Ascendancy of the Last - By Lisa Smedman Page 0,6

old spider silk. Under each of her eyes was a hairy bulge, from which a fang-tipped jaw curved, the points meeting above the mouth. The jaws gnashed as she lay on the floor, moaning.

T’lar was certain the demon-drow was Lolth’s, though she’d never seen anything like her. “What are you?” she asked. “One of Lolth’s handmaidens?”

The demon-drow looked up. “Lolth’s handmaiden?” she croaked. The word wrenched itself from her mouth. Her wild cackle filled the hollow temple and sent a thrill down T’lar’s spine. The laugh was chaos itself, uncontrolled and as dangerŹous as a rock fall.

Then the demon-drow began to sing.

The song was harsh, as if the creature’s throat was tight and parched. Yet the notes filled the temple with magic that plucked at the spiderwebs and made them vibrate like the strings of a lyre. T’lar could feel it within her own body: a thrumming surge of power. The demon-drow had been withered and gaunt when she fell out of the hole in the wall, but she rose to her feet plumped and visibly stronger. When her song ended, she stood solid and strong. She stared down at T’lar.

“What month is it? What year?”

T’lar met the demon-drow’s gaze unflinchingly. Lolth hated weakness, and so did the demons that served her. “The month of Ches, in the Year of the Cauldron—1378, by the reckoning of the World Above.”

The demon-drow shook her head. “Five months.” She stared down at her hands and arms, then abruptly clenched her fists. “Who are you?”

T’lar bowed. “T’lar Mizz’rynturl of the Velkyn Velve, assasŹsin of the Temple of the Black Mother.”

The demon-drow looked down at her, an expression of open amusement on her face. “Assassin?” she said. “Were you sent to kill me?”

“Indeed no! I serve Lolth.”

“That’s fortunate.” The demon-drow’s voice dropped to a harsh whisper, and she leaned closer, leering. “No mortal can kill me—though many have tried.” She reared back and shouted, “The void itself has no effect on me!”

T’lar was starting to suspect that this was something much more powerful than a yochlol. Some new form of demon that Lolth herself had spawned. “By what name should I address you, Mistress?”

The demon-drow was silent for several moments. Her spider jaws gnashed. At last she answered, “The Lady Penitent.”

It sounded like a title a powerful being might use. “Are you a demon lord?”

The Lady Penitent snapped out a laugh. Her eyes looked wild. “More than that. Much more.” She waved a misshapen hand at the mural on the wall. “I even have my own temple.”

T’lar nodded, her chest tight with excitement. Had she just played midwife to some ancient and long-forgotten deity? She kept her face expressionless, despite the surge of emotion that left her near giddy. The Spider Queen must have been watching when Nafay died. And again when T’lar offered up her sacrifice. Lolth was known for her caprice. It would not be unheard of for the goddess to reward a mere assassin with power that would make a priestess weep. The services of a demigod’s avatar, for example.

“Your song,” T’lar said. “I felt its power.”

“Lolth’s dark chorus? Bae’qeshel?”

T’lar hadn’t heard the word before, but to admit that would be to show weakness. And deities spawned of chaos and blood despised the weak. She nodded and spoke boldly. “I want to learn it. Teach me.”

The Lady Penitent cocked her head. For a moment, her expression seemed melancholic. Almost mortal. “You remind me of someone. A young female, heir to the throne of House Melarn. She asked the same thing, once.”

“What happened to her?” T’lar asked.

The Lady Penitent bared jagged teeth. “She died.”

T’lar refused to be cowed. “She was unworthy, then.”

“Yes,” the Lady Penitent said in a harsh whisper. “She was … weak.” Her lips twisted into a grimace.

T’lar stood firm before the Lady Penitent. “In me, you will find strength. And determination. I journeyed all the way from Guallidurth to do my valsharess’s bidding.”

“Guallidurth? The city with as many sects as an egg sac has hatchlings?”

T’lar felt a sliver of apprehension. The deity was challenging her—testing her faith. Fortunately, T’lar’s commitment was strong. The Temple of the Black Mother was one of the youngŹest in the city. It had splintered away from the Yorn’yathrins a mere six decades ago and had yet to rise to prominence, but rise to prominence it would. Especially under the tutelage of a demigod’s avatar.

“The priestesses of the Black Mother are fervent in their devotions,” she assured the Lady Penitent. “They will serve you well.”

The avatar

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