
The words were not a traditional sea elf greeting. Shemsen was impervious to those. By the time he'd
left the sahuagin garden to steal a place in a sea elf village, he'd known all their traditions and despised
them without exception. For almost a century he'd lived among them, his malaise and nausea relieved
only when he slipped away to drop a cunningly knotted string where another sahuagin might find it. He
wore his orders around his neck and the sea elves- the thrice-damned fools-admired his treachery so
much they'd ask him to fashion similar ornaments for them.
Then, on a moonless night when the sea had been too quiet, miasma, like ink from all the cuttlefish
that had ever swum, had descended on the village. It clung to gills and nostrils alike. Suffocation wasn't
the worst part. The miasma had talons, or teeth, or knives- Shemsen never knew which. He never saw
what slashed at him. He'd assumed it was some new boon the sahuagin priestesses had sought from
Sekolah. Certainly, he'd survived because he was sahuagin, tougher than any sea elf and blessed with
true senses beneath his malenti skin.
Shemsen had expected to find sahuagin beyond the miasma, but there were only sharks so wrought
with blood frenzy that no malenti could hope to dominate them. It had taken Shemsen's remaining
strength to resist their call as they tore through the sea elf survivors. He couldn't say, then or now, why
he'd resisted, except that however much Shemsen had despised his neighbors, he hadn't wanted to be
anyone's last living vision.
Exhausted from his private battle, he'd fallen to the sea floor in a stupor. When he'd opened his eyes
again the miasma was gone and he was neither alone nor among sahuagin. A handful of villagers had
survived. They were numb and aimless with grief. Shemsen had easily made himself their leader and led
them west with the prevailing current, toward the sahuagin village he hadn't seen in decades. He
anticipated the honor that would fall around his shoulders when he, a malenti, finished what the miasma
and sharks had left undone.
Ten days later, they swam above deserted, ruined coral gardens. A year, at least, had passed since
Shemsen's kin had swum through their ancient home and he, suddenly more alone than he'd imagined
possible, did not tell his look-alike companions what had happened. True, there had been no entwined
instructions waiting for him the previous spring, but that hadn't been unusual. In Shemsen's centuries of
spying on the sea elves, he'd often gone four years, even five or six without contact. He'd never
considered that something might be wrong.
He'd never know what happened to his kin. If there'd been survivors, none had thought to leave him
a message. Shemsen didn't think there had been sur-
vivors. Knowing what had been there, he saw the scars of violence and destruction. Sahuagin did war
against each other, for the glory of Sekolah, who decreed that only the best, the strongest and boldest, were
meant to survive, but in none of the many tales Shemsen knew by heart did sahuagin abandon what they'd
won or lay it to waste.
It had seemed possible that both villages, sahuagin and sea elf, had fallen to an unknown enemy, a
shared enemy. A mortal mind did not want to imagine an enemy that was shared by sahuagin and sea
elves.
Shemsen hadn't embraced the sea elves that day above the ruined sahuagin village. Neither
compassion nor mourning were part of the sahuagin nature, which was Shemsen's nature, if not his shape.
Still, a sahuagin alone was nothing and faced with a choice between nothing and sea elves, Shemsen chose
the elves. He made them his own, his sacred cause, and led them north, to fabled Waterdeep. By the time
they arrived, his loathing had been transformed into something that approached friendship.
So he rolled over in the water and called, "And peace with you, for your pain," to the woman before
making himself heavy in the water.
Shemsen had heard that as recently as sixteen years ago, the Cache was a maelstrom that spewed or
sucked, depending on the tide, and chewed up any ship unfortunate enough to blunder across it. Then the
merfolk had arrived in Waterdeep. In the name of safety, their shamans had gotten rid of the maelstrom
and poked a ship-sized hole in a goddess's bedchamber.
That was the merfolk. Half human, half fish, half mad. Except they, too, were refugees with tales of
black water and annihilation weighing their memories. Perhaps they'd known exactly what they were
doing.
Shemsen sank until the water changed. Heavy, cold, yet tangy with salt, it was the richest water he'd