Charon's Claw

 

Not long after, Arunika walked the quiet and dark streets of Neverwinter, her edginess hardly smoothed, her passion hardly sated.

 

 

 

Arunika hailed from the Nine Hells, not the Abyss, and though a place no less evil, the distinction between demon and devil rested mostly in the contrast between chaos and order. Arunika liked an orderly society. Lawful by heritage, by nurture, by the very essence that gave her form and substance, uncertainty unsettled her.

 

It made her edgy. It made her itchy.

 

 

 

 

 

Poor Brother Anthus. For all of his youthful enthusiasm, he could not match or sate the passionate succubus.

 

She had thought the Sovereignty would give her the pleasure of order here in Neverwinter. Perfect order, demanded internally and externally. But now they were gone and so many roads had opened. Too many roads for Arunika’s comfort, but she knew that it would pass as she came to better command the ultimate destination.

 

The agitated devil shook her head repeatedly as she followed every potential turn to its logical conclusion. What of Valindra? What of Szass Tam? What of the trio now hunting Alegni?

 

And most of all, what of Alegni and the Netheril Empire? Even with the potential pitfalls opening all around him, it seemed to Arunika that Alegni held the upper hand. Despite her assurances to Brother Anthus, Arunika understood that if Alegni survived the near future, he would become Lord of Neverwinter, perhaps for many years. Her meeting with Valindra had shown her the truth of the Thayans, and they would not threaten the power of Alegni and his Shadovar.

 

This likely outcome was not to Arunika’s taste, of course, but she was of the Nine Hells. The strong imposed the rule, and the rule was more important than the ruler.

 

Her preference, thus, seemed irrelevant.

 

She glanced back to the south, where Anthus lay on her floor, exhausted beyond consciousness, then shifted her gaze just a bit to the west, to an inn on a small hill, and a room looking back toward the river and the Herzgo Alegni Bridge.

 

Arunika did not like the uncertainty, but she knew what she must do if she wished to remain in the region, and more importantly, if she wished to help shape those rules that would govern this tumultuous area.

 

Now she walked with purpose, along the boulevards running south and west.

 

She could battle uncertainty by situating herself properly for all potential outcomes.

 

That was her litany, and it did help to calm her a bit as she passed by the darkened windows of sleeping Neverwinter. Emotionally, at least, though there remained the physical agitation, which Brother Anthus could not calm.

 

As she neared the inn, Arunika glanced around to ensure that there were no witnesses. Leathery wings appeared on her back as she willfully minimized her disguise, and then her wings spread wide.

 

As much a hop as flight put the succubus on the balcony of a particular room at that fine inn, and there she folded her wings once more and leaned on the railing, her back to the darkened city, her eyes watching the darkened room beyond the wood and glass door before her.

 

A long while passed, but she did not mind, as she worked even harder to clarify the possibilities and her potential within each.

 

Finally, she heard the lock click and a few moments later, the balcony door swung open and Herzgo Alegni stood before her, his expression a mixture of sly anticipation and hardened resolve.

 

Most of all, Arunika recognized, he was not surprised to see her. She stood on a balcony some thirty feet from the ground, with no stairway and only a locked door providing access, and yet, he was not surprised to see her.

 

His twisted warlock minion had extracted much from Invidoo, Arunika knew then more clearly, as she had suspected.

 

She answered Alegni’s hard look with a disarming smile.

 

“Keep your enemies closer,” Alegni remarked, the second half of a common warrior litany.

 

“Enemy?” Arunika asked innocently—so much so that she made it obvious to Alegni that she was denying nothing.

 

Alegni couldn’t resist her expression, her posture, her playful retort, and a grin spread on his broad face.

 

“You have won, Herzgo Alegni,” Arunika stated flatly. “What enemies remain?”

 

“Indeed,” he replied unconvincingly.

 

Arunika smiled all the wider, coyly, and let her wings spread wide once more as she walked deliberately toward the hulking tiefling. “How close would you like your enemies?” she asked quietly, her voice husky and promising, and her devil wings embraced him.

 

“Close enough to kill,” Alegni answered.

 

Arunika couldn’t resist that tease. Where Brother Anthus failed, Herzgo Alegni excelled.

 

 

 

 

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