âLetâs start with whyâre you all here, Harmsson?â I pointed at the two sticky guards. Theyâd finally stopped wiggling, but were still breathing.
Harmsson chuckled. âThe same thing you are, obviously. Escaping the mess you made.â
âI made!â I snapped. âThat was entirely your fault.â
âI didnât set a trap in a public venue!â
âThat was insurance, that you forced me to activate. Donât try to weasel your way out of this one. I canât believe you tried to jump-start a revolution during my beerfest. Whatâs wrong with you??â
Harmssonâs eyes flashed dangerously. âI was thinking about how to best get what we both want for this country!â
I scoffed. âGoatshite! What, fer you to rule it? Fat chance of that now!â
âNo! For a more egalitarian society! For more rights for guild members and rights for gnomes!â Harmssons voice was pleading.
âOh, puhleez, you donnae care about any of that!â
Harmsson sagged. âI did. I do, I really do. But politics is all about compromise and baby steps. And I â I donât have time for baby steps. The king wasnât moving, and the Council were outright stonewalling me. I heard two of the Council would be at your beerfest, and with the Duke there too⦠I saw my chance, and took it!â
I hesitated at that. The tone of his voice was genuine, and he was an old dwarfâ¦
No, no, that was just the high Charisma talking! This was a hard-bitten honey-tongued dyed-in-the-wool politico lying before me, and I wouldnât give him another inch.
And, it didnât really matter what his goals were. I was quite certain that heâd set Ambermine on me. Iâd given him his one chance. Fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, wonât be fooled again and whatnot.
I waved his excuses away like they were the bad smell down here. âForget about all that, I donât care about yer motivations, Harmsson. Whyâre you here.â
He sighed. âI really was just escaping. This was the only key my contacts could get me, since itâs a city access point. Lady Viola and Lord Newcastle stayed behind to keep the army occupied. They have large clans, so theyâll be safe.â
âAnd you donât?â
âNo⦠Iâm the last of the Harmsson line.â He said, meekly. âAnd if I die, the hope of change goes with it.â
There was a heavy silence. I broke it by pointing to the two trussed up guards.
âWhat about those two?â
Harmsson frowned. âThey were waiting here for me. I suspect whoever gave me the key also tipped them off. They really are part of the secret police. You should kill them.â
âIâm not killing anybody.â
âYou should consider it. They were willing to use a mind controlling Ability on you. Theyâd only go that far if they planned to kill you. Or silence you some other way.â
I choked. âWhat??â
Harmsson nodded as best he could. âThey work directly for the Council of Greybeards, and have a lot of extra-judicial powers. But Abilities like that are still illegal, so they wouldnât use it unless they were sure youâd never complain.â
âIâm not sure I believe that.â I poked Harmsson. âYou're pretty comfortable with this whole killing thing, aren't you? Speaking of which, why try and kill me, huh? Why send Ambermine?â
Harmsson fell silent, and looked away, not even trying to deny it anymore.
I stared at the miserable little [Politician] while I considered what to do. If the army knew Harmsson would escape this way, theyâd be knocking at the door up above sooner rather than later. That meant I had to leave right now.
I didnât know whether to laugh or cry.
âYou know what? I donât care about your reasons, or justifications, or you. You arenât worth my time, Harmsson. Iâll leave you here for the army. Good luck with whatever.â I gave him an ironic salute and headed into the darkness of the cavern.
After Iâd gone about ten steps, Harmsson called out, âThatâs the wrong way!â
I came to a shuffling stop and heaved a massive sigh. Since this hadnât been in our escape plans, I didnât actually know the way out of the sewers. I stomped back to the group and paused in front of Harmsson.
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âYou donât know the way.â He said, not a single trace of smugness in his voice.
âMaybe I do, maybe I donâtâ¦.â I grumbled.
âThis was my planned escape route. I memorized the whole layout. Itâs a maze down here, and sometimes thereâre monsters. Thereâs safety in numbers. Let me come with you, and Iâll get us both out. You donât need to trust me, but right now you need meâ
The snake was right. I didnât know my way out of here, and time was of the essence. I wanted to be locked up snugly in the Thirsty Goat with my lawyer when the Guard came calling. Not wandering the tunnels with vengeful maybe-secret-police out for blood.
âBy Tiaraâs Teats!!!â I growled, and bent to help Harmsson pull loose. âYouâd better promise that you wonât screw me over!â
âI promise.â He said with sincerity.
âUh - huh.â There wasnât anything so handy as a solvent for the stuff, it would crumble apart in about half an hour, but some judicious force applied to clothes in the right place and careful maneuvering of a knife let Harmsson strip down to his un-glued skivvies.
He stood and brushed himself off, then stretched. The left side of his tunic was stained with blood. He noticed me staring and shrugged. âOne of them nicked me. Itâs nothing serious; I have an Ability handling it and Iâve got a potion if necessary.â
As he spoke, he casually walked over to where his sword had fallen near my feet.
