Twilight Falling
And with each step of the healing process, the wounds that had healed in Cale manifested on Magadon. The guide groaned as his ribs shattered, and he gritted his teeth as his skin split.
The entire process took only moments.
Afterward, Cale was whole but for the stump of his hand. Magadon was ruined.
The guide collapsed beside him, eyes squeezed shut, face contorted with pain. Cale would have healed him if he had had his holy symbol. With nothing else for it, he sat up, put a comforting hand on Magadon, and looked up at Riven.
“What have you done?”
“Saved you,” Riven said unemotionally, and nodded at Magadon. “Watch.”
Cale watched, wide-eyed, as Magadon visibly gathered himself and attempted to concentrate. Before Cale’s eyes, the slashes in the guide’s flesh faded, and his ribs healed.
“Dark,” Jak whispered from behind him, watching with one eye while keeping the other on Magadon’s comrade.
Cale too was amazed. He had seen Magadon cast no healing spell.
“How?” he asked Riven.
Riven’s mouth twisted with distaste.
“Back in Selgaunt,” the assassin said. “I told you I once knew a mind mage. Now you do too.”
“Psionicist,” Magadon corrected, groaning as he lifted himself into a seated position. “Mind mage sounds ridiculous.”
Riven scoffed.
Cale helped Magadon to his feet and asked, “You healed me with your mind?”
Magadon looked him in the face with those knucklebone eyes and replied, “I established a sympathetic bond between us and took your wounds as my own. I healed myself with my mind.”
Cale absorbed that, still astounded.
“So you can only heal yourself?” he asked.
Magadon nodded.
A thought occurred to Cale and he asked, “Can you pass the wounds to another?”
A guarded look came over the guide’s face.
“Only if the other were willing,” he said. “It’s not a weapon.”
Cale considered that, nodded, and extended his remaining hand.
“I’m Erevis Cale,” he said, “and I’m in your debt.”
Magadon took his hand.
“Magadon Kest. And that,” he nodded to his comrade, a large man in studded leather armor, armed with bow and a greatsword, “is Nestor.”
The big man nodded his balding head in acknowledgement. His wide-eyed gaze lingered over the corpse of the slain creature.
Magadon went on, “Perhaps you’d consider calling off the halfling? Nestor looks intimidated.”
“Piss off,” said the big man.
“Jak,” Cale said with a smile.
The halfling sheathed his blades and gave Nestor an apologetic shrug.
For the first time, it registered that both Jak and Riven were wounded. Cale reached for his holy symbol—
And realized again that he had no holy symbol. And no hand. He looked at the stump. Strangely, it felt as though he still had a hand, as though he could still flex his fingers. He felt no pain, just loss. He looked to the corpse of the creature.
“What did you call her?” he asked Magadon.
“Her? How in the Hells would you know it was a ‘her’?”
Cale gave no answer, and Magadon shrugged.
“She’s a slaad, I think,” the guide said. “Creatures of chaos. Not of this world.” He looked at Riven. “Not enough enemies in Faerûn for you, Drasek?”
Riven sneered.
Nestor, standing over the slaad’s corpse with a haunted look, poked at the body with his greatsword. Cale figured Nestor had never before seen anything like her.
“Cut her up and burn her,” Cale said. “Then we move.”
Nestor whirled on them.
“What?” he asked, horror obvious in his eyes.
“They heal,” Riven said. “Faster than a troll. It’s the only way to be certain. Fleet, start a fire. Keep it low. We don’t need the whole forest seeing it.”
Jak nodded and set to work. Afterward, while Magadon, Jak, and Nestor chopped the slaad’s body into manageable pieces, Cale pulled Riven aside.
“How well do you know him?” Cale asked, indicating Magadon.
“We go back a bit. I’d trust him as much as you. He’s been a guide out of Starmantle for years. Did some work for the Zhents years ago. His comrade is unknown to me.”
“Get him over here.”
Riven called Magadon over while Nestor and Jak put the slaad to the flames. The creature’s flesh shed greasy black smoke as it burned. It smelled like eggs gone bad. Of course, Cale knew that somewhere in the flames his holy symbol too was burning. He watched the flesh char and peel away from the bones, hoping that somewhere the flames warmed the departed souls of the Uskevren house guards she had murdered.
