and scurried into side halls and off chambers. Her forceful strides caused her mail to chime and the candle flame to dance.
How could Lolth have chosen another? Quenthel washad been she reminded herself with heatthe Mistress of Arach-Tinilith. Lolth had brought her back from the dead.
But the Spider Queen had chosen her, an upstart whore!
The serpents of her whip offered soothing words in her mind but she ignored their soft hissing. You are still the First Sister of House Baenre, K'Sothra said.
True, Quenthel acknowledged. But she was no longer Mistress of Arach-Tinilith. She had seen to that. Quenthel knew it was blasphemous to think ill of the Yor'thae, but she could not stop herself. Quenthel would have preferred the dignity of a clean death to the shame of being removed from Arach-Tinilith.
Triel regarded her differently since her removal; everyone in the House did.
Why would Lolth have cast her so low? After all she had done and endured?
No one had been better suited to be Lolth's Yor'thae. No one. Especially not her.
A cobweb caught Quenthel's eye. Her rage subsided, and she stopped in the middle of the hallway. She saw nothing unusual about the web, but it seemed meaningful to her.
It hung in a corner, strung between two tapestry-covered walls, silvery in the candlelight. It was big. A stonespider's web, Quenthel decided. She had seen stone spiders grow half as large as her hand.
A few desiccated caveflies hung from the strands like tiny marionettes.
She walked to the web, head cocked, and held the candle aloft.
She studied the strands, thinking them beautiful in their intricacy. Every strand had a reason to exist in the web, every strand served a purpose.
Every strand.
The web made sense in a way that her life, death, and resurrection did not.
She looked more closely at the web, moved the candle around it, but saw no spider. She lightly brushed it with her finger, hoping the vibration would draw the creature out of hiding.
Nothing. The caveflies bounced on their strings.
For no reason that she could articulate, Quenthel hated the web. An impulse took her, and she could not stop herself.
She lifted the candle and held its flame to the strands. She knew it was blasphemy but she did it anyway, unable to contain a crazed grin.
The strands curled and disintegrated, vanishing into fleeting streams of smoke. The caveflies rained to the floor. Warming to her work, Quenthel continued until she had obliterated all sign of the web. She kneeled and burned each of the caveflies, one by one.
The serpents of her whip were too stunned even to hiss.
Mistress? K'Sothra finally managed.
Quenthel ignored her and stalked off, her rage inexplicably abated.
Chapter Sixteen
Danifae lost track of Jeggred the moment she stepped onto the Pass of the Soulreaver. One moment he was there; the next, gone.
She was alone.
A narrow passageway stretched before her, lined on each side by sheer walls of rock. A gray mist crawled over the ground. Her skin went gooseflesh from the chill.
With nothing for it, she walked forward. She felt as though she was covering leagues with each step, taking days to draw each breath. She pressed on, waiting for the Reaver to show itself.
After only a few moments, whispers sounded in her head, then hisses, pained wails. She could not see the source.
The hairs on the back of her neck rose. Her breath came fast.
It was behind her! She knew it with certainty.
She lowered her morningstar and turned around slowly.
A mere five paces away, the misty, serpentine form of the Soulreaver filled the passage. Its empty eyes reduced her to insignificance. Its open mouth could have swallowed an ogre whole. Deep in its throat, in its bowels, glowed innumerable souls, as tiny as the dolls of a child, as desperate and pained as victims of a torturemaster.
Danifae struggled to find herself, t o show no fear. She knew she faced another test of her worthiness. She touched her holy symbol, and the amber felt cool in her palm.
The Reaver was so immense, so ancient, so terrible....
The screams of the souls filled her mind. She bore it, though she wanted to dig a furrow in her skull.
The Reaver opened its mouth wider, simultaneously beckoning and challenging her to come forward, to test herself against what it would show her.
She started forward on leaden legs but stopped after only two steps.
Danifae gestured it toward her and said in her most seductivewhisper, "You come to me."
It did not hesitate. Mouth agape, it streaked at her, terrifyingly fast. She held her