
came a great crash, as the columns shat-tered against the inside of the portal. But the door held. The noise
faded into an echo.
Pale green light flared to life, revealing their three faces. A cool wisp of magelight danced on the palm
of Sulbrin's hand. They stared at each other, panting. Then, as one, they grinned. They had made it.
"Shall we?" the wizard asked wryly.
"Let's," Trisa said merrily, dusting herself off. "I think I've had my fill of Undermountain for a long time
to come."
Jardis laughed in agreement.
Together, they sped swiftly through the gloomy maze of halls and corridors, retracing the steps that had
brought them to the shrine of Savras. They passed through a crypt lined with dusty stone sar-cophagi. Next
was the chamber filled with candles, all mysteriously ever-burning. And here was the Hall of Many Pillars.
They were close now. A few more twists and turns and they would be at the Well of Entry. There waited
the rope to take them back up to the Inn of the Yawning Portal, and to fame everlasting.
Nothing could stop them now.
"We're the Company of the Red Wolf!" Jardis shouted in jubilation.
"Our names will never be forgotten!" Sulbrin rasped exultantly.
Trisa howled with glee. "We're the greatest heroes that ever—"
A shaggy gray form leapt squealing from the shadows, knocking the thief to the ground. Long yel-low
teeth flashed in the gloom.
Jardis drew his glaive and skewered the thing. It let out a shrill shriek, then died. With a boot, he shoved
the creature aside, gagging in disgust. It was an enormous rat, the size of a small pig. Yet a rat was still a
rat—nothing to fret about. He reached down to help Trisa up. Suddenly he froze. The thief stared up-ward
with blank green eyes. Blood spattered her face and clothes. Her throat had been torn out.
"Trisa?" Jardis whispered in puzzlement. She couldn't be dead. How could she be dead? What about
their shop? He knelt and roughly shook her shoulder. "Trisa!"
Dim shapes scuttled just beyond the circle of Sul-brin's magelight. A hungry chittering rose on the dank
air, along with a foul stench. Countless pairs of blood-red eyes winked in the dark.
"We have to go, Jardis," the wizard said, in a chok-ing voice. "It's too late for Trisa."
Dazed, Jardis lurched to his feet. Then hunger won out over fear of light, and the rats attacked.
With a shout of rage, Jardis swung his massive glaive, cleaving several of the rabid creatures in twain.
Sulbrin spoke a guttural word of magic, and the wisp of magelight in his hand flared into a ball of green fire.
He heaved it at the undulating gray mass. In seconds a half-dozen rats squealed as emerald flames licked at
their mangy pelts. They scurried frantically around the hall, setting others ablaze. In moments the entire
chamber was lit by flickering green light. Jardis stared in horror. Every inch of the vast hall was seething
with gigantic rats.
Fear redoubled, Jardis swung his sword in whistling arcs, barely beating back the ravenous crea-tures.
Sulbrin raised his hand, readying another spell. He never had the chance to cast it. A rat leapt on him from
behind, and the wizard cried out in terror as he pitched forward. In moments, his body was lost amid the
gnashing throng of rats, his cry cut short.
Tears streaming down his face, Jardis hewed at the rats, shouting in wordless rage. Blood oozed from a
dozen small, stinging wounds. Yet somehow he kept the vermin at bay as he backed toward the archway
that led out of the hall. He was nearly there. Only a few paces more.
His glaive lodged in the body of one of the rats. The blade was torn from his hand and swept away by
the surging mass. Weaponless, Jardis sprang back, scrambling over the living carpet of rats. Somehow he
gained the archway, stumbling into the corridor beyond, but the rats followed. Jardis ran as blood poured
into his eyes, blinding him. A rat leapt forward, gnawing the back of his knee, severing the tendons. Jardis
cried out in agony, nearly fell, and lurched on. Another rat lunged for his back but missed, striking the
leather purse at his belt instead. The purse tore open, spilling a spray of gold coins, as well as something
bright and sparkling.
The Third Eye of Savras.
For a second Jardis hesitated. Without the crystal, all of this was utterly meaningless. But the horde of
rats was mere paces behind. To reach for the crystal was to die. Clenching his jaw, he limped on.
Then he saw the rope dangling ahead. Twenty feet above was a large hole in the ceiling, and beyond
that, golden firelight. The Well of Entry. Two dozen faces peered down at him from above,
cheering—some for Jardis, some for the rats.
With a bellow of rage and pain, Jardis threw him-self forward, latching on to the rope just as rats flooded
the chamber's floor. Arms bulging, he pulled his body upward. A moment later, he blinked the blood from