Those reptilian creatures must have dug into this place in the seatt’s bowels. The state of the bones suggested something else had happened here. Beloved’s forces must have tried to dig in under the seatt, to come in from beneath before anyone here realized. But in the end, they must have been discovered.
Something had gone horribly wrong. Beloved’s forces had died here, buried under the mountain along with their enemies. And here was the orb.
But what would the orb of Spirit be worth in this place? Nothing, now or then. This was
At that truth, Sau’ilahk began to moan.
Dust and dirt stirred as conjury-twisted air gave a voice to his pain. He began weeping, and his growing rage turned into a wail. His shrieks filled the deadend cave with so much wind that pebbles scored the walls and bones rattled across the floor.
Sau’ilahk screamed,
He had been cheated again by the half-truths of his god, as he had a thousand years ago with the promise of eternal life.
A hissing whisper rose in his thoughts.
Sau’ilahk was beyond caring if he offended his god, and he screamed back,
He dropped the orb. Rubble and bones crackled under its weight, along with a metallic clang. Hope of beauty and eternal youth withered, and the pain of renewed loss was too great to bear. He screamed at his god once more.
The hiss assailed him again.
Sau’ilahk’s shrieking wind died. If Wynn lived, why would his treacherous god allow him freedom to do as he pleased? What could he do that he had not tried already in a millennium of searching? He was done with this place, and his misery made him wish to be gone.
That whisper like reptilian scales sliding over sand tore at him again.
He was too anguished to care about more taunting hints, but Beloved went on.
Sau’ilahk stood still, suspicion growing within him. What was this nonsense about chains, handles, or keys ... for the anchors of Existence?
He looked down at the one he had dropped.
The orb just lay at his feet, but there had been a sound when it fell that was wrong. Not the dull crack of stone upon stone, or even bones, but a metallic clank. He crouched, forcing one hand corporeal again, and shoved the orb aside.
In the depression its bulk had made was a spot of ruddy golden hue.
Sau’ilahk quickly slapped away dirt and dust until it was fully revealed. Before him lay a thick and heavy circlet of a rusty-golden metal, neither brass nor gold. Its open ends had protruding knobs pointing directly at each other. Its circumference was covered in engravings, though he could not read those marks.
Sau’ilahk remembered seeing such an item before. Once when he had witnessed one of the Children departing with an anchor, an orb, it had worn just such an open-ended circlet about its pale neck.
He glanced toward the orb and saw something more in the tapered head of its spike.
There were grooves about the right size for the circlet’s knobs. Was this key, this handle, how an orb was truly used? Even so, what good was it to him? This orb was not the one he desired.
This time, no answer came—and Sau’ilahk heard the footfalls echoing down the tunnel.
There was more than one pair, and both were too heavy to be Wynn. If one of them was Chane, Sau’ilahk was too weak to deal with that irksome undead.
Frustration made him hesitate, and then he snatched up the circlet. He had no way to carry it without remaining corporeal, so he turned to the cave’s rear wall.
The last of his energies fueled one final conjuration as a maw opened in the stone.
Sau’ilahk shoved the circlet in, to be retrieved later.
As the maw closed, leaving only raw stone, dormancy took him completely, and he vanished. For now, he was done with this place ... this tragically disappointing place.