by Lisa Smedman
“Eilistraee!” she cried. “Smite them!”
Whipping her hand forward, she clawed magic from the moon and hurled it at the departing swarm. Moonlight flared, illuminating the trees around her in a wide circle. Wings shriveled and larval bodies imploded under the sheer weight of the goddess’s magic. What remained thudded to the ground like soggy hail. A handful of the brood, howeverperhaps half a dozen insectswhirred away into the night.
When each landed, it would carve out a home for itself in the forest. There, it would feed, and grow. And if it was female, produce yet another brood.
Cavatina swore softly. She hadn’t purged vermin from the forest this night. She’d just spread it around a little, like a demon sowing taint.
The sword in her hand sang a victory paean, but Cavatina didn’t share its zeal. She’d killed a brood beetlequite an accomplishment for a priestess hunting alonebut the rush of exultation that should have accompanied her kill hadn’t come.
Part of the reason, she realized, was that nothing could ever live up to slaying a demigod. Any kill paled in comparison to the fierce joy she’d felt in the moment that her sword had severed Selvetarm’s neck.
Her eyes narrowed. Not her sword. Not any longer. The Crescent Blade was Qilué’s now.
She shoved the jealousy aside but couldn’t shake off her melancholy. There had been streaks of darkness in the moon bolt she’d used to weaken the beetle, and black blades among the silver in the magical circle of steel. Reminders, each of them, of how much had changed.
Cavatina didn’t want things to change. The sound of male voices singing the Evensong hymn was just wrong. So was the energy they added to the sacred dance. It was supposed to end in a shout of joy and the clash of swords, not in couples slinking off into the darkness to sheathe swords of a different kind.
She shook her head. She wasn’t foolish enough to try to pretend that nothing had changed. Nor was she about to go to the other extreme and give up her faith entirely, as many of Vhaeraun’s clericsand a handful of Eilistraee’s priestesseshad done. But that didn’t mean she had to embrace the changes enthusiastically. Some rituals, at least, could be performed in solitude.
She nudged the severed mandible with the point of her sword. It was a trophy of the night’s kill, one she normally would have carried back to the shrine. She decided to leave it there. To be burned, together with the rest of the brood beetle’s body.
She trudged back down the bank, stepping over bits of shattered chitin and earth that had been torn up by the beetle’s emergence from the ground. Kneeling beside the stream, she washed her blade clean, splashed water on her skin, and washed off the sticky beetle blood. Then she stood and waved the sword back and forth, drying it. The singing sword let out a low, contented hum, as if pleased with the night’s work. It, at least, drew no distinction between degrees of victory.
Balancing the blade on her shoulder, savoring the feel of the silvered metal against her skin, Cavatina walked back the way she had come. For her, the High Hunt was over this night. Eilistraee had caused her to cross paths with a monster, and Cavatina had slain it. That the brood beetle had been about to release a swarm of young was something Cavatina could not have known, she told herself. Perhaps the goddess had been trying to remind her of something: that even the tiniest fragment of evil could beget more evil. That evil had to be eradicated at its root, before it could spread. That
As she passed the spot where she’d seen the rats, a movement at the top of the bank caught her eye. A drow male stood there, silhouetted by the motes of light that trailed behind the moon on its passage through the evening sky. And not just any drow, but one of the recent converts who’d been invited to take part in the hunt this night.
Like her, he was naked, and his thin, muscular body gleamed with sweat from his run. A square of black cloth covered much of his face. His holy symbol. Vhaeraun’s mask.
The mask that Eilistraee herself wore as a trophy of her kill.
Cavatina’s eyes narrowed. Bad enough, having Nightshadows involved in the High Hunt. Worse luck still, that one had crossed her path. She glared up at him.
The male glanced down at something on the ground, then crouched and spoke in a voice just low enough that Cavatina couldn’t make out what he was saying over the gurgle of the stream. He nodded, then pulled a ring off his finger and held it out. A small black ratidentical to the one Cavatina had killed a short time agorose up on its hind legs and plucked the ring from his fingers. The rat turned the ring with its forefeet, sniffed it, and slipped the ring onto one foreleg as if it were an armband. Then it scurried away.
