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The Crystal Mountain

Page 10

by Thomas M. Reid


  Eirwyn smiled. “You’re not disturbing me,” she said, climbing from the bath. She dried herself and began to dress. Oshiga pointedly stared elsewhere while she did so. “I’m trying to relax, but this whole doing nothing business doesn’t suit me.” When she had donned her white tunic, she began to braid her hair. “So, what do you know?”

  “Tyr, Lathander—who has revealed his true form to be that of ancient Amaunator, incidentally—and Sune have imprisoned Cyric. His own plane has become his prison.”

  Eirwyn waved that bit of news away. “That was inevitable,” she said. “What else?”

  “The backlash from Mystra’s demise swept through the Astral Plane. Waves of raw magic crashed against many shores. No one knows the extent of the destruction yet, but it appears that several planes vanished, while others merged together.”

  Eirwyn frowned. “Though grievous, that’s not really news,” she said, finishing with her hair. She straightened and looked at the trumpet archon. “Of course there were aftershocks. The goddess of magic was slain.” She motioned for Oshiga to lead the way. “Unless there’s more to your message than that.”

  Oshiga nodded as they strolled down the hall. “There is. Erathaol has been receiving reports for quite some time now. I haven’t been privy to all of them—and I don’t know the details contained within any—but apparently, these waves of magic are different.” He paused. “They are having a strange effect on the places they touch. The edges of the House have even felt their impact, where the passage to the World Tree once stood. We are receiving news that the fabric of reality is changing there. Not just the land, but those caught up in it.”

  “I see. And what is happening to these poor unfortunates?”

  Oshiga sighed. “A few grow very sick. Many perish.” He paused, grimacing, as if what he had to add was too distasteful for him to repeat. “And the rest suffer strange transformations.”

  “A plague?” she asked. “A plague of magic?”

  Oshiga nodded. “Yes. These transformations are often gruesome, from what I have heard thus far.”

  “Can they be aided?” she asked. “Healed or restored? Should I venture somewhere where I can be of more help?”

  “I do not know,” Oshiga said, spreading his hands apart helplessly. “I truly cannot counsel you on what this means, or what you might choose to do about it. I just thought you’d want to know.”

  Eirwyn frowned. “Thank you. Perhaps there is something useful for me in the—” A thought whirled through her head. “You said that planes are vanishing. Correct?”

  “Yes.” He tilted his head to one side, giving his counterpart a puzzled look. “Why?”

  “Suppose some of them aren’t merely vanishing, but disintegrating? What if this place I have been seeing in my dreams didn’t yet exist, until this immense tragedy broke something free, created the crystalline fortress?”

  Oshiga caught her meaning. “If we were trying to ascertain the identity of something that we assumed already existed, but it did not, then the seeking book would have a difficult time revealing useful results. Everything we came up with must exist now, but have some connection with the future and your mysterious site.”

  “Precisely,” Eirwyn said, growing excited. “We’ve been searching wrong. We need to project this fortress as something that will be, rather than something that is.”

  “Unless it has come into being since we last attempted to focus on it.”

  “There would be no way to tell,” she admitted. “We would need to tease the book into ‘guessing’ for us. Can you do that?”

  “I believe I can,” the archon replied.

  Together, they hurried to the library chamber to commence their new search.

  Much later, after they had worked to produce a new list and had poured over the resulting collection of books, Eirwyn uncovered a telling bit of information. She reread the entry, wanting to make sure. Satisfied that what she had found was both accurate and useful, she showed it to Oshiga.

  The trumpet archon nodded. “Yes,” he said. “I think that must be it.” He sat back and looked at Eirwyn. “Now the question is: what must you do about it?”

  Eirwyn took a deep breath and said, “I must go there. I can feel it. Whatever the terrifying dream I have been experiencing is trying to tell me, the answer lies there.”

  “Yes,” Oshiga said, rising from his seat. “I believe you must.” He began to pace. “But you cannot simply set out blindly. This is no ordinary journey, even for an angel of your extraordinary talents. With the chaos rampant everywhere, it would be folly to journey there unprepared, by yourself.”

