by Monte Cook
Hirtho thus led a simple but comfortable life off his ill-gotten gains. One of his many sales went to a young man named Wenmer who was hired as an enforcer for a local criminal and—according to some—priest of some mysterious evil god. Little did Hirtho know, the young enforcer would be killed before he ever drew the blade—by his own criminal boss as a blood sacrifice no less. Hirtho would never have believed that a cambion from the Abyss would then take the sword and use it against that same criminal. The idea that one of Hirtho’s crude creations would have been used in an attack against a balor—perhaps the most powerful of fiends in all the Lower Planes—would have been inconceivable to the shady smith.
Vheod shouldn’t have needed to know the blade’s short and lackluster history to realize that his actions were foolhardy. He shouldn’t have been surprised when, on coming into contact with the flesh of dread Chare’en, the ungainly sword shattered into thousands of metal shards. The force of the blow and its results sent Vheod sprawling backward through the air, where he struck the stone floor with great force.
* * * * *
Chare’en appeared more stunned and surprised than hurt. In fact, he didn’t appear hurt at all.
Vheod’s vision swirled around him. He closed his eyes tightly, hoping to steady his vision. When he opened them again, Melann was kneeling over him.
“Vheod, get up,” she begged, her voice thin and panicked. “He’ll kill us all!”
She was attempting to lift him from the ground by his shoulders, and he allowed her to help him stumble to his feet. The demon’s black gaze fell on them both.
“Now, young mortalheart, I swear by the Abyss that gave birth to us both,” Chare’en said in a voice like polished obsidian, “you will die!”
Vheod and Melann ran, scrambling across the stone floor as fast as they could. The spine-covered whip slapped and scraped the ground behind them as Chare’en swung it over his head and crashed its tails where they had stood. The two of them ran, dodging the moving and whirling parts of the still rapidly moving metallic device.
Chare’en bellowed in rage, shaking both of them, body and soul. They reached the doorway and passed through the open bronze portals. Vheod looked around, blankly surveyed the bodies of the fallen thugs, Orrag, and Whitlock. He ran to where Whitlock lay.
“Is he … does he live?” Vheod asked, not looking back at Melann.
“Yes,” she replied, “but he shouldn’t be moved.”
“There’s nowhere to move him to anyway, I’m afraid.” Vheod took Whitlock’s sword and turned back to Melann. She’d begun some sort of prayer.
Next to her, Vheod saw Orrag’s fallen body by the doors. The floor shook as Chare’en followed them, loping slowly with legs cramped from centuries of captivity. With each step, the balor grew stronger. Vheod stepped up to the doorway but still looked down at Orrag. Surely the half-orc would have brought something of power with him here to this place. He seemed like a crafty planner—wouldn’t he have brought along some sort of fail-safe plan?
Vheod reached down and picked up the falchion the half-orc still clutched in his quickly stiffening fingers. Orrag, obviously not wanting to inflict serious injury on Vheod, hadn’t really attacked him with the weapon. Perhaps it was a magical blade—Orrag’s backup?
Chare’en reached the doorway as Melann finished chanting the mysterious invocation. Lines of blue fire traced a complicated pattern across the floor inside the doorway. “By the power of Chauntea, Mother of All,” Melann shouted at the fiend, “you cannot cross this line, demon!”
To Vheod’s surprise, Chare’en stopped. He studied the line of power and seemed to consider it, as if evaluating its power and limitations. Or perhaps he considered his own. Vheod couldn’t be sure. Nevertheless, anything that stopped the balor’s advance was mighty indeed and was an advantage that shouldn’t be wasted.
Unfortunately, even as thoughts of escape began to form in Vheod’s mind, he saw a glint of metal behind the balor. On the floor, near the middle of the chamber, lay the silver-runed staff. In her haste to help him, Melann had left the staff behind. He knew he couldn’t leave without it.
