weaker. Time and again you have done for one or other of the evil pieces — humans, monsters, demons. Still, the enemy cannot reckon properly what you are. When you move into the main field again as the champion sent by Balance, none will recognize your true powers until too late — we hope! If that is so, then you will become the second most powerful figure in the multiverse.'
The second?'
'Tharizdun is the first,' Basiliv said heavily.
'And I must then seek out that one?'
'If you attain to the second station, Prince Gord,' the Demiurge assured him, 'you will have no need to seek out the Absolute Darkness. He will find you.'
'How can I hope to succeed?' The young man looked from Catlord to the Demiurge questioningly.
'The Master of Nothingness and All has sided with us,' Basiliv stated after hesitating. 'That one is perhaps now the second-greatest force in the multiverse, but you must always beware such a being, just as one watches the scorpion.'
'Why be so enigmatic about him or it? I must have information!'
'No more can be said,' Basiliv replied. 'You will know in time, if that is given to any of us. If I speak too much, I might distort the foretelling.'
'Nonsense!' It was evident from his expression that Rexfelis disagreed with Basiliv's last statements, but it had not been the Catlord who had spoken just now. The voice had come from a shadowy corner.
'Shadowking?' Gord asked uncertainly.
'No,' the slow and icy voice answered from yet another location in the chamber. 'Master Entropy — at your service, prince and champion.'
That made Gord start. 'You are of ultimate chaos!'
'Never. I will consume the wild motion, eliminate randomness as I do order, wipe out death by removing life, burn out life and slay darkness into nothing. I am truly neutral, the actual balance of all. I am nothingness and everything — in their proper states.'
'Beware!' Rexfelis and Basiliv spoke in unison, but Gord ignored both of them.
'How will you help?' he asked the unseen figure.
'My aid comes now in the form of information. One of your most important tools is a sword. Many of your fine associates will appreciate the weapon and its forms. You have it now, the dark blade you brought from the buried capital of the forgotten realm of the Suloise.'
'I own it indeed,' Gord admitted, 'but it is of no special value.'
'More than you suppose,' the nothingness countered. 'Still, the sword is not all it can be, on that point I agree.' Was there mockery in the voice? Gord wasn't certain.
'You will assist me in making it truly potent?'
'I have already, by giving you this knowledge. This has been most painful, prince and champion, for it defies all I stand for and drains my particular force cruelly,' Master Entropy Intoned monotonously, as if speaking to a slow and measured beat. 'There is no more I shall say, no more I can do. Now. Gord, all is in your hands.'
With that, the presence of the strange being faded away. Basiliv and Rexfelis, seeming to take their cues from that occurrence, silently rose from their seats. Gord did the same, and moments later was alone in his chamber.
* * *
Elsewhere, elsewhen, the tides of evil weakened in their surge, and the men of the kingdoms and nations of Oerth who opposed the dark and wicked pushed their enemies back a little, slaughtering many in so doing. Stalemate positions occurred in the netherworld, and the great war being fought in the Abyss raged, but neither side advanced.
Master Entropy was at work. Creation and life — vitality even of demoniacal or negative sort — slipped away into nothingness. Nothingness grew and was strengthened, and was content.
'We are lost,' the Demiurge said lamentably when he, Rexfelis, and Gord reconvened a few hours later — hours during which weeks of time had passed on Oerth. 'Now truly are we placed between the void and the bottomless pit!' Rexfelis nodded and looked grim. What Basiliv said was too true, and there seemed to be no escape. Entropy was perhaps better, if nonexistence of anything but nothingness could be accepted by those who were sentient. 'Never should we have accepted Master Entropy, not in an eternity of days!'
'Lost or not. I have much to do,' Gord said energetically. 'Time will decide if that one is to triumph or not, but if I am to believe what I have been told, it is up to me to face and defeat Tharizdun.' He spat as he said that name. 'What can you tell me of the power of the sword Master Entropy spoke of?'
'I am as unaware of that as you, Gord,' Rexfelis replied. 'Basiliv?'
'Would I could be of assistance,' the Demiurge said. 'Perhaps if I could see the weapon and spend a little time examining its aura….'
There will be a bit of time for that, my old friend,' Rexfelis said. 'Gord will soon be presented to all of my subjects, including the peers who are his kinsfolk. There will be a short ceremony, longer speeches, and much growling of useless sort. I will name him first of all our sort after me before he sets forth on the mission we have for him.'
'I will certainly stay for two reasons, then,' Basiliv said, mustering up a weak smile. 'Let us see the dark blade now, for soon we will be too busy for anything except such work as we need accomplished.' Basiliv and the Catlord turned expectantly to Gord, both casting their gazes toward the scabbard at his waist. Gord's face was blank.
'Well? Bring forth the blade!' the Demiurge said.
'This is not it,' Gord said, touching the sheath. 'The sword that Master Entropy spoke of is hidden aboard
Chapter 4
'We are now moored In Safetons deep harbor, pious brother.'
The bent old cleric looked up with weak, rheumy eyes from the prayerbook he was reading. 'Thank you, shipmaster, but please call me simply Brother Donnur. 'Pious' is too worthy an honorific for a mendicant pilgrim,' the ancient fellow added gravely.
'Of course,' the captain of the little trading vessel said quickly. Then he turned and hurried above. Despite the priest's gentle demeanor and kindly ways, there was something about him that Shipmaster Rench found disquieting. 'Ah, balls.' the sailor muttered to himself. 'Likely nothin' more than the fact I'm a lost and wicked heathen, it is.' Nonetheless, Rench would be glad to see the back of the old cleric's dirty brown robe as the man went down the gangplank of his ship.
Safeton, northernmost of the ports that dotted the long Wild Coast, was a thriving town of some five thousand souls that Shipmaster Rench and his vessel, the
Nobody even noticed Brother Donnur's departure from the ship, Rench included. The bent priest hobbled away and was lost in the throng that teemed around the cargoes and market stalls of the waterfront district. When he was safely away, where none of the crew of the
The very day that