bleeding, animal's head.
The look of the battered creature made Pharaun smile. The spell he'd had to move so far away from the others to cast safely came to his lips as the tanar'ri continued to slowly dig itself out from under the stone slab. When he completed the incantation, Pharaun opened his mouth wide and screamed.
The sound came not from his lungs, throat, or mouth but from the Weave all around him and inside him. The sound rolled up, louder and louder, then shot out of him: a mad, keening shriek that smashed into the demon so hard it even blew the massive slab of stone into smoky vapor, then blew that smoke away into nothing. The sound crashed into the glabrezu, shaking him and spinning him into the air. Bruises exploded on Belshazu's tough red hide, and his bones cracked loudly one by one. The demon couldn't muster the breath necessary to scream, though Pharaun reveled in the obvious fact that he wanted to.
Especially when pieces of him started coming off.
Pharaun kept screaming, continued pushing air out of himself. The sound shredded the glabrezu, taking off skin, plates of exoskeleton, divots of fur, claws, fangs, eyes, then blood and entrails. The whole mess whirled in the air as if it were being stirred in a great invisible cooking pot, then all at once the spell—and the hideous shrieking scream—was gone, and the shredded remains of Belshazu fell in a heap on the battle-scarred ground. Blood continued to rain down in tapping spatters for a minute after the last big piece hit the ground.
Pharaun sighed, pushed away his errant hair again, and stepped gingerly into the mess. He kicked pieces this way and that with the toe of one boot until his eyes settled on the thin platinum band. He bent and retrieved the ring, making some effort not to touch the tanar'ri's blood.
'You owed me a ring,' he said to the demon's mute remains then slipped the ring on a finger and turned back to rejoin the drow who had been more than happy to let him face the glabrezu alone.
'It looked big from a distance,' Pharaun said as he ran a hand along a cold, rusted metal rib. 'It's even bigger from the inside.'
The Master of Sorcere looked up along the line of the gently curving steel beam and tried to guess how far above his head it ended—a hundred feet, maybe a hundred and fifty?
'Why was this just left here for a thousand years?' asked Jeggred. The draegloth was sniffing the outer surface of the great spider fortress and seemed dissatisfied. 'It should have been cleaned up. Wouldn't the goddess want it cleared away?'
'It hasn't been here a thousand years,' Quenthel said. She was standing inside a huge tear in the side of the broken sphere, her arms crossed in front of her. 'I told you all, I was here.'
'How long ago?' asked Danifae.
The high priestess looked at her with open contempt but answered, 'Ten years.'
'Ten years ago,' Pharaun asked, 'was this thing intact and moving?'
The Mistress of Arach-Tinilith nodded.
'How were you here?' Danifae asked.
Quenthel turned to Pharaun and said, 'If there is anyone alive in here, could you sense them?'
The wizard glanced at Danifae, who offered him a bored shrug.
'There are spells,' he answered Quenthel, 'that will do that, yes. Do you think we'll find someone alive in here? Lolth herself, perhaps?'
'If the Spider Queen is anywhere,' said the Baenre priestess, 'she'll be here. This is her palace. Still, I don't sense her presence. I still can't feel her here at all.'
Pharaun nodded and looked around at the ruin again.
'Far be it from me to argue, Mistress,' he said to Quenthel, 'but I find it impossible to believe that this construct was in operation a mere ten years ago. I'll admit I've never seen materials like this—steel beams big enough to hold up a building, a magical construct as big as House Baenre—but I've seen steel both old and new, and this steel has been laying out here for somewhat longer than ten years. I will accept that you're reluctant to tell us how you came to be here a decade ago, but. .'
'But what?' Quenthel snarled.
Pharaun stopped to think. The Mistress of Arach-Tinilith watched him the whole time, and finally he shrugged and shook his head. Quenthel turned and strode deeper into the wrecked spider fortress.
Pharaun could feel someone looking at him, and he turned to see Valas lurking at the edge of a shadow. The scout was standing outside the wreck. Following Valas's glances, Pharaun watched Danifae and Jeggred follow Quenthel into the ruin. When the three of them had disappeared into the maze of twisted metal, Valas stepped closer.
'Do you really think she's alive in there?' the scout asked.
Pharaun shrugged and said, 'At this point, my dear Valas, I'm willing to accept nearly anything. Time seems to have no meaning here—a different meaning anyway. Everything Quenthel says may be true, but then here we are at the very heart of Lolth's domain, and where is she?'
'Where are the souls of the dead?' asked the scout.
'We should be swarmed by departed ancestors, shouldn't we?' Pharaun agreed. 'There should be all manner of creatures here: demons, driders, draegloths. .' Pharaun paused to chuckle. 'All manner of things that start with 'd'. . but all there is is wreckage and ruins, calcified bone and rotting stone. It's the stuff of an epic lament.'
Valas stared into the darkness inside the spider fortress and sighed.
'I don't know my way around in there,' the scout said, his voice barely above a whisper, 'Why am I still here?'
'You were hired,' Pharaun said. 'House Baenre pays Bregan D'aerthe. . everyone knows why you're here.'
'No, I said, why am I still here?' the scout asked. 'I was hired as a guide to get this expedition through the Dark Domain, and I have done that.'
'You have indeed,' Pharaun replied.
'I never said I knew. .' Valas started, but ended with a sigh.
'You're out of your element,' Pharaun said, 'as are we all, but we could still certainly benefit from your skills.'
'I could have helped you with the demon,' said the scout.
'Quenthel wouldn't allow it,' Pharaun replied.
'You got us here,' Valas said, 'and as far as I know, even with the ship destroyed, you're the only one who can get them home, yet she risks you to prove a point that no one needs proven? Does that make sense to you at all?'
Pharaun smiled and shook his head, sliding an errant strand of hair out of his face, then said, 'I have been a thorn in the high priestess's side since we stepped out of Menzoberranzan. I've lost track of the various different reasons why she might want to kill me, as I've stopped counting the reasons I'd like to see her dead, too. Still, perhaps she was confident that I could handle the demon on my own. I did, after all.'
'There might have been a time when I'd have thought that was good enough,' Valas went on, 'but after all this, I can't help thinking it's just stupid, and potentially wasteful. Her behavior is erratic.'
'I think were all a bit erratic,' Pharaun admitted, 'but I agree in principle with what you're saying. I think the snakes are whispering to her more and more. She's lost control of both the draegloth and Danifae, has never had control of me, and knows that you're only here because of House Baenre's gold. We finally get to the Demonweb Pits and this is what we find? An ancient ruin? She should be insane. We all should be.'
Valas thought about that for a while, and Pharaun waited for him to respond.
'My contract is at an end,' the scout finally said.
Pharaun nodded, shrugged, and said, 'I will leave that for you to decide, but I have to admit I'd rather have you stay with us than leave. I can use spells, as the priestess asked, to find anything that might still live here, to find any latent sources of magic. If I'm the guide here, fine, but we could well need you again soon. Besides, can you even get back on your own?'
The scout tipped his head up, raised an eyebrow, and gave the hint of a smile that faded before it was completely recognizable.
'Well,' Pharaun said, 'perhaps you can then. I'm going inside anyway, and if you'd like to join us, so be it. We can discuss why, if you're capable of returning to Menzoberranzan on your own, you're concerned that I might be