Part 17 (1/2)
”And in so doing, you chose to abandon your claim to it,” the lich replied icily. ”The relic will be mine alone. You have done well, my apprentice. I shall have another bauble to add to my h.o.a.rd.”
The comely apprentice strode indignantly to the door, then glanced over her shoulder at the lich. ”But what of Leira, Sza.s.s Tarn? What if you anger the Patroness of Illusionists and Liars by breaching her temple and stealing something of hers?”
Sza.s.s Tarn laughed. ”I have little regard for the G.o.ddess of treachery, dear Frodyne. Get some rest. I shall tell you in the morning what my skeletons find in Delhumide.”
The lich listened to her footfalls retreat down the hall. Soon she would not need sleep. Or food. Soon she would need none of the things that made man weak, allowing her to one day sit at his side as he ruled all of Thay.
The lich sat straight in his chair and pushed Frodyne from his thoughts. He concentrated on his army of skele- tons in Delhumide, stretching his mind across the miles until he made contact with his undead general and directed him to march to Leira's temple. The miles melted away beneath the soldiers' bony feet as they neared the ruined temple of Leira. In an untiring cadence, they approached the temple steps. Then Sza.s.s Tarn lost contact with them.
The lich cursed and cast himself upon the Thayan winds to fly to Delhumide. As he soared, his form changed. His skin took on a ruddy tint. His cheeks became puffy, and his body thickened to fill out the red silk robes that only moments before had hung on his frame in voluminous folds. His eyes became black, almost human, and his white hair grew thicker and longer, then darkened to match the color of the night sky. The lich added a thin mustache for effect.
Few in Thay knew Sza.s.s Tarn was one of the dead. Outside the confines of his keep he a.s.sumed the image of a living man.
The ground pa.s.sed below him in a blur, the darkness obscuring most of the terrain. But the lich didn't falter in his course. He knew the way to the dead city. He'd been born there.
It was near dawn when he reached the ruined temple. He descended to the rough ground and glared at the crumbling stonework. His eyes smoldered in the gloom and surveyed the carnage. He knew now why he'd lost contact with his army. Strewn about the shattered pillars were more than a hundred skeletal warriors. Their broken bones and crushed skulls gleamed faintly. Near them lay more dead-figures with tattered gray flesh and rotting clothes, things that stank of the grave. The lich knelt near a one-armed zombie and slowly turned the body over. It had little flesh left on its frame. Most of it had been burned away by fire. Sza.s.s Tarn ran his fingers through the gra.s.s around the corpse Not a blade was singed. Magical fire had killed the army, the lich realized, fire meant for undead.
The hunt for Leira's relic was now very costly. It would take many, many months and considerable effort to raise enough dead to replace these fallen soldiers. Sza.s.s Tarn stood, silently vowed retribution for the slaughter of his minions, and carefully picked his way toward the crumbling temple stairway. At the base of the steps, the lich spied a twitching form, an undead creature with pasty white flesh, hollow eyes, and protruding broken ribs. The ghoul, lone survivor of the lich's force, tried futilely to rise at the approach of its master.
”Speak to me,” the lich commanded in a sonorous voice. ”Tell me what happened here.”
”Followed your orders,” the ghoul rasped. ”Tried to breach the temple. Tried to get what you wanted. But they stopped us.”
”How many?”
”Three,” the ghoul replied. ”They wore the robes of Red Wizards.”
Sza.s.s Tam growled deep in his throat and looked up the stairs. If only three had been able to conquer this force, they must be powerful. He took a last look at his beaten army and padded by the gasping ghoul to carefully select a path up the crumbling steps. Leira's temple lay in ruins like the rest of Delhumide. A once-great city, it was now populated by monsters and was laden with incredible traps-the remaining wards of the n.o.bles and wizards who had once lived here. Creatures roamed freely across the countryside-goblins, darkenbeasts, trolls, and dragons, and they presented enough of a threat to keep the living away.Sza.s.s Tarn searched for the magical energies that protected the fallen temple, and then he made his way around them to reach the comfort of the shadows inside. The damp coolness of the ruins reminded the lich of a tomb. This was his element. Focusing his eyes, he separated stonework from the darkness. He saw before him a crumbling old hallway that extended deep into the temple and sensed other presences within. He glided toward them.
Eventually the hallway ended, and the lich studied the walls, searching. Nothing. No moving stonework. He scrutinized the bricks by running his ringers over the cool surface to his left and right until he felt no resistance. The bricks before him were not real. Then he heard footfalls, soft and distant. The sound was regular, as of someone walking, and it was coming from far beneath him. He took a step forward and pa.s.sed through the illusionary wall.
Beyond lay a damp stairway that led down into darkness. The lich cupped his hand and spoke a single word. A globe of light appeared in his palm and illuminated the stairwell. Along the walls and on each step were weathered sigils of various-sized triangles filled with swirling gray patterns-all symbols of Leira. The lich paused to appreciate them. He had little regard for the G.o.ddess, but thought the sigils had been rendered by someone with considerable skill.
Most Red Wizards in Thay wors.h.i.+ped one or more malign deities. At one time Sza.s.s Tarn had, too-but the need to wors.h.i.+p some power that might grant eternal life had faded away with the years and with the onset of lich-dom.
Sza.s.s Tarn still considered himself respectful of some of the powers, such as Cyric. But not Leira.
