Read R.A. Salvatore's War of the Spider Queen: Dissolution, Insurrection, Condemnation Online
Authors: Richard Lee & Reid Byers,Richard Lee & Reid Byers,Richard Lee & Reid Byers
Tags: #General, #Fantasy, #Fiction, #Epic
“He was setting you up.”
“Now you’re getting it. While the clerics stay busy seeking me, the decoy, my illustrious chief will undertake another, more discreet inquiry undisturbed, by performing divinations and interrogating demons, probably.”
“You knew, and you undertook the mission anyway.”
“Because knowing doesn’t change my fundamental circumstances. If I want to retain my rank and quite possibly my life, I still have to complete the task the archwizard set me, even though he was playing me for a fool, even with Greyanna striving to hinder the process.” Pharaun grinned and added, “Besides, where
did
all those runaways go, and why do the greatest folk in Menzoberranzan care? It’s a fascinating puzzle, even more so now that I’ve inferred a portion of the answer. Did I leave it unsolved, it would haunt me forevermore.”
“You played me for a fool,” said Ryld. “Granted, you warned me the priestesses might interfere with us, but you greatly understated the danger. You didn’t tell me you were marked before we even descended from Tier Breche. Why not? Did you think I’d refuse to accompany you?”
Most uncharacteristically, the glib wizard hesitated. Far below the shelf, a whip snapped and a goblin screamed.
“No,” said Pharaun eventually, “not really. I suppose it’s just that dark elves are jealous of their secrets. So are the nobly born. So are wizards. And I’m all three! Will you pardon me? It isn’t as if you’ve never kept a secret from me.”
“When?”
“During the first three years of our acquaintance, whenever we fraternized, you kept a dagger specially charmed for the killing of mages ever close to your hand. You suspected I was only seeking your company because one of your rivals in Melee-Magthere had engaged me to murder you as soon as the opportunity arose.”
“How did you discover that? Never mind, I suppose it was your silver ring. I didn’t know what it was back then. Anyway, that’s not the same kind of secret.”
“You’re right, it isn’t, and I regret my reticence but I do propose to make up for it by sharing the most astonishing confidence you’ve ever heard.”
Ryld stared into Pharaun’s eyes. “I’ll pardon you. With the understanding that if you withhold any other pertinent information, I’ll knock you over the head and deliver you to your bitch sister myself.”
“Point taken. Shall we sit?” Pharaun pointed to a bench hewn from the limestone wall at the back of the ledge. “My discourse may take a little time, and I daresay we could use a rest after our exertions.”
As he turned away from the molded rock rampart, Ryld noticed that the cracking of the whip had stopped. When he glanced down, two goblins were carrying the corpse of a third, hauling it somewhere to be chopped apart and the pieces turned to some useful purpose. Possibly chow for other thralls.
The fencing teacher sat down and removed a cloth, a whetstone, and a vial of oil from the pockets of his garments. He unfastened his short sword from his belt, pulled on the hilt, and made a little spitting sound of displeasure when the blade, which he had been forced to put away bloody, stuck in the scabbard. He yanked more forcefully, and it came free.
He looked over at Pharaun, who was regarding with him with a sort of quizzical exasperation.
“Talk,” the warrior said. “I can care for my gear and listen at the same time.”
“Is this how you attend to mind-boggling revelations? I suppose I’m lucky you don’t have to use the jakes. All right, here it is . . . Lolth is gone. Well, maybe not
gone
, but unavailable at least in the sense that it’s no longer possible for her Menzoberranyr clerics to receive spells from her.”
For a moment, Ryld thought he’d misheard the words. “I guess that’s a joke?” he asked. “I’m glad you didn’t make it while we were in the middle of a crowd. There’s no point compounding our crimes with blasphemy.”
“Blasphemy or not, it’s the truth.”
Rag in hand, Ryld scrubbed tacky blood off the short sword.
“What are you suggesting,” the weapons master asked, “another Time of Troubles? Could there be two such upheavals?”
Pharaun grinned and said, “Possibly, but I think not. When the gods were forced to inhabit the mortal world, the arcane forces we wizards command fluctuated unpredictably. One day, we could mold the world like clay. The next, we couldn’t turn ice to water. That isn’t happening now. My powers remain constant as ever, from which I tentatively infer this is not the Time of Troubles come again but a different sort of occurrence.”
