Authors: Troy Denning
Rapha ignored them.
Finally, Galaeron said, “The enclave is a long way off. You might want to send Escanor ahead.”
The Shadovar fixed his ruby eyes on Galaeron. “Concerned for the prince, are we?”
“Of course,” Vala said.
“Most concerned,” Malik agreed. He hesitated for a moment, then was unable to keep from adding, “But we are even more concerned for ourselves. We know who will be blamed if he dies.”
This drew a sour smile from the shadow lord. Like everyone in the company, Rapha knew that Malik had been cursed by the goddess Mystra to speak only the truth or not all. It was an irony in which Shadovar seemed to take special delight.
Rapha clapped a hand on the little man’s shoulder. “You have nothing to fear, my stubby friend. You were not even at the Splicing.”
“But>>0M were,” Galaeron said, wondering what Rapha was playing at. “You know I meant no harm to the prince.”
“I know what I saw,” Rapha said. “You used a shadow snare to keep the thornback trapped beside the prince.”
“Had I let the thing teleport away, the shadowshell would be no prison at all,” Galaeron retorted. “Those phaerimm were there to learn its secret, and what they discovered was important, or they would have attacked us long before I found them.”
Rapha considered this, then his voice grew quiet and menacing. “How is it you know so much about the phaerimm, elf? Why could you find them when twenty shadow lords could not?”
Galaeron glanced away. “I can’t say why,” he admitted. “It just seemed right that they would be there.”
“It just seemed right,” Rapha echoed dubiously.
“I think his shadow knew,” Vala said. “He didn’t say anything about them until his shadow self asserted itself.”
Rapha shook his head impatiently. “The shadow self is only an absence of what a person is, a darker image of himself that he creates simply by being what he is. It cannot know more than its creator, any more than its creator can know it.”
Galaeron shrugged. “Then I can’t explain it,” he said. “I just had a feeling they would be thereand I was right”
“And risking Prince Escanor’s life?” Rapha asked. “You just had a feeling about that?”
“I had to do it to save the shell,” Galaeron said. “I knew that, just like I knew the phaerimm would try to teleport away.”
Rapha shook his head. “You can’t be sure,” he insisted. “Your shadow self has you in its grasp. Your thinking could have been subverted”
“But I can be sure that he needs a healerand soon,” Galaeron interrupted. This Rapha was a sly one, accusing Galaeron of trying to harm the princeand wasting valuable time. “Unless you have some reason for delaying? Perhaps you’d like to see Escanor hatch a thornback egg?”
Rapha’s eyes flared from ruby to white-orange. “I have nothing but love for all the princes of Shade, elf.”
“Then wouldn’t it be wise to have someone return him to the enclave at once?”
“It would, had Prince Escanor been lucid enough to tell us today’s word of passing,” Rapha said. “As it is, anyone who tries to enter through the shadows will find himself plummeting through to the Barrens of Doom and Despair.”
“So we must return the slow way,” Vala said, placing herself between Galaeron and Rapha to cut off further argument. “Can Escanor ride?”
“It would be better if he didn’t,” Rapha said. “Perhaps your friend would be kind enough to take a passenger.”
The shadow lord motioned across the wash, to where a grim-faced stone giant with sad gray eyes was kneeling over a ten-foot block of quartzite. He was clinking away with his sculptor’s tools, fashioning a life-sized model of the struggle between Escanor and the phaerimm that had wounded him. Though the work was still rough, it was obvious by the snaking forms and undulating hollows that he had captured not only the details, but the spirit and swiftness of the battleand from little more than a description of the events.
“I am confident Aris would be pleased to be of some small service to the prince,” Malik said. “While we were watching the camp, he said many timesif once can be considered manythat he wished he were small enough to accompany the rest of the company into the
Underdark and do his part to seal the fate of the phaerimm.”
“Good. Will you be kind enough to ask him for me? Ill have the prince brought over directly.” Rapha waved Malik toward Aris, then turned to Galaeron and Vala. “You can tell which mounts are yours? Well be leaving shortly.”
“We’ll be fine,” Vala said. “I banded a leg on each of ours.”