Besides, he thought, the intention behind his actions had been to slay Chare’en. He had to attempt to do so, or die trying. As he watched, Chare’en’s flat black eyes rolled slightly. Vheod knew the balor was calling on his own inner, Abyssal power.
Melann didn’t pause to observe. Instead, she used the time to begin calling on the power of her goddess yet again. While she chanted quietly, Vheod loosed a spell of his own. Daggers of light flew from his hand and screamed toward Chare’en’s broad chest. They disappeared inches before they would have struck him, as though they’d never existed. Vheod realized that the balor’s presence and power rendered many minor magical spells useless against him. Vheod cursed his luck and his trivial magical skills, then tumbled through the doorway and off to his right.
At almost the same time, a shining blue warhammer of heavenly might appeared in Melann’s hands. She flung it into the air at Chare’en but turned to watch Vheod leap past her protective barrier.
“By all the Gods of Faerûn, Vheod,” she shrieked, “are you mad?”
Vheod realized that the barrier obviously was meant to keep Abyssal creatures at bay. He was able to cross it one way, but due to his nature, would it repel him as well? He would never get the chance to discover the answer, for as all this occurred, Chare’en summoned forth the power within him and with a wave of his clawed hand dispelled the blue fire barrier with a snap of coarse, black lightning.
“I shall be denied nothing, regardless of which of your weak goddesses you call on!” His words curdled the air with his anger and hate.
The hammer Melann had conjured forth, also of bluish, goddess-granted fire, struck the tanar’ri noble. This spell passed through the balor’s resistance to magical energies and staggered him slightly. Vheod used both that distraction and the fact that Chare’en had needed to drop one of his weapons to dispel the barrier, to aid in his attack on the balor’s flank. Daleland broadsword in one hand and curved orc steel in the other, he slashed and stabbed at the fiend. His blades found their mark, and Chare’en bled an odiferous corruption for which no earthly name applies.
“Melann,” Vheod shouted, “get the staff! I’ll hold him …”
Black blood raged to Vheod’s head, and as he’d done before, he lost himself to the hatred and darkness of the tanar’ri portion of his soul. He struck blow after blow with his blades, hammering Chare’en with fury and might. The ferocity forced the balor back a few lumbering steps. He unfurled his wings in anger, but as he did a spinning sphere carried through the air by a curved metal span smashed into one of them, almost knocking Chare’en down. Even more surprising, as it struck the tanar’ri, the sphere stopped spinning—though it continued its revolution about the room—and a face within the metal surface groaned with wide eyes and a large, open mouth. Vheod watched in surprise and fascination, but the device continued to turn, and soon the sphere was rounding its way to the far side of the room.
The device was alive.
Vheod had had no idea.
* * * * *
Melann did as Vheod had suggested. She ran past Vheod and Chare’en as they fought, circling around to the left as she entered the chamber full of whirling metal spheres and supports. Vheod appeared so small next to the terrifying fiend. She could never have imagined such a horror. Chare’en was the embodiment of anathema. He was living despair, destruction, and desecration. Melann now suddenly understood evil much more intimately than she’d ever wanted to.
Fortunately, the spiritual weapon that Chauntea had granted her still beat on Chare’en’s body, aiding Vheod in his fight. The fact that her god’s magic worked even in the face of such terrible power served to strengthen Melann’s faith in her patron. She had no idea what she would do or think if it had failed.
Melann reached the staff and grasped it. Though it was wooden, it felt cool and smooth, like silver. The s
taff had been carved with four flat sides, each with etched runes filled with silver inlay. The ends were each capped in silver, all of it shining as if the object were brand new. In its texture and balance it was light and somehow pleasant to hold.
A cry of pain made her spin on her heel, looking back toward Vheod. Chare’en had managed to grasp the cambion in the tendrils of his many-tailed whip. Blood flowed from numerous wounds inflicted by the barbs and spines on the whips. As Vheod struggled to free himself, Chare’en laughed and burst into infernal flames.
