vicious and homicidal?

The demoness reached out and took the thing from him, acting with a little more haste than was called for, but such anxiety was understandable too. Elazalag was thinking of how this would redress the balance between iyondagur and Mezzafgraduun, between herself and the demonking Graz'zt. 'With this I shall reunite all of the Abat-dolor,' she said loudly, so that all the demons in earshot might hear and exult. 'I shall extend our lands and bring woe to all those enemies who harassed and belittled the Abat-dolor when we were weak!'

'I doubt you'll need it to finish off the rabble left behind by Infestix when he fled,' Gord said as he saw the trickle of movement toward the rear by the disorganized and frightened enemy, showing the beginnings of panic and rout. 'They are leaderless and will soon be in full flight. On the other hand, negotiations with Graz'zt will be most interesting, Princess, and I think you will-'

His further thoughts were drowned out by a growing roar. The ranks of the Abat-dolor warriors were alive with triumph as the word was passed among them. Their princess had recovered the Eye, and the daemon was chased from their land. Victory! Cheers and shouts rolled along their front, outward, company by company, then back inward again.

Nisroch looked at his sovereign, and Elazalag nodded. The herald brought the princess's chariot up, and as soon as she was within it, Nisroch's voice bellowed out above the shouts and cheers: 'Forward! Kill the enemy!'

That was all it took. The command was taken up by a thousand throats, then a hundred thousand, or so it seemed to the humans, who were nearly deafened by the din. With a continuing roar, the whole mass of the ebon- hued demon army rolled forward at a run. Elazalag with her hippokeres-drawn chariot, flanked by a score of cavalry on either hand, led the charge.

The riders on the wings forged ahead of the formation, making the advance into a crescent of death. It struck the fleeing horde of invaders as if it were a tidal wave, and fully a quarter of the foe were slain by that first impact.

'Let us leave this field,' Gord said, turning from the slaughter that was now commencing in earnest. 'I mind not seeing such as those meet their end, for it is meet. What happens afterward is something I care not to contemplate, let alone witness.'

'Something you said before, Gord,' Gellor mentioned as they began walking from the place toward the castle that sprawled some miles away.

'What's that, old friend?'

'The Eye — you said it was drawing power from Courflamme, and from the Theorpart, too.'

'Only because of our thoughts and emotions, only because of the proximity and the rapport which had built as each of us fought the enemy.'

'The burning spheres were a nonesuch, Gord,' Leda said, including the bard by a quick glance in his direction. 'What did you think of them, Gellor?'

'Sufficient to devastate whole battalions with a single discharge,' he responded.

'It was your thought which brought them forth, Leda,' Gord told the dark elven priestess. 'That device is a potent one. It is of great evil, but the force can be turned to other ends … on occasion.'

'Doesn't your own sword bind the powers of the netherspheres, Gord?'

'Yes, Leda, It does that; but it also holds, separately but in conjunction, the might of the spheres of Light. Balance binds all, and enables the forces to be used in equilibrium. The manifold energies of the Eye of Deception can produce terrible results. They are always of Evil. Who can say what can be performed with that great relic? In the end, its employment always benefits the Abyss.

'The sword, though, has no truly dark side, not any longer. Courflamme is the artifact of primordial neutrality. It exists to enable the cosmos to continue as it is, each of the disparate forces within it keeping the others in check. Perhaps it is the doom of Tharizdun, or perhaps the cosmos must change. It is not written anywhere that things will always be as they are.'

'We take the Soulless Sounding again, Gord?' The troubador asked that as the three came within a bowshot of the grim walls of Elazalag's castle.

'We must make it seem that way, at least,' the young champion of Balance answered. 'It is now readily apparent to our enemies what we are about. There will be rejoicing amongst the great demonlords, of course, for now only they among the forces of Evil possess Theorparts. After the celebration, they will begin to scheme and plan how to gain the one I hold. With that will come a further realization, and then understanding will be our greatest threat.'

'Don't be so enigmatic, youngster,' Gellor said to him. 'Let's have the whole of your thoughts. We're in this right alongside you, aren't we?'

'For now, anyway,' Gord concurred. 'Who can say what will transpire once the first part of the quest is concluded and the final portion commences?'

'Gord!'

'All right, all right. Once the rulers of this place understand that I have one Theorpart, and that I took it with relative ease, It will strike those with the other two that I am the cat, they the rats, and not vice versa.' Gord looked at each of his companions in turn. 'Consider this: We had the aid of the Abat-dolor to assure success. Perhaps we had to have such aid, although we might have succeeded with stealth and surprise. No matter now, we have the thing from Infestix, and that one is out of play for a time. At best, the foes will possibly assume that in yielding up the Eye of Deception we have made ourselves sufficiently weaker; then they will remain vulnerable.'

'But we have Initiator now, and its strength is twice that of the Eye,' Leda said with concern. 'That cannot escape even dolts such as Szhublox!'

'Not indefinitely. . ' Gellor commented, considering the lord of demonium.

'It is least likely that they will band together and make common cause to resist us,' Gord said with a solemnity unusual to him. 'But we must not dismiss the possibility entirely. With two Theorparts, they would equal our own force, and they have countless demon warriors to call upon to guard them too. If father and son, Graz'zt and Iuz, should somehow set aside their differences for the moment, we would never wrest the two remaining parts from their grasp — not in time, anyway.'

'Then we must keep the two factions warring,' murmured the troubador, stroking his cheek reflectively. 'Yet doing so might be difficult.'

'Only if we attack one without offering nonhostility to the other,' Leda told Gellor. 'Graz'zt is the one with whom we must treat, so that is where we will go next.'

'That is so, but neither Elazalag nor any other must know that until we have had opportunity to convince the demonking that he must accept us as his allies.'

'We will dupe him, then, and when the second Theorpart is in your hands turn both against him?'

'No, Leda, not quite. We will have to mislead Graz'zt, and in the end it might well be necessary to force him to yield Unbinder to me. The thing can bring him only destruction in the end. Tharizdun will have Graz'zt's life amongst the first the Ultimate One slaughters in his new empire of Evil. Demon and deva, no matter. Both sorts are inimical to what that one plans for the multiverse. It could be that the demonking must be killed by us in order to gain the last portion of the key of doom, but at least Graz'zt will have a chance this way. If he manages to hold the Theorpart from us, another will gain it, or the three will unite on their own. Then destruction is a certainty for him and all demons above the dimmest mentalities.'

'That is logical. I accept your reasoning,' Leda said. 'Something you said makes me wonder, though. Why haven't the fractions knitted themselves into the whole again? Once done, Tharizdun is loosed, no matter the hands that the key might temporarily rest in isn't that so?'

Gord nodded. 'I cannot answer that. Think, too, of the other mysteries. Basiliv is gone from us — did you know that? No force seems able to gain the upper hand anywhere. . '

'The Demiurge is slain?' Leda looked pale. 'Only one of stature beyond the gods could accomplish that! Even so small a thing as my ability to draw forth the energies of the Eye, to employ it with ever-greater success and not be drained to a shell by its inherent evilness. … I saw Vuron look puzzled by that. It seems as if we have some mighty unseen foe laboring against us, another equally invisible ally assisting the cause.'

'Then we will break the deadlock and in that process I think the recondite will become manifest. Our success will unveil both foe and friend alike.'

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