"You're just a man, Cale. These events are beyond you."
Cale gagged, choked, kicked Rivalen in the chest, but the blows did nothing. Rivalen, too, was beyond him.
"Listen to the words of your son," Rivalen said.
Rivalen kneeled, still holding a struggling Cale at arm's length, and touched Vasen.
Vasen's eyes snapped open, widened when he saw Rivalen and Cale. He reached for a blade, but his scabbard was empty. Rivalen grabbed him by the arm, pulled him upright, and slammed him down by the figure hunched before Shar's eye.
"Read it," Rivalen commanded. "You came here to read it, didn't you?"
Vasen looked back at him, at Cale, his eyes glowing yellow in the shadows.
"You thought I didn't know why you came? You think I didn't know Mask's plan? I knew all along. I knew it all. You gambled everything to come here and read the Leaves. So let's hear it read."
Rivalen shook Cale as he spoke. Cale, unable to breathe, started to see sparks. His vision narrowed to a tunnel, and at the end of it was his son.
"Read it!" Rivalen said. "Read it aloud."
Magic infused the phrases, turning the command into a compulsion.
Vasen turned and in a slow monotone began to read the words written on the back of the hunched figure, the words of The Leaves of One Night.
Rivalen shook Cale again. "Listen. Hear what your son says, Cale."
Compelled by Rivalen's spell, Vasen uttered blasphemous words dictated by Shar herself. The sound made Cale wince, hurt his ears. As Vasen intoned the black syllables, Shar's eye began to spin faster. It emitted an unsettling, discordant hum.
Desperately, Cale kicked and punched at Rivalen, blows that would have left a human insensate or dead but that had no effect on Rivalen. Cale could scarcely breathe. He was fading.
He had to get away. Before he lost consciousness, he let himself feel the shadows around him, in the plaza. He grasped at them, pulled them around him, and rode them across the plaza, to the darkness behind a fallen sculpture. He collapsed there, gasping, blinking. Darkness leaked from his skin. The shadowstuff in him began to heal the damage Rivalen had done to his windpipe.
He peeked around the statue to see Rivalen with his arms held out, shouting into the dark sky. "Watch then, Cale! Watch as your son ushers in the end! There's no moment of weakness written in the Leaves! I've read it! Do you hear me? There's only her moment of triumph! Do you hear, Cale! Do you!"
Shar's eye expanded, spun faster, and the hum turned to a roar like rough surf. The ground of the plaza began to vibrate. For all Cale knew, all of Toril might have been vibrating. The power emanating from the eye charged the air. Little balls of lightning exploded all over the place. Acrid smoke mixed with the shadows, all of it an echo of a world Cale had once visited, a world destroyed by Shar.
He'd survived his own death only to watch the world die.
Riven regained his bearings in moments. He let divine power explode outward from him in all directions. The force of it blew the devils a spear cast away from him, like dry leaves in an angry wind. He stood, shadows coiled around him, and faced Mephistopheles.
The archfiend alit on the battlefield twenty paces from Riven, his eyes glowing red with hate, his hands aglow with power, his wings beating a slow promise of Riven's death.
"Couldn't wait any longer, eh?" Riven said, his tone mocking. He sheathed his sabers. "Overreached, did you? Asmodeus has grown unhappy with his lapdog, eh?"
Mephistopheles's brow furrowed in anger. "You know nothing, mortal, and you don't deserve the power you stole. You don't even know how to use it. It's right that I tear it from your flesh while you scream."
Riven sneered, shadows boiling around him in an angry cloud. "That's a high-pitched bark you have, lap dog. Yap, yap."
Mephistopheles roared, beat his wings, and bounded toward Riven. Power crackled around the archfiend, buckling the earth as the archfiend closed in.
Riven waited, waited, braced himself, and at the last moment threw himself at Mephistopheles. Instead of dodging the archfiend's grasp, he clutched Mephistopheles's hands in his own. The two of them spun, each gripping the other, vying for advantage. Dark power surged into Riven, blistered his skin. He grimaced against the pain, the shadows whirling around man and devil darkening, deepening.
"Hey," Riven said through the pain.
Mephistopheles looked into his face, a question in his red eyes.
Riven sneered. "Let's go for a ride."
The shadows turned black as ink and pulled both of them across the plains and to Ordulin.
Chapter Fifteen.
Abruptly the sound emitted from Shar's eye changed pitch to a hungry whine. Vasen continued to recite the words of The Leaves of One Night. He spoke the words only slowly-he was resisting Rivalen's compulsion-but the spell forced him to speak the unspeakable, them clearly, loudly.
Rivalen cocked his head, as if listening for something far off. "Here they come at last," he said, and faded into the shadows. A churning cloud of deep shadow formed in the plaza, sparking with energy, and out of it tumbled Riven and Mephistopheles. Shadows and baleful energy swirled around devil and man. They gripped each other by the hands, shadows and unholy power sizzling between their palms as they struggled.
Mephistopheles roared, beat his wings, and shoved Riven back, the effort raising veins and sinew in the black skin of his chest and arms. Riven stumbled backward. Mephistopheles extended his arms and shot a column of swirling hellfire from his palms. It burned through the shadows that protected Riven, slammed into his chest, and drove him backward, his cloak and flesh charring. Riven rolled out of the path of flames, grimacing against the pain, and put a hand to his temple.
"Riven!" Cale shouted, and started to draw the shadows around him.
Riven looked at him sharply and Cale felt the weight of his gaze, the power in his regard.
"Stay where you are!" Riven barked.
Mephistopheles saw Cale, too, and turned to face him. "Cale! How did you escape my realm?"
Rivalen emerged from the darkness near Vasen, near Shar's eye, his hands at his sides, leaking power. "And now we're all here and the end is come."