As the male rose from his crouch, Cavatina strode up the hill. She knew full well what the male was doing: talking to the creatures of the forest, no doubt asking them where a suitably impressive monster might be found. One that would “prove” his worth as a hunter. But that wasn’t how it was supposed to work. Participants in the High Hunt weren’t meant to sneak up on their prey and stab it in the back. They were supposed to take down whatever monsters Eilistraee chose for them. Kill them using only their swordsnot with the hand-crossbow that Cavatina could see strapped to the back of the male’s left forearm. Nor were they supposed to wear magical protections, like the amulet that hung from a chain around his neck.
“What do you think you’re doing?” Cavatina demanded.
The male whirled and raised his short sword. For a moment, Cavatina thought he would attack. She slapped it aside with the singing sword; the blades clanged together.
The male’s eyes blazed with anger. “Dark Lady.” His voice sounded surprisingly even, given his expression. “You startled me.”
His accent hinted that he was fresh out of the Underdark, but surely he recognized her. Any moment now, he would whisper her name in awe or fold in a subservient bow. He did neither. Cavatina found herself getting even more annoyed by the way his amber-orange eyes refused to so much as blink under her challenge. “You’re supposed to be killing vermin, not conversing with them.”
His eyes narrowed slightly. “The rat.”
“The rat,” she agreed.
“A moon rat,” he added. “A creature that gains intelligence as the moon waxes.”
The unspoken jibe rang loudly in Cavatina’s ears. Her singing sword hummed a warning as she readied it. “Are you looking for a fight?”
The male stared up at her. That close, she could see the scar tissue on the left side of his face. Most of it was hidden by his mask, but what showed of the old wound gave his left eye an ugly pucker. “No need to look,” he said in a level voice. He nodded at something behind her. “One’s already found me.”
Cavatina danced back, wary of trickery, and glanced around. A few paces distant, a figure stood in the forest, its body shrouded in an enveloping black robe. Though a hood hid its face, Cavatina could see hands as black as her own. A silver ring gleamed on each finger, marking the figure as one of Kiaransalee’s priestesses.
“By all that dances,” Cavatina whispered under her breath. “A Crone.”
The male touched his mask. “Shield me, Masked Lady.”
A haze of darkness blurred his outlinedarkness shot through with sparkles of moonlight.
Cavatina sang her own protective prayer. Moonlight glowed briefly on her skin as it took holdmoonlight marred by motes of black. Then she hurled a spell. A ray of moon-chilled light sprang from her hand, striking the evil priestess in the chest.
Instead of retreating, the Crone flung up one ring-encrusted hand. Without so much as a glance in Cavatina’s direction she addressed the Nightshadow. “You!” she screamed, pointing a finger at him. “Assassin!”
The cleric cringed, raising one hand to shield his eyes. His other arm swung up in a gesture that mirrored the Crone’s and his hand-crossbow thrummed. A bolt streaked through the air, burying itself in the Crone’s throat. The priestess clawed at the black fletches and made a strangled sound, but did not fall. Her cowl fell back, revealing a face w
ith sunken cheeks and hollow, staring eyes. Her bone-white hair was matted and filthy. She yanked the bolt out of her throat.
“That… won’t work, Kâras,” she croaked, flinging the bolt aside. “Not… this time.”
The breeze carried the stench of death to Cavatina’s nostrils. She grabbed the silver dagger that hung around her neck. She wrenched its chain over her head and thrust Eilistraee’s symbol in the direction of the undead Crone.
“By Eilistraee’s holy light,” she shouted. “Return to the grave from which you came!”
Cavatina had her sword ready. Should the undead priestess merely turn away, instead of being destroyed utterly, she would slice the creature in half. The blade sang a high-pitched peal. Eager. Ready.
But the Crone neither crumpled nor turned. She strode toward the Nightshadow, a dry, half-strangled chuckle rasping out of the hole in her throat.
The male didn’t move. He stood stock still, his arm not quite high enough to shield his eyes.
Paralyzed.
