Authors: Bruce R. Cordell
Nis was in Telarian’s hand a moment later, dashing his rising panic as water to a flame. Logic, cold and untethered to emotion, become his only companion. As Knights pulled their weapons and began to slash at the stoic undead that rose as a pale tide all around them, Telarian made for the throne. Clearly, even if a few Empyrean Knights were to survive the next twenty ot thirty heartbeats, the puppeteet of this ghastly city had to be eradicated.
A dozen stony hands, blunt with erosion, pulled his screaming mount from under him. Telarian leaped free, his ebony blade pulling him up and away from the sounds of ripping horseflesh. Then he was on the central mound, dashing up the steep slope of solidified carrion, even as it began to shuddet and separate. Each unit of the cone-shaped structure became a screaming zombie whose flesh was hard as bedrock.
He stepped on a writhing arm, a yowling head, and into a palm and out of it before the hand could clutch and hold him. He batted away a face whose gaping mouth threatened to bite him, turning the pallid stone into so much sand. Then he reached the apex, just as the perpetrator of the uprising
surmounted the opposite side. Unlike his own uneven ascent, the energy-wreathed lich was raised securely in the hands of its newly animated followers.
Telarian and the relic lich faced each other from across the crystalline throne. The diviner looked into a countenance so weathered that only a shallow concavity faced him, incapable of displaying the least hint of feature.
The obscene crater that once housed a mouth worked, and it somehow spoke without tongue to shape its words. “The mechanism requires fresh infusion. Blood is too sticky and prone to clotting. Souls serve best.” Telarian’s spell of translation allowed him to understand the creature’s supernatural utterances, but the lich’s allusion to a mechanism escaped him. In any event, the context implied nothing pleasant for him and the Empyrean Knights.
Telarian swung Nis down and around from where it lightly rested on his shoulder, in a vicious cross-body swing. His foe easily blocked with its staff of blazing light. The contact jolted through the Keeper’s arm, but Nis steadied him despite the flexing, heaving slope on which he stood.
My presence, or perhaps my twin’s, Nis projected into his mind, has awakened a thing that lay quiescent in Stardeep’s basements since before Stardeep was delved. Splintered desires fuel this ancient shell, desires so potent they bleed out from the host and share animation with petrified remains of a murdered species.
Stardeep, Underdungeon
The demon gauntlet snuffled and coughed, straining forward, following the fading scent of those who’d gone before. Gage was pulled along in the fiend’s wake, his gloved hand held forward and down, slinking from tree to silvery tree. His quarry’s path had steered wide of chill mist rivers that sliced through the nighted landscape. He was happy to avoid intersecting the impenetrable vaporeven his bound demon shuddered and bucked when he’d ttied to insert it into the first standing bank he’d passed.
At length he came to the forest’s edge. A matgin of dead rock lay beyond, decorated with craggy boulders and narrow fissures. Beyond that lay a sea of colorless fog, chill and endless. He drew in a quick breath when he saw several corpses littering the beach, the decaying bodies matching those he’d dispatched earlier. One group of dead monsters lay near the edge of the fog, though several marked the petimetet of a large boulder about thirty paces from the mist’s edge. The demon gauntlet bleated and tried to pull forward. Kiril and the other two had come this way. Had they entered the mist?
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Gage studied the scene a moment longer, then moved.
The boulder was splashed with green and black ichorthe thief counted at least six of the loathsome creatures, battered, burnt, and…
An opening! A rectangular portal pierced the boulder’s overhanging side that faced the fog sea. A massive iron gate lay torn from its hinges, scratched and partially crumpled. The lower portion of the cavity was choked with monsters, all dead, many showing signs of flashburn. Blasting magic had separated many of these from their putrid lives. He didn’t see evidence of any blade-work. Kiril had not drawn her Cerulean sword to defeat these beasts. Or was the slaughter the work of someone else? Impossible to say without a witness to describe what had occurred.
His demon glove strained toward the portal. Gage spent another ten heartbeats examining the doorway before darting forward, diving to cleat the sprawled bodies at the last moment. He tucked his shoulder and rolled to absorb the impact of his quick entrance. The steep stairs beyond made this tricky feat even more difficult, but Gage executed the maneuver with panache.
