"We were attacked," the priestess said without looking up.
"Who attacked you?" Jedidiah demanded.
Walinda shook her head. "I don't know," she gasped. "It happened in a dark street. Something fell on me from above and clawed at my throat. Holly hit it with her pickax, and it turned on her. I ran here."
"You left Holly behind in the street?" Joel said angrily.
"There was nothing I could do," Walinda protested. "I have no spells."
"You could have hit whatever it was with this sledgehammer," Joel growled, kicking at the tool she'd dropped at her feet.
"It's too heavy to wield accurately. Whatever attacked us was fast and huge. There may have been more than one. It was too dark to tell. I ran all the way here for help," Walinda shouted back.
"Show us where," Jedidiah said grimly. "We'll be back," he told Bits.
The priestess led them to a dark spot in a narrow lane several blocks from the bookshop.
There was no one around. Jedidiah bent over and retrieved a large pickax that lay in the street, the only indication that Holly had ever been there.
"It's taken her!" Joel exclaimed.
"Use the stone," Jedidiah said calmly.
Joel nodded. He pulled out the finder's stone and thought of the paladin. The beacon shone in the direction of the ward where the Sensate safe house was located.
"She's still alive," Jedidiah declared.
They followed the beacon. It led them right to the Sensate safe house.
Joel dashed inside, shouting the paladin's name.
Holly lay on the white carpet, staining the wool red with her blood. Bors knelt beside her, sewing closed a great gash in the girl's stomach. He used a glowing golden needle that, although unthreaded, left a trace of golden stitches in Holly's flesh. It was a magic Joel had never seen before. Some sort of magic from Sigil, or perhaps from Bors's homeworld, Joel guessed.
The three waited anxiously for the Sensate paladin to finish. When he looked up, Jedidiah asked, "What happened?
"I heard Holly scream," Bors said. "I saw this one run off" He pointed at Walinda. "Then I found Holly in the street, left for dead."
"You were following us," Walinda declared in an accusatory tone.
"Lucky I was," Bors replied coldly.
"Did you see what attacked them?" Joel asked.
Bors shook his head.
Joel gave the priestess of Bane a suspicious glare.
Sensing what the bard must be thinking, Walinda went on the defensive. "It was not I," she declared. "Look." She showed them claw marks streaking her throat and arms. "Besides, if I had attacked her, I would not have left the job half finished. Use your power to heal her and she will tell you so herself. Perhaps she got a better look at whatever it was."
"We can't heal her," Jedidiah explained. "Finder's power doesn't appear to extend to this place."
Walinda sniffed haughtily. "I told you he was a petty god," she said to Joel.
"At least he's not a dead god," Joel barked back.
Jedidiah knelt beside the girl. "Most of these are superficial cuts, as if whatever it was was just trying to hold Holly back. The belly wound seems the most life-threatening injury, aside from the loss of blood."
Holly moaned softly. Then her eyes blinked open.
"Holly," Joel asked, "are you all right?"
The girl moaned again.
"What attacked you?" Walinda demanded.
"Black thing. Furry, with wings," the young paladin whispered. "Like Bear."
"Bear!" Joel gasped. "That's impossible. We cremated him. Holly, are you sure?"
Holly shook her head. There were tears in her eyes. She turned her head toward Bors and said no more.
"She must rest," Bors insisted. "Yes," Jedidiah agreed. He stood up. "And we must get back to work," he said, taking up the pickax he'd retrieved from the street. "Joel, Walinda, let's go. Bors will look after Holly."
"I will stay," Walinda said.
"What?" Joel asked.
"I have been injured myself," the priestess of Bane said, "and you cannot heal me. I have no spells. I would be more hindrance than help. I will nurse the girl. I am better at causing wounds than healing them, but I do know something of the art."
Jedidiah examined the priestess with a jaundiced eye, but after a moment he nodded. "We'll return when we've found something," he said. Then the older priest wheeled about and headed for the door. Joel followed in his wake.
Joel and Jedidiah walked back toward the Market Ward in the dark fog.
"That was strange, wasn't it?" Joel asked the older man.
"What?" Jedidiah replied.
"Walinda offering to nurse Holly."
"Oh, that. Indeed it was," Jedidiah replied.
"I would have thought she'd want to be there when we found the hand no matter how wounded she was."
"Unless the banelich has warned her that there may be a deadly guardian protecting the hand," Jedidiah pointed out.
"What do you think attacked Holly?"
"I don't think it was Bear. It could be another dark stalker. If the priests of Iyachtu Xvim caught wind of what Walinda was up to, they might have decided to send an agent here to prevent Bane's resurrection. Walinda said the creature attacked her first, and it left Holly once Walinda was gone."
"It left Holly for dead," Joel pointed out.
"But it didn't leave her dead. Did you notice Holly was crying?"
Joel nodded. "She must be in terrible pain."
"She turned her head away," Jedidiah said.
Joel thought about that for a moment. "Do you think she knows something she's not telling us? What could it be?"
"I think we should hurry back to the shop, just in case."
From some shadows off to their right, something hissed. Then, in his head, Joel heard a voice speak their names: Joel. Finder.
Jedidiah was brought up short, apparently having heard the same voice using his real name. Joel halted beside him, his hand on the hilt of his sword.
A figure glided out from behind the curtain of fog. It wore a robe of crimson, ornately trimmed in gold. A red fez with a gold tassel crowned its octopuslike head. It was a mind flayer, what Jas called an illithid, one of Ilsensine's chosen master race.
You are Finder, it stated in their heads.
Joel noticed that the left side of the mind flayer's ten-tacled face twitched, as if from palsy.
I am a servant of Lord Ilsensine, the illithid explained. Its face twitched some more. We seek a boon from you.
"I have paid my debt to your lord," Jedidiah replied cautiously. "I have no further desire to deal with him."
He needs to deal with you. The mind flayer waved its tentacles anxiously. He begs for your indulgence.
"Begs?" Jedidiah replied with amused surprise. "Why would the greatest mind in the universe need to beg?"
Your song… The illithid's face started to twitch faster; the tentacles writhed as if in pain. After a moment the twitching slowed, and the illithid said, Your song. It doesn't end. It keeps on going, and my lord cannot get it out of his mind.
"That's not my problem," Jedidiah said. "He wanted it."
Please take the song back. It is spreading to us,
Ilsensine's faithful priests, when we pray for spells. It is driving us mad.
"All sales are final," Jedidiah replied with a chuckle.
My lord says he will grant you a boon, the illithid replied, if you will take the song back. Anything you need to know. Gods have traded one of their eyes for such knowledge.
Jedidiah paused for a moment, then said, "There are two things I need to know."
Agreed, the mind flayer cried out in their heads without hesitation.
"Very well," Jedidiah said.
The mind flayer moved in close to Jedidiah. It extended its facial tentacles. The tips of the tentacles glowed with the same green radiance as Ilsensine had. The tentacles stroked Jedidiah's face, then plunged deep beneath the flesh, passing ethereally into his brain. After a moment, they withdrew, leaving Jedidiah's flesh unscarred.
In his head, Joel heard the mind flayer sigh. The creature's palsy had evaporated.
The mind flayer stepped back and bowed deeply. The answer to your first question is no, it said. The answer to your second question…The creature tilted his head. He does not know. Good-bye, Finder Wyvernspur.