free.
The fanatic on the driftdisc stepped off it and joined those who had circled around the spot where the statue should have been. His arms lifted, and the others drew breath. At his signal they chanted in an impossibly slow drone.
The chanting intensified. The mist roiled. It swirled above the Pit, coalescing into a knot that became an eye, as large as a serving platter. The eye blinked open, emitting a dull orange light that illuminated the fanatic leading the chant. Immediately, he prostrated himself on the rubble. Slowly, the eye rotated, its sickly light washing over the fanatics one by one. Each fell to his knees in turn, crying out the Ancient One’s name.
“Ghaunadaur, Ghaunadaur, Ghaunadaur …”
Naxil stared, horrified. The puddle of orange-purple light didn’t quite extend to the captives. He knew, instinctively, that Ghaunadaur considered them unworthy, beneath even its contempt. Naxil’s stomach felt watery and weak, and his head swam even without the drug. Tears poured down his cheeks, soaking his mask. Beside him, the other captives wept softly.
He touched his mask to steady himself, and saw a hazy smudge: his hand, becoming visible. Hastily, he renewed his prayer, rendering himself invisible again.
The eye completed its rotation. Then it “spoke” in a voice that slithered into Naxil’s mind like a damp, unwelcome slug.
Clear the Pit.
The fanatics closest to the Pit laid hands on the jumbled stone and chanted. The others touched their backs, and joined in the prayer. Chips of rock melted into mud. A stench like manure filled the cavern. The fanatics closest to the Pit made paddling motions with their hands. The mud churned. Foul-smelling steam boiled from it, rendering the air in the cavern hot and humid. The puddle of mud sagged, twisted like water down a drain, and revealed the top of a shaft with utterly smooth, glasslike walls.
The captive next to NaxilJub, the half-orcfainted, either succumbing to his wounds, or to fear. Other captives tried to pray to Eilistraee, but only managed a slurred mutter, thanks to the drug.
The fanatics maintained their chant, and the mud continued to sink. With each passing moment, more fanatics descended the stairs and crowded into the cavern, lending their voices to the unholy chorus. Abruptly, the chant ended.
A second command hissed out of the floating eye. Feed them to me, it ordered. Then it disappeared.
Naxil tensed as the fanatic guarding the captives turned. “Forward,” he commanded.
The fanatics parted, forming a corridor for the prisoners to walk through. “Ghaunadaur,” they chanted. “Consume them. Consign them to oblivion. Devour them.”
Compelled by the command, Naxil stumbled with the others to the Pit. A captive tripped and fell off the edge. Her scream wailed away into the distance. Another leaped into the Pit of his own accord, crying Ghaunadaur’s name, causŹing Naxil’s lip to curl at his cowardice. The other captives wavered at the edge. The magical compulsion wasn’t quite strong enough to compel them to take their own lives.
Naxil stared down into a seemingly bottomless well. He’d heard the Pit was nearly half a league deep. Far, far below, he saw a bright silver glow. He wondered if it were the planar breach Cavatina had warned them about.
The fanatics closed in behind the captives. The push of a hand sent another of Eilistraee’s faithful into the Pit. Others swiftly followed. Soon only Naxil, still hidden by his invisŹibility, stood at the edge.
Naxil listened to the captives’ screams as they fell. Tears streamed down his cheeks and soaked his mask. He closed his eyes, unwilling to see more. He took a step backand realized, to his amazement, that he was no longer under the magical compulsion.
Someone jostled him from behind: one of the fanatics, crowding forward. The fanatic started, glanced sideways at the spot where Naxil stood, and opened his mouth to shout. Naxil grabbed his robe and spun him off the edge. A flick of Naxil’s fingers triggered a cantrip; his voice shifted to the falling cultist and followed him as he fell. “Ghaunadaur! Consume me!”
The other fanatics started. The face of the one who’d led the chanting purpled. He spun to face a green-robed cultist next to him. “Trucebreaker!” he howled. “What of your oath? Our Houses were to descend together to greet the Ancient One!”
The other fanatic whirled. “House Abbylan did not sanction this. He leaped of his own accord!”
As they argued, Naxil edged away from the Pit. Avoiding the fanatics was difficult, as the room was crowded. He wouldn’t be able to climb the stairsnot with