, thirsty, and sore frombonds chafed her standing for hours in one position. Her
, and her head ached. Howevergenuine agonies this stuffy cellar provided, and she thought she knew why, she had yet to endure one of the
. Somemessenger had instructed the torturers to
wait for Triel to arrive before commencing the festivities.ted to converse with the little male and her jailersand failed to elicit a response fromFaeryl had already attemp eitherstruggle to govern her thoughts. She didn't want to im. She had nothing else to do butagine all the things the
Baenre might do to her, but she herself had presided over enough excruciations that it was difficult not to envision the possibilities. She didn't want to dwell onthe massacre of her followers, either, but the memories kept welling up insideher.
Surrounded and outnumbered, the daughters and sons of Ched Nasad hadperished one by one. As Faeryl watched the slaughtertears she refused to shed. Naturally, she didn't "love" her m, her eyes ached with the inions, but she wasused to them, even fond of a few, and she knew that without a retinue she wasnothing, just a fallen priestess in a land of enemies, bereft of goddess and home alike.
Then the small male confronted her and used his magic to confound her and knock her out. She woke tied to the stone stake.
A door creaked, and voices murmured. Faeryl's instincts warned her that Triel had come at last. The ambassador closed her eyes, took a deep breath, and let it out slowly, composing herself. She wouldn't show fear. Dignity was all she had
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left—for a little while longer anywayof her , until her captors lashed and burned it out
.
Sure enough, Triel and her draegloth son emerged from the doorway thatapparently led to m
ore salubrious precincts of the Great Mound. The Baenre
matron was sm
legs. iling. Fangs bared in a grin, Jeggred bounded along on his caprine The little m
ale rose and offered obeisance.
"Valas," said Triel. "W
"They tried to sneak away in disguise," the mell done. Did the Zauvirr give you any trouble?"ale replied. "It almost fooled the lookout, but once he figured out what was what, everything w
ent as
planned."
hand.The Baenre proffered a fat pouch that looked too big and heavy for her tiny
"I'
V ll send word when I need Bregan D'aerthe again," she said.alas took the pouch, then bowed low. He withdrew, and Triel and her
monstrous son turned toward the prisoner.
"Good evening, Matron," Faeryl said, "or is it morning now?"
lunged at the prisonerFighting hands outstretched, talons at the ready, jaws agape, Jeggred . Despite herself, Faeryl flinched. Both the claws and the pointed teeth stopped less than an inch
over her from her flesh. The draegloth loomed , pressing close, almost seeming to embrace her like a lover. He ran a
pointed nail across her cheek, then lifted it to his bestial muzzle. He sucked,
and a bit of warm, viscous drool, mixed, perhaps, with a trace of her blood,
"Have a care," the ambassadordripped onto her forehead. said with as much nonchalance as she could
muster. "If your son kills me quickly
Jeggred made a low , won't that spoil the fun?", grinding sound. Faeryl couldn't tell if he was growling orlaughing.
Triel said, "You underestimate him. True, I've watched him butcher eight
prisoners in as many seconds, but I've also seen him spend days picking one little faerie child apart a mote of flesh at a time. It depends on his humor, and, needless
to say"Of course," Faeryl said. The shallow gash, my instructions."
traced the edges of her lips with his claw, not quite cutting, not yet. "I hope the in her cheek began to sting. Jeggred traitor whelp appreciated the honor."
"It was hard to tell," she said. "What about you? Will you savor it?"
honor she didn'"Alas, Exalted Mothert earn." ," Faeryl said, "your daughter can take no pleasure in an
Still stroking the prisoner's features with the clawsmaller hands that, save for their dusting of fine hair, Jeggred lifted one of the , looked no different than
those of an ordinary dark elf. He caught hold of Faeryl's earshe gasped at the brutal stab of pain. When he finally l and twisted it, and
et
throbbing and ringing. She wondered if th go, the organ kept on damage, though it really didn't matter e draegloth had inflicted permanent
. In
the least of her problems. the hours to come, deafness would be
matriarch. "I always find that dull.""I wish you wouldn't deny your guilt," sighed the dainty little Baenre "Even when it's true?" Faeryl felt a fresh cut bleeding under her eye. App
aren
when Jeggred had abused her ear, she'd bucked against his claw tly,."Don't be tiresome," T
riel said. "You were fleeing, and that confirms your
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guilt."
me," Faeryl retorted. Jeggred caught "All it confirms is my certainty thathold of a lock of her hair and someone has poisoned your mind against vicious tug. "My aversion to being condem gave it a
ned unjustly."