At the stair’s foot a tunnel led off, its downward slope noticeable. The tunnel’s rock walls were streaked with deposits of white stone, but the light from the entrance topping the stairs didn’t reach far. Gage produced a clear glass vessel and shook it vigorously. The chemicals within were inimical to each other, and given time, slowly separated. When mixed, the hostile essences fought, producing light.
His gauntlet yanked forward with surprising strength.
Gage grunted and resisted. His glove muttered, “Never forget, your soul is forfeit.”
“I quaver in my boots,” the thief replied. “Behave. Don’t forget, acid burns. Remember what happened last time?”
The glove muttered something too quietly for Gage to hear. “Better. Now lead on. Quietly.”
Gage advanced down the tunnel, surrounded by a dim sphere of light, his eyes wide for any evidence of his quarry.
Gage gave his light another vigorous shake to rejuvenate its intensity. How long had he walked these sttangely smooth tunnels?
“More importantly,” he muttered aloud, “how’d Kiril and her friends get so far ahead of me?” He gave his gauntlet a suspicious squint.
Ahead, a hole in the floor gaped nearly the entite diameter of the tunnel. His light picked out individual strands of thickly intertwined webs that obscured the hole’s sides, but opened into a twisting funnel at the hole’s center. A cold, dusty wind blew from the gap, as did a rushing, full-throated roar of moving water.
His eyes lit on a papery scrap that lay ensnared in the web about two body lengths down the funnel. Though stuck, its outer edge wavered in the chill breeze.
“I am on the right trail,” he whispered, relief washing over him. The chance of the glove misleading him wasn’t out of the question. It had grown more willful since the other glove, with the eye, was burnt to ash by Angul.
Gage stared into the webbing, wondering who had dropped the scrap of paperKiril, or one of the other two? Vellum was expensive. In fact…
The thief removed his pack. From it he produced an elven rope, a selection of iron spikes with eyeholes, and a battered mallet. He selected a point on the wall and sunk the spike with three strikes. The echoes of the malietfalls made him wince. Too late for second thoughts!
He threaded the rope in the anchored spike, tied one end into his belt, and let himself over the edge of the webbed hole. Hand over hand he lowered himself until he was close enough
to snatch the lone vellum scrap from the sticky strands. It took a little careful tugging to extract his prize without ripping it. It was blank. Unpenned and already-spent spell scrolls possessed the same sense of limitless possibility in their clean expanse. They seemed eager for the next spell, the wilder and more potent, the better. Of course, they also represented a tidy sum of gold. He stowed his prize, worth a tenday’s lodging in the finest festhall in Laothkund.
As Gage hauled himself out of the hole, he heard the unmistakable cry of a wailing infant below.
“What in Akadi’s name… ?” He glanced down. A many-limbed white bulk filled the web tunnel beneath him. Dozens of pale, stone-hard eyes fixed on his own. From its mandibled mouth came the pitiful mewls of a crying baby.
Gage screamed. The gargantuan thing, its legs shaking off the dust of ages, rose beneath him. Its flesh was stone, as if a statue come to life.
The thief groped at his belt, his terror-numbed fingers finding the proper clasp more through luck than skill. He grasped a warm bulbhis most prized alchemical item, and worth considerably more than a tenday in a festhall.
The arachnid was too close, but dangling as he was, he had no other option. He dashed the bulb down, whipping it with as much strength as he could muster. The bulb detonated on the creature’s face only a body length away.
The explosive fount punched up into his body. It reminded him of the time he’d leaped for a neighboring roof but missed and fell three stories. Except this time he was on fire. But, just like then, he blacked out a moment later.
Flickering light on a smooth white ceiling. Torchlight? A numbness slowly faded under a barrage of tinglingand pain. Gage blinked. Why would that be? He groaned as he
sat up. His entire body was one contiguous bruise. Then he recalled the spider and the detonation.
The webbed hole lay several dozen paces away, its gooey coating ablaze. The explosion had propelled him past the gap. About halfway between him and the burning pit crouched a figure silhouetted by the flames. At first the thief took it for a detached portion of the spider, blown loose in the blast. Then he noticed the black scales, the horns, and as it slowly stood from its crouch, its flaring batlike wings.