  Eirwyn fanned her hands. “Perhaps, but I have little choice. My patron is no more. I cannot call on others to accept this task alongside me.”

  “That may be,” Oshiga replied, smiling. “But I do not think your prospects are so slim. You have demonstrated a remarkable level of perseverance in the face of such adversity. Other patrons will welcome you into the fold, should you wish it.”

  Eirwyn felt a rush of nerves course through her. She had kept the debate over accepting patronage from another deep inside herself, not wishing to confront the issue of whether to change her allegiance after Helm’s demise. It was too painful to contemplate. She felt like a traitor, betraying everything she had dedicated herself to serving.

  “I cannot,” she answered softly. “Not yet. It’s too soon.”

  Oshiga tilted his head. “Is it? I cannot tell you what the right course is in this matter, but perhaps you should ask yourself whether you are truly best serving your cause by permitting your grief to render you impotent, immobile. In this time of need, do you do the just thing, or the selfish thing?”

  Eirwyn glared at Oshiga, who sat across from her. How dare you, she thought. You know nothing of the pain and tragedy of losing your deity. But she let the anger subside and stared down at the surface of the table. “Your insight may be accurate,” she said softly. “However, it does not change my reluctance. Helm was as selfless in his love for me as any I could imagine, and I fear the disservice I do to him by tarnishing that love.”

  Oshiga pursed his lips. “Even Helm would see you move beyond such a relationship when duty and others had need of you.”

  Eirwyn knew he was right, and she felt a little part of herself being wrenched free, torn from her heart. She wanted to weep. “I know,” she said, “but I know of no power I wish to swear my allegiance to. I cannot bear to think of it.”

  Oshiga smiled. “I do not think you need to,” he said, his tone filled with compassion. “You have already done so much in the service of so many. The mountain itself has embraced you, Eirwyn. You are a child of the heavens, a celestial creature heart and soul. Why not draw your spiritual energy from the entirety of the plane? Why not refill your heart with the love of Celestia itself?”

  Eirwyn considered his words. It was not unheard of for certain angelic beings to dedicate themselves to the righteousness of ideals, and the lands from which they flowed, rather than to a divine creature. She had forsworn obeying Tyr’s law because she believed it was more important to uphold the values under which even he lived.

  How would it be any different? she wondered. I have pledged myself to this philosophy. Can the philosophy not grant me strength and power in return?

  Slowly, as the realization filled her that she had been living her life dedicated to Celestia all along, Eirwyn began to smile. In that moment of recognition, Eirwyn felt hope and energy wash over her again.

  It felt good.

  “I thank you,” she said to Oshiga, who smiled.

  “I am deeply proud to be of service.” He stood and looked officious. “Now,” he continued, “we must prepare you for your journey. It will not be an easy one.”

  Later, as the trumpet archon led Eirwyn away from the Seer’s domain and back into the skies of the House of the Triad, they did not notice the pair of figures that followed them.

  Fuming, Aliisza squeezed through a narrow gap
in the tunnel. Gods and devils, Kaanyr, what were you thinking? “Let’s find another route and flank them.” Brilliant if you know the tunnels well, but I’m so turned around now, I’ve got no idea where we are. And now they’re chasing us, and you’ve gotten too far ahead. Wait for me, you thrice-damned—

  She cast a quick glance behind her and spied the bearded devil that was chasing her. He caught up to her and swung his heavy polearm, topped with a thick, serrated chopping blade, at her head.

  She ducked and the blade whistled over her.

  A sharp ring of steel on stone reverberated just behind her ear. Chips of stone sprayed the back of her neck. Aliisza pushed past the bottleneck in the passage, then she turned to face her pursuer again. He grinned at her, licking his cracked, blackened lips, and thrust his blade through the gap for another attack.

  Aliisza grimaced, shook her head in disgust, and lunged away. The stretch of tunnel before her opened up into a wide path, and the smooth floor was devoid of obstacles. She took off running.

