Plague of Spells (31 page)

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Authors: Bruce R. Cordell

BOOK: Plague of Spells
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He closed his eyes, reaching for his focus. He visualized his chest and the bones that gave his torso shape as lines of energy. They were cracked and misshapen—a few were broken. Pulses of pain spiked out from them through the rest of his body He imagined the spikes as real objects, then imagined their pointy ends eroding away. These sorts of visualization tricks aided his concentration. When the piercing pain receded enough for him to continue, he mentally grasped each broken and damaged bone, one after another, and straightened it. New spikes of agony shot through his body, ones he couldn’t dampen. But he did not stop until every bone was mended.

Raidon finally released his focus. Stabbing pain had been replaced by a body-wide dull ache. He lay awhile longer in the winter-cold chamber of rubble and strange objects. Stray thoughts of his long-dead life intruded. He saw Ailyn playing in the courtyard of their home in Nathlekh. She wore a yellow dress, and her face was grubby. She clutched a great mass of wild daffodils from the garden. He could smell them.

The monk smiled. Ailyn returned the impish grin he knew so well. His heart clenched. “Hey, little girl,” he murmured to the phantom. His throat was tight. Ailyn laughed and skipped away.

A new pain pulled him from waking reverie. Something hard and painful lay below his prostate form. He shifted and saw the object was Angul. He looked at its dull length for a few moments. His vision was blurred with unwept tears born of his daydream.

The monk rubbed at his eyes until they were clear.

He grabbed Angul’s cold hilt and stood. From this new vantage, he could see farther into the chamber. The lines of light that were not burned out seemed to lead to a nexus at the chamber’s heart. He walked toward that gathering point, favoring one foot slightly.

At the center lay a crumpled, half buried shape, like the husk of some fantastically large spider’s recent meal. The shape was a humanoid figure forged of crystal, stone, iron, and more exotic components, but it had fallen over. Its surface was rusted, pitted, and cracked, and half of it was buried beneath a section of collapsed ceiling. A partially visible design winked from its dented metallic chest—the Cerulean Sign.

“Cynosure?”

The figure did not respond. Despite that, Raidon was certain he was in the presence of the artificial entity who once served as Stardeep’s warden.

“Are you awake?”

He bent, tapped the golem’s forehead. Was that a slight glimmer of light deep in the idol’s stony eyes? He couldn’t be sure.

“Did you exhaust yourself pulling me from the Chalk Destrier’s domain?” he asked. “If so, thank you. I hope it does not prove your last act. I’m not worthy of such sacrifice.”

He frowned. “You sacrificed yourself to save me, someone you hardly know.”

His thoughts turned backward. He murmured, “Me, I left the heart of my life to die alone while I slept in safety.”

Even as he spoke aloud, he recognized he half consciously reflected the golem’s noble act back upon himself. A pathetic show of self-pity, and for whom?

He was far more human, with all the failings that implied, than he’d ever admitted to himself. He was only a fool with an outsize ego, like every other fool who pranced and paraded through life, deluded they were somehow finer and better trained than most others, until shown the truth.

He turned, disgusted. His hip brushed a stone block, closer to the golem than all the rest. The glyphs on the stone flared into life. Their shapes fluttered and morphed, until the monk saw they spelled out words in Common. He read:

Raidon,

If you can read this, I have consumed my last remaining store of animating elan. Fear not, I did not trap you. With your Sign, you can access Stardeep’s functions and propel yourself across the face of Faerűn one last time. You must go to the seamount we earlier scried, where Gethshemeth lairs. You have the Cerulean Sign. Worry not about your lack of training. Concentrate on Stardeep’s spellmantle, and you will be able to access it as I have. Go to Gethshemeth. Subdue the great kraken. Destroy the relic of Xxiphu it wields. Much depends on you, Raidon. Though I have no spirit or life that will persist beyond my physical death, I wish you well with all the fiber of my faltering existence.

Your friend, Cynosure

“I am doubly unworthy of your trust,” Raidon murmured.

He gazed long at the stone block. The runes he’d read were changing, forming a great ring. The ring lifted off the stone until it hung vertically before Raidon. Within it, an image resolved.

Raidon saw the isle where kuo-toa cavorted above, and a tentacled monstrosity lurked in the watery hollows beneath.