Sza.s.s Tarn was halfway down the steps when he felt a presence approaching. The minutes pa.s.sed, and the undead zulkir's patience was finally rewarded when a pearl-white phantasm with the face of a beautiful woman formed in front of him. The lich pondered its appearance and decided the thing was nothing more than a hapless spirit tied to the temple.
”Trespa.s.ser,” the spectre whispered in a soft, feminine voice. ”Begone from the sacred place of Leira, she who is most powerful. Begone from the Lady of the Mists' temple, the place we are sworn to protect.”
The lich stood his ground, eyeing the thing, and for an instant, it appeared the spirit was astonished he did not run. ”I will leave when I am ready,” the lich said flatly. He kept his voice low so his quarry deeper in the complex would not hear.
”You must go,” the spirit repeated, its voice changing, becoming deeper and sultry. The visage was that of another woman. ”This is not a place for those who do not believe. You do not believe in our G.o.ddess. You wear no symbol of hers.”
”I believe in myself,” the lich replied evenly. ”I believe in power.”
”But not in Leira.”
”No. I have no respect for the Lady of the Mists,” the lich growled softly.
”Then your bones shall rot here,” the spectre cursed in a new voice.
The lich stared at the creature. The undead now bore the image of a young man with a long nose, and the voice was strong and masculine. Large ghostly hands reached out and thrust into Sza.s.s Tarn's chest. The lich stood unmoving, unaffected by the spirit's attack.
”This cannot be! You should be dead!” the spirit shouted with the voice of an old woman. Indeed, the pearl-white form was now covered with wrinkles, and the transparent flesh sagged on her cheeks and jaw.
”I am already dead,” the lich whispered in reply. ”And you will bend to my will-whatever manner of undead you are.” Sza.s.s Tarn's eyes once more became pinpoints of hot white light. They bore into the old woman's eyes and fixed the diaphanous being in place.
”Who are you?” Sza.s.s Tarn demanded. ”What are you?”
”We are Leira's,” the old woman replied. ”We are the last of the priests who lived in this temple. When the city fell to the army of Mulhorand, we died. But so strong was our faith in the Lady of the Mists that our wills banded together in one form so we could serve Leira forever.”
The lich's lips curled upward slowly. ”It is your misfortune you stayed.” His pinpoint eyes glowed brighter, and he concentrated on the ghostly form before him. The spirit ”moaned in pain, the voice of a young man joining the old woman's.
”No!” the spirit cried in a chorus of voices. ”Do not hurt us! Do not send us from the temple!”
”To the Nine h.e.l.ls I will send you-to join the other priests of the Patroness of Liars,” Sza.s.s Tarn threatened, ”unless you serve me and cease your cacophonous whining.”
”We serve only Leira,” the spirit wailed even more loudly.
”Now serve a better master.” The lich raised a fleshy finger and pointed it at the spectre's face. The visage of the young man had returned. A silver beam shot from the tip of Sza.s.s Tarn's finger and struck the spirit's head, sending the apparition flying backward several feet. The beam pulsed wildly while the spirit convulsed in agony.
”Who do you serve?” the lich persisted.
”Leira,” the creature groaned in chorus.
Again the lich struck the creature with a silver beam. The ghostly image wavered and began to spread, as if it were being stretched on a torturer's rack. The spirit's arms and legs lengthened to the corners of the stairwell, and it became as insubstantial as mist.
”Who do you serve?”
”We serve you,” the spirit finally gasped in its myriad voices.
Sza.s.s Tarn's eyes softened to a pale glow. He studied the spirit to make sure it was indeed under his control. The many minds he touched berated him, but they swore their loyalty. Smugly satisfied, Sza.s.s Tarn willed his human eyes to return.”Tell me, priests,” the lich began. ”Were you this ineffectual in stopping the Red Wizards who came before me?”
”The ones below?” the spirit quipped. The creature's face was now that of a beautiful woman, the one the thing had displayed when Sza.s.s Tarn first encountered it.
”Yes. The ones below.”
”They believe,” the ghostly image stated. ”They wear the holy symbol of Leira upon their s.h.i.+ny heads. All believers are welcome in this temple. All believers-and you.”
”You let them pa.s.s freely because they tattooed symbols of Leira on their heads?” the lich queried. ”You believed they wors.h.i.+ped your G.o.ddess because of a little paint?”
”Yes,” the ghostly image answered. ”Leira's temple is for Leira's own.”
The lich looked past the creature and peered down the stairs. ”You will come with me. You will show me the traps that litter the path before us. And you will show me the relic I seek.”
Sza.s.s Tarn resumed his course down the stairway, the spectre at his side pointing out weathered mosaics of its G.o.ddess, expounding on the greatness of Leira, and gesturing toward magical wards on every step. The lich pa.s.sed by the broken bodies of long-dead trespa.s.sers as he moved from one chamber to the next. He was so intent on finding the relic that he nearly pa.s.sed over the only freshly killed corpse. The spectre pointed it out to him. The body of a red-robed man, no older than twenty, lay crumpled amid chunks of stone. The man, who wore the painted symbol of Leira on his head, sprawled with his limbs at odd angles. His eyes were wide with terror, and a thin line of blood still trickled from his mouth.
”He was with the other wizards,” the spectre said in an old man's voice. ”Pity he died so young. Though he wore the symbol of the Lady of the Mists and I let him pa.s.s, the guardian looked into his heart. His heart betrayed him as an unbeliever. The guardian struck him down.”