multitudes of leering stalactites, paused and regarded the lone stranger carefully, hand
crossbows or poisoned javelins held ready until Dinin was far beyond them.
That was the way in Menzoberranzan: always alert, always distrustful.
Dinin gave one careful look around when he reached the edge of the Clawrift, then
slipped over the side and used his innate powers of levitation to slowly descend into the
chasm. More than a hundred feet down, he again looked into the bolts of readied hand
crossbows, but these were withdrawn as soon as the mercenary guardsmen recognized
Dinin as one of their own.
Jarlaxle has been waiting for you, one of the guards signaled in the intricate silent
hand code of the dark elves.
Dinin didn't bother to respond. He owed commoner soldiers no explanations. He
pushed past the guardsmen rudely, making his way down a short tunnel that soon
branched into a virtual maze of corridors and rooms. Several turns later, the dark elf
stopped before a shimmering door, thin and almost translucent. He put his hand against
its surface, letting his body heat make an impression that heat-sensing eyes on the other
side would understand as a knock.
"At last," he heard a moment later, in Jarlaxle's voice. "Do come in, Dinin, my
Khal'abbil. You have kept me waiting far too long."
Dinin paused a moment to get a bearing on the unpredictable mercenary's inflections
and words. Jarlaxle had called him Khal'abbil, "my trusted friend," his nickname for
Dinin since the raid that had destroyed House Do'Urden (a raid in which Jarlaxle had
played a prominent role), and there was no obvious sarcasm in the mercenary's tone.
There seemed to be nothing wrong at all. But, why, then, had Jarlaxle recalled him from
his critical scouting mission to House Vandree, the Seventeenth House of
Menzoberranzan? Dinin wondered. It had taken Dinin nearly a year to gain the trust of
the imperiled Vandree house guard, a position, no doubt, that would be severely
jeopardized by his unexplained absence from the house compound.
There was only one way to find out, the rogue soldier decided. He held his breath
and forced his way into the opaque barrier. It seemed as if he were passing through a wall
of thick water, though he did not get wet, and, after several long steps across the flowing
extraplanar border of two planes of existence, he forced his way through the seemingly
inch-thick magical door and entered Jarlaxle's small room.
The room was alight in a comfortable red glow, allowing Dinin to shift his eyes
from the infrared to the normal light spectrum. He blinked as the transformation
completed, then blinked again, as always, when he looked at Jarlaxle.
The mercenary leader sat behind a stone desk in an exotic cushioned chair,
supported by a single stem with a swivel so that it could rock back at a considerable
angle. Comfortably perched, as always, Jarlaxle had the chair leaning way back, his
slender hands clasped behind his clean-shaven head (so unusual for a drow!).
Just for amusement, it seemed, Jarlaxle lifted one foot onto the table, his high black
boot hitting the stone with a resounding thump, then lifted the other, striking the stone
just as hard, but this boot making not a whisper.
The mercenary wore his ruby-red eye patch over his right eye this day, Dinin noted.
To the side of the desk stood a trembling little humanoid creature, barely half
Dinin's five-and-a-half-foot height, including the small white horns protruding from the
top of its sloping brow.