The precaution was not a frivolous one. The Shadovar’s flying mountsveserabswere odd, furless creatures that had no faces and uniform midnight-blue skin. With four spindly legs, fan-shaped ears, and a pair of gargoyle-like wings folded alongside their tubular bodies, they looked like an unfortunate cross between bats and earthworms. Once they impressed on a rider, their devotion was absoluteto the point that they would spit noxious fumes into the face of anyone else who tried to mount them.
Galaeron followed her down the draw until they found a trio of veserabs wearing copper bands on their legs. Vala pointed to one with a band on its right foreleg. Galaeron gave the wing joint a tentative squeeze and slipped a foot into the stirrup. The creature did not react until he lowered his full weight into the saddle, when much to his reliefan undulation of pleasure ran down its long body.
A few moments later, Malik returned and climbed into his saddle, and Rapha signaled the departure. The veserabs charged down the wash until they gathered enough speed, then spread their wings and rose into the air in flawless formation. Many of the shadow lords were tied across their saddles, but only Escanor’s mount was riderless. The company had recovered all of its casualties and carried them through fifty twining Underdark miles back to the surface.
As they climbed out of the wash, a huge dome of darkness rose into view over their shoulders at Anauroch’s western edge. Even from a dozen miles into the desert, the barrier was immense, curving away high into the sky and stretching north and south as far as the eye could see. Through its black translucency, Galaeron could just make out the stacked crests of the foothills of the Desert Border South and, looming behind, the familiar crags of High Sharaedim itself. He could not help thinking of what lay beyond those peaks, the vale and city of Evereskaand his sister, Keya, safe within the city’s protective mythal. He knew better than to think that his warrior father had been lucky enough to survive his duties to return to her side, but Lord Aubric Nihmedu was as resourceful as he was brave, and there was no harm in praying it so.
Once the veserabs had ascended high enough to avoid being surprised by an attack from the ground, Aris rose into the air on an ancient Netherese flying disk. Though the bronze saucer was neither as swift nor as maneuverable as a veserab, it was capable of carrying not only the giant’s weight but also that of the wounded prince, his campaign tent, and Aris’s half-completed statue. Its one drawback was that Aris could not defend himself in an air battle. The disks had been designed as battle platforms for Netherese archwizards, not stone giant clerics.
As the company leveled off and fixed their course on the murky silhouette of Shade Enclave, the formation began to loosen, giving the veserabs room to relax and stretch their wings. The creatures did not fly so much as swim through the atmosphere, reaching forward to grab a piece of air, then pulling themselves past. The turbulence and slipstreams created by tight formations made it more difficult to stay aloft with this strange motion, so
they usually divided into smaller groups and flew side by side when traveling long distances. Vala and Malik drew up on opposite sides of Galaeron, spacing themselves about thirty feet apart.
Even had they been close enough to speak comfortably, the pounding veserab wings would have made it impossible to hear. They continued toward the dusk with only their own thoughts for company, leaving it to their mounts to steer a course toward the enclave while they watched their assigned slice of sky. Though most of the phaerimm were trapped inside the shadowshell, their hosts of servants and slaves remained free and apt to attack at any time. Twice, Rapha dispatched fliers to chase down and slay asabi lizardmen lest they were scouting for a larger company, and once they themselves had to swing into the shadows beneath a long line of cliffs when Vala spied the flea-sized spheres of a distant beholder troop bobbing across the moon’s face.
Galaeron spent most of the trip brooding over the bitter words that had passed between him and Rapha. When they reached Shade Enclave, the lord clearly intended to blame him for what had befallen Escanor, and part of Galaeron even wondered if that could be justified. His shadow self was as insidious as it was dark, always working to make him see dishonorable motives in the actions of everyone around him, and for some time he had been growing angry about the hungry look in Escanor’s eyes whenever he addressed Vala. Was it possible that Galaeron had sent the phaerimm to Escanor not because he wanted to be certain of killing it, but because his shadow self wanted to see the prince harmed instead?
