necromancer himself, had rescued Gweltazâs charred bones from a demon-guarded midden on the heights of Thaymount. For the next ten years Chazsinal abandoned his own studies to collect the rare unguents necessary to restore his father to a semblance of life. He cast the spells