The view through the scrying circle showed him the island’s surface. It was night, but noisome glows and glimmers gave outline to the sentinels that continued their circuit above the island.

“Angul, are you ready?” The monk raised the sword, gripping it. The cerulean light in the blade’s pommel continued to glimmer, no softer, but no stronger.

He recalled one of the last times he’d seen the sword. It had been more than ten years ago, more like twenty, he supposed.

Kiril had stood before Angul, considering relinquishing the blade that had cursed her with its overzealous nature. Cynosure’s words came back to him: “Angul’s life is only a half-life. Without a living wielder, the soul-forged blade will fail, releasing the soul to its final peace. All that will remain is a dead length of sword-shaped steel.”

The memory faded, but concern tightened Raidon’s eyes.

If his memory reported true, then when Kiril had given up the blade to the Chalk Destrier, Angul lost his living wielder. He hadn’t had a living wielder for years…

“By Xiang’s serene teachings, you had better not be broken!” exclaimed Raidon.

The sword remained as quiescent as when he’d first drawn it from the stone.

Warmth flushed the monk’s cheeks. He resisted smashing the sword on the stone obelisk before him, even though it was what he wanted to do more than anything in that hot moment.

No, he commanded himself. I am an heir of Xiang. Focus. Calm yourself, or your pledge to defeat Gethshemeth in Ailyn’s name will fail.

Raidon unclenched his chest and shoulders, standing taller. “Angul,” he said, his voice calm but commanding, “I beseech you, wake! A foe you were forged to destroy threatens Faerűn with a relic of elder days. If it and its foul artifact are not obliterated, you will fail your own purpose.”

Had the dim pulse of blue in the hilt grown slightly brighter at his words?

No. They hadn’t changed at all.

Raidon tried a few more appeals to the sword before concluding the soul-shard in the blade was too far gone to be conscious of such petitions.

He regarded the Blade Cerulean. It was a tool of the Keepers of the Cerulean Sign. A sign of which he himself had become a living manifestation.

He loosened his jacket, revealing the ruddy Sign on his chest. He placed the blade’s hilt directly upon it and willed his Sign to pulse.

Something tickled the back of Raidon’s mind. A query, so faint he thought he might have imagined it.

Raidon pulsed his Sign again. This time, he clearly heard a forlorn question, a question asked without sound.

Kiril, is it you? Has my Bright Star returned?

The monk said, “Angul?”

No response. He frowned and infused the blade a third time with his Sign.

The voice, no stronger than before, spoke anew into Raidon’s mind.

I am so tired. So tired. Why won’t you speak, Kiril? I thought you shut of me, finally sworn off this shattered soul that can never know peace. I don’t blame you. I have no restraint, none whatever, as you know so well…

Raidon addressed the blade again. “Kiril has moved on.”

My Bright Star… She was my all, and I was her bane. “Angul, listen to me—”

Angul? Is that my name? No, it was something else…

“You are called Angul. I speak true.”

… I remember. I am Angul. I was Kiril’s companion and righteous tool. But I have fulfilled my oath. My task is complete, and peace beckons. Why do you disturb me?

“A new wielder has need of your strength. A blight threatens the world, a menace you were specifically fashioned to vanquish. You are needed!”

So tired…

“Aboleths from ancient days, Angul, are poised to poison the surface world,” pleaded Raidon. It seemed the blade was actively resisting him, actively trying to descend once more into complete, unknowing somnolence.

Leave me be. Perhaps this time I can be reunited with Kiril as a whole and complete—

Raidon pulsed the blade a fourth time.

Like a candle begets a wildfire, his Sign finally ignited Angul. The paper-thin personality he’d been interacting with, ghostlike in its tentative, fleeting nature, charred and burned to nothing. Beneath lay the true Angul, hard and bright and unforgiving.

Aberrations shall be purged, a voice pronounced in a tone completely shorn of the pain and loss of the earlier persona. This voice was keen for what awaited it, eager to strip the world of all who were unfit to walk its face.

His hand disappeared in a nimbus of burning, searing fire, a fire that burned away his own self-pity, his doubt, his focus, and his half-realized desire to walk away from the entire escapade. Something more than aspiration took hold of the monk—it was moral certainty, simple and absolute. Some things could not, could never be suffered. Angul was the first, best, and only tool to accomplish that end. Gethshemeth, and its stone of corruption, would be eradicated. He knew it—he and Angul would be the instrument that accomplished that righteous deed.

