Difference between revisions of "Amanita (Chapter 35)"

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(Created page with "{{Amanita nav}} It looks like no rest for the wicked tonight. I don't know if demons sleep. I've never caught one napping, but I'm not exactly the quietest Assassin in the w...")
 
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#REDIRECT [[Amanita (Act V)#Chapter 35]]
It looks like no rest for the wicked tonight.  I don't know if demons sleep.  I've never caught one napping, but I'm not exactly the quietest Assassin in the world.  The ice caves were full of demons again: Death Maulers, Ice Things, and more of those damned frozen Zombies.  I'm really, really starting to hate those guys.  Why couldn't it have been Succubi?  They turn easily, put curses on other demons, and the catfights are pretty funny to watch.
 
 
 
I knew the caves went a long way, but after I found a second Horadric waypoint, I started marking the walls with demon blood X's.  The Horadrim don't put their waypoints anywhere near each other, and neither was close to an entrance.  It would be easy to get lost down here.  There aren't many landmarks, though sometimes I can tell if I've been through from the frosted-over lumps on the floor.  One columned hall had two local boys on ice, and a batch of ice Zombies guarding a treasure chest.  I think one of the Barbs was still alive when he got frozen.  Unlike Anya, he didn't stay that way.
 
 
 
On a return trip to dump potions with Malah, Cain tried to make chit-chat.  "Amy, please stay a while.  I wish to speak with you."
 
 
 
"Ok, what is it?" I said, already angling towards Larzuk's to pick up more bolts.
 
 
 
"I have been speaking with Anya.  She is a fascinating young woman, by the way.  I feel the future of the northern highlanders is secure with such strong-willed and devoted young people to lead them."
 
 
 
"Great, great.  And... ?"
 
 
 
He chewed his lip for a few long seconds.  "Anya asked me about you, and I was forced to confess that, though we have traveled together for months, I do not know you well."
 
 
 
"What's to know?  I'm doing a job that's gotta get done."
 
 
 
"She mentioned something, about how you rescued her from her imprisonment..."
 
 
 
"Oh, that was nothing," I tried to brush it off.  "I found her frozen, asked Malah what to do, and she gave me the potion."
 
 
 
Cain's eyebrows met in a dark line, like a wall between his ears and his brain.  "Malah told me you did not.  You came to her already knowing what you would need."
 
 
 
"Look, it doesn't matter.  Ok, I have a talent.  My naturally sweet disposition can only take me so far, so I play head games.  It gives me an edge in a fight.  That's all."
 
 
 
"What Anya described is more than that!"
 
 
 
A cool anger tinged Cain's thoughts: he's a little offended, but not very.  Not yet.  He's a nice old fart, willing to give me the benefit of a doubt.  But I can't tell him everything.  "Ok, it's not just head games.  I can enter other people's thoughts, and tell what they're thinking.  It helps me find things out.  Sometimes, I can tell what someone's going to do before they do it.  Strong, healthy people can kick me out of their heads.  Anya almost did.  For what I do, it's useful, but kind of limited."
 
 
 
He nodded solemnly, still a bit upset.  "I have heard of this talent of yours.  By all accounts, it is very rare."
 
 
 
Actually, it isn't, but most of us don't blow our cover as badly as I have.  "I guess.  I don't know anybody else who can do it."
 
 
 
Cain raised an eyebrow.  "Why have you not told anyone?"
 
 
 
I shrugged.  "No reason to."
 
 
 
"No reason to?" he sputtered.  "All this time, you have claimed there is nothing out of the ordinary about you!  I have followed you through Hell itself, always sharing what I knew in the faint hope that it might be of some help to you, and only now do I found out about this extraordinary gift of yours?"
 
 
 
I shook my head, and gave him my best shit-eating grin. "Aw c'mon, Cain!  Dames like me lie about anything, just to keep in practice.  A guy your age should know that!"
 
 
 
He frowned, sadness tingeing his response. "Amy... though I do not know you well, I know you well enough not to believe that."
 
 
 
Damn it.  I could take it if he was mad, but when he's just disappointed in me... "All right, all right.  I don't tell anyone because it scares people.  They think I'm gonna invade their thoughts, steal all their secrets, and control their minds to turn them into my willing slaves or something.  I do not go around reading everyone's minds all the time, even if I could."
 
 
 
"Of course not," Cain smiled, relaxing.  "Were your talent as powerful as that, you would not need to bother with lying.  Or you would be much better at it."
 
 
 
"Thanks a lot," I snorted.  "I also would have spotted Nihlathak a lot faster."
 
 
 
"That is water under the bridge, young hero!  All the time I have been with you, I feared for your life.  So many others had fallen where you ventured, but you always returned, and in the end, triumphed.  I never understood how you could remain safe in the midst of so much danger.  Now, all my worries have been banished.  Like the heroes of old, mighty forces work through you, making you something more than merely human --"
 
 
 
"Uh, Cain?"
 
 
 
"Yes?"
 
 
 
"Don't you think you're laying it on a little thick?"
 
 
 
He looked baffled.  "But..."
 
 
 
"Repeat after me: it's just Amy.  She's weird.  Ok?"
 
 
 
"Well... as you wish."
 
 
 
"Thanks.  Now, I gotta get some more bolts.  Back in a while."
 