  As she retreated, Aliisza went back over Kaanyr’s final conversation with her. Did he really get trapped by his own logic? she wondered. Then another idea struck, and it horrified her. Maybe he has begun to figure out a way to manipulate his own thoughts, convince himself a certain course of action is in Tauran’s best interests. Can he deceive himself and thus circumvent the spell? Surely not.

  But newfound doubt lingered in the back of her mind.

  She neared a turn in the tunnel and could sense the bearded fiend behind her closing the distance once again. She marveled at how fast he could move.

  Time for a little surprise, she decided.

  As she reached the bend in the path, she planted her foot against the rocky surface. She leaped into the air and pushed herself backward. She flipped over so that she faced downward again and unfurled her wings enough to glide. The alu sailed over her pursuer, who stared up as his momentum carried him past her.

  Aliisza landed behind the creature and slashed at him with her long sword. The blade bit into the fiend’s moist, scaly flesh and drew black blood, but the cut did little to slow the devil. He snarled, turned around, then rushed at her again. He swung his nasty, serrated glaive with both of his clawed hands. The foul odor of his breath wafted from him, making Aliisza gag.

  Another fiend arrived at the far end of the stretch of tunnel and rushed pell-mell toward Aliisza. She spied him raising a saw-toothed blade to strike at her. She kicked out with her booted foot and caught him squarely in the chest before he could land his blow. The impact drove the creature backward, but it also distracted her enough that her original opponent got inside her guard with his longer weapon and nicked her shoulder.

  Aliisza grunted from the wound. It burned, and hot blood ran down her back inside her leather tunic. She tried to ignore the pain and refocus her attention on her two foes, who had her pinned between them in the narrow tunnel.

  This killing things isn’t as fun as it used to be, she decided. Where in the Hells is Kaanyr? Is he going to figure out he left me behind?

  She knocked away a swipe aimed at her head.

  She leaped a second, lower attack from the opposite side and summoned a collection of magical darts. The whistling, streaking blue missiles shot from the tip of her finger and burrowed into the devil’s chest in rapid succession, leaving four scorched, smoking holes in the howling creature. He fell back, screaming in agony and clawing at his wounds.

  Aliisza tried to ignore the painful twisting of her insides from the tainted magic.

  The first devil slashed at Aliisza with his glaive again, and when she parried, she struck her foe’s weapon hard enough that she jarred it loose from his hands. The loss of the glaive didn’t seem to faze the creature one bit. He simply smiled malevolently and lunged at her with both his clawed hands extended.

  “Pretty meat to tear and eat,” the devil crooned as he grappled with Aliisza and pinned her arms to her sides.

  She struggled free and fought to keep him at bay, slashing at his arms to prevent them from reaching her. Each time her blade struck, it cut into the fiend, but she simply wasn’t having much of an effect on the devil.

  “Begone!” she screamed as she brought her foot up between herself and the devil. “Go back to the hole from which you crawled!”

  She shoved the devil away before he could get any closer. As he stumbled back and fell on his fleshy tail, she willed another set of the arcane missiles into being and flicked her fingers, flinging them from the tips so that they rushed at the thing. Three of the four blue projectiles pounded him, while the fourth fizzled out with a mild pop. Still, the magic did the trick. The devil fell, twitched, and writhed upon the stone.

  Aliisza whirled back around, fighting not to hunch over in pain. The other bearded fiend was struggling to regain his feet. He staggered unsteadily but would not stop coming. She spied three more of the things scampering toward her from the far end of the tunnel, along with another devil covered in wicked-looking barbs. It reminded Aliisza of a cross between a lizard and a porcupine. The four of them crowded together, bumping and jostling one another as they tried to be the first to reach their target.

  Aliisza sighed in exasperation and chose another spell. The magic came almost unbidden to her then; she no longer had to think about what she needed to do, only brace herself for the accompanying pain each casting inflicted upon her.

