Siegfried
leaned forward and squinted, trying to discern the source of the cloud of dust
rising behind the cart. “If they
get too close I can deal with them,” he said confidently. Bob turned
and shouted a warning to his comrades. “We’re being followed!” Varien
sighed and got to his feet, conjuring his pact weapon, which appeared as a
magical longbow. “I’m going to take a shot!” “Wait!”
Siegfried called. “We don’t know for sure who is following us! You might peg a member
of the Neverwinter Guard or somesuch.” Varien
snorted, his bow fully drawn back. Radegast scrambled
to the top of the pile of hay in the back of the wagon and gazed with searching
eyes at the riders who followed them. She could make out two staggered lines of
horsemen carrying lances, spread out on either side of the narrow wagon trail. The
late afternoon sunlight glinted off plate armor and horse barding. Their leader
rolled confidently in front, a battle standard flapping mightily in the breeze.
It bore the mark of the Order of the Gilded Eye. Bingo , she thought. They need to die, and quickly, too. She turned
to Varien. “The Eye follows us.” “Okay then!”
Varien said, preparing to shoot.
“Never loose your arrow until you’ve seen the whites of their eyes,” Radegast
warned. Varien
rolled his eyes and let fly. His arrow arced high into the sky and fell back to
earth, homing in on the lead rider. In a flash,
the rider drew a greatsword and deflected the arrow with a flourish, shattering
it into matchsticks. The rider, resplendent in his polished armor, kept the sword
pointed out at his quarry, and kicked in his spurs, sending his horse flashing
forward as his riders kept pace. “Oh, damn,”
Radegast whistled. “If I didn't hate these guys with every fibre of my being, I
would have thought that was a pretty sexy move.” Siegfried
got to his fight and cast Armor of the
Dawn Titan . In a flash of cinders and brimstone he was clad head to toe in
smouldering ash plates, which glowed with primordial molten rock at each seam.
He raised a hand, sending a cloud of ash whipping into the wagon’s wake.
“Agents of the Eye,” he shouted with supreme authority. “This is your only
warning! Turn back now, and live! Pursue us further and be executed as enemies
of the Crown of Neverwinter!” Varien
reached for more arrows in his quiver and sent two towards the approaching
riders, both of which fell short of their target. “Shut up, Radegast!” he said
preemptively. Fiendsbane
rattled in his scabbard. If you’re not
slashing at fiends, I’m not interested. “Have you
considered putting Fiendsbane into your bow and shooting him at our pursuers?”
Radegast asked innocently. She realized that the Gilded Eye was too far behind for
her to do anything worthwhile, so she chose to cast minor illusion to spook the horses pulling the wagon with the yipping
sounds of a pack of wolves, to inspire them to keep up the pace. Her plan
worked on one horse better than the other, and suddenly Alec was frantically
hauling on the reins in an attempt to bring the horses back into alignment as
one, whinnying and shrieking, attempted to bolt from her harness. The wagon began
to slow. “Dammit,
Radegast!” Varien cursed as the wagon lurched beneath him. Siegfried
cast a hand out over the tall grasses and cast plant growth . In an
instant, a 200-foot diameter patch of grassland before him, centred on a point
about 150 feet away, began to thicken and grow, tangling up the pounding hooves
of the riders and forcing them to a near-standstill. The riders shouted in dismay
as they attempted to stay in their saddles, and the horses neighed in panic at
the sudden increase in overgrowth. Only the
rutted, rocky wagon trail remained clear, and the lead rider spurred on his horse,
intent on closing the distance, while his companions struggled to hack their
way free. Varien
fired two more arrows with the intent of taking the rider’s horse out of the action.
Both shots missed. Radegast
stepped in front of Varien, nocking an arrow into her stormbow and firing at the lead rider. The arrow sizzled as it
turned into a lightning bolt that sought its target. Radegast’s eyes went white
with the rage of Talos. The arrow
struck the rider squarely with a thunderclap, sending bolts of electricity
arcing over the man’s armor, rocking him in the saddle. The horse cried out as
it too took secondary damage from the blast, stumbling but remaining upright
and in the fight. Erwen poked
a straw-covered head out from the pile of hay in the back of the wagon. “What’s
going on?” “We need
you up here!” Alec shouted. “What are
you doing to those poor horses!” Erwen exclaimed, jumping into the driver’s
seat and taking the reins from Alec. He made a nickering sound that calmed the
panicked draft animals down. Radegast
turned to Varien. “The whites,” she said with emphasis. “Of their eyes.” Suddenly
there was a pair of sickening thuds as a pair of arrows struck her squarely in the
chest. She swooned back, coughing blood. The lead
riding was up and firing, with two more shots that whizzed right over Erwen’s
head as he fought to get the horses under control. Bob grabbed
his healer’s kit and tried to help Radegast. “See?” Radegast
said weakly as her blood spilled onto the straw below. “If you get close enough
you can hit someone.” Varien
snarled and grabbed one of the arrows sticking out of his comrade. He nocked it
into his longbow, breathed a prayer, and let fly. The arrow struck
the horse in its flank, and the force of his eldritch smite knocked the animal prone. It and its rider fell to the
ground with a resounding crash, sending a plume of trail dust rocketing skyward. “Yes!”
Varien pumped his fist. He then looked over his shoulder at Erwen, who hadn’t
noticed what he had done to the horse. “Don’t tell
the little fella,” Varien whispered. Bob shook
his head as he bandaged Radegast’s chest. Radegast
pulled the second arrow out of her body and fired it back at the now horseless
rider, who was down on all fours and struggling to his feet. The shot went
wide. Radegast
turned to Varien. “Now, you see that? I missed because I couldn’t see the
whites of his eyes.” Bob shook
his head as he bandaged the second wound on Radegast’s chest. The party
lost sight of the other riders, still struggling in the tall grass, as Erwen coaxed
what extra energy he could out of the horses. They were wild-eyed, with flecks
of foam around the bits in their mouths. “Erwen, you’re
better than me at driving,” Alec admitted. “But these horses aren’t looking so
hot." Radegast
cast heroism on the horses. Siegfried
let the Armor of the Dawn Titan crack
and fall away in plates of ash that dissolved like grey memories. He practiced
tossing Talon into the air and summoning it back to his sword hand, while
keeping one eye on the receding riders behind them. Bob finished
administering first aid to Radegast and found a spot to sit down near the front
of the wagon. He shaded his eyes with his hand as the late afternoon sun lowered
itself towards the coastal horizon before him. “I think we’re
coming up on a road ahead,” Bob said. “Looks like a major thoroughfare.” It
reminded him of the long, lonely roads across the steppes of his homeland. “That’d be
the High Road,” Radegast said. “There should be plenty of road traffic we can
blend into.” “No sign of
the Gilded Eye behind us,” reported Siegfried. “I suppose they finally blinked.” Erwen
expertly pulled the wagon onto the trade road and turned south, towards
Neverwinter.