“Take a deep breath,” Valas said.
The old drow looked up at him. They stayed like that for a bit, but finally Firritz drew in a deep breath then exhaled slowly.
“That’s what you see for it,” Valas finished, “and it’s necessary I get a few supplies.”
Firritz frowned and said, “Nothing magical. Everyone’s been buying up the magic bits—and for twice, even thrice the market value.”
“I need food,” the scout replied, “waterskins, a few odds and ends.”
“You have a pack lizard?”
“No,” Valas said with a smile and a tip of his head, “so I’ll need something to carry it in. Something magical.”
Firritz swept his arm across the table, scattering the coins onto the floor with a thousand echoing clatters.
“Food, Firritz,” Valas said. “Time has become an issue for me.”
Danifae could feel the Binding, and she could feel Halisstra. No matter how many thousands of feet of rock separated them, they were connected.
Danifae’s skin crawled.
The farther from the center of the city she walked, the higher the mix of non-drow she passed on the streets. It was with no little relief, and after enduring lewd remarks from a trio of hobgoblins that she came to her destination.
She had never been to Sschindylryn before and had never seen that one particular structure, but she had gone straight to it. She’d made no wrong turns and asked for no directions.
Danifae stood in front of a complex jumble of mud bricks and flagstones arranged into what looked like some kind of hive or termite hill. Over the wide door—wide enough to accommodate a pack lizard and a decent-sized wagon—hung a slab of black stone into which was carved an elaborate sigil. The symbol contained unmistakable traces of the Yauntyrr crest but somehow turned in on itself, imploded, perverted.
Danifae reminded herself that no matter what happened, House Yauntyrr was gone. The integrity of its heraldry was of no concern to her, nor, she was sure, to anyone else.
She stepped inside.
Zinnirit’s gatehouse, not unlike the larger gatehouse they’d entered the city through, was mostly open space on the street level. There looked to be room for another floor or even two above—likely Zinnirit’s private residence—but the heart of the establishment was in that single cavernous chamber.
There were three gates, each a circle of elaborately interconnected stones easily thirty feet in diameter. No seething magical light pulsed through them. All three were inactive, dark.
“Zinnirit!” Danifae called.
Her voice echoed in the empty space. There was no immediate reply. Danifae had lost track of time quite a while before, and as she called the former House Mage’s name again, she realized she might have dropped in on the wizard in the middle of his Reverie.
She didn’t care.
“Zinnirit!”
A quiet, slow shuffling of feet answered Danifae’s third entreaty. The sound was unmistakable but difficult to trace in the huge, echoing space. Despite the echoes, Danifae got the distinct impression that there was more than one set of feet. She couldn’t count exactly how many—maybe half a dozen—and they were getting closer.
Danifae drew her morningstar and set it swinging at her right side.
“Zinnirit,” she called. “Show yourself, you old fool.”
Again, the only answer was that same echoing set of shuffling footsteps.
A shadow bobbed back and forth at the edge of her peripheral vision from deeper into the gatehouse. Danifae reacted with a thought, calling without question or hesitation on an ability bred into all highborn drow.
Five figures blazed to life with shimmering purple light. The faerie fire ringed their bodies and outlined them against the dull gloom behind them. The figures slowly shambled toward her and took no notice of the faerie fire.
The realization of what they were hit her half a second after the foul smell did.
They were zombies: walking dead of what looked to be mostly humans, though Danifae wasn’t interested in conducting a thorough physical examination.
“Zinnirit …” she breathed, irritated.
One of the zombies reached out for her, and a quiet, painful-sounding groan escaped its rotting, tattered lips.
In answer, Danifae stood straight, arched one delicate eyebrow, held out one slim-fingered hand, and said, “Stop.”
The zombies stopped.
“That will be all,” she said, her voice a perfect, level calm.
The zombies, all still aglow in purple, turned clumsily, bumping into each other, and shambled away from the battle-captive. They were moving a bit faster away from her than they had come at her.
