
reflecting off the salt crystals, were blinding. During the day, they rested, stretched out on the salt and
covered by their cloaks. They had little to fearfrom the predatory creatures that roamed the wastes of the
Athasian desert, for even the hardiest forms of desert life knew better than to venture out upon the Great
Ivory Plain. Nothing grew here, nothing lived. For as far as they could see, from the Barrier Mountains to
the north to the Mekillot Mountains to the south, and from the Estuary of the Forked Tongue to the West
and the vast Sea of Silt to the East, there was nothing but a level plain of salt crystals, gleaming with a
ghostly luminescence in the moonlight.
Perhaps, thought Sorak, he was pushing her too hard. Crossing the Great Ivory Plain was far from a
simple task. For most ordinary humans, it could easily mean death, but Ryana was villichi, strong and well
trained in the arts of survival. She was far from an ordinary human female. On the other hand, he was not
human at all, and possessed the greater strength and powers of endurance of both his races. It was unfair
to expect her to keep the pace he set. Still, it was a dangerous journey, and he was anxious to have the
crossing over with. However, there were other dangers still awaiting them when they finally reached the
mountains.
The marauders of Nibenay had their base camp somewhere near the mountains, and Sorak knew they
had no cause to love him. He had foiled their plot to ambush a merchant caravan from Tyr, and had brought
down one of their leaders. If they encountered the marauders, things would not go well for them.
In order to reach their destination, the village of Salt View, they had to cross the mountains-in itself no
easy task. And once they reached the village, they would have other thorny problems to resolve. The Sage
had sent them there to find a druid named the Silent One, who was to guide them to the city of Bodach,
where they were to seek an ancient artifact known as the Breastplate of Argentum. However, they did not
even know what this mysterious druid looked like. For that matter, they did not know what the Breastplate
of Argentum looked like, either, and Bodach was the worst place in the world to search for anything.
Legend had it there was a great treasure to be found in Bodach, but few adventurers who went in
search of it ever managed to return. Located at the tip of a peninsula extending into one of the great inland
silt basins, Bodach was a city of the undead. Formerly a mighty domain of the ancients, its
once-magnificent towers could be seen from a great distance, and it covered many square miles of the
peninsula. Finding one relic in a large city that had fallen into ruin would be, in itself, a daunting task, but
once the sun went down, thousands of undead crept from their lairs and prowled the ancient city streets. As
a result, very few were tempted to seek out Bodach's riches. The greatest treasure in the world was of no
use to one who never lived to spend it.
Sorak cared nothing for treasure. What he sought, no amount of riches could buy, and that was the
truth. Ever since he was a child, he had wanted to know who his parents were and what had become of
them. Were they still alive? How did it come about that a halfling had mated with an elf? Had they met and
somehow, against all odds, fallen in love? Or was it that his mother had been raped by an invader, making
him a hated offspring, cast out because she had not wanted him? Perhaps it had not been her choice to cast
him out. Had she loved him and tried to protect him, only to have his true nature discovered by the other
members of her tribe, who had refused to accept him in their midst? That seemed to be the most likely
possibility, since he had been about five or six years old when he was left out on the desert. In that case,
what had become of his mother? Had she remained with her tribe, or was she, too, cast out? Or worse. He
knew that he would never find true peace within himself until he had the answers to those questions, which
had plagued him all his life.
Beyond that, he now had another purpose. Even if he did succeed in discovering the truth about
himself, he would still forever remain an outsider. He was not human, nor had he ever met, among the other
races of Athas, anyone even remotely like himself. Perhaps he was the only elfling. Where was there a
place for him? If he wished, he could return to the villichi convent in the Ringing Mountains, where he had
been raised. They would always accept him there, yet he was not truly one of them and never could be.
And somehow, he believed his destiny lay elsewhere. He had sworn to follow the Path of the Preserver
and the Way of the Druid. Could there be any higher calling for him than to enter into the service of the one
man who stood alone against the power of the sorcerer-kings?
The Sage was testing him. Perhaps the wizard who had once been called the Wanderer required these
items they were collecting to aid him in his metamorphosis into an avangion. On the other hand, perhaps it
was merely a test of their metric and resolve to see if they were truly worthy and capable of serving him.
Sorak did not know, but there was only one way to find out, and that was to see the quest through to its
end. He had to find the Sage. He had resolved that nothing would deter him from it.
For a long time, they walked in silence, conserving their energy for the long trek across the salt plain.
Finally, the golden light of dawn began to show on the horizon. Soon, the Great Ivory Plain would burn