The Ghost King

The Ghost King by R.A. Salvatore Page B

Book: The Ghost King by R.A. Salvatore Read Free Book Online
Authors: R.A. Salvatore
dwarf’s face in response, a primal explosion of sheer terror. As Bruenor fell back, the halfling scrambled away, rising up to his knees, then to his feet. He ran headlong, face-first, into the opposite wall. He bounced back and fell with a groan.
    “Oh, by the gods,” said Bruenor, and he reached down and scooped something up from the floor. He turned to Drizzt and presented the item for the drow to see.
    It was the halfling’s ruby pendant, the enchanted gemstone that allowed Regis to cast charms upon unwitting victims.
    Regis recovered from his self-inflicted wallop and leaped to his feet. He screamed again and ran past Bruenor, flailing his arms insanely. When Bruenor tried to intercept him, the halfling slapped him and punched him, pinched him and even bit him, and all the while Bruenor called to him, but Regis seemed not to hear a word. The dwarf might as well have been a demon or devil come to eat the little one for dinner.
    “Elf!” Bruenor called. Then he yelped and fell back, clutching his bleeding hand.
    Regis sprinted for the door. Drizzt beat him there, hitting him with a flying tackle that sent them both into a roll into the hall. In that somersault, Drizzt deftly worked his hands so that when they settled, he was behind Regis, his legs clamped around the halfling’s waist, his arms knifed under Regis’s, turning and twisting expertly to tie the little one in knots.
    There was no way for Regis to break out, to hit Drizzt, or to squirm away from him. But that hardly slowed his frantic gyrations, and didn’t stop him from screaming insanely.
    The hallway began to fill with curious dwarves.
    “Ye got a pin stuck in the little one’s arse, elf?” one asked.
    “Help me with him!” Drizzt implored.
    The dwarf came over and reached for Regis, then quickly retracted his hand when the halfling tried to bite it. “What in the Nine Hells?”
    “Just ye take him!” Bruenor yelled from inside the room. “Ye take him and tie him down—and don’t ye be hurting him!”
    “Yes, me king!”
    It took a long time, but finally the dwarves dragged the thrashing Regis away from Drizzt.
    “I could slug him and put him down quiet,” one offered, but Drizzt’s scowl denied that course of action.
    “Take him to his chamber and keep him safe,” the drow said. He went back into the room, closing the door behind him.
    “She didn’t even notice,” Bruenor explained as Drizzt sat on the bed beside Catti-brie. “She’s not knowing the world around her.”
    “We knew that,” Drizzt reminded.
    “Not even a bit! Nor’s the little one now.”
    Drizzt shrugged. “Cadderly,” he reminded the dwarf king.
    “For both o’ them,” said the dwarf, and he looked at the door. “Rumblebelly used the ruby on her.”
    “To try to reach her,” Drizzt agreed.
    “But she reached him instead,” the dwarf said.

CHAPTER
ANGRY DEAD

    I t will be at Spirit Soaring,” the Ghost King proclaimed. The specter chasing Jarlaxle had worked out the drow’s intentions even before the clever dark elf’s dastardly trick had sent the creature on its extra-planar journey. And anything the specters knew, so knew the dracolich.
    The enemies of Hephaestus, Yharaskrik, and mostly of Crenshinibon would congregate there, in the Snowflake Mountains, where a pair of the Ghost King’s specters were already causing mischief.
    Then there would be only one more, the human southerner. The Crystal Shard knew he could be found, though not as easily as Jarlaxle. After all, Crenshinibon had shared an intimate bond with the dark elf for many tendays. With Yharaskrik’s psychic powers added to the shard’s, locating the familiar drow had proven as simple as it was necessary. Jarlaxle had become the focus of anger that served to bring the trio of mighty beings together, united in common cause. The human, however tangential, would be revealed soon enough.
    Besides, to at least one of the three vengeful entities—the dragon—the coming catastrophe

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