He shook his head and gave a great sigh, reminding himself that he had no time for such distractions. The potion wouldn't last long.
"So are you going to tell me where you went yesterday?" he said, turning to face the human.
Entreri looked up at him. "No."
But he was already telling Jarlaxle much more, for the question had elicited memories of the previous day's events: images of the street they had visited, of an old man lying on the floor holding in his spilling guts, of another man.
His father! No, the man he had thought his father, had known as his father for all his life.
"You have come here to find your mother. That much I know," Jarlaxle dared to say, though Entreri's expression grew more threatening from the moment he mentioned the lost woman.
An image flashed in Jarlaxle's mind, not of a woman, but of a view.
"You know, too, that I have told you that none of this is your affair," Entreri said.
"Why would you push an ally away?" Jarlaxle asked.
"You cannot help me in this."
"Of course I can."
"No!"
Jarlaxle straightened, assailed suddenly by a wall of red. He felt Entreri's anger more keenly than ever before, a razor edge that bordered on murderous rage. Images flashed too quickly for him to sort them and grasp them. He noted many of priests, of the great Protector's House, of the lines for indulgences playing out in the square.
Then just hatred.
Jarlaxle held up his hand defensively without even realizing it, though Entreri had made no move from the table.
The drow shook his head, to see the man staring at him curiously.
"What are you about?" the obviously suspicious Entreri asked.
"About tall enough to put me face between a woman's bosoms!" came a roar from the side, and Jarlaxle was truly relieved for the interruption at that particular moment.
Entreri cast a glance at Athrogate, then stood up quickly, his chair sliding out behind him. He stalked around the table, and never taking his stare off Jarlaxle, left the house.
"What's tyin' that one's armpit hair in knots?" Athrogate asked.
Jarlaxle merely smiled, glad that the potion's effects were already fading. The last thing he wanted was to be bombarded by the images that flitted through the mind of Athrogate!
Little life showed on the facings of the wind-swept brown rocks footing the mountains south of Memnon. There were a few lizards, though, sunning themselves or scampering from ledge to ledge, and so Jarlaxle knew that beneath the surface, deep in cracks or in caves formed by the incongruity of stone on stone, life found a way.
It always did—under the desert sun, or in the pits of the Underdark, where no stars shone.
A crude stone stair wound up the hundred feet or so around a large jut of rock, but Jarlaxle didn't use it. He moved off to the side, where the jag would keep him covered from view, and tipped his great hat to enact its levitation properties. He half-walked and half-floated up the sheer face. As he neared the top, he paused and glanced back behind him to view the distant harbor, and nodded with recognition in confirming that it was the same view he had seen in Entreri's thoughts when he had used the mind-reading potion.
Certain that Entreri was on the other side of the stone, Jarlaxle crept low as he went to the top.
Behind it was a flat patch of sandy ground, wider than the drow had expected. Many small and weathered stones littered the place—ancient gravestones, Jarlaxle realized. Across the sandy field directly south of his position, the drow noted a tarp-covered mound.
Bodies awaiting burial.
Entreri was indeed up there, walking among the stones, looking down at the sand and apparently lost in contemplation. Only one other man was about, a priest of Selûne, who stood at the westernmost edge, looking down at the harbor through a break in the brown stones.
It was a paupers' graveyard, where Entreri's mother was likely buried, Jarlaxle surmised. He retreated a bit over the far side of the rock and rested his back against it, considering it all. His friend was in turmoil, clearly. In breaking through Entreri's emotional wall, Jarlaxle had opened him to those painful memories.
He crawled back up and took one last look at Entreri, wondering what might result.
He floated back down carrying more than a little guilt on his slender shoulders.
"You'll not find any names on those stones," the priest said to Entreri as the assassin puttered about, coincidentally moving nearer to the man.
Entreri looked up and noticed the priest—the same one who had been collecting indulgences in the square that day—for the first time, really, so absorbed had he been in pondering the dirt and the many souls buried beneath it. He noted the man's defensive posture, and understood that the priest felt threatened.
He offered a helpless shrug and walked off a bit.
"It's not often that a man of your obvious means would come here," the priest persisted.
Entreri turned and regarded him again.
"I mean, these wretches don't get much in the manner of visitors," the priest went on. "Mostly unknown, unloved, and unwanted…" He ended with a condescending chuckle, which disappeared abruptly in light of Entreri's ensuing scowl.
"Yet you write their names on your scrolls when they give you their coins in the square," the assassin remarked. "Are you up here to pray for them, then? To fulfill the indulgences they purchased at your table?"
The priest cleared his throat and said, "I am Devout Gositek."
"You've confused me with someone who cares."
"I am a priest of Selûne," the man protested.
"You are a charlatan who sells false hope."
Gositek steadied himself and straightened his robes. "Beware your words…" he said, inquiring of Entreri's name with his expression and inflection.
Entreri didn't blink, and at first didn't respond at all. It was all he could do to keep from leaping across the ten feet that separated him from Gositek and throwing the fool from the cliff.
Entreri reminded himself to do nothing so rash. The young man was barely half his age and could not have been involved with his mother in any way.
"As I said, I am Devout Gositek," the man said again, apparently drawing strength from Entreri's snub. "A favored scribe of Principal Cleric Yozumian Dudui Yinochek, the Blessed Voice Proper, himself. Speak ill to me at your peril. We rule the Protector's House. We are the hope and prayers of Memnon."
He babbled on for a bit, but Entreri hardly heard him, for that name, Yinochek, sparked memory in him.
"How old is he?" Entreri asked, interrupting the fool.
"What? Who?"
"This man, this Blessed Voice Proper?"
"Yinochek?"
"How old is he?"
"Why, I don't know his exact—"
"How old is he?"
"Sixty years, perhaps?" Gositek asked as much as answered.
Entreri nodded as memories came back to him of a young and fiery priest, an oratory prodigy, a blessed voice proper, who had often delivered powerful homilies from the balcony of the Protector's House. He remembered viewing some of those beside his young mother, her eyes upturned, her heart uplifted.
"And this man has been at the Protector's House for many years?" Entreri asked. "And he has been known as Blessed Voice Proper…"
"From the beginning," Gositek confirmed. "And yes, he was a young man when first he came to join the priests of Selûne. Why? Do you know of him?"
Entreri turned and walked away.
"You used to live here," Gositek called after him, but Entreri didn't stop.
"What was her name?" the perceptive priest asked.
Entreri stopped, and turned to regard the man.
"The woman you seek here," Gositek explained. "It was a woman, yes? What was her name?"