The wave of fear moved onward, past the walls of the city’s vault and into the crowded approaches to the Underdark beyond. It passed through the duergar lines, overtook the retreating tanarukks, and blindsided the scattered illithid spies. It affected all of them in different ways, but it affected all of them. By the time it was done—and it didn’t take long—there was no question, anywhere, that Lolth was back.
Triel stood and surveyed the damage. She looked down at Dyrr and knew she could simply step over to him and kill him with a thought—or at least a dagger blade across his undead throat—but she didn’t. Killing the lich was someone else’s job.
The matron mother stepped to the rigid, calcified form of her brother. The expression frozen on his face was one of anger. Triel smiled at that.
“Ah, Gromph,” she said. “You couldn’t do it alone after all, could you? There are limits to your power as there are limits to mine, but together …”
Triel embraced the petrified form of her brother, wrapping her arms around his back as she whispered a prayer to Lolth.
Warmth came first, then softness, then a breath, then movement, and Gromph’s knees collapsed. Triel held him up, and he grasped her around the waist, his head lolling on her shoulder as he drew in a series of ragged, phlegmy breaths. When his legs came back under him, Triel released him and stepped back. Their eyes met, and Gromph opened his mouth to speak.
“No,” Triel said, stopping him. She glanced at the quickly recovering Dyrr, and her brother’s eyes followed hers. “Finish what you started.”
He opened his mouth to speak again, but Triel turned her back on him. She could hear his feet shifting on the loose gravel and glass, and she knew he was facing his enemy.
Triel walked away.
Anger, hatred, and exhaustion passed between the archmage and the lichdrow. They were done with each other. Both only wanted to finish it. They stood a dozen paces apart, eyes locked. Dyrr began to cast a spell, and Gromph surrounded himself in another globe.
Gromph began to cast a spell too, and the lichdrow kept casting. He was doing something complex. He meant to finish it indeed.
Before Gromph could finish his spell—one meant to burn the already wounded lich once more—Dyrr whispered something the archmage couldn’t quite hear, and the spell took effect. The skull sapphire burned red-hot against Gromph’s forehead, and he reached up to throw it off him—but it disintegrated before he could touch it. The dust that fell over the archmage’s face was dull gray and powerless. There would be no more protection from the skull sapphire and no more stored necromancies. Gromph knew it had taken a wish to destroy it.
His own spell ruined, Gromph brought another to mind and said, “Well, everyone’s using the big spells today, aren’t we?”
The lich ignored the jibe and started casting a spell the same time Gromph did. It was the archmage’s that finished first: another minor divination spent to create a blast of arcane fire. The preternatural flames poured over the lich, who threw his arms over his face to block them but to no avail. Dyrr’s dry flesh crisped and curled, and the lich staggered in pain.
When the fire burned out, the lich lurched forward, red eyes bulging, his ever-present mask burned away, his face twisted in hatred and agony. Gromph could feel that despite the arcane fire Dyrr had finished his own spell.
Cold coursed through Gromph’s body, and he shook—and Gromph was getting painfully tired of shaking, shivering, and quivering—but the lich wasn’t through with him yet. He could feel the warmth, the life itself, being drawn from him. He staggered backward, barely managing to stay on his feet.
“I’ll drain you dry, Gromph,” the lich grumbled, his voice raspy and haggard. “You’ll die with me, with my House, and my cause.”
The lich began to cast again, and Gromph recognized the peculiar cadence and structure that revealed the incantation as a powerful necromancy. Gromph knew many ways to kill, but he also knew that Dyrr probably knew more.
The archmage’s hand tightened on his staff, and his arm jerked. A dull pain and a hard pressure settled in his chest, and when he tried to take a breath, no air came to him. His knees finally buckled, and he fell. Gromph forced air into his lungs, but barely a whisper made it in. Dark shadows began to coalesce at the edges of his vision, and his ears went numb with a roaring rush of blood as his body fought in vain to keep his brain alive. The ring was of no help. The lich wasn’t wounding him, he was killing him soul-first.
