off with a wave of her hand. âStay silent. You will do as I say. Holidayâs demise is to be left to me. Your part in this is settled. I want no dispute. You are not trying to dispute me, are you?â
There was a long silence from the other. âNo,â he replied finally.
âGood. If you want Holiday dead, and I know you do, then leave it to me to arrange. Now go.â
She wove her hands through the air before her, and Rydall disappeared in a rising column of mist. She waited until she was sure he had been dispatched back to where he had come from. She neither liked nor trusted him, but he was useful in this matter and would do as a catâs-paw until she was finished. Until Holiday was dead.
She closed her eyes in pleasure as she envisioned the play-Kingâs final moments. She had pictured it over and over again in her mind, shaping it, honing it, polishing it until it was perfect. She could see every detail of it. She could see him breathing for the final time, see the look in his eyes as he realized what had been done to him, hear the despair in his voice as he tried to cry out.
Oh, it would happen. It most definitely would. For now, however, there were other matters that needed her attention.
She brought up her hands one final time. A rush of dark mist engulfed her, and she was gone.
Ben Holiday was already thinking furiously as he walked back across the causeway and reentered Sterling Silver. Willow had come down from the battlements and was waiting for him. She rushed up, and he held her close in an effort to still the trembling inside them both.
âWeâll get her back,â he whispered, feeling her fists tighten against his back. âI promise.â
Then he turned to Bunion, who was trailing behind. âLeave for the lake country right away,â he ordered the kobold. âTell the River Master that his granddaughter has been kidnapped by Rydall of Marnhull and ask for his help in searching for her. Tell him any assistance he chooses to give will be greatly appreciated. Be sure he understands that she was traveling to his country for safekeeping when she was taken. Keep an eye out for any sign of what might have happened on your journey down. And Bunion,â he added, âbe careful yourself. Donât take any chances. Iâve already lost Questor and Abernathy. I donât want to lose you as well.â
The kobold grinned and showed his teeth. It wasnât likely that anything would happen to a creature that could dispatch a cave wight or a bog wump without breaking a sweat, but Ben was spooked by how easily Rydall had overcome those he had sent to protect Mistaya. If that was what had really happened, of course. He still wasnât sure, but he had to assume the worst. Bunionâs visit to the River Master was necessary.
Bunion turned and was gone so swiftly that Ben had to remind himself why he had dispatched his royal messenger in the first place. Kobolds were the fastest creatures alive. A trip to the lake country would take a kobold barely a day. They were strange beings, their bodies all gnarled and bristly, their legs bowed and their arms crooked, their faces monkeylike, and their teeth as numerous and sharp as an alligatorâs, an amalgam of bizarre and diverse features. But kobolds had served the Kings of Landover for many years, and they were loyal and tough. Ben knew he could depend on Bunion.
He started across the entry court, Willow at his side. âIâm going up to use the Landsview. Maybe I can find some trace of Misty. Will you cancel all my appointments for the day? Iâll be down as soon as I can.â
He climbed to the castleâs highest tower and boardedthe Landsview, the magical instrument that allowed its user to travel from one end of Landover to the other without leaving Sterling Silver. He invoked the magic, rose out of the tower as if actually flying, and in his mindâs eye scanned the whole of the