“Get back!” screamed the second Cormyrian, kicking at the bald man.
The guard’s boot caught the stranger square in the forehead. The blow should have sent him tumbling down the stairwell, but the tattooed head simply rocked back. Then the little man growled and, moving with astounding speed and grace, struck the offending leg and broke it. The guard screamed and fell, his head striking a stone step with a sickening thump.
Adon suddenly knew why the guards had not stopped the attacker. The little man was an avatar.
“Bhaal!” Adon gasped, unconsciously lifting his mace.
The avatar turned toward the cleric and drew his thin lips back in an acknowledging smile.
A wave of fear washed over Adon, and he could not force it away. When he had faced the god Bane in similar circumstances, Adon had had his faith to strengthen him. Death had not been frightening then, for he had believed that dying in Sune’s service was a high honor that would bring a great reward in the afterlife.
There were no such guarantees now. Adon had abandoned the goddess, and if he died, only endless despair and nothingness would follow. Worse, there would be nobody to set the matter straight. Bhaal would take the tablet and plunge mankind into darkness and misery.
The last guard dropped his halberd and drew his sword. He crouched into a fighting stance and slowly traced a defensive pattern in the air.
Still two steps below the landing, Bhaal turned his attention back to the guard.
The Cormyrian hazarded a glance at Adon. “Are you with me?”
Adon swallowed. “Aye,” he said. The cleric stepped out of his room and stood over the guard who had fallen a moment earlier.
The remaining live soldier shifted to the other side of the landing, then raised his sword. The guard was deliberately giving the god an opening so Adon could attack.
Heedless of the trap, Bhaal stepped forward, and Adon swung his mace at the avatar’s head. The god easily ducked the blow. Before the Cormyrian could slash, however, the Lord of Murder punched him in the abdomen. The man barely retained his balance and stumbled back on the landing. Bhaal now stood next to Adon.
Staring the avatar in the eyes, Adon brought his mace into a guarding position. The Cormyrian staggered a step forward and lifted his sword, too.
“What now?” the guard asked, gasping for breath.
“Attack!” Adon yelled.
The Cormyrian obliged with a vicious overhead slash. Bhaal sidestepped it easily, moving backward toward Midnight’s chamber.
The magic-user’s door flew open. Midnight stood in the entrance to her room, dagger in hand. She had been watching the battle in silence, cursing the loss of her spellbook and waiting for an opportunity to strike. Finally, it had come. She thrust the blade into the avatar’s back.
Bhaal’s eyes widened in surprise. He started to turn, and Adon seized the chance for an easy attack, smashing his mace into the avatar’s ribs. The god’s knees buckled and he tumbled down the stairs, roaring in a rage.
The avatar came to rest six steps down, Midnight’s dagger still planted in his back.
“Is he dead?” Midnight asked.
Bhaal rose and glared at the magic-user, cursing in a language no human could duplicate. Without paying any attention to his wounds, the Lord of Murder jumped for the landing.
The Cormyrian yelled and leaped to meet the avatar, blade flashing. Bhaal met the guard in midair, blocking the soldier’s sword arm with a bone-crunching blow and simultaneously driving his fingers into the man’s throat. The avatar reached the landing with the guard’s gasping body in his hands, then dropped the corpse down the stairs without a second thought.
It was then that Adon understood. Nothing they could do would stop the avatar. Bhaal was animating the body with his own life force.
The tramp of boots and a chorus of yells announced that reinforcements had entered the keep tower.
“Run, Midnight!” Adon yelled. “We can’t kill him!”
The cleric turned toward his own room, intending to shove the tablet out the window. Bhaal grinned, then turned toward Midnight.
“Adon!” the magic-user screamed. “What are you doing?” She could not believe her friend would desert her.
Midnight’s cry brought Adon back to his senses. In his concern to protect the tablet, he had forgotten she was defenseless. He turned and hefted his mace, finding Bhaal’s back to him. It was as good a chance as he’d ever have.
Adon brought the mace down hard on the back of Bhaal’s head. Bone splintered beneath the weapon. The surprised avatar teetered and stumbled, and Adon thought for a moment the god might actually fall.
Bhaal lifted a hand and felt the wound. His fingers came away bloody. Without so much as turning around, he kicked backward, catching the cleric in the ribs. Adon flew into his chamber, crashed into his bed, then crumpled to the floor gasping for breath and wondering how he would ever pick himself up.
Adon felt the floor tremble faintly, then metal screeched against metal. He had no idea what could be causing the strange noise and vibration.
“What’s happening down there?” Kelemvor yelled from up the stairway. His voice was hoarse with grogginess.
Bhaal looked up the stairs, his head little more than a bloody pulp.
“By Torm’s mailed fist!” Kelemvor cursed, descending the keep’s stairs with heavy, unsteady steps. “What are you, I wonder?”
Bhaal turned back to the magic-user, apparently unconcerned with the warrior. Heart pounding with fear, Midnight held on to her door for support while searching her mind for a way to defend herself without a weapon.
A mighty roar echoed from the walls. Kelemvor flew into view, swinging his sword in a mighty arc. Bhaal dropped his shoulder, letting the fighter land on his back, then stood up and catapulted the warrior down the stairwell. Kelemvor flashed out of Adon’s sight as quickly as he had entered it.
A series of thumps and curses announced that the Cormyrian reinforcements had broken the fighter’s fall—and that they would be delayed even further. Adon forced himself to stand, his breath coming in short, painful gasps. His doorway was aligned directly opposite Midnight’s, and he could see Bhaal slowly advancing on the magic-user.
Midnight remained motionless as the Lord of Murder moved toward her. She had thought of a way to delay Bhaal, but it depended upon surprise. When the god reached the threshold to her room, she slammed the door, using its bulk as a weapon.
The move did catch Bhaal by surprise, and the heavy door hit him squarely in the face. The avatar stumbled back two steps, then Midnight pushed the door shut, slid the bolt into place, and braced her body against it. The tactic would not hold the Lord of Murder for long, but it might allow her time to think of something better.
Bhaal stood in the middle of the landing and stared at the closed door, venting his anger in a stream of guttural curses.
Adon could easily understand how Midnight’s move had stunned the evil god, for it had certainly astonished him. What he could not understand, however, was why Bhaal was concentrating so intently on her. Perhaps the god assumed that she carried the tablet, or, not realizing that her spellbook was lost, feared her magic more than Adon’s mace. Whatever the reason, the cleric decided to take advantage of the situation.
Adon stepped into his own doorway. Six feet down the stairs, Kelemvor and eight Cormyrians lay in a heap, dazed and groaning.
As the cleric raised his mace, the floor vibrated beneath his feet again, and faint metallic clinks echoed around the landing. Though he could not imagine what caused them, Adon shrugged off the strange vibrations and prepared to attack.