Those black, finely grained scales looked familiar…
Gage dropped his gaze to his right hand. His gauntlet. Gone!
He jerked his eyes back to the figure. It stood now to its full height and beyond, reaching and stretching its long, clawed limbs as if waking from sleep. Or as if freed from an enchantment that bound its shape into something far smaller. Say, a glove?
The creature, clearly a demon, began to chuckle. One of its eyes fixed the thief with a sinister, gleeful glare. A mass of burned flesh and scars festered where its other eye should have been. Gage recalled again how Angul had burned his other gauntlet to a cindet, the one with the single, enchanted eye.
He scuttled backward on hands and legs. A sharp rock cut his palm.
The demon flared its wings. It interrupted its mirth to speak. “Recall the payment I’ve reminded you that you owe me, mottal, time and again. I’m afraid our acquaintanceship is over. The time has come for me to eat your soul!”
Fear tried to break his normally professional detachment, bringing an unfamiliar and unwelcome quiver to his limbs as he sprang upright. His voice, too, sounded weak and pitiful in his ears. “Demon! Uh… Hold, will you? Wait! I have more value to you alive than dead, if you hear me out. I offer a bargain!”
The scaled wings pulsed and the razor-sharp tail lashed, but the demon remained at the edge of the hole. Its single eye narrowed, and it growled, “Explain.” Gage’s wit failed him. He stammered then turned and ran.
The thief heard the demon laugh. Then, oddly enough, it scteamed.
He glanced over his shoulder. The stone spider was back! Its upper body protruded from the burning hole at the demon’s back, the pale stone of its carapace blackened and cracked with alchemical scorch marks. The wail of a baby burst anew from the insectoid maw like a little one hungry to suckle.
The spider’s mandibles clamped the demon around its waist. The demon’s wings burst into a fit of mad flapping, as a moth that is caught too near a flame. It bit, clawed, raked, and bucked with such ferocity the tunnel floor shook. All to little effect. With a chilling finality, the spider retracted its head and body back into its lair, dragging the hapless, howling demon with it.
The demon gave one final, soul-shattering scream, which ended abruptly.
Gage, without his gauntlets and unable to see, sprinted, whimpering, into the unrelenting darkness.
Stardeep, Underdungeon
Awind, bearing alien odors, brushed Raidon’s face. He wondered by what daik, subtetranean route the ait had traveled, and for how long before caressing his face with its feathery, unseen hands. Black lakes, unlit mansions of stone, warrens of crystal, caverns housing forgotten secretswho knew the depths of these passages whose extent was large enough to generate its own breezes, perhaps its own weather?
Raidon followed a conflicted woman. As they strode white-washed subterranean tunnels, Kiril muttered and mumbled as if possessed. More than once he saw her hand move toward the hilt of the blade she wore on her hip, only to flinch away before contact.
An obsession, cettainly, pethaps something like the tie that bound him to his grandfather’s daito? True, his fixation had given way to something less obviously lethal. The amulet bequeathed him by his mother had led him into a world beyond any he could have imagined. Was it not obsession that yet held him fast to Erunyauve’s legacy? This amulet of a Sign whose significance he didn’t fully comprehend would
point him toward his missing mother. With it, he could discover why she left him. If not obsession, something powerful, whatever its name, gripped him.
“Look at this!” came Adrik’s startlingly loud call from behind. Raidon whirled, ready to defend the small group.
The sorcerer pointed to a greenish stripe of mold running along the wall of the tunnel, only a half-pace above the level of the floor. Raidon had earlier noticed the mold and discounted its appearance as unimportant. A sputtering light flamed and smoked from the coin Adrik clutched in his left hand. The illumination was born of a quick series of syllables the sorcerer uttered when they’d left Sildeyuir’s light behind.
Kiril turned, one eyebrow raised in a question. Xet, riding her shoulder, belled a short, rising tone.
“Fungus wouldn’t grow in such a uniform line unless this tunnel periodically floods,” replied Adrik. “But then we’d see a parallel stripe on the other wall.”
“What of it?”
“No matching stripe, no flooding. The only answer is that there must be a reservoir of water behind this wall. It must seep through, providing moisture enough for this growth!”
The swordswoman snorted, turned, and continued stalking forward.