Teldin knew that voice. He'd heard it, or one very much like it, on Krynn once before, and he knew the creature that produced it. He turned slowly.
The neogi had emerged from the door nearest the left end of the room. It advanced slowly toward him, the claws tipping its eight insectlike limbs clicking on the bonelike deck. Its bare, fleshy neck moved restlessly, like a snake's. Its mouth was open in a grin that showed needle-sharp teeth. The creature's pelt virtually blazed with a profusion of colors-the colors of a chaotic rainbow, or of the flow.
'Prissith Nerro Master,' Rianna said, with a bow.
'Yes,' the neogi hissed. Its small red eyes flicked back and forth between Rianna and Teldin. 'Yes,' it repeated,
'Betray.' Rianna picked up on the word. 'Master, the one known as Barrab has betrayed you. He's sold his services to the illithids. He…'
Prissith Nerro cut her off with a gale of harsh neogi laughter. 'Master not learn this, you think? Lesser races meat are, only, no more.' The creature fixed her with an evil smile. 'Ambition of Barrab greater than wisdom, always. To me meat returned, for higher price meat asked.' The neogi laughed again. 'Higher price meat
Another creature appeared in the doorway from which the neogi had emerged. Again, Teldin had seen its kind before, during the battles at Mount Nevermind and aboard the
Teldin had expected to see Barrab again, one way or another-but not like this. The man lay crumpled, blood already pooling beneath him. His whole body seemed to be raw flesh, with hardly a scrap of skin remaining intact. Only his face was untouched. Another death, Teldin thought, another death over this cloak.
Barrab's eyes opened, rolling wildly. The eyes were glazed with agony beyond description, but still, deep within them was a spark of awareness-and of horror greater than any living creature should have to face. The neogi's head flashed down, and the spark was extinguished forever. Prissith Nerro smiled at Rianna. Its thin black tongue licked red gobbets from its teeth. 'Thus to all traitors,' it hissed. It took another clicking step toward Teldin. 'Now,
Teldin backed away-one step, two. He bumped into something. Rianna. She was shaken-he could see that in her face-almost as shaken as he was, but he saw, too, that she was in control of herself. She forced a shaky smile onto her face. The point of her sword pricked into his back. She stepped back from him-farther from the neogi and Barrab's remains- until her sword was at arm's length, its point still against Teldin's flesh. 'Sorry, lover,' she said quietly. 'I told you: a deal's a deal.' He saw that her left hand again held spell components: a scrap of fur and something that looked like a tiny rod of amber.
Prissith Nerro clicked forward. Teldin felt as though a scream were bubbling in his throat, fighting for release. He looked around wildly-for escape, for help… for
Julia? No, the sellsword still held her tightly, his blade poised to slice her throat open. There was no help anywhere.
'The cloak;' Prissith Nerro repeated.
The cloak. The words echoed in Teldin's brain.
The overwhelming force of the memories diminished, but the thrilling within his bones remained. He opened his eyes.
The lighting was different-brighter, harsher-and every eye in the room was fixed on him. The pricking of Rianna's sword was gone from his back.
It took him a moment to realize that the cloak around his shoulders was glowing with a hard, brittle light.
The neogi reared back, hissing in horror, its tiny eyes half-lidded against the glare. 'Control it, meat does,' it spat. '
As the light bloomed around him, Teldin had expected the same crystal clarity and focus of thought he'd experienced before, but there was no trace of calm within him. Fear still possessed him. He looked around wildly, instinctively. The sellswords had backed away farther; in the knot of figures, only Estriss had held his ground. The bravo holding Julia had lowered his blade a fraction.
Claws clicked. The neogi was so close that Teldin could feel its warm breath on his face, could smell the reek of corruption it exuded. 'Prey,' it spat once more. Its sinuous neck reached forward and its jaws opened to tear the cloak from around Teldin's shoulders.
Estriss lunged forward. One bravo was reeling backward, mouth open in a silent scream, clawing at his head in unendurable agony. The bizarre, Juna-made knife was in the illithid's red-tinged hand. The curved blade lashed out, and another bravo collapsed, his head almost cleaved from his body. One of the sellswords was quicker to react than his fellows. He lunged, opening a gash in the mind flayer's side, but Estriss was free of the circle. The illithid flung himself forward, at the neogi, at Teldin. His empty hand reached out, an attempt to grab the neogi's throat… or to snatch the cloak for himself. Teldin couldn't be sure which. Prissith Nerro responded instantly. Its head lashed out and its teeth sank into the illithid's neck beneath the writhing tentacles. The two creatures, locked together, staggered toward Teldin. He stepped back, raising his hands to protect himself….
And the power blossomed within him. Fire coursed through his veins, flashed along every nerve. He felt that his skull would rupture, that his eyes would burst from his head. Agony mixed with ecstacy. He
Light burst from his extended hands, a blinding curtain of energy. The air in front of him sizzled.
Illithid and neogi reeled away from the coruscating wall of light. Together they slammed into one of the huge windows. The crystal cracked, then shattered, and glittering fragments were blown outward into the void. Still the creatures were locked together; the neogi's teeth were still sunk into Estriss's flesh, while the mind flayer's facial tentacles were wrapped around Prissith Nerro's skull. The illithid dropped his blade, dug his fingers into the neogi's fleshy throat-more for support, Teldin thought, than from any attempt to further harm the creature. They teetered for a moment on the lip of the shattered window, silhouetted against star-speckled blackness. Then, silently, they plunged from sight.
As suddenly as it had arisen, the power that had flooded through Teldin's body vanished. In its wake was weakness and biting cold. His legs buckled, and he collapsed to his hands and knees on the hard deck. Gray fog clouded his vision. It was all he could do to cling to consciousness. Sounds of chaos surrounded him: the skirl of steel on steel, a man's shout of agony, the umber hulk's frenzied barking and roaring. He simply couldn't bring himself to care. There seemed to be no energy left in his body or mind.
Rianna's voice cut through his exhaustion. 'Get back,' she shouted.
His head might have weighed half a ton for the effort it took to raise it. He moaned with the pain, but at least the exertion seemed to clear the mist from before his eyes.
The umber hulk was waving its arms and dashing its mandibles in obvious rage as it advanced on Rianna… and on Teldin. 'Get back,' the woman yelled to him. 'It'll kill us all.'
It was the hardest thing he'd ever done in his life, but he managed to force himself to his feet. He shambled back, away from the advancing creature.
Rianna stood her ground. She'd dropped her sword, keeping only the spell components. She held the scrap of