When Magadon walked over, Cale asked him, “Can you get us to the Lightless Lake by midnight?”
Magadon frowned and said, “That’ll be tight. The marsh is hard going. But I know the way.” He paused, then added, “What’s in it for me and Nestor?”
“Three hundred fivestar—gold pieces each,” Cale said. “You’ll have to take my word for payment, at least for now.” When Magadon didn’t balk, Cale went on, “There’s likely to be danger there. And more of those.” He indicated the roasting slaad with the stump of his hand. “Innocent lives may be at stake, but you should understand that this really is a personal matter.”
The guide stared him in the face, his expression unreadable.
“There aren’t any innocent lives, Erevis,” Magadon said, “and I wouldn’t trust a man who was out to save ’em. A grudge, now that I can understand. We’re in for three hundred wheels.”
He gave Riven a look then walked back to help burn the slaad to ash.
After he’d gone, Riven indicated Cale’s stump and asked, “How is it?”
Coming from Riven, the question surprised Cale. He remembered the thought that had occurred to him as he lay dying: Was Riven his friend?
“I’ll manage,” he said. “Lost the mask, though. No spells until I get a new symbol.”
He managed to keep his tone level, but in truth he had no idea how he would obtain another holy symbol. The mask had come to him by …
Fate, he thought, and almost smiled. Almost.
Riven’s hand went to his own holy symbol, then he wiped the slaad’s black blood from his sabers and scabbarded them.
“Let’s find this prig of a mage.”
CHAPTER 17
SUMMONING SHADOWS
Behind Vraggen, the bullywugs ceased beating their drums and fell silent. The hushed air was rich with anticipation. The bullywugs seemed to be holding their breath beneath their torches. Eglos, their shaman, had represented to his faithful that the expected appearance of the Fane of Shadows would be a sign that the tribe was favored by Ramenos. Worked into a religious frenzy, the gullible creatures now would tear to shreds anyone else who attempted to set foot in the area.
“I’ll never get this stink off of my clothes,” Azriim said, beside him.
Vraggen made no reply. He stood on the edge of the Lightless Lake with the half-drow and Serrin to either side.
The Lightless Lake was a small body of water, but Vraggen knew its depths to be infinite. Like a well in the world, it had no shallows. Stepping into even the edge of its waters meant sinking to depths beyond measure. No starlight, no glow from Selûne’s tears reflected on the pitch waters. Ripples did not mar its surface. It was a darkened mirror, a perfect reflection of the night.
It was a holy place.
Vraggen waited, increasingly anxious. The midnight hour approached. If Azriim had correctly deduced the time from the star globe, soon the Fane would appear, soon he would be transformed.
The Fane was a gift of the gods of shadows to their faithful, a sanctuary that journeyed through time and worlds. It was a bastion, an armory for servants of the twilight. Only one who understood the shadow could enter it safely and bypass i
ts guardians.
A cold breeze stirred, whispering through the stands of cypress. As one, the bullywugs uttered a low croak of awe. They sensed the growing presence of the Fane, but dared not approach nearer than a spearcast to the water.
Ochre light began to pulse from deep in the depths of the lake.
“Look,” Vraggen said.
“I see,” Azriim said softly, and Vraggen heard the anticipation in his voice.
The green light grew brighter, fuller, but somehow did nothing to dispel the darkness of night.
Beside him, Azriim shook his head sharply, as though to shed an unpleasant thought.
“There is a problem,” he said, softly.
What problem could there be? Vraggen’s triumph—Cyric’s triumph—was at hand.
“Speak,” the mage commanded.
Azriim looked him in the eyes. The ochre light from the lake cast the half-drow’s face in a sinister light.
Azriim said, “Cale is coming.”
Vraggen couldn’t believe it so he asked, “Why do you think this?”
Azriim hesitated a moment before answering, “Elura and Dolgan were to transport themselves here at this hour. Something must have prevented that. It can only be Cale. He must have tracked us from Selgaunt.”