Gromph tried to speak, to utter the words of a spell that might save him, but he couldn’t. Dyrr stepped closer, moving to stand over him. Gromph barely managed to turn his head to look up at the gloating lich. The archmage had other means of escape but couldn’t force himself to activate any of them. He could feel Nauzhror and Prath trying to speak into his head, but their words never fully formed. Gromph feared that his body was already dead.
He tightened his grip on the staff, and his arm jerked again—the staff.
Gromph forced every ounce of will he had left into pulling his other hand beneath him. He felt his fingers wrap around the staff.
“Fight it, Gromph,” the lich growled at him. “Suffer before you die.”
“Arrogant—” Gromph coughed out, surprising himself with his ability to speak, even if it was only that one word.
“What was that?” the lich asked, taunting him. “The last words of Gromph Baenre?”
“Not …” the archmage gasped.
Gromph’s arms tensed, his hands tight around the staff of power—an item so prized hundreds had died just to possess it for a day.
“… quite,” Gromph finished, and he broke the staff.
The ancient wood snapped in response less to the force of Gromph’s arms and hands than to his will. The staff broke because Gromph wanted it to break.
Dyrr had time to take in a breath, Gromph had time to smile, then the world around them both became a raging hell of fire, heat, pain, and death. Gromph couldn’t see the lich blasted to pieces. He was too busy worrying that the same had happened to him. He closed his eyes, but the light still burned them. He felt his flesh peel away in parts, sizzle, and crisp. It was over as fast as it started.
Gromph Baenre drew in a breath and laughed through waves of burning agony. The ring started to bring him back to life a cell at a time and he lay there, waiting.
“You’ve done it,” Nauzhror said, and it took a few murmuring heartbeats for Gromph to realize he’d heard the Master of Sorcere’s voice with his ears and not his mind. “The lichdrow is dead.”
Gromph coughed and dragged himself up to a sitting position. Nauzhror squatted next to him. The rotund wizard began examining the archmage’s wounds.
“Dead?” Gromph said then coughed again.
“The cost was high, and not only the staff of power,” Nauzhror said, “but he’s been utterly destroyed.”
Gromph shook his head, disappointed with Nauzhror. The lich’s physical form was blasted to flinders when the staff unleashed all its power in one final burst, but a lich was more than a body.
“Dead?” the archmage said. “Not quite yet.”
Nimor Imphraezl stepped out of the Shadow Fringe and into the ruins of Ched Nasad. High above him, clinging to the remains of a calcified web street, was perched a massive shadow dragon, an ancient wyrm magnificent in the terror it inspired in all who gazed upon it.
It was a dragon Nimor recognized instantly. It was the dragon Nimor had gone there to see.
Stretching his own aching, exhausted, wounded wings—wings that were puny in comparison to the great shadow wyrm’s—Nimor lifted himself up off the rubble-strewn floor of the cavern and into the air below the dragon. If the wyrm took any notice of him, it gave no sign. Instead, it continued as it had been, directing the clearing of the rubble in the preparation for the rebuilding of Ched Nasad. It was a huge task, even for the dragon.
Nimor coasted to a slow, respectful stop on the web strand next to the dragon and bowed, holding the posture until the dra
gon acknowledged his presence. He was still bowing when the enormous shadow wyrm shrank into the form of an aging drow with thinning hair but a solid, muscular form, dressed in fine silks and linens from all corners of the World Above, every stitch as black as the assassin’s heart.
“Stand,” the transformed dragon said, “and heed me.”
Nimor straightened, looked the drow-formed dragon in the eyes, and said, “I am less than satisfied with the results at Menzoberranzan, Revered Grandfather.”
The dragon-drow returned Nimor’s look and held it until Nimor had to look away. The assassin heard footsteps approaching but didn’t turn around to look. Nimor knew whose they were.
“Nimor,” someone said. “Welcome to Ched Nasad.”
Nimor pretended to look around at the still smoldering ruins.
“Of course,” the source of the second set of footsteps said, “it will look quite different when we’re finished.”
“I clearly remember your promise,” the transformed dragon said. “Do you?”
“Of course, Revered Grandfather,” Nimor replied, head held high, showing no outward sign of weakness.