âNuh, uh!â I said, grabbing the weapon and pointing it at him. âIâll take that. You just concentrate on getting us out of here.â n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
Harmssons gave me a casual nod, then pointed down the tunnel. âItâs down that way, then left. Letâs go. Are you sure you donât want to just⦠toss those two into the muck down there? Let the sewer handle the shit?â
I frowned. âNo. I handled your little [Assassin], I can handle a pair of government employees. Letâs go.â
So saying, I nicked each of the guards in an easy to reach place and collected some of their blood. The Ambermine trick had worked quite well, so Iâd need to make some more vampire tea when I had the chance.
Harmsson watched me curiously then shrugged. âFine. Letâs hurry.â
We headed off into the murky purple darkness, leaving the two behind. The system of sewerage tunnels was fairly uniform, with holes in the center of the roof every 100 meters or so for street cleaning and rain runoff. Rain could be an actual serious problem in Western Crack, as the canyon overhead allowed in impressive amounts of rainfall during the rainy season.
When we reached the first fork in the path, I headed to the left, but Harmsson stopped me and pointed down the right path, holding a finger up to his lips.
I stared at him in confusion for a moment, before realizing what heâd done. I nodded and made sure to make some clear footprints down the left tunnel in some moss, then stealthily headed down the right tunnel.
We walked through the tunnels in silence, Harmsson in front and me with a sword at his back. I had little interest in anything Harmsson had to say, and he was preoccupied with ensuring we were headed in the right direction. Heâd been correct, I absolutely wouldâve gotten lost down here, it was a total labyrinth. And Gods, the smell. It was so bad you never got used to it.
It was after nearly an hour of wandering that I had to ask the burning question. Harmsson had paused at another T-junction and was squinting down both tunnels looking perplexed. âHarmsson⦠are we lost?â
âAh⦠possibly.â
âYOU-!!â
âIâm doing my best! Iâm running off pure memory here!â Harmsson snapped. âI think we need to go back to that last U-bend and go up the path to the left instead.â
âFineâ¦â I sighed, turning around.
It was about a ten minute trek back, but as we approached, I stopped Harmsson with a finger to my lips. My [Map] filters were still on, and theyâd caught four dots back the way weâd come. Listening carefully, we could make out the sound of people talking.
âShit.â I muttered, and pointed back. âGo, go, go, go.â
âHow did they get out so quickly??â Harmsson muttered as we ran as quietly as we could.
âI assume someone came and helped. Or it could be some of yours, or just city workers, but Iâm not taking any chances.â
âI think thereâs another exit up that way.â Harmsson pointed down another bend. âItâll drop us out in Darkwater ravine, so thereâll be some climbing, but itâll get us out.â
âGood enough. Go, go, go!â I hissed.
So we ran. Unfortunately, we seemed to be well and truly lost now, as we ran into dead-end after dead-end. It was at one such dead-end where I stopped Harmsson with a hand against his chest.
âNo, we cannae go back. Theyâre already at those last crossroads, weâll run right inta them.â
âAre you sure?â He asked, heaving for breath.
I closed my eyes and nodded, staring internally at my [Map]. Four dots stood a ways back. The path was winding, so they were in view, but theyâd still catch up in about a minute or two.
âWe need ta hide.â I said, pointing around the cavern. âAnd prepare an ambush.â
âI donât have any hiding [Abilities].â Harmsson shook his head. âYou shouldâve killed them.â
âWhatever, we donnae know if itâs even them. Just hide, and attack if I shout âFer Crack and Annieâ.â
He choked back a nervous laugh. âWhat??â
âJust do it.â I gave him his sword, and he took it in a steady grasp. I kept a wary eye on him as I craned my neck looking for a place to hide.
The sewer in this section was a pile of logs and refuse. Some effort had been made to organize things, with the logs and various bits of dwarven city garbage arranged in a haphazard pile of sticks and large stones. Possibly a collection tunnel, and someone with a cleaning Ability would be by later to dump it into an extra dimensional garbage.
It was while I was wedging myself between two slimy logs that one of the dots on the map vanished. Followed closely by another. Then a third.
âPeterâ¦â Harmssonâs voice came from just to my left, a hint of terror in it.
I looked over his way. He was pointing to a trio of boulders in the middle of the general pile. I looked more closely at the large mottled spheres.
At the⦠very, big, eggs.
The last dot had vanished now, and a muffled bellow reached us down the tunnel. I checked my filters again with mounting horror. Monsters were still on!! I should be able to see any!!!
Then I ticked on the âanimalsâ filter, which was immediately populated with thousands of rats. As well as one very large dot approaching rapidly down the tunnel.
âPETER!!!â Harmsson shouted now, as thundering footfalls echoed down the dank tunnel.
âWait for it!â I hissed, holding my mace at the ready and doing my best to hide.
And then we saw it. An enormous yellow body covered in grime heaved into view, roughly the size of a draft horse. An orange beak with a wicked hook at the end snapped open and shut and a pair of beady black eyes shimmered in the dark. It flapped a pair of wings that nearly filled the entire cavern and let out a cry.
âQUACK!!!â
âCrikey.â Harmsson muttered, as the beast waddled fully into view. âThatâs a big duck.â