Vraggen whirled on Serrin and spat, “You—!”
Azriim held up his hands and interposed himself between Serrin and the furious mage.
“They left Serrin for dead at the Twisted Elm, Vraggen,” the half-drow said. “He told them nothing. If it were otherwise, I would know. Cale probably tracked us by magical means.”
Vraggen stared into Azriim’s mismatched eyes and knew the half-drow was right. Besides, it didn’t matter how Cale had tracked them. To Vraggen, Cale was nothing more than another obstacle to overcome in his quest to glorify Cyric. He recovered his calm.
“The bullywugs will have some sport, then. Excellent.” Vraggen turned back to the lake and looked across its still surface, into the glow in its depths. He pointed and said, “Behold, Azriim. The Fane of Shadows.”
Azriim and Serrin leaned forward to see.
Deep below the surface of the lake, the diffuse ochre light pierced the pitch to illumine marble columns veined in black, graceful arches, thick pillars, obsidian sculptures of a hundred world’s gods of the night—a temple, the Fane. Living shadows swirled around the columns, danced through the arches. The waters of the Lightless Lake blurred the image but the beauty of the Fane was undeniable. It seemed to hang suspended in the depths, like a star in the heavens.
Within, Vraggen knew, was power.
“Open the way,” said Azriim.
Vraggen nodded. He held up his arms, uttered the arcane words to a spell of opening, and powered it by tapping the Shadow Weave. He sent the shadow magic spiraling into the lake. In answer, the waters seethed and hissed.
Behind them, the bullywugs croaked in unison, caught in a religious ecstasy.
The waters of the lake parted, solidified, and formed a narrow, step-lined, hollow shaft that pierced the lake’s depths all the way to the Fane. It appeared as though the invisible finger of a god had penetrated the lake to point Vraggen’s way.
“Well done,” Azriim breathed.
Vraggen couldn’t help but smile as he said, “Only one who wields the Weave behind the Weave can do what I have done.”
“I know,” said Azriim.
Vraggen turned to the bullywugs and in their tongue, which he could speak only through the power of his magic, he shouted, “Ramenos shows his favor to this tribe and I am consumed in his maw. Remain until the sign has passed, then go with the blessing of the Maw. Kill any others who appear.”
The shaman and fat chieftain echoed Vraggen’s words and the tribe croaked agreement.
“Come,” Vraggen said to Serrin and Azriim. He turned to look down the shaft. “The Fane remains in each world for only a short while. What we seek is within.”
“Indeed,” Azriim said, and he smiled with his perfect teeth.
Despite the steep angle of the shaft, the footing within it was firm, the water somehow solid. Far below them, the Fane beckoned, itself seemingly situated on an invisible platform and surrounded by a dome of air. Its shadow guardians lurked at the bottom of the shaft, in the statue littered courtyard before the great iron doors of the Fane’s entrance. As they descended, the shaft closed behind them, and the shadows swarmed toward them.
“They will not harm us,” Vraggen said to Azriim and Serrin as he led them downward. When they neared the bottom of the shaft, Vraggen announced to the guardians, “I am a servant of the hidden power, the Weave behind the Weave, Shar’s darkness to Selûne’s light and Mystra’s folly. I will pass.”
The shadows parted as had the water. They stood on an invisible disc, surrounded by a dome of air. Vraggen savored the moment. Around them, the statues of a hundred gods from a hundred worlds looked on. Vraggen walked through the courtyard to the doors. He put his hand to the iron pull ring and heaved open the door.
The forest floor sloped downward and grew increasingly soft as they moved through the Gulthmere. After a time, the thick stands of pines and cedars gave way to brooding cypresses. Pools of stagnant water dotted the undergrowth, increasingly common as they moved along. A pungent organic smell wafted from the water.
“It is well for you that this was a dry spring,” Magadon said. “Otherwise, these ponds would be more like lakes, and the ground nothing but a muddy swamp.”
Even in the scant illumination from Jak’s bluelight wand, Cale could see that the swamp was no real swamp at all. Rather, it was just a lowland area within the forest that was dotted with pools—the Gulthmere’s drain.