Patron Grandfather Mauzzkyl drew a deep breath in through his nose then slowly said, “You promised to cleanse Menzoberranzan of the stench of Lolth. Have you done that? Is that why you’re here?”
Nimor didn’t nod, shake his head, or sigh—nothing to make it seem to the patron fathers that he was guilty of anything. The two patron fathers who had approached him from behind stepped around him on either side and stood before Nimor flanking the once majestic wyrm.
“No,” Nimor said.
“I have come from the City of Wyrmshadows,” the patron grandfather went on, “to aid Patron Father Zammzt in the reconstruction of Ched Nasad. Is that why you’ve come from Menzoberranzan? To aid in the cleanup?”
“No, Revered Grandfather,” Nimor replied.
“Tell your tale to Patron Father Tomphael and Patron Father Zammzt,” Mauzzkyl said, his voice cold and final.
Nimor closed his eyes and said, “I answer to—”
“Tomphael,” Mauzzkyl said. “You will speak to me through Tomphael from this day until I order otherwise.”
Nimor had no time to argue, but that was the last thing he intended to do. Instead he watched, barely breathing as Patron Grandfather Mauzzkyl turned his back then transformed again into a dragon. The great wyrm stepped off the edge of the shattered web and disappeared into the gloom of the ruined city.
“Tell me what you came here to say,” Patron Father Tomphael said.
Nimor looked Tomphael in the face but saw no anger, pity, or contempt. Nimor had fallen in the ranks of the Jaezred Chaulssin, and he’d done it just like that.
“Something has changed,” Nimor said.
“Lolth has returned,” Tomphael finished.
Nimor nodded and said, “Or she will soon. Very soon. The lichdrow failed, and the tide is turning in Menzoberranzan. I thought we’d have more time.”
“Dyrr is dead?” Tomphael asked.
Nimor nodded.
“And the cambion?”
“Alive,” said Nimor, “but already withdrawing. He had an agent in the Abyss who gave a strange report. I still don’t know what happened to the spider goddess, where she’s been, or why she fell silent, but she has managed to pinch the Demonweb Pits off of the Abyss.”
Tomphael raised an eyebrow, and he and Zammzt shared a glance.
“So,” Tomphael said, “your tanarukks are deserting. What of the duergar?”
“Horgar still lives, and when I left him he was still fighting,” Nimor said. “However, with the priestesses again able to commune with their goddess and the tanarukks marching home, the gray dwarves won’t stand a chance.”
“Menzoberranzan,” Zammzt said, “is the greatest prize. It was always the one thing most out of reach. We have had successes in other cities. The Queen of the Demonweb Pits was gone long enough.”
“Was she?” Nimor asked.
“Look around you,” Zammzt replied. “Once this was a drow trade city, openly obedient to the priestesses. Now it is a blank slate, and even as we speak it is being transformed.”
“The other patron fathers and I,” Tomphael said, “under Patron Father Zammzt’s expert guidance, will be concentrating our energies here.”
“As you always intended?” Nimor concluded.
Tomphael sighed and said, “I know you’ve always considered me a coward, Nimor, but you were wrong. Only the fool misses the difference between the coward and the pragmatist.”
“Only the young seek glory over success,” said Zammzt.
“I could have won in Menzoberranzan,” Nimor argued.
“Perhaps,” said Tomphael. “If you had, this conversation would have taken a very different tone. It was your opportunity to surprise us, Nimor. That is what you failed to do—surprise us. Our plans did not depend on the City of Spiders being delivered to us on a silver platter, nor did they assume that Lolth was never going to return from wherever it is she’s been. We had this one opportunity, and we took all there was to take. There will be other opportunities to take more.”
“Other opportunities….” Nimor repeated, rolling the words over on his tongue.
“You could be Anointed Blade again, Nimor,” Tomphael said.
Nimor nodded, bowed, and said, “I will return to the City of Wyrmshadows … with your leave, Patron Father.”
Tomphael nodded, and Nimor turned and stepped into Shadow.