“Well,” a firm male voice said, the single word echoing a thousandfold in the gatehouse chamber.
Danifae put her hand down, let it rest on her hip.
“You shouldn’t have been able to do that,” the voice said, quieter but closer.
Danifae followed that echo back to its source and saw another drow-shaped shadow at the edge of the gloom.
“No need for faerie fire,” he said and stepped close enough for Danifae to see him.
“Zinnirit,” she said, pasting a broad grin on her face. “How lovely it is to see you, my old friend.”
The aged drow moved a few steps closer to her but still kept a respectful—no, suspicious—distance from Danifae.
“You were taken to Ched Nasad,” the wizard said. “I heard that Ched Nasad fell apart.”
“It did,” Danifae answered.
“I honor Lolth as much as any drow,” the wizard said, “but you can keep buildings made of web, thank you very much.”
“That wasn’t the problem,” Danifae replied. “Of course, you don’t give the south end of a northbound rothé what happened to Ched Nasad.”
“You know me too well still,” he said.
“As you know me.”
“It isn’t easy, you know,” the old wizard said, taking a few steps closer. “What you want done. It’s not something you simply … dispel.”
Zinnirit looked different. Danifae was amazed at how stooped he was, how thin, how wizened. He looked like a human, or a goblin. He looked bad.
“You’ve adopted the fashions of your new home, I see,” Danifae remarked, nodding at the wizard’s outlandish dress.
“Yes, I have,” he replied. “Good for business, you know. Doesn’t frighten the neighbors as much as the old spiky armor.”
“You know why I’m here,” said Danifae, “and I know you knew I was coming. Were the zombies meant to scare me?”
“Another bit of showmanship, actually,” the mage explained. “Drow and lesser races alike are attracted to the odd bit of necromancy. Makes me seem more serious, I suppose.”
“You knew I was in Sschindylryn the second I stepped through the gate,” she said.
“I did, yes.”
“Then let’s get on with it.”
“Things have changed, my dear Danifae,” Zinnirit said. “I am no longer your mother’s House mage, subject to the whims of her spoiled daughters.”
“You expect me to pay?” she asked.
“You expect something for nothing?”
Danifae let one of her eyebrows twitch in response. That barely perceptible gesture made the old wizard look away. She took a deep breath and concentrated on that corner of her mind in which the Binding hid.
“I know why you’ve come,” Zinnirit pressed. “It’s always there, isn’t it?”
Seeing no reason to lie, Danifae said, “It is. It’s been there every second since I fell into the hands of House Melarn.”
“It’s an insidious enchantment that binds you …” said the old drow, “binds you in a way that only a drow could imagine. While the Binding is in effect, you will never be free. If your mistress …?”
“Halisstra Melarn.”
“If Halisstra Melarn dies, so goes Danifae,” he continued. “If she calls for you, you’ll go to her. No question, no hesitation, no ch
oice. You can never—much as you might like to, even as a method of suicide—raise your hand to her. The Binding won’t let your body move in a way that would result in your mistress’s death.”
“You understand well,” she whispered, “but not completely. In many ways, it’s the Binding that fuels me. That spell keeps me alive, keeps me vital, keeps me listening, watching, and learning. That spell, and my desire to break its hold, is what I live for.”
Danifae saw fear flash across the old wizard’s eyes.
“You weren’t the only member of our House to be brought to Ched Nasad,” he said. “After that last raid—the one that destroyed the redoubt, that destroyed the family—others were taken by Ched Nasad’s Houses, and the rest were scattered over a wide swath of the Underdark. Those who lived, anyway, and that was precious few.”
“Zinnirit Yauntyrr made it to Sschindylryn,” she continued for him, “and did quite well here. That never surprised me. You were a talented spellcaster. No one could teleport like you. You were the master. And teleporting isn’t all you’re good at.
“You’re ready,” she said. “I know you.”
