The assassin tested it, but backed off again as the smoke bit at him painfully.
“The other way,” he told Dahlia, nodding to the stair across the second level.
“She’s up there?” Dahlia asked, not moving other than to reform her singular long staff.
Entreri looked at her curiously, and tried to push her toward the stair.
But Dahlia avoided him and moved toward the balcony instead, though she motioned for him to continue across the room.
The assassin glanced back as he reached the stair, and smiled wide. Dahlia rushed to the edge of the smoking area, planted her staff against the base of the wall opposite the short stair, and leaped forward, twisting and pushing off as she came even with the opening. With great agility and strength, the elf woman hung there, her momentum lost, and as she started to descend, she lifted her legs higher to the side and pushed off with all her strength, lifting herself up the side stair.
Entreri sprinted up the short stairwell and burst through the door, to find himself facing Sylora Salm and her crooked wand.
Dahlia was there, too, having cleared the blackened area.
“All my enemies in one place,” Sylora said. “How convenient.”
Dahlia responded by thrusting the end of her staff at the woman’s mouth. The attack seemed true, but the weapon hit a barrier, a brown semicircle glowing in front of her at the impact.
Sylora laughed and whipped her small wand in front of her, and from that wand came a series of black darts, spinning through the room.
Both Dahlia and Entreri curled defensively, but both got hit. Many darts flew, and those small missiles brought forth painful bites indeed.
“Go!” Entreri demanded of Dahlia. He leaped at Sylora, as did Dahlia, sword, knife, and staff stabbing hard.
And all, weapons and attackers, were easily repelled by the barrier.
Down below, from the balcony, they heard a different cadence of explosive missiles.
“The barrier can be broken!” Dahlia surmised, and though Sylora hit them again with a rain of darts, on they came, their only defense a brutal forward assault.
Indeed, behind the globe, Sylora appeared genuinely concerned, and a bit disoriented by the sheer ferocity of their attacks.
The strikes didn’t diminish until something flew past Dahlia, making her instinctively duck. She called out to Entreri as she did, and he, too, had to dive aside, his dagger not quite catching up to the small fiend as it fluttered past him. The devil’s strike, however, did score, its whiplike tail lashing out at the assassin and cutting him painfully across the shoulder.
Up into the air went the creature, above the next rain of Sylora’s darts—and that barrage had Dahlia and Entreri staggering back under the weight and sting of the assault.
But Arunika’s imp hadn’t been hit. Its skin hanging in burned strands from Sylora’s earlier encasing ash, it understood the sorceress’s defenses more keenly than the others.
Sylora hardly even seemed aware of the creature as it flipped over the top of the bubble and dropped down upon her extended arm. With clawed feet and hands, it grabbed at her forearm and hand, at the wand, and when she pulled back against it and slapped at it with her other hand, the imp bared its fangs and bit down hard on her weapon hand.
It lifted its head, two severed fingers hanging from its mouth, and tore the Dread Ring wand from Sylora’s weakened grasp. Away it leaped, stinging her with its tail as it flew free of her desperate grabs.
Time seemed to stop then, a sudden, shocked pause from the three remaining in the tower room.
“Oh, now you die,” Artemis Entreri promised, rising from his knees against the far wall, Dahlia beside him.
But Sylora Salm wasn’t out of tricks. She threw her cloak up over her head, and as it descended, she transformed into the likeness of a giant raven.
Dahlia yelled in protest and struck at her. Entreri, too, managed a stab.
But neither scored a mortal, or even a serious hit, and the raven dived from the room, down the short stair, and out the tower balcony.
Drizzt leaped high, clearing the last line of still-smoking rings, on his way to the cave.
As he landed, though, he heard a sound from above, a peculiar sound given the circumstance and location: the whinnying of an angry horse.
That noise turned his attention back the other way, where he saw a large crow, a human-sized bird, fly out from the balcony, soaring into the night.