 
 
In a set of ponds under the deepest ice, I found what I wanted: Succubi!  Howling catfights accompanied my every step, and none of the other demons ever got near me.  I don't want to know what Baal does to his Succubi to make them prefer me.  Unless... nah.  The whole idea behind Succubi is completely heterosexual.  Twice I was ambushed by packs of demon-slut sisters when I opened urns.  A third urn brought out a single one.  The more I look at them, the more sure I am that the fancy burial urns aren't local.  Barbarians make pots, but never anything that elaborate.  They're a trap for the greedy, which must be why they've gotten me so often.
 
 
 
At long last, after stomping my way through I don't know how many miles of ice, I found an exit to the caves.  I came out near the edge of a cliff, in an icy wind so hard and cold I had to clench my teeth hard to keep them from chattering.  If only this damn circlet wasn't so useful...  I crawled to the edge of the cliff and looked down hundreds of feet into a mist of snow, the ground nowhere in sight.  I could probably kill something by spitting -- it would freeze hard as a rock on the way down.
 
 
 
This was the coldest, nastiest part of the mountain I'd seen yet, but there were still signs of human activity.  A campsite with a dead Barbarian, lightly clothed as usual, was right near the cave.  Further out, I found burial chests, cached weapons, and signs of other campsites.  I could not see anything that would support human life up here, but that was probably because of all the demons.  An Imp 'ported in almost as soon as I started poking around, and soon I was knee-deep in the little pests.  Then the Crush Beasts came.  Sigh.  I amused myself confusing the crushers into attacking the Imps.  It was fun to hear one come running in, then squeal when the big guy turned around and stomped him.
 
 
 
The high tundra was probably a special place for the Barbarians.  The peak of the mountain was close, I could look up and see something shiny that wasn't snow up there.  I found a couple of stone circles.  The stones were small, no more than a couple of feet tall, but there they were.  The loot was great.  Cain was happy to see a legendary bow called Raven Claw, and said I should try using it.  Maybe, but I like something with a little more power.  There was also a sword called Death's Touch, Isenhart's helm, and an axe of some kind.
 
 
 
When I found the Hell gate, I walked right in.  The heat was a relief for about 15 seconds, and then I hated it as much as usual.  This set of Hell islands was a barracks, full of slaves creatures, slave drivers, and Imps.  Midway through clearing it, an amulet popped out of thin air and fell into my hand, along with a note.  Guess who.
 
 
 
 
 
"Congratulations on your 45th!  Here's my gift, a Shadow Amulet!  Sorry it's got nothing else going for it, but that's the way it came.  Those boots back in your stash will make up for your lightning resistance.  That's all I got for you.  Remember, walk softly, and don't forget to give those Ancients a little extra juice.  Venom, that is.
 
 
 
-- The Mule"
 
 
 
 
 
My birthday was 4 months ago.  I'm only 27.  But he can think what he wants for a Shadow Amulet!  There are high-ranking Viz-Jaq'taar mentalists who can only wish they had one of these bad boys.  I put it on, tossed the old one, and went to kick some serious ass.  It was great.  I was faster, my mind was clearer, and my poison was stronger than ever.  I even felt better fighting with the katar.  Natty would have been so jealous...
 
 
 
After I cleaned up my little corner of Hell, I went back to the tundra.  The Barbarians had some barricades up here too, manned by Imps and slaves as usual.  It was getting so boring, I'd almost rather see ice Zombies on the walls.  I did manage to confuse three Crush Beasts at the same time.  Their heads were poking over the wall, ripe for the picking, and after a little mental misdirection they were fighting on the side of right and never knew it.  I love the sound of shrieking Imps.  It sounds like... victory.
 
 
 
Another Waypoint was up on the tundra, near a cliff under the icy cap of Mt. Arreat.  I knew what to look for this time, and found the cave entrance without much trouble.  More ice caves.  They'd be easier than trying to climb the ice, but not by much.  I was tired.  The sun was going down; I'd been out here all night and all day again.  But how much time was left to catch Baal?  There was no way of knowing until I got to the peak.
 
 
 
"Warrior?"
 
 
 
I'd been standing by the waypoint, wondering if I should pack it in and get some sleep.  I knew I wasn't going to, but I always leave myself open to temptation.  Life is more fun that way.  "Yes, Qual-Kehk?"
 
 
 
"Every time I hear of you, your deeds have become more legendary.  You have already gone further than most men can follow.  None see aught but footprints and the corpses of our enemies in your wake.  Even your prowess at the table outmatches us."
 
 
 
I smiled, feeling a little fuzzy-headed. "Uh... thanks."
 
 
 
"Now, I understand you are approaching the very summit of Mt. Arreat.  Even I have never dared venture there.  Thanks to the snake Nihlathak, you must face the challenge of the Ancient Ones.  Your reputation here does not matter.  It is they who will determine your worthiness."
 
 
 
"Thanks.  Um... who are the Ancient Ones?"
 
 
 
"Our ancestors, of course.  We were like gods then.  You must face them without flinching, or be cast down."
 
 
 
"Uh... what do you mean, face them?"
 
 
 
Qual-Kehk stared hard, not sure what the question meant.  "Trial by combat.  What other measure of a warrior can there be?"
 
 
 
"Oh."  I thought about that a minute.  "Then I guess I'd better get some sleep."
 

Latest revision as of 17:03, 13 February 2017