Or at least, that was what Melann thought at first. Instead, she saw after her eyes adjusted to the unpleasant light of the piercing flames, that the tanar’ri had somehow immolated himself, sheathing his body in flames that seemed to inflict no pain on him whatsoever. The fire lapped at Chare’en’s flesh like waves of water, and as he continued to laugh the balor pulled Vheod closer and closer to him and to the conjured fires of chaos and evil.
Melann bounded toward this scene as Vheod still strained at the coils of the whip that trapped him. She raised the staff, gripping it in both hands, and charged Chare’en with it as if it were a spear. The heat of the fire forced her back. She couldn’t get close enough even to strike. With a mighty yank, Chare’en drew Vheod into the flames and held him close in a fiery, life-quenching embrace.
“No, please, don’t,” she protested in vain. “Vheod! I love you!”
She wasn’t sure until now, but it was true. Vheod’s nobility, strength, and passion were greater than anyone she’d ever met. Now, it would seem, he would be taken away from her before she could ever tell him, for the roar of the flames drowned out her words.
To her surprise Vheod still struggled in the grasp of the fiend. While the flames obviously burned him, he withstood the heat with a greater fortitude than she would have believed possible. His Abyssal heritage must give him such strength, she reasoned, but could it be enough? She was near exhaustion and thought if she could only reach Vheod, she might possibly be able to call on the power of Chauntea once more to heal him, but then she would be of no further use.
She charged forward again and was again repelled by the flames. The twisted laughter of Chare’en still filled the room. It drew her attention, however, to the orrery-like rotating device spinning almost silently in the room. She had seen it earlier strike the demon and almost knock him down. She’d also seen the face within the metal that appeared when it struck him. Perhaps she could get it to strike again—but if she did, it would strike Vheod as well.
Melann ran back to the center of the room. The base of the device was an immobile tripod of metal that surrounded the now-open glass prison. The top of the tripod, where the three supports joined, held a spinning disk from which curved metal supports extended at various lengths into the chamber. At the end of each was one of the metallic, three-dimensional shapes that whirled in circles. Some moved up and down as well as around. Most were joined to other shapes by further metal supports, so that the entire superstructure moved as one—around, up and down, with many of the individual parts spinning on their own.
Melann tucked the staff into her belt at her back and began to climb up one of the legs of the giant tripod. The support was about as thick as she was, and so by wrapping her arms and legs around it she was able to quickly inch her way up the outer surface of the leg. Near the top, she reached up and grabbed onto the disk that turned horizontally. She was surprised by the force that tore her from the leg. As she held on with all her might, she whirled around on the spinning disk.
Pulling herself up on top of the disk, she found she could stand on it and maintain her balance between the various supports that sprouted forth and connected to the rest of the structure. The whole thing obviously functioned by magic, for she found nothing resembling a mundane mechanism at the center of the device to turn the disk. She reasoned that perhaps the device was some sort of magical generator that powered the prison to hold Chare’en. No other explanation for its existence seemed to make sense. Experimentally, she leaned against one of the supports and began to shake it using her weight. To her surprise, she was able to cause the entire device to waver slightly.
As she turned, Melann saw Chare’en and Vheod. Again to her surprise, she saw that Chare’en had dropped Vheod to the floor, where the cambion writhed in burned agony—but he was alive! Chare’en reeled backward, but Melann had no idea why. She turned past them and no longer could get a good view of what happened.
By the time the device circled her around, Melann could see that Chare’en clutched at something sticking in his left eye. As the fiend staggered backward he roared in pain. With his movement, however, Melann saw past him to the doorway.
Whitlock stood between the open bronze doors, a crossbow weakly dangling in his hand. As she passed around past the scene again, Melann determined that her brother would almost certainly drop at any moment. She had to do something—now was her chance.
