“Sune, baby, c’mon,” Xylon pleaded to his deity, falling to his knees with his hands raised in supplication. In his heart he felt only a distant sadness. “Xylon,” Radegast sighed. “Which way is your girlfiend?” “East,” Xylon mumbled. Radegast picked up a stick and pointed it, sweeping it slowly around. “Stop me when I’m pointing to the east,” she said. Erwen’s spider senses were tingling. He had grown up in woods much like these, but he had never been in such a weird forest as Neverwinter Wood. The trees here did not reach to the heavens like those in his native Lluirwood. Here they were stooped, covered in hanging clumps of moss, as though they had turned their very backs on the sunlight. And the silence! No crickets chirped, no squirrels chittered. It was as though the animals had all taken their leave of this benighted place. But the worst of it was the fear. Fear hung in the cool, moist air like a stinking cloud. To hide the shaking of his eight limbs, he dropped out of wildshape and then reformed as a majestic elk, the spread of his antlers rivaling the branches of the tall trees around them. If the trees wouldn’t worship Nature’s goodness, he would pay tribute to the Green Mother in his own way Bowing his head, Erwen-Elk slowly scooped up Bob and Alec into his antlers. The party began to walk to the east through the darkening woods. “Guys,” Xylon said. “Once we get to Agatha’s I want to meet her alone, all right?” “Did you bring chocolate?” Radegast said with forced cheerfulness. “Jewelry also works wonders.” “Something like that,” Xylon said. Varien brooded. “Put your sword back in your scabbard,” Xylon warned. “And let me talk to her first.” The adventurers plodded their way through the trees for four hours, making very little headway. Several times they had to stop to hack their way through dense thickets of prickly bushes, and they would stumble across a long-overgrown path only to discover that it followed a trail of switchback turns that took them further and further off course with each change in direction. The conifers conspire, and the deciduous deliberate , Erwen-Elk remembered a saying from his youth. The trees in this forest were not friendly, not even to a Halfling druid. Then Varien spotted something in the trees ahead of them. He gestured to his companions. “Look there,” he hissed. “Something’s hanging in the trees.” “Hanging hanging, or hanged hanging?” Xylon asked. “Hanged,” Varien said with a grim look on his face. Radegast’s sharp eyes made out the shapes of five humanoid figures, swaying in the silent breeze, hanging from ropes slung over the low-hanging branches of a gallows tree. She nocked an arrow into her longbow and fired it across the clearing. The arrowhead sliced into the rope holding one of the corpses, and it unraveled quickly, dropping the body to the leaf-covered ground. Her second arrow went wide. Erwen-Elk snorted, lowered Bob and Alec to the ground, and then bounded across the clearing, catching the remaining four bodies in his antlers and severing the ropes. There was a series of wet thuds as the bodies fell to the ground. “Show off,” Radegast said to Erwen-Elk. “If you want to engage in a pissing contest, make sure both competitors have the same equipment.” Erwen-Elk kicked out a leg and let out a high-pressure stream of stag piss into the leaves. Mindful of the growing puddle, Alec and Bob climbed back into Erwen-Elk’s antlers. Xylon, Varien and Radegast approached the corpses. They were clad in ranger’s leathers, four male and one female, and their bodies were riddled with arrows, several of the shafts having broken during their rapid descent. Radegast examined the ropes while Xylon pulled out an intact arrow and investigated. “Elvencraft,” Radegast said of the finely-twisted cord. Xylon nodded. “These are Elven arrows, too.” He looked around at the trees that crowded the perimeter of the clearing. “Now, what elves yet live in Neverwinter Wood?” Then he made a mental connection and felt a sudden chill. “The Eldreth Veluuthra ,” he whispered, looking pointedly at Radegast. “No,” Radegast said. “The who now?” Varien asked. Xylon sighed. “Elven supremacists,” he said. “Wait, aren’t all elves supremacists?” Bob asked. “Racist,” Xylon said casually. Then he answered. “Sure, most elves consider themselves superior to the other races of Faerun, but those in the ranks of the Eldreth Veluuthra take it to a very extreme conclusion – they seek the eradication of other races, particularly humans, from our realms.” “Wait,” Varien snickered. “If Xylon and his ilk are considered the greatest form of life in Faerun, then we’re all