Cavatina blinked. What was this thing? Even something as powerful as a lich should have hesitated at the sight of her holy symbol.
Cavatina leaped forward, her weapon raised. The undead priestess turned toward her and sang a single, mournful note. Low as a shaum, it reverberated through Cavatina’s mind.
Suddenly, Cavatina’s mother was before her. Her long white hair whipped around her head as she spun with a dancer’s grace. She flung up an arm to meet Cavatina’s descending sword. Only at the last moment was Cavatina able to wrench the sword aside to avoid severing her mother’s arm.
The singing sword shrilled a warning. The shrill, urgent note penetrated Cavatina’s consciousness, shredding the veil that had clouded her mind. The illusion of her mother was replaced by the reality: a desiccated corpse that had been given a hideous semblance of life. White nubs of bone protruded through the tips of those grasping fingers. The cloak hung loose on bony shoulders.
One hand lashed out. Bony fingers brushed Cavatina’s shoulder. A wound appeared there, as if a dagger had sliced it open. Not deep, but it stung.
“This is not… your affair,” the Crone croaked. Its voice was stronger, and Cavatina could see that the wound the crossbow bolt had torn in its throat had already knitted together.
Cavatina blinked, surprised at the Crone’s complete disdain. She raised her sword and swunga powerful two-handed blow. The singing sword gave a peal of glee as it descended.
In that same instant, the Nightshadow moved. He lashed out with his own sword in an upward diagonal blow. Their two blades clanged together, throwing both Cavatina and the Nightshadow off balance. The Crone ducked aside, unwounded.
“Out of the way!” the Nightshadow shouted.
The Crone lunged, slapping at him with a bare, bony hand. Only by twisting violently aside was the Nightshadow able to avoid being disemboweled. He gasped as the fingers brushed across his hip and buttocks, opening a deep wound.
While the Crone’s back was turned, Cavatina leaped and swung. This time, her sword connected. It bit deep into the Crone’s neck, cutting through the tough, dry skin and severing the spine. The headless body folded, then fell.
The Nightshadow stared at it, his panting breaths fluttering his mask. One hand clutching his wound, he gasped out a prayer. Slowly, the bleeding stopped.
Cavatina waited, keeping an eye on the body of the Crone, making sure it wasn’t going to rise again.
Instead of thanking her, the Nightshadow spat out a curse. “Next time, keep out of the way.”
Cavatina stiffened. She couldn’t believe what she’d heard. “And let her kill you?”
“She nearly did, thanks to you.”
Cavatina’s face grew hot. “You were paralyzed,” she said. “Helpless.”
“I faked it. To draw her in close.”
He was lying, of course. It was only to be expected from a Nightshadow. Cavatina was already sorry she’d stepped in. But then she gave herself time to think about it, and realized the unlikelihood of the paralysis wearing off precisely at the moment the Crone came in close enough to kill with a sword blow. Maybe he wasn’t lying.
“My apologies,” she said at last. “If it happens again, I’ll wait until I’m absolutely certain you really do need my help, before jumping in.” She shrugged. “Of course, next time you might not be faking the paralysis.”
The male met and held her eye in a flat, level stare. Then he turned his attention to the corpse. “It has to be burned,” he said. “Before it knits itself back together again.”
The head rocked back and forth, as if struggling to do just that. The Nightshadow rolled it away from the body with his sword. Without another word to Cavatina, he began gathering dried wood and placing it atop the dead torso.
“What” Cavatina stopped herself before asking the question. As a Darksong Knight, her training had focused on hunting demons, and only to a lesser degree on the undead. She was loath to reveal her ignorance by asking about the creature. She nodded at the severed head. “She knew your name: Kâras.”
He nodded.
“Why?”
“I was one of her consorts. Briefly.”
“Until you learned who she served?”
“Until I killed her.”
“Ah,” Cavatina said, suddenly understanding. “She’s a revenant.”
“Yes.”
That made sense. The Crones’ thirst for vengeance was unquenchable. Their goddess dictated that any slight, no matter how small, must be avenged. A fatal bolt in the back from the crossbow of a consort would rank right at the top of the list. Kiaransalee herself must have lifted it from the grave.