“What sort?”
“Oh, am I supposed to know that already? I thought I was doing rather well to detect the occurrence at all.”
“Only if it’s really happening.”
Ryld inspected the point of the short stabbing blade, then took the hone to it. Bemused by Pharaun’s contention, he wondered how his canny friend could credit such a ludicrous idea.
“I want you to think back over the confrontation from which we just emerged,” said the Master of Sorcere. “Did you even once see Greyanna or the other priestess cast divine magic from her own mind and inner strength as opposed to off a scroll or out of some device?”
“I was fighting the skeletons.”
“You keep track of every foe on the battleground. I know you do. So, did you see them casting spells out of their own innate power?”
Ryld thought that of course he had . . . then realized he hadn’t.
“What does that suggest?” Pharaun asked. “They have no spells left in their heads, or only a few, which they’re hoarding desperately because they can’t solicit new ones from their goddess. Lolth has withdrawn her favor from Menzoberranzan, or . . . something.”
“Why would she do that?”
“Would she need a reason—or at any rate, one her mortal children can comprehend? She is a deity of chaos. Perhaps she’s testing us somehow, or else she’s angry and deems us unworthy of her patronage.
“Or, as I suggested before, the cause of her silence, if in fact she is mute when her clerics pray to her and not just uncooperative, may be something else altogether. Perhaps even another happenstance involving all the gods. Since we have only one faith and clergy in Menzoberranzan, it’s difficult to judge.”
“Wait,” Ryld said. He unstoppered his little bottle of oil. The sharp smell provided a welcome counterpoint to the moist stink of the dung fields. “I admit, I didn’t see Greyanna or any of the lesser priestesses working magic, but didn’t you yourself once tell me that in the turmoil of battle, it’s often easier and more reliable to cast your effects from a wand or parchment?”
“I suppose I did. Still, under normal circumstances, would you expect a pair of spellcasters to conjure every single manifestation that way? Just before our exit, I saw Greyanna groping in the ether for a weapon that was slow in coming to her hand. The sister I remember would have said to the Hells with it and dumped some other magic on our heads. That is, unless something had circumscribed her options.”
“I see what you mean,” Ryld conceded, “but when the clerics lost their powers in the Time of Troubles, it destabilized the balance of power among the noble Houses. Those who believed the change made them stronger in relative terms struck hard to supplant their rivals. As far as I can see, that isn’t happening now, just the usual level of controlled enmity.”
He laid the short sword aside and picked up Splitter.
Pharaun nodded and said, “You’ll recall that none of the Houses attempting to exploit the Time of Troubles ultimately profited thereby. To the contrary, the Baenre and others punished them for their temerity. Perhaps the matron mothers took the lesson to heart.”
“So instead of hatching schemes to topple one another, they . . . what? Enlisted every single priestess in a grand conspiracy to conceal their fall from grace? If your mad idea is right, that’s what they must have done.”
“Why is that implausible? Picture the day—a few tendays past?—when they lost the ability to draw power from their goddess. Clerics of Lolth routinely collaborate in magical rituals, so they would have discovered fairly quickly that they were all similarly afflicted. Apprised of the scope of the situation, Triel Baenre, possibly in hurried consultation with our esteemed Mistress Quenthel and the matrons of the Council, might well have decided to conceal the priesthood’s debility and sent the word round in time to keep anyone from blabbing.”
“The word would have to pass pretty damn quickly,” said Ryld, examining Splitter’s edge. As he’d expected, despite all the bone it had just bitten through, it was as preternaturally keen and free of notches and chips as ever.
“Oh, I don’t know,” the wizard said. “If you lost the strength of your arms, would you be eager to announce it, knowing the news would find its way to everyone who’d ever taken a dislike to you? Anyway, since this is the first we’ve learned of the problem, the deception obviously did organize in time.”
“Or else everything is as it always was, and the plot exists only in your imagination.”
“Oh, it’s real. I’m sure Triel deemed the ruse necessary to make sure no visitor would discern Menzoberranzan’s sudden weakness.” He grinned and added, “And to fix it so we poor males wouldn’t swoon with terror upon learning that our betters had lost a measure of their ability to guide and protect us.”
“Well, it’s an amusing fancy.”