Pharaun hadn’t felt so good in so long, he’d almost forgotten what it was like to be healthy. The priestesses, perhaps reveling in the return of their spells, were almost continuously chanting healing prayers. They conjured a banquet and clean, cool water. They healed every wound and soothed aching muscles.
Stretching, feeling too good to bother with Reverie, Pharaun stood and watched Quenthel and Danifae work on Jeggred. Again, likely because they couldn’t resist using the spells that had been denied them so long, the two females worked together. As they sat cross-legged on either side of a nervous, reclining Jeggred, Pharaun sensed flashes of the old physical relationship the two priestesses had shared not too long ago. There was the accidental touch that turned into a lingering caress, the heavy-lidded eye contact past the draegloth’s wild white mane, and the occasional play of a tongue along parted lips as the words to a series of complex healings taxed even their spell-rejuvenated throats.
The result of all of it was that Jeggred’s severed hand grew back. Pharaun found the sight of the thing slowly taking shape from the dead end of the stump even more fascinating than the exchange between the two females. The hand came together in layers: bone, sinew, muscle, blood vessels, skin, fur, claws.
When they were done, the draegloth stood, flexing his hand, jaw agape, body quivering.
The two priestesses stood with him, separating, their eyes once again going cold toward each other.
Jeggred looked first to Danifae and said, “My thanks, Mistress.” Then to Quenthel, “Mistress Quenthel….”
Anger poured over the high priestess’s face like fog, and she turned away from her nephew, quickly gathering her pack.
“We’ve rolled around on the floor long enough,” she said, already walking swiftly down the corridor. “This way.”
Danifae motioned to Pharaun to proceed, and the wizard gladly went after Quenthel. Valas followed behind the wizard, and Danifae and the draegloth took up the rear. Any distance, any buffer between the two priestesses was a good thing, and Pharaun was happy to provide it as long as they got moving. The Master of Sorcere was all but overwhelmed with curiosity.
Quenthel led the way with a confident stride and such assurance that none of the rest of them argued or second-guessed her at all. They went from one corridor to another, passed through rooms, sometimes through doors that Jeggred had to force open by brute strength. All the while the interior of the spider fortress maintained its cold, dark, dead, rusted feeling. Though Lolth’s pow
er had definitely returned to the two priestesses, the construct was as dead as ever, and Pharaun got the distinct impression that wherever that power was coming from, it wasn’t the sixty-sixth layer of the Abyss.
When they saw light at the end of one of the passageways they all stopped, clinging to the walls and the concealing shadows. As he ran through the spells still available to him and closed his fingers over a wand that would send bolts of lightning crashing through the air, the Master of Sorcere took stock of the rest of the expedition. Quenthel and Danifae both looked down the corridor with hopeful, excited expressions. Jeggred looked at Danifae in the same manner. Valas was nowhere to be seen—as was usual for the scout.
“What is it?” Jeggred asked, his voice as quiet as was possible for the massive half-demon.
Pharaun guessed, “A gate.”
“It’s where we have to go,” Quenthel said.
“She’s correct,” said Danifae.
“Well, then,” Pharaun replied, “we ought to proceed right away. Should we be prepared to fight our way through?”
Quenthel stepped away from the wall and started walking quickly, back tall and straight, toward the strange purple glow.
Pharaun shrugged and followed, still holding the wand in one hand and the list of spells in his mind. The high priestess hadn’t actually answered his question after all.
By the time they got to the end of the corridor Pharaun’s instincts were telling him to approach more slowly, more cautiously—but he’d also grown accustomed to following the lead of the highest ranking priestess in attendance, so he followed Quenthel into the chamber at the end of the corridor with a hesitation in his mind but not in his step.
The corridor opened into a huge, round, high-ceilinged chamber walled in the same rusted steel as the rest of the spider fortress. In the center of the otherwise empty space was a circle that appeared to be welded together from jagged, rusted pieces of the fortress construct itself. The circle stood up on its end, perhaps eighteen feet in diameter. The center of the ring was filled with opaque violet light, swirling and folding in on itself as if it came from a luminescent cloud of vapor trapped in the confines of the circle.
Annihilation Page 33