Extinction - Lisa Smedman [110]
"If it truly is Eilistraee's will, I will try," Halisstra said slowly. Then she realized that the first step in her monumental quest had yet to be taken. "Seyll said the Crescent Blade was lost on the Cold Field. Where is that?"
"It lies about three days' march to the southeast of here, at the edge of the great wood," Uluyara said. "It is a dangerous place. Centuries ago it was a battlefield, and the foul magic once unleashed there permeates it. The ghosts of the dead soldiers who once fought there roam it still-and are at their most dangerous in winter. When the chill of the air matches the chill of the grave they rise to fight again-and sweep away everything in their path."
Halisstra, going over Seyll's message again in her mind, was only half listening.
"Is the Cold Field home to a dragon?" she asked, remembering the warning about a wyrm.
Uluyara shrugged and said, "None has been sighted there, but it is possible. The battle was said to involve dragons. The Cold Field was scoured by their magical breath, and its soil remains infertile to this day. One of these dragons might have laired there in the centuries since."
"How did the Crescent Blade come to be lost?" Halisstra asked. "Seyll said 'she' was carrying it. Who? A priestess?"
The look Uluyara gave Halisstra was a peculiar one. She stared as if she'd suddenly realized something about Halisstra-something of import.
"She who carried the Crescent Blade was a priestess of the first rank," she said. "One of our Sword Dancers. She came, originally, from the same city as yourself. She came from Ched Nasad."
Halisstra nodded. She was surprised to hear that someone from her own city had also wound up at that temple, so far from home.
"What House was she?" Halisstra asked.
"House Melarn."
Halisstra blinked, and asked, "What… what was her name?"
"Mathira."
Halisstra frowned. She didn't recognize the name, at first-but then a memory bubbled up from her childhood. A memory of the day she'd noticed that one of the portrait busts in House Melarn's great hall was "broken." The chisel work that obliterated the features of the stone head and the name carved into its base had been roughly done, so it was still possible to make out the first letter: an M. When Halisstra noticed the damage, she asked her mother whose bust it had been and how it came to be broken. Her answer was a stinging slap across the face-a slap so hard it had split Halisstra's upper lip. She could still remember her surprise-and the taste of her own blood. Some questions, she'd learned, were better not asked.
Which had made her all that much more keen to have an answer. And so, years later when she had become a priestess, she'd used one of the spells granted by Lolth to satisfy her curiosity. Under the spell's magic, the name on the ruined bust had blazed clearly: Mathira. Discreet inquiries had uncovered a sliver of information about the woman, that she had fallen into disgrace and been forced to flee Ched Nasad a decade before Halisstra was born. What her "traitorous act" had been, however, Halisstra had not been able to discover. Eventually, having reached the end of the thread of family scandal she grew bored and let the matter drop.
"So," Halisstra said, half whispering, "Mathira must have fled Ched Nasad because she'd turned to the worship of Eilistraee."
"And she came here," Uluyara finished for her. "She rose through the ranks of the faithful to become a Sword Dancer, and was the priestess who carried the Crescent Blade onto the Cold Field-and lost it.
And it was up to Halisstra to find it and to use it as Eilistraee intended, to kill Lolth.
It was all too much to be mere coincidence. Halisstra saw the hand of Eilistraee in every step of it. Who else but a goddess could guide the lives of mortals