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Japheth said, "Seems unlikely-"

"Because we didn't give a very good account of ourselves."

Protestations rose to the warlock's lips: he had been taken by surprise, he hadn't unleashed his full arsenal of curses, he had been concerned with the welfare of the others. But he remained quiet. Their guide had been slain, and the rest of them had barely escaped with their lives. And perhaps it was his own fault.

How had he allowed it? The bald truth wouldn't creep away and be ignored. He'd been in the dazed grip of traveler's dust. If he'd been in his right mind-

The memory of a metallic container tumbling down through dark water assailed the warlock. His breath caught. He slapped his cloak where the tin was kept safe. He couldn't detect the comforting bulge. His eyes dilated as he frantically searched through the folds of his cape. Empty.

Japheth's supply of dust was lost.

The captain watched Japheth through this anxious display, his expression quizzical.

"I have to go back," Japheth explained. "I lost something in the water."

"Go back, then exclaimed the wizard."We're going forward."

Japheth glanced at her. Seren was wringing out her hair. She looked up, saw the warlock's desperate expression, and said, "You're cute, but I'm not going back down there."

An image of a road composed of ground bone on a crimson plain flashed before him, then faded. Japheth took another few gulps of air, crazy impulses flashing across his mind. Images of diving, alone, into the cataract…

Too crazy to consider for more than heartbeats. He'd have to do without, despite the risk to his sanity.

"Never mind."

Thoster skewered Japheth with a look. "You certain you're still in the game?" the captain asked.

"I have no other choice, it seems," breathed the warlock. "Let's see what's in here, shall we?"

Japheth pushed to the fore and stepped into the vast space lit by glittering witchlights.

The rounded sphere tops and protruding obelisks mimicked the buildings on the surface. They were built, or perhaps grown, of something similar to coral. However, the structures in the dark seemed older, centuries older. None possessed any obvious entranceways or windows, either. Several had script upon them, but in a language none of the explorers knew.

Japheth began to see a pattern to the drifting points of light. Sometimes they clustered around one particular dome or obelisk, only to languidly redistribute themselves in different densities around other features. The lights never paused in the empty air between the monument-like structures. A small enough pattern, but possibly significant.

The warlock considered his own paucity of power in the arena of gleaning information. Though he knew curses that could unleash feral, hungry forces upon his enemies, making mute stone speak wasn't in his repertoire.

He glanced at Seren, wondering. She was a wizard-didn't she have spell or ritual capable of providing deeper insight?

"Seren," Japheth said.

The wizard paused. "What?"

"Do you-"

"Listen. If you're asking me to consult my spellbook for a handy solution to this mess, don't bother. It is a stroke of luck I've relearned as many spells and rituals as I have in the last eleven years. A damn sight better than most. In time, the rest will return, I'm certain. Until then, stop bothering me with, insipid requests!"

Thoster grinned and shook his head.

A spire ahead enjoyed a particularly large number of slowly circling lights. Japheth headed toward it across the damp, uneven ground. It worried him that little pools of seawater pocketed the stone here and there. How long had it been since this entire area was drowned? More important, would the water return? They were already far below sea level, but that didn't mean tides didn't have a role to play beneath Taunissik.

He reached the base of the pedestal. Japheth realized the stone wasn't exactly like the others. It was no simple obelisk; it was some sort of statue-a twelve-foot-tall effigy, roughly like a kuo-toa, carved of purplish stone, though its lobster clawlike hands were black as pitch. Runes, like those written across the other structures, were inscribed on the figure. But unlike the script on the other formations, the runes on the statue seemed to trace ancient lines of power across its limbs. Worse yet, in place of its head, a single glyph was scribed, from which a thin streamlet of seawater dribbled.

Thoster said, "Japheth, stop. This is a kuo-toa holy place. We tread on sacred ground, at our peril."

The smell of seawater intensified, and a dozen more witch-lights flocked to the figure. Their combined radiance wavered between purple and green.

"This is a likeness of the kuo-toa god?" asked Japheth.

"Goddess," replied Thoster, his normally confident voice slightly wavering. "Come away!"

A crack of rending stone saw the statue shudder into movement. With two steps, the figure jerkily cleared its low pedestal. A heavy claw reached for Japheth.

He jerked back and the claw scraped across the ground. A screech of what seemed like pain issued from the animate beast.

"What is it?" yelled Seren, her wand suddenly in hand.

"An eidolon of the sea!" replied Thoster, even as he backed away. "A kind of construct kuo-toa create as half living altars. They're animated by a shard of power from the Sea Mother herself!"

The creature lunged at Japheth once more. Again the warlock evaded the relatively slow-moving bulk.

"Why does it attack us? We have not suborned its followers- the kraken has."

"It ain't received a sacrifice since Gethshemeth commandeered this colony," returned Captain Thoster. "It's blinkin' insane with hunger!"

"Sea Mother!" Japheth called out. "We are enemies of your enemy-the great kraken, Gethshemeth, has overpowered your people! We seek to destroy Gethshemeth. Grant us your aid, and perhaps your people may come back to you!"

The effigy paused, as if considering.

Seren muttered, "Quick thinking, Japheth. Let's hope it works!"

Thoster shook his head. "This ain't the Sea Mother-it's merely a focus for devotion meant for her. In fact, I do not ever recall seeing this particular image. It ain't quite right. Regardless, this eidolon has been untended so long it may have gone rogue!"

"Rogue?" asked Japheth. Then he had his answer.

The rune that served as the statue's face suddenly spewed blood red seawater in all directions.

Japheth's cloak intervened, shunting the brunt of the liquid aside, but some still spattered his face and forearms. Pain blossomed across his skin where the seawater touched it. The warlock cried, "The water is caustic!"

Seren pointed her wand. A line of flickering lightning briefly connected its end with the animate statue. It sparked and staggered, and the sharp order of ozone blurred Japheth's vision. He blinked and thought better of rubbing his eyes with the back of his seawater-spattered and burning hand.

A shape suddenly materialized from the blur his vision had become.

"Look out!" yelled Thoster. Japheth tried to duck away, but his senses were too confused. Instead of slipping out of the way, he darted directly into the grasp of the stony lobster claw.

Pressure crushed his chest and back, and his feet were pulled free of the ground. His legs worked foolishly in the air. His right arm was pinned to his side, and his hand went numb with the pressure.

The eidolon had him. Japheth blinked away the tears and saw the thing had raised him high above its head. Preparatory to smashing him down, most likely. He heaved against the stone pincer holding him in place. He succeeded merely in goading it to squeeze all the harder. He couldn't draw in a new breath.

Japheth called on his cloak to transfer him back to the ground. It whipped and strained, but failed. He was caught in a grip more than merely physical.

Below his flailing feet, Thoster darted in with his golem-work blade. The clang of metal on stone reverberated up the effigy's form. Farther off, Japheth saw Seren ready her wand for another strike, then pause, a frown of indecision on her face. He wondered if she considered striking the statue with another bolt of lighting even though he remained in its grasp. It surprised him she even paused to deliberate.