Entreri rubbed a hand over his weary face, and moved down from the perch as Devout Gositek, his face all bruised, crawled out of the hole.
"I am not afraid to die," he said, trembling so badly he seemed as if he was about to soil himself.
Jarlaxle turned deferentially to Entreri.
"Then get out of here," the assassin said.
Gositek's jaw dropped open.
"Generous," Jarlaxle remarked.
"Surprised," said Athrogate.
Gositek looked at the elf and dwarf, then scrambled for the stair. But Entreri intercepted him, and with frightening strength yanked him aside and ran him to the very edge of the hundred-foot drop.
"No, please!" the priest who was not afraid to die desperately pleaded.
"If you wish to remain alive, then look down there," Entreri growled in his ear. "Mark well the destruction of the Protector's House. You will rebuild it—you and your fellow priests?"
When Gositek didn't immediately answer, Entreri shifted him forward, almost off the ledge.
The terrified man yelped and blurted, "Yes!"
Entreri tugged him back. "And you will never forget their names again," he instructed. "Any of them. And you and your brethren will come up here, every day, and pray for the souls of those who have gone before."
"Yes, yes, yes," Gositek stammered.
"Do you understand me?" Entreri roared, shaking him near the edge again.
"I do! We will!"
"I don't believe you," Entreri said, and the man began to cry.
Entreri threw him back from the cliff and to the ground. "Remember that view," he warned. "For if you forget your promise, you will see it again, with smoke once more rising from the ruins of your rebuilt temple. And on that next occasion, I will throw you from the cliff."
The man nodded stupidly as he crawled away. Finally, near the edge of the graveyard, he managed to put his feet under him, and he scrambled down the long stair.
Entreri moved to the top of that stair and watched him run away.
"Are you satisfied now, my friend?" Jarlaxle asked.
Entreri put his head down and forced himself to remain calm then turned around, his expression revealing his emptiness.
Jarlaxle offered a shrug. "It is often the way," he said. "We've all demons needing to be put to rest, but the experience is not as rewardi—"
"Shut up," Entreri interrupted.
Athrogate laughed.
"We must be gone from this place," Jarlaxle said.
"I don't care where you go," Entreri answered. He reached into his pouch and pulled forth Idalia's flute, which he had broken into two pieces. He locked stares with the drow and tossed it to Jarlaxle's feet.
Jarlaxle gave a helpless chuckle, but there was no real mirth in it. Finally breaking Entreri's imposing stare, he bent and retrieved the flute. "A valuable item," he said.
"Cursed," came Entreri's reply.
"Ah, Artemis," said the drow. "I understand your wounds and your anger, but in the end, you will see that this was all for the best."
"You might be right, but that changes little."
"How so?" asked the drow.
Entreri pulled his pack around. He fished out the obsidian figurine and dropped it to the ground, calling forth his nightmare mount. As the creature materialized, Entreri pulled forth another object and sent it spinning at Jarlaxle.
A black, small-brimmed hat.
"I am finished with you," Entreri said. "Your road is your own, and I care not if it takes you to the gates of the Nine Hells."
Jarlaxle caught the hat and rolled it over in his slender hands. "But Artemis, be reasonable."
"I have never been more so," Entreri replied, and he put one foot in a stirrup and hoisted himself astride the tall black horse. "Farewell, Jarlaxle. Or fare ill. It matters not to me."
"But I am your muse."
"I don't like the songs you inspire."
Entreri turned his mount around, stepping to the stair.
"Where will you go?"
The assassin paused and looked back sourly.
"I can find out, in any case," Jarlaxle reminded him.
"To Calimport," Entreri answered, and he gave a helpless laugh at the truth of the drow's statement—and Jarlaxle took heart in that, at least. "To Dwahvel, and to a place I might call home."
"Ah, Mistress Tiggerwillies!" Jarlaxle said with sudden animation. "And will you seek to regain your status among the streets of that fair city?"
Entreri chortled and nodded toward the distant plume of smoke. "Artemis Entreri is dead," he said. "He died in the Protector's House in Memnon, chasing ghosts."
He turned his horse away, down the stairs and out of sight.
"Might that we should follow him," Athrogate said to Jarlaxle. "He'll be getting' hisself into trouble, no doubt. It's the way his blood's flowing."
But Jarlaxle, staring at the empty stair, shook his head with every word. "No," he said. "And no. I suspect that Artemis Entreri really is dead, my friend."
"Looked living to me."
Jarlaxle laughed, not willing to explain it, and not expecting that Athrogate, who had his own emotional barriers defining him, would begin to understand.
But Athrogate remarked, "Ah, he died the way meself died when them orcs come to Felbarr."
"More than three centuries ago?" Jarlaxle asked.
"Three and a half, elf."
"And yet you look so young."
"Might be that livin' long's a curse more than a blessing."
"A curse imposed by…?"
"Ever twist the bum hairs of a wizard, elf?"
Jarlaxle rolled his eyes and laughed.
" 'Ill-argued and ill-met, he telled me. A pox on me bones for not payin' me debt. To grab the sun and not let it set, ye'll not die young, and ye'll never forget. »
"That was his curse?"
"And after three hunnerd years, I'm tellin' ye it worked."
Jarlaxle nodded and considered the tale for a short while. Then, on a sudden impulse, he reached over and plopped the hat atop the dwarf's hairy head.
"Hey, now!"
"Yes," Jarlaxle said, nodding with admiration. "It suits you well."
As he spoke, the drow dropped a hand into his pouch, feeling the broken pieces of Idalia's flute and wondering how much it would cost him to get it repaired.
He winced just a bit, because he realized that Athrogate couldn't likely blow a note.
But he looked back to the empty stair, where Artemis Entreri had gone, and he reminded himself that sometimes you just had to play the hand you were dealt.