  Whatever else may have been wrong with living under Tyr’s shadow, at least I didn’t have to put up with the vile stench of devils all day, she lamented, only half in jest.

  She waited until the horde of devils closed to only a few paces away. Then she gestured at an area directly behind them and let fly the magic. At the same time, she opened one of her magical doorways. The moment the conjuration was completed, she fell through her doorway and let it wink out before any of the foul creatures could follow her through.

  She reappeared further up the passage, back in the direction she had originally come, and crumpled to the floor in agony. Her blade slipped from her hand as she writhed. She fought to catch her breath. She managed to glance back over her shoulder to catch a glimpse of her handiwork. A thick sheet of ice filled the passage from wall to wall and floor to ceiling, sealing the devils on the other side of it.

  Aliisza could hear the fiends slam against the icy barrier from the other side. She clutched her stomach and willed the pain to dissipate. The blue glow emanating from her subsided, and she felt the gnawing of her insides ease at last. As she grabbed the hilt of her weapon and rose from her hands and knees to her feet again, two or three more thumps shook the thick slab, but it did not budge.

  That ought to hold them, she thought as she managed to stand upright. I’ll just return to the last intersection and wait for Kaanyr. When he realizes he left me behind, he’s bound to come back looking for me.

  Isn’t he?

  Before she could turn to retrace her path, though, the devils materialized on the near side of the ice.

  Aliisza groaned. Not this again, she thought, turning to sprint away. I had enough of this with the archons!

  She ran back down the stretch of tunnel and slipped past the narrow gap, rushing through the winding, twisting passage. She fought against the urge to employ more magic to aid her in escaping.

  Not unless absolutely necessary, she told herself.

  She could hear the devils behind her as she darted around one bend and then another, racing to reach the intersection where she believed she had taken a wrong turn and lost track of Kaanyr.

  Ahead, more sounds of fighting reached her ears. She feared running into a hornet’s nest of trouble in that direction, but she knew she was outrunning certain difficulties behind her, so she resisted slowing down. The sounds of clanging steel and screaming combatants grew louder.

  Aliisza turned another corner and nearly collided with a hulking froglike demon. A hezrou demon. The stout creature towered over a dead devil, nearly filling the tunnel with its broad, slimy bo
dy. Body parts and blood from its deceased foe splattered much of the floor. It opened its wide, teeth-filled mouth and growled at the half-fiend, then drew back a claw to strike at her.

  “Wait!” she gasped, cringing back from the impending strike. “I fight for your mistress! Grekzith brought me before her! We’re on the same side!”

  The beast snarled again and pushed her aside.

  “Then get out of my way,” it rumbled.

  “Several devils coming,” she said as the behemoth demon stalked past. “Stinking, filthy barbed things.”

  The hezrou snorted and said nothing, but it sat back on its haunches and maneuvered its hands in front of itself in what Aliisza recognized as arcane gestures. She waited and watched, and as the first of the devils careened around the corner, the big frog-thing flung its spell. The barbed devil slipped and stumbled as it tried to halt, clearly surprised at the unexpected blockage in the passage.

  The demon had timed its magic well, and a cascade of bouncing, multi-colored energy burst forward from it, ricocheting off the floor, walls, and ceiling like balls of madly flashing light. The globes of power pummeled the devil and the two that slid to a stop next to it, buffeting them and knocking them backward with considerable force. The devils howled and tried to swat the swarming attacks away.

  Relieved that the hezrou had slowed the devils down, Aliisza turned back to her journey. I forgot how disgusting those things are, she thought. I must have grown soft while a guest at the Court.

  She reached the three-way intersection a few paces later and turned down the only remaining path she had not yet traversed. She listened for sounds of threats or anything else that might give her a notion of where Kaanyr was, but the tunnel ahead was silent. Only the mad fight between the hezrou and the devils reached her.

  Aliisza came to a slight incline in the path and followed it up. As she rounded another sharp bend in the passage, she found herself near the ceiling of a much larger cavern. She stood upon a small outcropping, much like a balcony, that overlooked a roomier chamber below.

 

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