Afterward, Raidon decided he would turn his hand to the multitude of lesser moral failings still plaguing Toril.

CHAPTER TWENTY

The Year of the Secret (1396 DR) Taunissik, Sea of Fallen Stars

Anusha retraced the path she’d taken a few hours earlier. She didn’t need to squeeze between gnarled roots and under reaching limbs; she passed like a ghost without regard to the difficult terrain. Unlike the previous time she passed, her dreaming, physical self was miles closer. She didn’t have to concentrate nearly all her attention on holding herself in place.

On the other hand, with her body so close and vulnerable, she was reluctant to move too far from it. Twice she paused in her tracks, listened intently after some imagined noise, then raced back to the lifeboat to check on the sanctity of her travel chest. Both times Lucky had been happy to see her return. Both times were false alarms.

Full night had arrived, and she was no closer to finding Japheth.

“I’m not scared,” she said. Was it true, she wondered? Why was she still lingering here, outside the city, when she knew where she had to go?

“I’m not!” she iterated.

Despite her resolve, she still shrieked in surprise when a blaze of cerulean blue dropped from the sky to land somewhere off in the mangroves. She waited for an explosion, as she supposed would accompany the impact of a falling star, but heard nothing.

Should she ignore it? What if the firefall was some sort of warlock signal sent by Japheth? Anusha turned and made directly toward the point of impact.

Instead of a chunk of burnt skystone, she found a man. A half-elf, actually, though one whose human parent obviously hailed from Thesk or elsewhere eastward.

He was dressed in sandals, loose trousers, and an elaborate silk jacket open to the belt. A flaming sword in one hand and a tattoo on the man’s chest burned with the same sky blue fire. The flame’s color didn’t quite suggest spellplague to Anusha. The hue was clearer, somehow purer than what she associated with her nightmares.

The man stood in a burned area but was physically unharmed by what Anusha guessed had been a rough arrival. On the other hand, she judged by his expression that his mind could well be broken; his open mouth and blank eyes implied he might be crazed.

Hunting screams resounded from above. The sentinels had noticed the newcomer’s dramatic appearance too.

One of the sentinels dropped from the sky, its wriggling shape limned in green lambency. The kuo-toa rider gripped a long, slender lance of coral aimed right at the man’s heart. A black trail roiled in the wake of the creature’s dive.

The half-elf s empty eyes darted upward and narrowed. As the flyer stooped upon him, the man brought his sword into a high guard position. Just as it seemed the man would be pierced by the rider’s cruel lance, he slipped ever so gracefully sideways. With one hand, he ran his blazing sword through the body of the morkoth as it flashed by. The sword tip tore through the creature as if it were no more than tissue paper. With his free hand, he plucked the kuo-toa rider from the saddle. The limp, blood-spurting corpse of the morkoth piled into a mass of trees on the other side of the clearing.

Anusha watched the man, her mouth wide in amazement. His display outshone anything she had earlier witnessed, even that icy eladrin in Japheth’s castle. The half-elf must be a hero of old, she thought. But she didn’t recognize him from any of the stories her tutor had taught.

The man held the struggling kuo-toa high by the throat. He said, “Tell me where I can find the abomination Gethshemeth.”

The kuo-toa redoubled its efforts to free itself from the newcomer’s vice-like grip.

A hint of movement above caught Anusha’s attention.

“Watch out!” she yelled. Two morkoth-mounted sentinels flying in side-by-side formation dropped like hawks on a rabbit, intending to bracket him between two arrow-swift lance tips.

The swordwielder released his captive even as he jumped straight up. The half-elf cleared ten feet easily. The sentinels flashed beneath him. One accidentally skewered the kuo-toa rider the man released as he leaped. The other attempted to raise its lance at the last moment, but the man, even as he spun head over heels in the air, shattered the lance with a single strike of his sword.

The sentinels mounted back into the sky. The man landed lightly upon his feet, moving with the grace and economy of action she didn’t normally associate with a sword fighter.

He scanned the area near where Anusha had called her warning, failed to see her, then picked up the kuo-toa he’d earlier snatched from its saddle. It was already unmoving from the wound its compatriot had delivered. He said, “Aberrations shall not be suffered.” He hewed the unmoving form with the sword, splitting it asunder. Anusha gasped.

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