Bury Elminster Deep (Elminster Book 7)

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Bury Elminster Deep (Elminster Book 7) Page 39

by Ed Greenwood


  “Which means …” Storm said slowly.

  Her sister smiled. “Which means the items contain seeds that could perhaps bring back Larloch, or even something … someone more … if used in the right manner.”

  “Uh,” Arclath mumbled, “I’m not sure Rune or I should be hearing this …”

  Ignoring him, The Simbul went on sternly, “It is imperative blueflame items must be wielded to close rifts and restore the balance of Toril, or the ancient Primordials will rise and rage unleashed across the lands … and inevitably, what will eventually be left will not be the world we know, the realms of humans, elves, dwarves, halflings, orcs, and the rest. Dragons may survive, but probably as enslaved steeds, not conquering wyrms. Their time is past.”

  She looked from one person to another, staring last up at the beholder, whose rays had faded away.

  “El and Manshoon, will you both work to make sure the time of humans is not ended?”

  “Aye,” Elminster agreed eagerly.

  It was another long and silent wait before Manshoon muttered reluctantly, “Yes.”

  “Good. Starting now would be a good thing,” The Simbul told them dryly.

  Then she gave Storm a smile. “Thank you for caring for me, sister. I’ll return as soon as I can, but long ago I promised Mystra I’d do … certain things. I must keep my promises, or I am nothing.”

  She took a step back. “I go.”

  Abruptly, without a spell or sound, she vanished.

  Leaving Storm, Arclath, Amarune, and Elminster all looking at the beholder hanging in the air above them.

  Silence stretched.

  “So,” El asked mildly, “shall we begin?”

  Manshoon glared at him—and vanished, leaving only empty sky behind.

  EPILOGUE

  Elminster whirled and cast a hasty spell.

  Storm started to say something urgent, but Elminster shook his head, waved his hands in a dramatic flourish—and watched Storm, Arclath, and Amarune vanish as his magic took them elsewhere.

  Then he ran back to the cave.

  He was only a few steps inside when Manshoon’s first attack spell stabbed at his back.

  It raged against El’s ward, shattered it, and the two magics died together.

  Elminster kept running, knowing the spot he wanted to reach before—

  Manshoon’s second attack, a flood of piercing lightning, drove him to his knees, groaning in pain.

  El fought to hiss out a small, simple spell, hoping its nature would let him finish it before—

  Manshoon smashed him with deadly magic once more.

  “Work with you? Bah! All my life you’ve frustrated my schemes, intrigued against me, opposed me!” the vampire shouted. “Work with you? I think not. Be entombed, instead!”

  Magic clawed at Elminster, and the rock beneath him changed.

  “I’ll drive you down into solid rock by making it less than solid—in shifting spots, so the weight of the rest of the stone, still hard, will crush your bones to jelly!”

  Elminster was sinking, his body tingling, starting to shift at Manshoon’s bidding. He had to fight to form a smile.

  “I want you to feel pain, Sage of Shadowdale!” Manshoon shouted from above. “Long, slow pain! Let your tongue be stilled, your jaw, arms, and fingers all be broken, to rob you of all means to work magic!”

  The rock closed over Elminster’s head, dark and hissing, Manshoon’s magic lancing into his lungs to keep him from suffocating just yet. And to bring him more of its caster’s gloating.

  “Think you can foil me again? Work another of your sly triumphs? No, a thousand times no! I am Manshoon, and I will defeat you!”

  “By deafening me? Like any lackspell mageling, ye’ve certainly mastered being noisy!” Elminster murmured to himself as his body fell entirely back to ashes—and plunged through the fissures he’d been seeking.

  The agony was—intense.

  Yet, he’d known worse.

  It would take him days, perhaps months, to drag himself together again … but he’d managed much, much longer patience in the past.

  Silently, by many thousands of little ways, he descended.

  New magic stabbed after him, thrusting here and there, swift and energetic.

  Only to withdraw, finding no trace of Elminster.

  “Yes!” Manshoon roared, his voice high and wild. “Bury him deep—and I did! Go godless to the gods at last, Elminster, to fail that judgment and fade, gone forever! Fare you not well!”