“Fire and glare, you’re a hard boy to convince, and I’ll be cursed if I know why. You’ve already lived through the Time of Troubles, the previous Matron Baenre’s death, and the defeat of Menzoberranzan by a gaggle of wretched dwarves. Why do you assume our world cannot have altered in some fundamental way when you’ve watched it change so many times before? Open your mind, and you’ll see my hypothesis makes sense of all that has puzzled us.”
“What do you mean?”
“Whatever they’re up to, how is it that for the past month an unusual number of males have dared to elope from their families? Because they somehow tumbled to the fact that a priestess’s wrath now constitutes less of a threat.”
“While the clerics,” said Ryld, catching the thread of the argument, “are eager to catch them because they want to know how the males know about the Silence, if we’re going to call it that. Hells, if all those males had the nerve to run away, maybe they even know more about the problem than the females do.”
“Conceivably,” said Pharaun. “The priestesses can’t rule it out until they strap a few of them to torture racks, can they? But they don’t want Gromph involved with capturing the rogues because . . . ?”
“They don’t want him to find out what the runaways know.”
“Very good, apprentice. We’ll make a logician of you yet.”
“Do you think the archmage already knows the divines have lost their magic?”
“I’d bet your left eye on it, but he’s in the same cart as the high priestesses. He posits that the fugitives might know even more.”
Ryld nodded. “In a war, or any crisis, you have to cover every possibility.”
“The notion of the Silence even explains why the Jewel Box was so crowded, and why some of the patrons were in a belligerent humor or even bruised and battered. Females divested of their magic might well feel weak and vulnerable. Consciously or otherwise, they’d worry about losing control of the folk in their household and compensate by instituting a harsher discipline than usual.”
“I see that,” said Ryld.
“Of course you do. As I said, the one hypothesis accounts for every anomaly. That’s why we can be confident the idea is valid.”
“How does it account for the relative paucity of goods in the Bazaar?”
Pharaun blinked, narrowed his eyes in thought, and finally laughed. “You know, it’s difficult for genius to soar in the face of these carping little irrelevancies. Actually, you’re right. At first glance, the Silence doesn’t explain the marketplace, but it explains so much else that I still believe the idea correct. Have I persuaded you?”
“I . . . maybe. You do make a kind of twisted sense. It’s just that it’s a hard idea to take in. The one truth our people have never questioned is that Menzoberranzan belongs to Lolth. Everything in the cavern is as it is because she willed it so, and the might of her priestesses is the primary force maintaining all that we have and are. If she’s turned her face from the entire city, or is lost to us in some other way. . . .” Ryld spread his hands.
“It is unsettling, but perhaps, just perhaps, it affords us an opportunity as well.”
Ryld extended a telescoping metal probe, attached a cloth to the hook on the end, and started swamping out the blood-clogged scabbard.
The warrior asked, “What do you mean?”
“Just for fun, let’s make the same leap of faith—or fear—that Gromph and the Council did. Assume the rogue males can explain the cessation of Lolth’s beneficence. Assume you and I will find them and extract the information. Finally, assume we can somehow employ it to restore the status quo.”
“That’s a lot of assuming.”
“It is. Obviously, I’m letting my imagination run amok. Yet I have a hunch—only a hunch, but still—that if two masters of the Academy could accomplish such a triumph, they might thereby win enough power to make my friend the Sarthos demon look like small beer. You wanted to find something to our advantage, as I recall.”
“Your sister may find us first. She tracked us once. Do you still think we shouldn’t kill her, or her vassals either?”
“That’s a good question,” Pharaun sighed. “They’re attacking us with potent magic. I suspect that leather bag holds nine sets of servant creatures, each deadlier than the one before.”
“In that case, why didn’t she chuck them all at us?”
“Perhaps, in the absence of her innate powers, she was trying to conserve her other resources. Alas, she may not be so parsimonious next time.”
“So what do we do?”
“Well, you know, I truly do want to kill Greyanna. I always have, but I suppose the prudent course is to avoid our hunters if possible. If not, we’ll do what we must to survive. I may at least make a point of disposing of Relonor. I suspect he located us with divinatory magic. He was always good at that.”
“Can you shield us?”
“Perhaps. I intend to try. Stay right where you are, and don’t speak.”