"So you say," Riven said. "But-"
Appendages shot like striking asps from Shar's eye, long ropes of darkness that squirmed forth and grabbed Riven and Mephistopheles, coiling around them, cutting off Riven's words.
"No!" Mephistopheles roared, before one of the appendages shot into his open mouth and down his throat, gagging him.
More and more appendages squirmed forth from the now-shrieking eye, wrapping around the two gods, cocooning them in Shar's darkness. Mephistopheles writhed and fought, dark energy flaring from his exposed flesh. Riven did not struggle, and soon both were entirely covered.
Immediately the thick twist of appendages that led back to Shar's eye began to pulse, like a gulping throat. And with each gulp Shar's eye grew incrementally larger. With each gulp, the power of the empty being that lived behind the eye grew.
"And so dies the herald," said Rivalen.
Cale understood immediately what was happening. Shar was coming. She was consuming their divinity, and when she ate it all, she would emerge and devour the world. And it had started with Vasen reading The Leaves of One Night. He had to stop it and he saw only one way. He had to kill the man on whom the Leaves were written. He prepared to step through the shadows, but before he did, he felt a familiar itch behind his eyes. Magadon's mental voice, strained, sounded in his head.
Erevis?
Cale could hardly believe what he was hearing. He put his back against the statue's pedestal, sank down and into the shadows. Mags? Mags?
Erevis, it's so good to hear- Later, Mags. Where are you?
Almost to Ordulin. I'm with the Source on Sakkors.
The Source!
Erevis, I have to mind link Riven to you, to us. I want you to prepare yourself.
For what?
This.
Cale felt the connection open between him and a god. Agonizing pain coursed through Cale. His body felt as though it were on fire. He was feeling what Riven was feeling, tiny bits of himself getting chewed off by Shar's maw.
Cale might have screamed. Or he might have just been experiencing Riven's screams.
Behind the pain, he sensed the sweep of Riven's mind stretching across time and worlds, the understanding so vast and deep that Cale recoiled. And behind that, he felt the hopeful voices of the faithful pleading with Riven for a sign, the burden all gods carried.
The . . . book, Riven projected. Her weakness . . . in . . . the book.
There is no weakness in the damned book!
Has . . . to . . . be. Find it . . . or we all . . . die.
The mind link with Riven closed.
"Shit, shit, shit," Cale said.
Rivalen's deep voice rang out. "This is over now, Cale. Are you bitter? Do you see now the fool Shar has made of you and your ridiculous god?"
"Shut up," Cale whispered. To Magadon, he projected, Mags, I need you to link me with my son.
Let me see through your eyes.
Cale looked at Vasen and felt Magadon's consciousness settle into his vision. A deeper itch behind the eye, a short, sharp pain in his left temple. The connection between them opened.
Vasen? Cale said.
No response. Cale felt waves of resistance, self-loathing, rage, but still Vasen read the words and still Shar fed.
Listen to me, Vasen. You have to find the moment of weakness in the book. It's there.
Still no response.
Think of everything you've seen, everything you've heard and done. It's there, Vasen. Mask had a plan. He set all this up. He's a better schemer than Shar could ever hope to be. It's there somewhere. You just have to see it.
Still nothing.
It's there, Vasen. You'll find it. I have faith in you.
Rivalen emerged from the shadows before Cale, powerful, dark.
Cale lurched to his feet, stabbed with Weaveshear, but Riven sidestepped the blow, grabbed Cale by the cloak, and slammed him against the pedestal. Ribs snapped and Cale gasped with pain.
"You can't hide from me, Cale. The darkness here belongs to me."
He slammed Cale again into the pedestal, causing ribs to grind against ribs, opening his skull. Cale saw sparks; his vision blurred. The shadowstuff in his veins worked to heal the damage, but he was still barely holding onto consciousness.
Cale? Magadon projected. Cale, I'm almost there. But the Source is dying . . .
Cale did not respond to Magadon. Instead, he spoke to his son.
Faith, Vasen. I have faith. Write the story. Write it.
Rivalen slammed him once more into the stone pedestal. Agony, and all went dark.
Write the story. Faith.
Vasen's mouth formed the words he read on the poor, trapped man who hunched before him. Hateful words. Dire words. Words of death. Words that should never be uttered. Words that promised an end to everything. And yet he could not stop his lips from forming them, his voice from speaking them.
Faith.
There was no moment of weakness written in the book. There were only words that described Shar's imminent victory, her incarnation, her feast on the world and everyone in it.
He looked between the words, sought to discern a code, a hidden text. He saw nothing and despaired. And he knew his despair was a betrayal, that Shar fed on his despair as she fed on everything.
He grabbed onto his father's words, pulled them close.
Think of everything you've seen, everything you've heard and done. It's there, Vasen. Mask had a plan. He set all this up. It's there somewhere. You just have to see it.
His voice, compelled by the nightseer's spell, continued to utter blasphemies of its own accord, but his mind was his own. He pored over his past, things Derreg had said, things the dead of the pass had said, things the Oracle had said.
The Oracle. Faith. Write the story.
For men like us, Vasen, faith is a quill. With it, we write the story of our lives.
The story of our lives.
He thought of Orsin, prone beside him, maybe dead, thought of the spirals and whorls and lines that decorated the deva's skin.
The story of Orsin's life, scribed on his flesh.
A man writes his story in the book of the world.
And in that moment Vasen understood. Shar's moment of weakness wasn't written in The Leaves of One Night, because Vasen wasn't supposed to read it. He was supposed to write it, and his faith, a faith of light and hope and courage, was the quill.
The light is in you, Vasen. Brighter than in the rest of us because it fights the darkness in you.