  From some flakes of tumbling ash in a cavern far beneath Manshoon’s boots, in an upper cavern of the Underdark, came a faint echo that just might have been an answer to Manshoon’s shout.

  An echo that sounded rather like the Sage of Shadowdale’s chuckle.

  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Other Books by This Author

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Prologue

  Chapter One: Kneeling to a Goddess

  Chapter Two: The Word of a Nobleman

  Chapter Three: I Have a Little Plan

  Chapter Four: Dark Villainy Again

  Chapter Five: Traitors, Traitors Everywhere

  Chapter Six: Stormbreak

  Chapter Seven: Let It Begin

  Chapter Eight: Untidy Arrivals

  Chapter Nine: In Stately Conclave Met

  Chapter Ten: I Foresaw All This

  Chapter Eleven: Blood on the Whirlwind

  Chapter Twelve: Going Too Far

  Chapter Thirteen: Soon After Whenever

  Chapter Fourteen: Sunderings and Wild Chases

  Chapter Fifteen: The Happy Reign of Chaos

  Chapter Sixteen: Friend and Foe

  Chapter Seventeen: A City Cursed

  Chapter Eighteen: I Go Now to Hunt

  Chapter Nineteen: Fearing Worse, I Fled

  Chapter Twenty: Fearful for Good Reason

  Chapter Twenty-one: Hiding and Seeking

  Chapter Twenty-two: Disputes and Recriminations

  Chapter Twenty-three: Swords Come Out

  Chapter Twenty-four: Battles Inside and Out

  Chapter Twenty-five: Rescues and Captures

  Chapter Twenty-six: Lies, Chains, and Kisses

  Chapter Twenty-seven: Bedchambers Invaded

  Chapter Twenty-eight: A Lady of Ghosts

  Chapter Twenty-nine: A Different Night

  Chapter Thirty: Murdering Lord Helderstone

  Chapter Thirty-one: The Dangerous Work of Luring Ghosts

  Chapter Thirty-two: Old Games and Older Secrets

  Chapter Thirty-three: When the Blue Flame Dances

  Chapter Thirty-four: Rather Noisy Battles

  Chapter Thirty-five: Battle and Burial

  Epilogue

  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Other Books by This Author

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Prologue

  Chapter One: Kneeling to a Goddess

  Chapter Two: The Word of a Nobleman

  Chapter Three: I Have a Little Plan

  Chapter Four: Dark Villainy Again

  Chapter Five: Traitors, Traitors Everywhere

  Chapter Six: Stormbreak

  Chapter Seven: Let It Begin

  Chapter Eight: Untidy Arrivals

  Chapter Nine: In Stately Conclave Met

  Chapter Ten: I Foresaw All This

  Chapter Eleven: Blood on the Whirlwind

  Chapter Twelve: Going Too Far

  Chapter Thirteen: Soon After Whenever

  Chapter Fourteen: Sunderings and Wild Chases

  Chapter Fifteen: The Happy Reign of Chaos

  Chapter Sixteen: Friend and Foe

  Chapter Seventeen: A City Cursed

  Chapter Eighteen: I Go Now to Hunt

  Chapter Nineteen: Fearing Worse, I Fled

  Chapter Twenty: Fearful for Good Reason

  Chapter Twenty-o
ne: Hiding and Seeking

  Chapter Twenty-two: Disputes and Recriminations

  Chapter Twenty-three: Swords Come Out

  Chapter Twenty-four: Battles Inside and Out

  Chapter Twenty-five: Rescues and Captures

  Chapter Twenty-six: Lies, Chains, and Kisses

  Chapter Twenty-seven: Bedchambers Invaded

  Chapter Twenty-eight: A Lady of Ghosts

  Chapter Twenty-nine: A Different Night

  Chapter Thirty: Murdering Lord Helderstone

  Chapter Thirty-one: The Dangerous Work of Luring Ghosts

  Chapter Thirty-two: Old Games and Older Secrets

  Chapter Thirty-three: When the Blue Flame Dances

  Chapter Thirty-four: Rather Noisy Battles

  Chapter Thirty-five: Battle and Burial

  Epilogue

 

 

 


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