But not too well, for in Entreri's thoughts, first and foremost, he did not want to draw the dracolich's attention.
Wherever that attention went, the beast's enemies crumbled to dust.
And the great creature was in a frenzy by that point, its wings beating and battering, its tail whipping wildly and launching warriors through the air to smash against the chamber's distant walls.
But metal rang out, on and on, snapping against bones, tearing rotting dragon skin. One wing came down to buffet Ellery, but when it reached its low point, a dozen undead warriors leaped upon it and hacked away, and bit and clawed and tugged on bones with skeletal arms. The dracolich roared—and there seemed to be some pain in that cry—and thrashed wildly.
The skeletons hung on.
The dracolich rolled, and bones splintered and shattered. When it came around, the skeleton warriors were dislodged, but so was its wing, snapped right off at the shoulder.
The creature roared again.
Then it bit Ellery in half and launched her torn corpse across the room.
Stubbornly, relentlessly, the skeletons were upon it again, bashing away, but Entreri recognized that the ring of metal on bone had lessened.
A line of spittle melted another group of charging skeletons. Forelegs tore another undead soldier in half and threw its bones at yet another. The dracolich flattened another pair with a downward smash from its great skull.
All hope faded from Entreri. Despite the unexpected allies, they could not win out against that mighty beast. He looked over to Jarlaxle then, and for the first time in a while the drow looked back. Jarlaxle offered an apologetic shrug, then tugged on the side of his hat's wide brim. His body darkened, his physical form wavered.
The dark elf seemed two-dimensional more than three, more of a shadow than a living, breathing creature. He slipped back to the wall, thinned to a black line, and slid into a crack in the stone.
Entreri cursed under his breath.
He had to get away, but how? The ramp was no good to him with the large section burned out of it.
So he just ran, as fast as his wounded ankle could carry him. He stumbled across the room, away from the dracolich as it continued its slaughter of the skeleton army. He looked back over his shoulder to see the creature's massive tail sweep aside the last of the resistance, and his heart sank as those terrible red points of light that served as the beast's eyes focused in on him.
The monster took up the chase.
Entreri scanned the far wall. There were some openings but they were wide—too wide.
He had no choice, though, and he went for the narrowest of the group, a circular tunnel about eight feet high. As he reached its entry, he leaped to a stone on the side, grimacing against the stinging pain in his ankle, then sprang higher off of it, catching the archway with both hands. He worked his hands fast, hooking a small cord, then let go and ran on into the tunnel.
But it wasn't a tunnel, only a small, narrow room.
He had nowhere to run, and the dracolich's head could easily snake in behind him.
He turned and flattened himself as much as possible against the short tunnel's back wall. He drew his weapons, though he knew he could not win, as the creature closed.
"Come on, then," he snarled, and all fear was gone. If he was to die then and there, so be it.
The beast charged forward and lowered its head in line. Its serpentine neck snapped with a rattle of bones, sending those terrible, torn jaws forward into the tunnel, straight for the helpless Entreri.
The assassin didn't strike out but rather dived down, curled up, and screamed with all his strength.
For as the dracolich's skull came through the archway, came under the red-eyed silver dragon statuette that Entreri had just placed there, the devilish trap fired, loosing a blast of fire that would have given the greatest of red dragonkind pause.
Flames roared down from the archway with tremendous force, charring bone, bubbling the very bedrock. The dracolich's head did not continue through to bite at Entreri, but the assassin knew nothing but the sting of heat. He kept curled, his eyes closed, screaming against the terror and the pain, denying the roar of the flames and the dracolich. He felt his cloak ignite, his hair singe.
The defenders of Palishchuk fought bravely, for they had little choice. More and more gargoyles came in at them from out of the darkness in the latest wave of a battle that seemed without end. After the initial assault, the townsfolk had organized into small, defensible groups, tight circles surrounding those who could not fight. To their credit, they had lost only a few townspeople to the gargoyles, though a host of the creatures lay dead in the streets.
In one small room, a lone warrior found less luck and no options. For, like some of the other townsfolk who had fallen that night, Calihye had been cut off from the defensive formations. She battled alone, with Davis Eng helplessly crying out behind her.
Three gargoyles were dead in the room, with two killed in the early moments of the long, long battle. After an extended lull, the third had come in against her, and it had only just gone down. Its cries had been answered though, with the next two crashing in, and Calihye knew that others were out there, ready to join the fray.
She dodged and stabbed ahead, and she thought she might win out against the pair, but she knew she couldn't keep it up much longer.
She glanced over at Davis Eng, who lay there with the starkest look of terror on his face.
Calihye growled as she turned her attention back to the fight. She couldn't leave him, not like that, not when he was so utterly helpless.
So she fought on, and a gargoyle went spinning down to the floor. Another came in, then another, and Calihye spun and slashed wildly, hoping and praying that she could just keep them at bay.
All thoughts of winning flew away, but she continued her desperate swinging and turning, clinging to the last moments of her life.
The gargoyles screeched so loudly, so desperately, that it stung Calihye's ears, and behind her, Davis Eng cried out.
But then the gargoyles were gone. Just gone. They hadn't flown out of the room. They hadn't done anything but disappear.
The gargoyle corpses were gone too, Calihye realized. She blinked and looked at Davis Eng.
"Have I lost my mind then?" she asked.
The man, looking as confused as she, had no answers.
Out on the street, cheering began. Calihye made her way to the broken window and looked down.
Abruptly, without explanation, the fight for Palishchuk had ended.
From a crack in the wall across the chamber, Jarlaxle had seen the conflagration. A pillar of fire had rained down from above, obscuring the dracolich's upper neck and head. The great body, one wing torn away, shuddered and trembled.
What trick had Entreri played?
Then it hit the drow. The statuette he had placed over their apartment door in Heliogabalus, the gift from the dragon sisters.
My clever friend, Jarlaxle thought, and he thought, too, that his clever friend was surely dead.
The flames relented and the dracolich came back out of the hole. Lines of smoke rose from its swaying head and neck, and when it turned unsteadily, Jarlaxle could see that half of its head had been melted away. The creature roared again or tried to.
It took a step back across the room. It swayed and fell, and it lay very, very still.
Jarlaxle slid out of the crack and rematerialized in the chamber—a room that had grown eerily quiet.
"Get off o' me, ye fat dolt," came Athrogate's cry, breaking the silence.
The drow turned to see the dwarf roll Olgerkhan over onto the floor. Up hopped Athrogate, spitting and cursing. He looked around, trying to take it all in, and stood there for along while, hands on his hips, staring at the dragon cadaver.