"Did you think to escape by running back to Ched Nasad?" Triel asked. "My word is law there, too."
Jeggred slapped her with one of his enorm"How do you know?" Faeryl asked. ous fighting hands, bashing herhead sideways. For a m
oment, the shock froze her mind. When her senses
returned, she tasted blood in her mouth.
and growled, "Respect the chosen of Lolth."The draegloth crouched, placing his bestial face directly in front of her own, "I mean no disrespect," Faeryl said. "I'
m
anything could be happening in Ched Nasad. Cloakers could have overr just saying that for all we know, un thecity, or it m
ay have drowned in tides of lava. I doubt it, I pray not, but we don't
know.
We need to find out, and that's why
the weakness of Menzoberranzan' I was sneaking away. Not to betray s clergy to some enemy or other. Mother of
Lusts, it's my weakness too! To gather intelligence, to reestablish
communication—"
"I told you I have been in communication with Ched Nasad," Triel said."To reestablish
trustworthy
communication . ". . Faeryl persisted, "to make
myself useful and so demonstrate I'm your loyal vassal, never a traitor ".
Triel made a spitting sound, then said, "My loyal servants obey me."
Faeryl wanted to weep, not from fear, though she was experiencing plenty ofthat, but from sheer frustration. Jeggred ran his claw along her c
arotid artery.
"Matron," the Zauvirr said, "I beg you. Let metraduced m confront the person who
e. Give me that one chance to prove my fidelity. Is it so hard to
imagine someone telling you a lie? Don't your courtiers slander one another all
the time as a means of vying for your favor? Is it impossible that someone or
some
while days, then tendays, then mthing in Ched Nasad is lying to you even now—telling onths go by without a si you all is well ngle caravan?"T
r
zoberranzan said, "Yiel hesitated, and Faeryl felt a thou're the liar rill of hope. Then the ruler of Men-, and it will do you no good. If you want me toshow any m
ercy at all, tell me whose creature you are. The svirfneblin? The
aboleths? Another drow city?""I serve only you, Sacred Mother."
convince the Baenre of her innocence. It was too hard for TFaeryl said the words without hope, for she saw that she would never riel to measure u to
her predecessor p, too hard to rule in these desperate times, too hard to makedecisions. She wasn't about to rethink one of the few she'
squeeze out, no matter how foolish it was. d managed to
blows. Finally time seemed to skipJeggred slapped Faeryl and kept on somehowslapping until she lost count of the , and he wasn'tanymore. Why should he bother? He'd al hitting her
her ready battered all the strength out of . She would have fallen if not for the ropes holding her up. A broken tooth
had lodged under her tongue, and it was all she could do just to spit it out."I told you," the draegloth snarled,
"respect”
s why I give the truth even whenit might be easier to lie.""I am respectful," Faeryl wheezed. "That'
Triel peered up at her son and said, "Princess Zauvirr will not distract you
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from your duties."Jeggred inclined his head. "No, Mother."
use the spy as you see fit. "But at such times as I do not requireIf she tells you anything of interest, pass it a you," the matron continued, "you may lon butthe point of your efforts is chastisement, not interrogation. I doubt she has g,
anything all that important to confide. We already know who our enemiesare."
"Yes, Mother." The half-demon crouched, leered into Faeryl's face, and said,
"I can make the fun last. You'll see."
He stuck out his long, pointed tongue and licked blood from her face. Themember was as rough as a beast'
s.
The figure in the chapel doorway had a bulbous head with huge, protrudingobscuring the mouth. It had gnarled three-fingered hands, a body with eyes, dry, wrinkled hide, and four wriggling tentacles surrounding and contours and proportions different than those of a drow, and an assortment oftalismans and amulets burning whad no doubt, was a member of ith strange enchantments. Syrzan, Pharaun