Still, the air felt different, thick, oily. Some evil slept there, Cale was sure of it.
Jak pulled at his sleeve and said, “Your sword.”
Cale nodded. He knew. He held his blade unsheathed in his good hand and wisps of darkness played along its length. Ever since they’d passed the border stones, it had been bleeding shadows.
“The sphere …” Cale began
“… transformed it,” Jak finished, nodding. He eyed the wisps of shadow swirling around Cale’s hand and forearm. “They don’t hurt, do they? Do you feel yourself?”
Cale went to put his hand on Jak’s shoulder and instead thumped him with his stump. Jak grimaced, but Cale forced a smile.
“What’s left of me feels like myself, little man.”
Jak’s eyes were pained. “There’s magic that can fix that, Cale,” he said, indicating Cale’s wrist.
“That’s for later,” Cale said. “For now, let’s do what we came to do.”
Jak nodded and they continued following Magadon and Nestor.
Midnight arrived—Cale felt it—and still they had not reached the Moonmere. He feared they would not arrive in time to stop Vraggen.
“Magadon,” Cale prodded, “we need to move!”
The guide, standing with Nestor atop a low rise about half a spearcast ahead, hissed for silence and sank to the ground. He lowered himself to his stomach and waved everyone down. Cale, Jak, and Riven hit the earth and crawled forward.
When he reached the top of the rise, Cale saw what had given the guide alarm: torchlight in the distance, and a strange, pulsing ochre glow. With each pulse of the light, Cale felt a pressure on his ears.
“Do you feel that?” he asked Jak.
“I feel it.”
Due to distance and intervening stands of cypress and undergrowth, Cale could make out no more.
“The Moonmere is just beyond the tree line,” Magadon said. “Those torches burn near its shore. Your enemies are on guard, it appears.”
“Where is the temple?” Cale asked Magadon.
Magadon looked at him strangely and said, “There is no temple here, Cale.”
Cale didn’t even pause. “Yes there is. Jak?”
“I’ll scout it,” the halfling said as he took out his holy symbol.
Cale gripped him
by the shoulder and warned, “As fast as possible, little man. Midnight is past. Find Vraggen. If not, find the temple and find us a way in.”
“Not more than a quarter hour,” Jak said, and he vanished into the forest.
As promised, the halfling returned in less than a quarter hour.
“It’s me,” he said, and stepped from the shadows.
Already, he had his pipe in hand. Shielding the flame with his palm, he lit it with a tindertwig.
“Well?” Riven asked.
Jak blew out a smoke ring and said, “About thirty bullywugs, arranged in a line about forty paces from the lakeshore. They’ve got a priest with them. They appear to be waiting for something.”
“Did you find the Fane?” Cale asked.
“Yes,” Jak answered, and his brow furrowed. “But that’s the problem. It’s in the lake.”
“There’s nothing in that lake,” Magadon said. “It’s a pit.”
“It’s there,” Jak said, and he took another pull on his pipe.
“So we’ll swim to it,” Riven said.
“No,” Jak replied. “I mean it’s in the Lake. Underwater. Deep underwater. That green glow is coming from it. You can see the Fane down there if you look from the shore right in front of the bullywugs. It’s like it’s just … hanging there, surrounded by a giant bubble.”
“Even if we could swim to it,” Nestor grumbled, “and even if it’s got a bubble of air around it, how can we hold our air long enough to swim down there? The halfling said it’s a long way down.” The big human looked to Magadon. “Mags, this cannot be done. Let’s take our payment and go.”
Cale said nothing. He couldn’t blame the big man but would welcome Magadon’s presence. Riven stared contempt at Nestor.
Magadon considered. He looked to Cale and Riven.
“Why not wait?” the guide asked. “If you seek someone who is within, he’ll come out sooner or later. You can move on him then.”
Cale replied, “No. The mage we’re after must be stopped before he gets what he seeks. Besides, this quarry does not need to exit through doors. If we don’t stop him now, we may never see him again.”
Magadon still looked uncertain.
“They got in,” Cale said to him. “And they need to breathe. So there’s a way. We’ll find it.” He paused before adding, “With or without you.”