“What will you do when you’re free?” he asked.
Danifae smiled at him and stepped closer. They could touch each other if either lifted an arm.
“All right,” the old mage breathed. “I don’t need to know, do I?”
Danifae offered no response. She stood waiting.
“I will have to touch you,” the wizard said.
Danifae nodded and stepped closer still—close enough that she could smell the old man’s breath: cinnamon and pipeweed.
“It will hurt,” he said even as his hand was reaching up to her. He placed the tips of his first and second fingers on her forehead. His touch was dry and cool. Strange words poured from his mouth. It might have been Draconic he was speaking but a dialect she couldn’t quite pin down. After a full minute he stopped and lowered his hand. His red-orange eyes locked on hers. Danifae did not pull away, much as she wanted to.
“Tell me,” he whispered, “that you want to be through with it.” “I want it gone,” she said. Her voice seemed too loud, too sharp to her own ears. “I want to be free of the Binding.”
No sooner had that last syllable left her lips than her chest tightened, then her legs, her arms, her feet, her hands, her neck, her jaw, her fingers and toes—each one. Every muscle in her body cramped and seemed to rip into shreds under her skin. She might have screamed, but her throat was clamped shut. Her lungs tried to force what air was left in them up and out through her closed throat, past her clenched jaws, between her grinding teeth. She went blind with pain. It was over.
Her body loosened so quickly and so completely that she collapsed. Vomit poured from her, and her vision was a swirling blur. Her eyes watered, her nose ran, and she came within half a second of wetting herself.
That was over too.
Danifae was shaking as she stood. She mastered the barrage of emotions that assaulted her—everything from humiliation to homicidal rage—with a single thought:
I’m free.
She wiped her mouth on her sleeve and stepped away from her own sick. Zinnirit followed, reaching out to steady her in case she fell again, but she avoided his touch, and he seemed as reluctant to touch her.
“I can’t feel her,” Danifae said even as she realized that the connection was truly gone.
“She won’t feel you either,” said the mage. “She’ll probably think you died … wherever she is.”
Danifae nodded and collected herself. Part of her wanted to shriek with delight, to dance and sing like some sun-cursed surface elf, but she did not. There was still one more thing she needed. The battle-captive turned free drow blinked the tears from her eyes and looked at the old mage’s hands.
Zinnirit wore many rings, but Danifae was looking for one in particular, and she recognized it immediately. On the second finger of Zinnirit’s left hand was a band of intertwined platinum and copper traced with delicate Draconic script.
“You kept it,” she said.
He looked at her with narrowed eyes and shook his head.
“That ring,” she explained. “My mother’s ring.”
Zinnirit nodded, unsure.
“You enchanted that for her yourself, didn’t you?” she asked.
Zinnirit nodded again.
“Wherever she might go,” Danifae mused, “that ring would return her home to her private chamber in House Yauntyrr in far Eryndlyn. I remember she used it once when we were in Llacerellyn. The ring took us both home when an idle threat turned into an assassination attempt and someone sent an elemental after her.
“You’ve never used it? You’ve never tried to go back?”
“There’s nothing there,” the mage answered too quickly. “Nothing to return to. I retuned the ring years ago to bring me back here.”
“Still, have you ever had necessity to use it?” she asked. “Has it ever brought you back here from some distant cave?” Zinnirit shook his head.
“Never stepped through your own gates?”
The old drow shook his head again and said, “I have nowhere to go.”
Danifae tipped her head to one side and let the tiniest smile of appreciation slide across her lips.
“You poor thing,” she whispered. “All these years … so lonely. Waiting for one last chance to serve a daughter of House Yauntyrr.”
Danifae reached out and took Zinnirit’s hand. The mage flinched at her touch but didn’t pull away.
She lifted his hand to her lips and kissed it. Considering she’d just thrown up all over his floor, Zinnirit winced at the gesture, but still allowed it. Danifae pressed the old drow’s hand to her cheek. It felt warmer, less dry.