Cavatina used her sword to flick the robe away from what remained of the Crone’s feet. They were mere stubs, the toes and front of each foot long since worn away. “Looks like she walked a long way.”
Kâras nodded. “All the way from Maerimydra.”
Cavatina looked up. “Were you therein Maerimydra? When it fell to Kiaransalee’s cultists?”
“Yes. And before that, when the army of Kurgoth Hellspawn overran the cavern.”
Cavatina stared at Kâras with a fresh respect. Whatever else he might be, he was a survivor. Kurgoth’s army of goblins, bugbears, and ogres had laid waste to the Underdark city of Maerimydra during Lolth’s Silence. According to the stories, its streets had been filled with thousands of corpses after the army had sacked it. A bountiful harvest for the Crones who’d ruled what remained of the city afterward.
“Did you see Kurgoth yourself?”
“No, shadows be praised.”
“That’s… fortunate,” Cavatina said. A lieshe would have loved to have crossed swords with a fire giant who was reputed to be half fiend. She supposed, however, there had been plenty of other adversaries wandering the streets of Maerimydra after the city’s fall. She wondered if the Crone they’d just battled was the only one of Kiaransalee’s worshipers Kâras had killed.
She glanced around at the moonlit forest. “Do you expect more of them? More revenants?”
“No.” He dumped more wood on the corpse. “The moon rat only mentioned this one.” Over his shoulder, he added, “Do you know a prayer that can raise fire?”
“No.”
He sighed then unfastened the straps that held the crossbow to his forearm and detached the bow from the rest of the mechanism. Then he reached for a stick.
Cavatina sheathed her sword and watched Kâras twist the bowstring around the stick. He carved a hole in a dried scrap of wood and set one end of the stick in it, and added some dried moss. Then, holding the top of the stick loosely, he sawed the bow back and forth, twirling the stick rapidly in place. Eventually the base of it smoldered. A moment later, tiny flames crackled through the dried moss. Kâras blew them to life, gradually adding tinder. Soon, he had a fire.
The flames licked at the undead priestess’s robe, charring it. Then the body itself burst into flame. It burned rapidly and with great heat, melting away li
ke a candle. Kâras rolled the head into the fire. A smell like burning leather filled the air.
Cavatina moved closer to Kâras as the Crone’s head was consumed. The Nightshadow stared at it without emotion as the flames danced across its desiccated flesh. She wondered if the Crone had been beautiful when still alivewhether Kâras had loved the woman, once. Then she remembered that they did things differently in the Underdark. Females simply “took” males when they wanted them. If it had been like that, little wonder Kâras betrayed no emotion.
Cavatina was curious to hear how the undead hordes of Kiaransalee had been driven from the city, and even more interested in hearing about Kurgoth Hellspawn. She turned to ask Kâras about the city’s fall and recapture.
He was gone.
CHAPTER 3
The Month of Marpenoth
The Year of the Haunting (1377 DR)
Q’arlynd stood beside the workbench where his scrolls and spell ingredients were laid out. He watched as the duergar metal crafter slid a long-handled crucible into the darkfire furnace. Sweat beaded the metal crafter’s bald head and trickled down his temples into the steel-gray stubble on his cheeks and chin. With flat black eyes, he stared at the darkfire that licked the underside of the ceramic dish. So still did he stand that his body might have been carved from gray stone. His thick-fingered hands were dotted with teardrop-sized patches of white where splashes of molten metal had burned them, yet they gripped the handle with the confidence of a soldier holding a pike.
The magical darkfire burned with great heat, but no light. The flames flickering inside the furnace were black as dancing shadows. Coal-dark smoke poured out of a chimney atop the furnace and twisted up through the hollowed-out stalagmite that was Darbleth’s workshop. The top of the stalagmite had been lopped off to release the smoke. Once, which rose toward the ceiling of the cave above, blending there with the outpourings of dozens of other forges and furnaces. It spiraled lazily above, eventually disappearing into a one-way portal at the center of the cavern that conveyed it to the surface realm.