doomed.” Radegast’s blood ran cold, and then began to run very, very hot. “There are militant groups in many ancient Elvenwoods,” Xylon explained. “Ardeep Forest, Neverwinter Wood, and so on. But they have sympathizers in every civilized Elven city and realm. No doubt elves of like mind live on in Evermeet as well. And so these extremist groups hide in the darkest reaches of the forest, supported by their wealthy friends.” Radegast was lost in her memories of growing up half-caste in Evereska, where she was taught that elves were the pinnacle of Creation in every classroom by sneering tutors who often singled out the half-elf child as an example of the dangers of miscegenation between elves and humans. How her classmates taunted her whenever the headmaster, who had allowed Radegast entry into the school on the strength of her pureblooded mother’s righteous indignation, looked the other way. “So they don’t like humans,” Varien shrugged. “I’d like to see them try to-” “It’s not just that,” Xylon nodded in Radegast’s direction. “They view half-elves as an abomination, to be killed on sight-” Radegast screamed, her rage causing a few loose leaves to tumble from the branches overhead. “THIS KIND OF INSANITY IS WHY I LEFT EVERESKA!” she shouted, and, balling her first, punched the trunk of the gallows tree, casting thunderwave . The blast shook leaves from trees in every direction. Their branches waved wildly. Then Radegast’s scream was echoed by the hollow croaking of two hidden creatures, whose branch-like limbs were steady in the face of her raging magic. Forest walkers. “Oh, shi-” Radegast said. The forest walkers charged. Each of the creatures had four limbs that terminated in sharp claws, and they propelled themselves on twisted roots that erupted out from their trunks to find purchase on the ground, slithering like snakes as they pierced the loam and dragged their boles forward over the leaves and logs. Radegast stood her ground and stabbed with her rapier, sending a spray of hot sap squirting from one of the forest walkers. “Light it up!” she shouted at the casters. “On it!” Xylon rushed forward until he was standing directly beneath one of the hulking creatures. He pulled out his flint and tinder and frantically tried to get a spark to light the creature aflame. The elven wizard looked up as the forest walker bent over him with a creak. “Left turret, fire!” Bob shouted, casting firebolt at the approaching creature. “Right turret, fire!” Alec shouted, casting firebolt but cursing as it spun askew, hissing into the leafy perimeter. Varien smiled and pulled Talon from its scabbard, swinging the ringing blade as he cast divine smite. The sword bit deeply into the first creature, radiant energy sending bark curling away from the wound. The forest walker let out a croaking roar, swinging its limbs at Varien. The paladin got his shield up in time to block the first strike, but the second hit him across the midsection. The paladin issued a hellish rebuke that sent flames conjured from the depths of the Nine Hells slithering around its body. Erwen-Elk backed up, pawed the ground, and charged with a snort as the Trevelyan brothers held on for dear life. Erwen-Elk reared up and collided with the second forest walker, knocking the creature to the ground with a sickening thud that sent leaves and berries flying everywhere. With violent grace, Erwen-Elk trampled the prostrate forest-walker, splintering its limbs and sloughing its bark-like armor from its trunk. Xylon found himself half-enveloped by the creature’s leafy fringes. “Uh, it’s not what it looks like!” He backpedaled as the forest walker attacked, catching a whipping hit across the shoulders as he ran. He pulled out his crossbow and began fiddling with it. The second forest walker lashed out with its roots, pulling itself upright, and began landing whomping hits on Erwen-Elk. From his vantage point, Bob cast down a firebolt that struck the creature at such close range that there was an explosion of crispy bark and burning splinters. Alec followed up with a second flaming bolt, setting the creature’s leaf-shrouded head aflame. “It’s tinder time,” Varien snarled, swiping left and right with his sword in sweeping strikes. Talon slashed a cut so deep into the first forest walker’s trunk that the creature folded in on itself with a shower of matchwood. Varien’s second swing severed the other forest walker’s lowermost arm, which crashed to the ground, oozing sap. Erwen-Elk backed away, but the second forest walker managed to hit him with a vicious uppercut that knocked him right out of wildshape. The Trevelyan brothers