“Dear Zinnirit,” she whispered, looking the old mage in the eye, “what has become of you?”
“I’m a thousand years old,” the mage replied. “At least, I think I am. I have no House, just these three gates and whatever meager tolls I can charge. I’m a stranger in a strange city, with no House to protect me, no matron mother to serve. What has become of me? I can barely remember ‘me’.”
Danifae kissed his hand again and whispered, “You remember me, don’t you, House Mage?”
He didn’t reply but didn’t take his hand away.
“You remember our lessons,” she said, punctuating her words with the gentle brush of her lips against his hand. “Our special lessons?”
She took his finger into her mouth and let her tongue play over it. The old drow’s skin was dry and tasteless then there was the tang of metal against her lips.
“I didn’t …” the mage mumbled. “I don’t …”
Danifae slipped the ring off his finger, slowly teasing his flesh with her lips all the way. She tucked the ring under her tongue before kissing the back of his hand again.
“I do,” she said.
Danifae twisted the old drow’s arm down and around hard and fast enough that more than one bone snapped in more than one place. Zinnirit gasped in pain and surprise and didn’t even try to stop Danifae from turning him around. She brought her other hand up and cupped his chin. She was standing behind him, his broken arm twisted painfully behind his back.
“I remember,” she whispered into his ear. Then she broke his neck.
For any mage, the preparation of a day’s spells was part experience, part intuition, and part inspiration. Pharaun Mizzrym was no different.
From time to time he looked up from his spellbook to refresh his eyes and let a particularly complex incantation sink into his memory. What he saw when he looked up was the still, quiet deck of the ship of chaos. Larger patches of sinew and cartilage and ever more complex traceries of veins and arteries embellished the bone ship. It lived—a simple, pain-ravaged, tortured, insensible life—and when it was quiet and the others were still in Reverie, Pharaun imagined he felt the thing breathing.
The uridezu captain lay in his place, visited only by the occasional rat. He was curled
into a tight ball, his body wrapped into itself in a way that made Pharaun’s back ache to look at it. His breathing was deep and regular, punctuated by the odd snore.
Jeggred sat opposite the captured demon, his knees drawn up to his chest and his head down. Unlike Pharaun and his fellow dark elves, the draegloth slept. Obviously that was a trait carried over from his father, Belshazu.
Well, the Master of Sorcere thought, you can’t chose your parents.
Quenthel sat as far away from the rest of them as she could, at the very tip of the demon ship’s pointed bow. Her back was turned to Pharaun, and she sat straight and stiff, meditating.
Can you talk? a voice echoed at the edge of his consciousness—a voice he recognized.
Aliisza? he thought back.
You remember me, the alu-demon’s voice echoed more loudly in his head—or was it more clearly? I will consider that a supreme honor.
As well you should, Pharaun sent back, instinctively attaching light, playful emotions to the thought. Where are you?
On the ceiling, she replied, right above you.
Pharaun couldn’t help but look up, but even with his fine darkvision, the gloom of the Lake of Shadows hid the ceiling from his sight.
How did you find me? he asked.
I’m a resourceful, intelligent, and talented woman.
That you are, he replied.
If you levitate straight up, she sent, you’ll come right to me. Well, Pharaun returned, in that case …
The wizard closed the book he was working on, the spell still not fully prepared, and tucked the volume back into his pack. He stood and touched the brooch that held his piwafwi on his shoulders.
Straight up? he sent.
I’ll catch you, came the alu-demon’s playful reply.
Pharaun’s feet left the deck, and he accelerated, the ship falling rapidly away beneath him. When it was lost—or more properly when he was lost—in the pitch-dark shadows of the ominous cavern, he slowed.
“A little more,” Aliisza whispered to him, her voice barely audible.
Pharaun came to a stop slowly, a defensive spell hanging on his lips in case the alu-demon turned on him—she was a demon after all, so there was always some possibility of that.
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