Again came that demonic growl.
'When you are free, Errtu,' Lloth said evenly, 'when you have Drizzt Do'Urden entangled in the tongs of your merciless whip, do kill him slowly, painfully, that I might hear his every cry!' The Spider Queen swept hers arms up then and disappeared with a flurry of crackling black energy.
Errtu's lip curled up in an evil smile. He looked to the pitiful prisoner, the key to breaking the will and the heart of Drizzt Do'Urden. Sometimes, it seemed, the Spider Queen did not ask for much.
* * * * *
It had been two weeks since the victory, and in Mithril Hall the celebration continued. Many had left—first the two remaining men from Nesme and the Longriders, along with Harkle and Bella don DelRoy (though Pwent finally convinced Bidderdoo to stick around for a while). Then Alustriel and her remaining Knights in Silver, seventy-five warriors, began their journey back to Silverymoon with their heads held high, the lady ready to meet the challenges of her political rivals head-on, confident that she had done right in coming to King Bruenor's aid.
The svirfnebli were in no hurry to leave, though, enjoying the company of Clan Battlehammer, and the men of Settlestone vowed to stay until the last of Mithril Hall's mead was drained away.
Far down the mountain from the dwarven complex, on a cold, windy plain, Catti-brie sat atop a fine roan— one of the horses that had belonged to a slain Silverymoon knight. She sat quietly and confidently, but the sting in her heart as she looked up to Mithril Hall was no less acute. Her eyes scanned the trails to the rocky exit from the mountains, and she smiled, not surprised, in seeing a rider coming down.
'I knew ye'd follow me down here,' she said to Drizzt Do'Urden when the ranger approached.
'We all have our place,' Drizzt replied.
'And mine's not now in Mithril Hall,' Catti-brie said sternly. 'Ye'll not change me mind!'
Drizzt paused for a long while, studying the determined young woman. 'You've talked with Bruenor?' he asked.
'Of course,' Catti-brie retorted. 'Ye think I'd leave me father's house without his blessings?'
'Blessings he gave grudgingly, no doubt,' Drizzt remarked.
Catti-brie straightened in her saddle and locked her jaw firmly. 'Bruenor's got much to do,' she said. 'And he's got Regis and yerself …' She paused and held that thought, noticing the heavy pack strapped behind Drizzt's saddle. 'And Gandalug and Berkthgar beside him,' she finished. 'They've not even figured which is to rule and which is to watch, though I'm thinking Gandalug's to let Bruenor remain king.»
'That would be the wiser course,' Drizzt agreed.
A long moment of silence passed between them.
'Berkthgar talks of leaving,' Drizzt said suddenly, 'of returning to Icewind Dale and the ancient ways of his people.»
Catti-brie nodded. She had heard such rumors.
Again came that uncomfortable silence. Catti-brie finally turned her eyes away from the drow, thinking he was judging her, thinking, in her moment of doubt, that she was being a terrible daughter to Bruenor, terrible and selfish. 'Me father didn't try to stop me,' she blurted with a tone of finality, 'and yerself cannot!'
'I never said I came out to try to stop you,' Drizzt calmly replied.
Catti-brie paused, not really surprised. When she had first told Bruenor she was leaving, that she had to go out from Mithril Hall for a while and witness the wonders of the world, the crusty dwarf had bellowed so loudly that Catti-brie thought the stone walls would tumble in on both of them.
They had met again two days later, when Bruenor was not so full of dwarven holy water, and, to Catti-brie's surprise and relief, her father was much more reasonable. He understood her heart, he had assured her, though his gruff voice cracked as he delivered the words, and he realized she had to follow it, had to go off and learn who she was and where she fit in the world. Catti-brie had thought the words uncharacteristically understanding and philosophical of Bruenor, and now, facing Drizzt, she was certain of their source. Now she knew who Bruenor had spoken to between their meetings.
'He sent ye,' she accused Drizzt.
'You were leaving and so was I,' Drizzt replied casually.
'I just could not spend the rest o' me days in the tunnels,' Catti-brie said, suddenly feeling as if she had to explain herself, revealing the guilt that had weighed heavily on her since her decision to leave home. She looked all around, her eyes scanning the distant horizon 'There's just so much more for me. I'm knowing that in me heart. I've known it since Wulfgar …»
She paused and sighed and looked to Drizzt helplessly.
'And more for me,' the drow said with a mischievous grin, 'much more.»
Catti-brie glanced back over her shoulder, back to the west, where the sun was already beginning its descent.
'The days are short,' she remarked, 'and the road is long.»
'Only as long as you make it,' Drizzt said to her, drawing her gaze back to him. 'And the days are only as short as you allow them to be.»
Catti-brie eyed him curiously, not understanding that last statement.
Drizzt was grinning widely as he explained, as full of anticipation as was Catti-brie. 'A friend of mine, a blind old ranger, once told me that if you ride hard and fast enough to the west, the sun will never set for you.»
By the time he had finished the statement, Catti-brie had wheeled her roan and was in full gallop across the frozen plain toward the west, toward Nesme and Longsaddle beyond that, toward mighty Waterdeep and the Sword Coast. She bent low in the saddle, her mount running hard, her cloak billowing and snapping in the wind behind her, her thick auburn hair flying wildly.
Drizzt opened a belt pouch and looked at the onyx panther figurine. No one could ask for better companions, he mused, and with a final look to the mountains, to Mithril Hall, where his friend was king, the ranger kicked his stallion into a gallop and chased after Catti-brie.
To the west and the adventures of the wide world.