fell into a heap on the ground. Erwen picked himself up, dusted leaves from his bearskin cloak, and fished some silver coins from his pocket. He cast heat metal on the coins in his fist until they began to glow. “Money is the root of all evil,” he said to the approaching forest walker. He flung them furiously. The molten coins peppered the creature, which staggered back under the barrage of bullion bullets. “Aha!” Radegast vaulted up the wounded creature’s knobbly trunk until she stood atop its shoulders, and then stabbed down with the rapier into its upturned face. A crack of lightning pierced the forest as the creature swayed and fell back in a heap. As Erwen bent to pick up his coins here and there, Alec fired a fruitless firebolt into the already smouldering body of the forest walker. “It’s fine, I didn’t want to shoot anything anyway!” The forest was silent save for the crackling of burning wood. The party collected themselves, eyeing the woods for signs of reinforcements. As she passed by the smouldering bodies of the forest walkers, Radegast’s ears perked up. The hissing and spitting of the embers seemed to form words, whispered in Sylvan. She bent down near the blackened head of the dying forest walker. “Grandfather…” the scorched creature hissed. “Grandfather…” Radegast straightened up and eyed her companions. “We should be… not here.” “Too late for that,” Xylon said. "Fool!" she snapped, then let out a heavy sigh. “Sorry, I get snappy when I’m upset. I shouldn’t be rude.” “Is this about the Eldreth Veluuthra ?” Xylon asked. Radegast ground her teeth. "Go screw your mother. Nine out of ten uncles agree she's a good time."  The party continued east, fighting against the environment the whole way. The branches and leaves of the trees above their heads rubbed against each other, whispering in Sylvan, “The Grandfather sleeps…The Grandfather sleeps.” Radegast cursed as a tangle of brambles snagged her clothing for the twentieth time. “You want us to leave?” She shouted in Sylvan. “Stop keeping us here!” Varien and Alec continued to hack away at the thick underbrush with their swords as the party made its painful way through endless thorn bushes and fallen logs. “Now, if I remember the map…” Erwen muttered to himself. “Map?” Varien said. “When did you see a map?” “Didn’t Ragnar copy Gundren’s map?” Bob asked. “I thought I saw a sketch of his once.” “Keep pressing on,” Varien said. “Xylon’s girlfriend has a date with my steel.” The temperature began to drop noticeably, with frost beginning to dapple the leaves of plants. The party’s breath fogged as they slogged on through the wet undergrowth. Erwen estimated that they had covered about 8 miles in 4 hours, a lamentable pace. The wind picked up, and on it was the keening sound of a woman’s voice, eerie and ethereal. “Xylon….” It said in a singsong voice. “Xylon…” “Daddy’s almost home,” Xylon muttered. “Were those forest walkers Agatha’s doing?” Varien asked. "Or is she in league with those elven supremacists?" “Bunch of inbred buttholes,” Radegast said. “I’m sure this bitch has plenty of friends in the forest.” “Watch your tongue,” Xylon hissed. “We have to play this nice and easy or else we’re going to pay dearly.” He found the trail to Agatha’s lair. The forest grew dark and still as the trail wound deeper into the trees. Heavy vines and thick layers of moss like bridal lace draped the branches, and the air grew colder still. Rounding a bend in the trail, the party saw a clearing open up, with a large tree stump converted into a dwelling place, its roof made of a screen of warped branches woven into a domelike shelter. The party stopped at what seemed like a respectful distance away from the hovel. “Okay,” Xylon turned to his friends. “I’m going to go in there alone. Don’t do anything stupid.” He looked directly at Varien. “Don’t do anything at all.” He squared his shoulders, took a deep breath, and headed for the door. “It’s been a while since we ate,” Erwen said. “I’m going to go forage for food.” He disappeared into the forest. Xylon opened the door to Agatha’s lair and peeked inside. “Honey, I’m home,” he said, his voice ringing in the empty hovel. The furnishings were much the same as the last time he’d seen them – Xylon noted the bejeweled comb lying on the dresser where Agatha had left it. The rest of the room was sparsely furnished, with chests, shelves, a table, and a reclined couch, all of it fine elvencraft. “Agatha, it’s cold in here,” Xylon said, looking around. “Can’t you get a fire going?” There was a flickering of cold light behind him. Xylon turned as Agatha’s spectral shape took form. His