locate the Crescent Blade several times, but though she was certain she'd com-mitted the words of the song to memory correctly, she might have confused the melody slightly. Either that, or the darksong was still beyond her limited reach. She'd felt none of the tingling certainty that should have led the way to the object she was seeking. The only thing she'd felt was the incessant cold wind sweeping across the deso-late plain.
She sat in the darkness, peering through the gloom at the object she'd just pulled from the breast pocket of herpiwafwi:her House medallion. When she converted to Eilistraee's faith, she'd decided to set it aside with the rest of her past, but something had made her hesitate. The brooch was magical, after all, and gave her the ability to levitate - but there was more to it than that. She sensed that it was not only a link with her past but with her future as well.
Setting the brooch beside her on the snowy ground, she drew Seyll's songsword from its sheath and raised the hilt of the weapon to her lips. How did that melody go again? It seemed strange to be playing a song from thebae'qeshel tradition on an instrument forged for a priestess of the Lady of the Dance ... or did it? Wasn't the rais-ing of the skills and talents of the Underdark to the World Above the very end for which Eilistraee strove?
For a time, Halisstra concentrated on her fingering, trying the melody in different keys and pausing, from time to time, to warm her fingers by blowing on them. Though she tried to concentrate, her mind kept drifting, and her eyelids felt heavy. After more than a cycle and a half of constant searching, she was desperately in need of the release that Reverie could give. She longed to let it claim her, to drift among her memories until they soothed her, but she couldn't give up her search. Exhausted though she was, she would master the spell before she rested. But the bitterly cold wind seemed to snatch away the notes and fling them into the night, scattering her efforts like dead leaves in a wind.
Lowering the songsword, Halisstra stared at the scraps of bone and rusted metal that protruded through the snow all around her. Centuries before an army had taken the field against a foe who counted dragons among their allies. Knowing that they would al-most certainly be defeated, those soldiers had nonetheless marched bravely into battle - and been slain.
Centuries later, at the urging of a dead priestess, Halisstra was about to face even more impossible odds. It was madness to think that she could defeat a goddess. Even armed with the Crescent Blade - assuming she could find it - Halisstra would surely bedefeated. Lolth's power was unimaginably vast and all encompass-ing; no one could escape her web of destruction and vengeance. Halisstra was foolish to even think of trying.
Perhaps it would be better if shedidn't find the Crescent Blade.
Suddenly Halisstra sensed someone looking over her shoulder. Someone whose breath came in thin, chill gasps.
Startled, she sprang to her feet, songsword in hand. She whirled but saw no one. Quickly, she sang the spell that would allow her to see invisible creatures. The few flakes of snow sharpened as the air took on a magical shimmer, but still she saw nothing.
Then a ghostly figure materialized right in front of her.
It was a drow female, but one who had been horribly disfigured. Long white hair clung in straggling clumps to a scalp that was puck-ered with deep pits, and her face was terribly burned. Where the nose had been was nothing but a gaping hole, and the eyes were likewise missing. Skin had bubbled in enormous blisters on the face and on those portions of the arms and legs that were bare. The torso, thank-fully, was hidden by a chain mail tunic, but the metal links were corroded and loose as though the armor had been hurled into a lake of acid.
Halisstra clutched the broken songsword, heart pounding, wishing desperately that she held a better weapon. The ghostly figure, how-ever, made no threatening moves. Instead it stooped and reached for something on the ground: Halisstra's brooch. As it did, a medallion that hung from its waist by a metal chain swung forward. Like the chain mail, the medallion was blackened and pitted, but Halisstra could see a faint trace of the design it once bore: Eilistraee's symbol.
Halisstra