Once again, despite the growing dizziness she felt from the rapid rotation, Melann grasped one of the supports and began attempting to shake it. Throwing her weight into it, she caused the device to shudder and shake. With each moment, it grew more violent. The shapes, one by one, stopped spinning on their own. Each formed a humanlike face in the metal surface, each turned toward her. As they rotated around the central axis, shifting up and down, near and far and throughout the room, the faces all moaned with voices of metal fatigue: “No!”
She ignored them. Melann didn’t stop.
“We maintain the prison of the balor, Chare’en. We were placed here by Braendysh. It is our duty for all time to ensure he does not escape …” the voices continued.
“You failed, whatever you are,” Melann whispered as she shook the support. “It’s my turn now.”
As the support wobbled more and more dramatically, the voices moaned and protested more. Meanwhile, she saw Chare’en remove the crossbow bolt from his eye and toss it to the ground. Black and green fluid poured from the wound, but already the flow began to ebb. Suddenly, two of the metal shapes clashed together as the device swayed and shook, and the different moving parts began to turn out of sync. The whole structure careened out of control. Supports began to bend and tear apart.
Melann’s eyes grew wide. “What have I done?” she shouted, though only she could hear herself.
The floor was fifteen feet below her at least, but she had to get off the device, and quickly. She stood on the disk, retaining her balance, when a powerful shudder echoed through the chamber. As she’d hoped, a part of the magical generator slammed into Chare’en. The tanar’ri was carried across and around the room a fair distance. Unfortunately, the same shock sent Melann tumbling off the disk to the ground below.
She landed with a crack, and the arm that she reflexively put out to cushion the long fall snapped like a tree branch. Pain shot through her body as she rolled along the floor.
Long, agonizing moments passed while Melann couldn’t bring herself even to open her eyes. In her self-imposed darkness, she could hear the once nearly silent device screaming like a thing in pain. Another moment passed before she realized that she screamed in pain right along with it.
Somehow she dragged herself to her feet, clutching her broken arm. She thought it likely that she might have broken a rib or two, judging from the pain in her chest. Luckily, her legs seemed relatively unharmed, and she was able to stumble to what she believed was where Vheod lay, which fortunately was near Whitlock and the exit.
Melann got lucky, or perhaps Chauntea continued to watch over her, for after only a few dozen short, stumbling steps she came to Vheod. She looked down, and what she saw made her no longer feel quite so much pain herself. Vheod’s clothing—apparently as well as the straps of his breastplate—had burned away, leaving him with little covering his bloody, black flesh. He was horribly burned, and he curled up like a dying animal.
Collapsing near him, Melann called one last time on the Mother of All, asking her to heal Vheod with the goddess�
�s life-giving touch. Melann’s good hand radiated golden energy, and where she passed her fingers, Vheod’s burned flesh healed. Using this divine power, Melann was able to heal a great portion of his wounds. He sighed with the pleasure of reduced pain and began to writhe. His body had thrown him into a state of shock, but he recovered with a start.
Looking up, Vheod’s eyes widened in surprise. “Abyssal hosts!” he cursed. “We’ve got to get out of here!”
Melann managed to follow his gaze and saw that the device spun entirely out of control now, the parts bending, snapping, and crashing into each other. His wounds at least partially healed, Vheod had strength enough to help Melann to her feet. Grasping his arm tightly around her, he brought both of them toward the only exit from the chamber.
A hemispherical portion of the device crashed next to them, a horrified metal face screaming in frustration. The still rotating generator dragged the hemisphere along the ground toward them, sparks flying about it. Vheod managed to pull them both out of the way, and they reached the door.
Whitlock lay at their feet, once again bleeding dangerously. Before Melann could even think about tending to him, a tremendous cacophony of metal and screams came from behind them. The entire device—tons on tons of metal—crashed to the floor in a single, unbelievable blow. Even through the crash they could hear the voice of Chare’en from across the chamber.
“No!” the tanar’ri cried.
The voices of the magical device suddenly cried in unison “It is our duty for all time to ensure he does not escape!”