mood eased as he got a full glimpse of the banshee’s considerable bosom that spilled over her tightly-cinched bodice. “Baby, you’ve still got it where it counts,” Xylon whispered. “You were wise to return to me, my gentleman caller,” Agatha’s voice was like the sound of icicles forming. “But of course,” Xylon said. “How could I stay away?” The edge of Agatha’s horrid mouth twisted in what might have been a smile. Outside the hut, Varien reached out with his divine sense and detected the presence of undead, not inside the hovel itself, but a few yards away on the western edge of the clearing. The rest of the party was hunkered down by a small fire. Radegast’s eyes narrowed at the paladin. “Xylon said to stay put,” she hissed. Varien was already unsheathing his sword. “The undead stalk these woods. I can smell it.” He strode into the dimness. Varien could see a small dancing light hovering in mid-air several yards from the hovel. It seemed to drift and dance to its own inner music, bouncing through the air seemingly oblivious to his approach. “Whatever you are, you’re dead and should have stayed dead,” Varien muttered. He swung his sword. The tiny orb whizzed out of the way and blinked out of sight, reappearing several feet away. “Nuh-uh-uh,” he heard a spectral voice say. Varien swung again, this time nicking the creature. Sparks flew. “Fool!” the orb hissed, and then disappeared. “You’re not getting away that easy!” Varien said, charging ahead. “So,” Agatha breathed. “What of our arrangement?” “Yes,” Xylon said. “The treasure at Old Owl Well. I found a few things that might interest you.” He pulled out the crystal ball and held it out. Agatha’s cold eyes went wide. She passed a spectral hand through the seeing stone and it drifted up from Xylon’s hands. She stared into it, lost in thought. “There you are…” she whispered. “Yes, well, I took a look through that crystal ball and I have to say I didn’t find it particularly helpful,” Xylon said. “Is it part of a set? Are there more of them out there?” “More questions,” Agatha hissed, not taking her eyes off the crystal ball. “I believe our arrangement was the treasure for the location of Wave Echo Cave.” “Well, that is true,” Xylon said. “But I believe I’ve shown you nothing but the strongest loyalty. I brought you that heirloom comb, for example, and I held up my end of our bargain. What if we were to substitute the Wave Echo Cave location for more information about these crystal balls.” “Loyal,” Agatha repeated. “Well, yes, you have been that…” She turned to face Xylon. “I’m dying to know more about that crystal ball,” Xylon said. “Dying, yes,” Agatha said, her attention once again drawn to the seeing stone. “Very well. This crystal ball is one of three, crafted by the Ancient Netherese, to spy on the elves of Illefarn. When used in concert, these crystal balls reveal the location of the ancient elven stronghold of Sharandar, lost for centuries in the depths of Neverwinter Wood, a fortress that no longer wants to be found.” “Tell me more,” Xylon said. “I know you thirst for knowledge. I too am thirsty.” “Oh, Xylon,” Agatha said, her expression darkening. “A fool always betrays his intentions.” “What do you mean?” Xylon gulped. Agatha sneered. “One of your companions is outside being very naughty.” Xylon sighed and took a peek out of one of the hovel’s windows. He could see Varien off in the distance, swinging his sword at a twinkling piece of light that flickered in the darkness. “Cheeky!” Varien shouted as the creature dodged his attack. “Damn it,” Xylon hissed. He cleared his throat. “Baby, listen, I need your help. You might have noticed that I look a little different than when I saw you last.” Agatha looked him up and down. Xylon felt a thrill shiver its way from head to toe. “I was cursed,” he continued. “Cursed?” Agatha said, floating up towards the ceiling of her hovel. “I know all about curses.” “I am separated from my magic,” Xylon said. “I couldn’t defend myself. Otherwise I would have abandoned my companions and visited you alone, as you prefer. But the Order of the Gauntlet…” “The Gauntlet?” Agatha snarled. “What of them?” “They bid us discovered the secrets of Old Owl Well.” “And what did you find there?” “An ancient evil that we promptly killed.” “And what of the Red Wizard?” “Oh, he’s dead,” Xylon said. “Pierced and in pieces.” “That’s delicious,” Agatha said. “And so there was this crystal ball, and a set of very fashionable robes,” Xylon said, indicating his cursed cloak. “Ah, cursed robes,” Agatha drew so close that Xylon thought he would freeze to death. “Excellent.” “And so my friend out