The thought sent a shiver down Galaeron’s spine, for it meant that the darkness had begun to invade his actions as well as his perceptions. The idea was driven
from his mind as quickly as it had arrived, though. The prince had already killed one phaerimm and was about to slay the second, so it just seemed wisest to send him the third as well. Besides, if he really thought about it, Escanor deserved what had happened. Had he listened to Galaeron in the first place, the company would have been ready for the attack, and
“No.”
Galaeron spoke the word aloud and, alarmed at how powerful his shadow was growing, shook his head clear. The rationalization had come so smoothly, felt so natural that he had almost accepted the reasoning as his own. He would have to speak with his friends about this as soon as they landed. Aris had suggested that the best way to combat the influence of his shadow self was to be completely open about what he was thinking and feeling and let the opinions of his friends guide him. So faras long as he didn’t listen to Malikthe stone giant’s strategy had not only worked, it had kept Galaeron more or less in control of himself. It had also brought him closer to Vala than was probably wise, considering the fleeting and intense nature of human lives.
Galaeron’s thoughts came to an end when the veserabs let out a single high-pitched screech and abruptly started to climb. Night had fallen and it was so dark that he could see clearly no more than sixty feet in front of his face, but the light of the stars above was being blocked by Shade Enclave’s looming form. It was not long before a few bats from the growing colony on the enclave’s underside began to flit about their heads. Rapha called the company back into a tight formation, and the shadowy crags of a capsized mountaintop appeared over their heads. They circled the funnel-shaped peak in an ever-growing spiral, exchanging silent salutes with the jewel-eyed sentries watching from
hidden nooks and crannies. Finally, they came to the Cave Gate, hidden in the deep shadows beneath a massive overhang and all but invisible even to Galaeron’s dark sight.
The veserabs climbed so close to the roof that the riders had to lean forward and press tight against the creatures’ fleshy backs. Then, one after the other, the veserabs gave short screeches, folded their wings tight against their bodies, and dived through a square of nothingness so dark that Galaeron could not tell it from the black gates themselves. He felt his sleeve brush against one edge of the wicket gate, then the air grew muggy and warm and he knew they had entered the vast Wing Court.
His mount spiraled downward into a dimly lit mezzanine area and landed in formation, six places behind Rapha and between Vala and Malik. Galaeron was astonished to see the Princes Rivalen, Brennus, and Lamorak standing at the head of the landing yard with a full company of shadow warriors.
Following the lead of Rapha and the rest of the Shadovar, Galaeron slipped off his veserab and kneeled on the floor, pressing his forehead to the cold stone. He cast an apprehensive glance in Vala’s direction and saw her looking at him just as nervously, but neither dared to speak the question on their minds.
When the rest of the riders had dismounted and assumed similar positions, Galaeron sensed the princes and their guards coming across the floor. There was no soundno tramping feet or clinking armor, nor even the whisper of boots scuffing cold stoneonly a growing sense of stillness and apprehension.
Finally, Prince Rivalen’s deep voice sounded not ten paces ahead. “Who is in command here?”
“I am,” answered Rapha’s quavering voice.
He stood and gasped softly, then described what had occurred at the underground lake, making clear what he had observed with his own eyes and what had been reported to him by others. When Rapha came to the attack on Prince Escanor, he took care to relay only the facts, though his acid tone made clearat least to Galaeronwhere he was trying to lay the blame. The shadow lord finished by reporting the successful completion of the Splicing and venturing the opinion that the phaerimm trapped within the Sharaedim would perish within a few months.
“And what of Escanor?” The voice that asked this was sibilant and pervasive, like a whisper echoing into the chamber from some distant passage. “Where is he now?”
“On the flying disk with the native giant,” Rapha reported.
like Aris himself, the flying disk was too large for the wicket door that opened into the passage leading down to the Wing Court. The stone giant would have to wait outside the Cave Gate until it was opened, then land on the great Marshaling Plaza itself.
“Most High,” Prince Brennus said, “I’ll summon a healer and see to our brother.”
If there was a response, Galaeron did not hear it. The air grew chill and motionless, and he sensed someone standing above him.
“You are the one who held the phaerimm beside Escanor?” asked the same wispy voice that had spoken before.