Talal gazed down the third tunnel. The passage spilled into a long, narrow chamber. Chipped and sheared stalagmites formed stone benches. A dozen men would have fit comfortably in the room, Talal thought, but the benches squatted close to the floor to accommodate shorter legs.
At the back of the room, situated in front of another tunnel, a wide altar rose up from the floor. Spiky writing was etched deep into the stone, but a crack cut a jagged line down the center of the monument.
Talal watched Morgan and Laerin examine the writing. The half-elf’s lips moved as if he could read the words. His face creased in consternation.
“What does it say?” Talal asked.
The half-elf cocked his head. “The script is Dwarvish, of course. It’s an altar to Abbathor, the dwarf god of greed.”
Talal knew nothing of the dwarf gods, not enough to blaspheme them, anyway. He would have to ask Meisha about Abbathor.
The thought of the Harper sent an unexpected stab of pain through his chest. If she’s alive, she’s safer than you are, Talal told himself. He was the fool. He’d had the opportunity to escape and see daylight again, but he’d wasted it worrying over a fire-twisted Harper he barely knew.
His thoughts shattered when a sharp blow cuffed the side of his head.
“Watch him!” Laerin shouted, and the half-elf was suddenly in front of Talal, shielding him with his body.
Dizzy and in pain, Talal heard Morgan grunt and, a breath later, the sound of a body dropping on stone.
Laerin’s arm caught his. “Are you all right?”
Talal wiped blood from his temple where the Shadow Thief had struck him. “Second time they’ve roughed up my head,” he mumbled.
Laerin grinned. “Luckily you keep nothing important up there.” His face sobered. “Forgive me, I should have been watching him more closely.” He turned to Morgan, who was wiping blood from his sword. “Dead?”
Morgan nodded. “Hope you were done questioning him.”
“I was,” Laerin replied, taking one last look at the altar. “A pity Garavin isn’t here. He would have wanted to see this.”
They headed for the tunnel at the back of the temple, but Talal stopped abruptly. His head still felt fuzzy from the blow. He wondered if he were imagining things. “Did you hear that?” he asked.
Morgan and Laerin continued ahead of him. “Keep up,” grunted Morgan.
“It sounded like … rain.”
They moved past an intersection of four tunnels. Laerin choose to keep going straight, but the sound persisted just at the edges of Talal’s hearing. He wondered why the half-elf couldn’t hear the steady beat, water against stone.
Talal glanced behind and saw movement in the darkness of the intersection. “Look at that!”
Laerin turned, following the streak of Morgan’s pointing torch.
A dwarf ran into the intersection. He was bald, dressed in plated armor that should have creaked loudly in the stillness. His short legs skidded on the loose dirt, but he caught himself with a hand on the ground. He half-turned toward them, and Talal gasped.
The entire left side of the dwarf’s face was gone, exposing white skull and a length of jawbone. Torchlight flickered off the shadows and hollows created by the missing flesh. No one could be that injured and live. The dwarf was dead, Talal thought, just like the one he and Meisha had encountered in the upper tunnels. He was dead, and he was running. None of the other ghosts had run, and none had looked at Talal with such terror-filled eyes.
The dwarf regained his feet and plowed on down the tunnel. The sound of rain drew closer.
“Talal,” said Laerin, drawing his sword, “Run. Down the passage—now!”
Talal felt the half-elf shove him hard. He stumbled and fell, unable to take his eyes off the intersection. Fear crawled along his body. A breeze passed over his skin, bringing heat and a scent that made his eyes water. The tunnel suddenly felt humid. Steam pools rose up from the floor, and the sound of rain became a sizzling.
Talal crushed his eyes shut, and time seemed to slow, as if he were experiencing everything from a great distance. He opened his eyes in time to see a shape pass through the intersection, filling it utterly with weight and light. The timeless silence shattered, sundered by a roar that filled the caverns, knocking Morgan and Laerin to their knees.
Talal covered his ears and screamed, but he could not hear the sound of his voice over the terrible roar. Morgan and Laerin crouched beside him, shielding him with their bodies and weapons. They, too, seemed incapable of movement.
The beast’s head looked vaguely like that of a lion. A full, red mane streamed out behind it, stained with black ash from an ember fire. His body, as it stretched into the tunnel after the dwarf, filled the length of the intersection. Huge, muscled haunches tapered to four black-clawed feet that scraped furrows in the stone. The rain sound was the sizzle of the demon’s claws, constantly burning where they touched the earth.
Talal watched, transfixed, as the creature drew his head out of the tunnel. In his jaws struggled the dead dwarf. The beast bit through its shoulder, and the dwarf’s screams were as loud and pitiful as any living being’s. It was the screaming that finally galvanized them.
Morgan grabbed Talal by one arm, Laerin by the other, and they ran down the tunnel at breakneck speed, careening around corners at random.
Morgan cursed liberally. “What the bloody piss and Hells is it?” he shouted.
“A demon,” said Laerin grimly. “Meisha’s beast. The doom of the Howlings.”
“A jarilith,” said Dantane as the phantom image of the creature stepped into the chamber. “A tanar’ri—a hunting beast from the Abyss.”
The demon leaped at Varan. The battle that ensued was horrifically beautiful to watch. Varan hurled spells that ravaged the left side of the creature’s face, removing the jarilith’s eye. Enraged, the demon sprang forward, curling around the wizard. The jarilith raked his claws sideways along the wizard’s flank.
Varan retreated, trying to heal himself with a cracked potion vial, but he bled from dozens of small wounds. He grasped the demon’s lost eye and chanted. The words spilled out, booming with power, and it seemed he would complete the magic before the beast could launch another attack.
But the demon charged, tangling with the release of the Art. Tremors shook the cavern, and suddenly, Varan clutched the left side of his face. His mouth twisted in agony.
Horrified, Meisha watched the flesh beneath Varan’s fingers blend together and melt, becoming a hideous mirror to the jarilith’s ruined visage.
The demon tossed his head in renewed frenzy, as if some invisible foe were attacking him. Clawing the stone, the jarilith fell back into the caves from whence he had come. Varan followed, crawling on his hands and knees, one arm clutched awkwardly against his face. He did not have to go far. The demon collapsed, unconscious or enspelled. Meisha could not tell which.
When the scene faded at last, Meisha saw the breached wall, just as the vision had rendered it. Empty.
“The demon’s awake,” said Dantane.
“I don’t understand,” Meisha said. “Why did he do it? Why did he stay to fight?” He could have escaped, come back when he’d recovered from Prieces’ death and the battle with the elemental, Meisha thought. Why had he fought the demon in his weakened state, using magic to merely put it to sleep?
“What was that spell?” asked Dantane.
Meisha had no idea. “It seemed to allow him to control the demon, at least in that moment.”
“Through a mental connection,” said Dantane, nodding. “It requires a focus. In this case—”
“The jarilith’s eye,” said Meisha, and the truth dawned on her. Varan hadn’t been weakened or desperate when he’d cast the spell. He’d known exactly what he was doing. “Watching gods, he couldn’t have wanted to keep it alive,” she said.