crowned them. So too did storm clouds, an expanding bank of black as thick and as dark as demon's blood-a storm the likes of which Pharaun could never have imagined.
And it was moving toward them. The cutting wind and screaming webs were its prophets.
The line of souls, unbothered by the swirling wind and gathering storm, poured toward the base of one of the mountains. There, they congregated at a dark point, perhaps a valley or a pass, between two of the largest peaks.
"Lolth's web and city sits on the other side those mountains," Quenthel said above the wind, above the screeching of the webs.
Danifae held her hair back from her face and looked to the far horizon. The distant look in her eyes reminded Pharaun of a mad prophet he had once seen in Menzoberranzan's bazaar.
"All the souls are massing in that gorge at the base of the mountains," Pharaun said, not certain everyone had seen it.
"It is not a gorge," Quenthel answered, her voice barely audible over the wind.
She offered nothing more, and Pharaun didn't like the haunted look in her eyes.
"The sun rises," said Jeggred, shielding his eyes with one of his huge fighting hands.
Pharaun turned to see the lip of a tiny red orb creep diffidently over the eastern horizon. It cast little more light than the silvery nighttime satellite of the World Above when it was full. The light from Lolth's sun formed a clear line on the landscape, a border between darkness and light, that oozed toward them as the orb rose higher. Just as Quenthel had said, the light caused only minor discomfort.
Pharaun lowered his hand from his eyes and watched the first sunrise of his lifetime.
To his surprise and alarm, where the dim light touched, movement occurred. At first, Pharaun thought the sunlight was causing the earth to ripple, but then he realized what was actually occurring.
The plane was birthing spiders. Millions of spiders.
Crawling, scuttling, clambering, they moved from the darkness of their fissures and caves and into the light, summoned by the dawn. All had eight legs, eight eyes, and fangs, but there the similarities ended. Some were the size of rats, some were the size of rothe, and a few that clambered forth out of largest fissures had bloated bodies as large as giants. Some leaped, some phased in and out of reality, some pulled their bloated forms along on overlarge pedipalps or swordlike legs, others tumbled or flew on the gusting wind.
As the sun's light moved across the landscape, the pits, tunnels, and holes that it lit vomited forth their arachnid denizens. A ponderous but visible wave traveled across the earth as the sun slowly trekked higher into the sky. The ground was acrawl.
The light was moving toward them. They watched in awed silence.
Pharaun had lived with and amongst spiders his entire life but he had never before seen anything like the seething, roiling mass of arachnids that was beginning to blanket the surface of the plane. They coated everywhere the light touched, a seething blanket of legs, eyes, and hairy bodies.
At first, little occurred other than the birthing. The spiders that emerged from their holes seemed content to sit in the light as the birthing line moved across the world. But soon, first one, then another, then a hundred, then a million of the spiders attacked the others and fed upon the fallen. A slaughter trailed the birthing line by a few hundred paces, and there the surface of the plane erupted into a roiling, chaotic mass of fangs, pedipalps, and pincers, all biting, cutting, and tearing. Hisses, screeches, clicks, and the sound of ripping bodies filled the air, a wave of sound that followed hard after the sunlight. Severed legs dotted the rocks; huge carcasses flailed and bled; ichor stained the earth.
It was purposeless slaughter, madness made flesh, chaos given substance.
Lolth must have been smiling.
Pharaun could see plainly that anything caught in the midst of the bloody tumult would be fortunate to survive. He spared a
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