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Swords Against Wizardry by Fritz Leiber ...

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fingerbreadths (at the end of an outstretched arm) above the flat horizon of the<br />

Waste; and something in the air had turned Sol white as silver -- he no longer<br />

sent warmth to combat the cold. But the ledges of the Roosts were close above<br />

now, and it was possible to hope they would offer a better campsite than the<br />

chimney.<br />

So although every man and cat muscle protested against it, they obeyed<br />

Fafhrd's command.<br />

Halfway to the Roosts it began to snow, powdery grains falling arrow-straight<br />

like last night, but thicker.<br />

This silent snowfall gave a sense of serenity and security which was most<br />

false, since it masked the rockfalls which still came firing down the chimney like<br />

the artillery of the God of Chance.<br />

Five yards from the top a fist-size chunk struck Fafhrd glancingly on the right<br />

shoulder, so that his good arm went numb and hung useless, but the little<br />

climbing that remained was so easy he could make it with boots and puffed-up,<br />

barely-usable left hand.<br />

He peeped cautiously out of the chimney's top, but the Tress here had<br />

thickened up again, so that there was no sight of the North Wall. Also the first<br />

ledge was blessedly wide and so overhung with rock that not even snow had fallen<br />

on its inner half, let alone stones. He scrambled up eagerly, followed <strong>by</strong> the<br />

Mouser and Hrissa.<br />

But even as they cast themselves down to rest at the back of the ledge, the<br />

Mouser wriggling out of his heavy pack and unthonging his climbing-pike from<br />

his wrist -- for even _that_ had become a torturesome burden -- they heard a<br />

now-familiar rushing in the air, and there came a great flat shape swooping<br />

slowly through the sun-silvered snow which outlined it. Straight at the ledge it<br />

came, and this time it did not go past, but halted and hung there, like a giant devil<br />

fish nuzzling the sea's rim, while ten narrow marks, each of suckers in line,<br />

appeared in the snow on the ledge's edge, as of ten short tentacles gripping there.<br />

From the center of this monstrous invisibility rose a smaller snow-outlined<br />

invisibility of the height and thickness of a man. Midway up this shape was one<br />

visible thing: a slim sword of dark gray blade and silvery hilt, pointed straight at<br />

the Mouser's breast.<br />

Suddenly the sword shot forward, almost as fast as if hurled, but not quite,<br />

and after it, as swiftly, the man-size pillar, which now laughed harshly from its<br />

top.<br />

The Mouser snatched up one-handed his unthonged climbing pike and thrust<br />

at the snow-sketched figure behind the sword.<br />

The gray sword snaked around the pike and with a sudden sharp twist swept<br />

it from the Mouser's fatigue-slack fingers.<br />

The black tool, on which Glinthi the Artificer had expended all the evenings of<br />

the Month of the Weasel three years past, vanished into the silvery snowfall and<br />

space.<br />

Hrissa backed against the wall frothing and snarling, a-tremble in every limb.<br />

Fafhrd fumbled frantically for his ax, but his swollen fingers could not even<br />

unsnap the sheath binding its head to his belt.<br />

The Mouser, enraged at the loss of his precious pike to the point where he<br />

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