there, he’s really salty when it comes to things necromantic. His hometown was wiped out by the undead, you see. We try to keep him on short leash, but…” Agatha moaned in exaggerated sympathy. “Oh dear,” she said. “Which makes me wonder,” Xylon continued. “If I can somehow be of service to you again. My friend won’t trouble you inside your hovel.” “Hovel?” Agatha snapped. “Domicile, palace, house…” Xylon stammered. “Certainly not a hovel.” Agatha turned to view Varien outside. “Perhaps your friend would prefer to make himself useful as one of my servants in the afterlife.” “Ha ha,” Xylon chuckled nervously. “That would be a sight to see.” “Well, well,” Agatha turned back to the wizard. “Netherese magic can be problematic, it’s true.” She stroked the neck of Xylon’s robe. The wizard’s teeth chattered. “Can you help me?” Xylon pleaded. “What are you offering me in return?” Agatha said. “My services are already yours,” Xylon said. “Ah, but you and your friends have already caused much trouble in these woods of late.” “What, those tree creatures? They attacked us!” “No, I speak of the way your friends decimated the Cragmaw goblins and sacked their castle.” “Oh, well, that was just business,” Xylon said. “Your friends’ actions have destabilized the power structure of the forest,” Agatha said. “I fear for the safety of many who pass through my domain.” “We’ll gladly go on a quest to procure the other two crystal balls,” Xylon said. “But without my magic, I am a sitting duck.” “Are you asking me to remove your curse?” Agatha whispered in Xylon’s ear, sending a rime of frost into his hairline. “I will do anything you command,” Xylon said. “Well then, I can’t have you at anything less than your best, my lovely elf,” Agatha extended a clawed hand that rapidly took corporeal form, and with a hissed incantation ran it down the length of Xylon’s cloak, tearing it from his body. Xylon felt necrotic wounds open along his chest, but figured they were superficial. He could feel his attunement to the cursed cloak shatter like ice. Xylon raised a hand and tentatively cast a ray of frost into the ceiling and was rewarded with a flash of icy energy. It began to snow inside the hut. “That feels better,” Xylon said. “Much better.” “Now,” Agatha’s voice deepened. “Bring me the Scrying Stones of Sharandar.” “And where might they be?” Xylon asked. “One was lost in the forest, but I trust in your abilities to locate it once more,” Agatha said. “The other is located in the Dread Ring, where even now, more Red Wizards of Thay seek it.” “Sounds easy enough,” Xylon said. “Be on your guard,” Agatha warned. “The Eldreth Veluuthra stalk the forest in search of the unworthy. You should choose your traveling companions more wisely. And the Dread Ring is to the southeast. It is no place for the fainthearted.” “Dread Ring, Red Wizards, southeast, got it.” Xylon was still reveling in the magic coursing through him again. He turned to Agatha. “One last thing. The acquaintance I mentioned. He says his city was destroyed by a necromancer. It was the City of Lorelei. Have you heard anything about that?” Agatha shook her head. “I have answered enough of your questions today, my handsome elf. Prove yourself worthy and I may yet tell you more.” Xylon watched as Agatha turned back to the crystal ball, cradling it and staring into it. He knew what he had to do. “By the way,” he said, edging towards the door. “Do you feel like it is getting hot in here?” He cast fireball in the centre of Agatha’s hut. “Damn ghost!” Varien snarled. “Get back here!” He was rapidly running out of patience as the tiny orb kept toying with him. Then he felt a sudden heat on his back. He turned to see Agatha’s hovel blowing its stack. The woven roof burned away instantly as the fireball blasted up and out, mushrooming into the air over the forest and turning the dimness to blinding daylight for a few moments. “Well,” Radegast said, getting to her feet. “Looks like Xylon is back on his bullshi-” Inside the hut, Xylon stood in a pocket of safety, watching the fire rage against the banshee’s belongings. The flames parted to reveal Agatha still floating in mid-air, glowering at Xylon with the look of a woman scorned. “This,” Agatha said as the fire danced in her eyes. “Will not be a pleasant end for you.” She turned incorporeal and flew right through Xylon and the door to her burning home to parts outside. Xylon lunged for the crystal ball, catching it before it could shatter on the ground. Outside, the party members were scrambling into fighting stances. A second orb twinkled into existence and immediately zoomed towards Radegast, Alec and Bob, while Varien was suddenly on the receiving end of a shock attack from the tiny ball of light. Then he could see the banshee in all her terrifying glory, floating above the forest clearing. “Yes!” Varien said, raising his sword. “YOU DARE?” Agatha shrieked. “YOU DARE INVADE THE HOME OF AGATHA, THE GHOST OF NEVERWINTER WOOD? YOU DARE TO RAISE YOUR WEAPONS AND STAND AGAINST ME?” “Yes, yes, and yes!” Varien said. “I WILL NOT AGAIN BE BETRAYED,” Agatha cried out, and then began to scream an anguished, inarticulate, howl that drowned out the sounds of the flames and caused the party members to grip their heads and cover their ears in agony. Radegast fell to her knees, blood flowing from her ears, nose, and eyes. She pitched sideways and sprawled on the ground, unconscious. Inside the hovel, Xylon staggered, trying to stay conscious as the echoes of Agatha’s wail drilled into him, loosening his teeth in their sockets and threatening to turn his eardrums to icy splinters of agony stabbing into his brain. He felt his knees give out as a wave of darkness swept over him like a veil. He stumbled halfway out the door, blood flecking his lips as he coughed. With the last of his strength he kept the crystal ball from falling to the floor. Varien shook his head to clear the ringing echo of the banshee’s wail and cast a Vow of Enmity on the banshee. “This forest will be cleansed of you before the night is through!” he promised. He swung his sword with righteous fury and connected with Agatha, a divine smite that send a blast of radiant energy rippling through the creature. Agatha screamed. Bob reached Radegast and rolled her over. “Oh, this doesn't look good,” he said to Alec. “We’ve got other things to worry about,” Alec said, pulling his sword. “Watch out!” One of the orbs zigzagged past the fighter and stopped over Radegast’s unconscious body. A ray of spectral light blasted out, making the bard convulse. Radegast’s teeth clenched and she began to sweat blood, but she appeared to be able to resist the creature’s life draining ray. Bob got up and ran until he could see both Xylon’s and Radegast’s bodies. Then he cast a twinned healing word on the two of them. Alec cast a fire bolt at the orb, which dodged easily. “You’ll have to do better than that!” the creature laughed. Radegast coughed and sat up. She stared at the orb. “Looks like you didn't have the balls to take me out!” “Now that hurt,” the orb said plaintively. Bob stood transfixed at the sight of the banshee. "The things Xylon puts his thing inside of..." “YOU WILL NOT SOON FORGET WHAT YOU SEE TONIGHT!” Agatha screamed and revealed her truly horrible visage, letting her jaw hang askew as her flesh turned a deep, dead purple. Agatha locked eyes with Varien and the paladin saw in her horrible gaze a phantasmagorical replay of the Shade of Lorelei. Alec grinned. “Aha, you can’t play with my mind, you hag!” Then he thought for a moment. “Unless you were to use worms. I don’t do worms.” Radegast got to her feet, staggered over to Varien, who stood petrified, and grabbed his shoulders. “GRIT…YOUR….TEETH….AND….WRECK HER!” She cast heroism. Varien shook his head and snarled at Agatha. He hefted Talon again and called down another divine smite on the banshee, blasting her with a radiant attack and following through with another heavy blow. The banshee, weakened, drifted back, covering her face as she screamed. Varien used his Celestial Light to further heal Radegast. One of the orb creatures, that Varien now recognized as a Will o’ Wisp, tried to zap him with a lightning attack that missed. The second Will o’ Wisp hit Alec with a lightning attack. “You bitch!” Xylon’s voice carried over the sound of the melee. He staggered out from Agatha’s doorstep, a finger pointed at the banshee. “You’re frigid baby, time for you to warm up to my charms!” Another fireball blasted forth, enveloping Agatha and several yards of combustible underbrush. The party could hear her laughter from within the flames, which suddenly snuffed out with a flourish. “Fools!” Agatha cackled. “You will soon learn the futility of your resistance!” Alec swung his sword at the Will o’ Wisp, missing, but he caught it on the backswing, sending it spinning wildly away like a cricket ball. Bob raised his hands. “Eat my radiant light, you hag!” A guiding bolt zapped out and connected with Agatha, blasting her midsection apart. This time, Agatha’s scream was one of agony. She twisted, holding her hands to her shattered body, parts of which remained incorporeal while others looked all too solid. She moaned and stuttered an invocation. Twin pulsating ribbons of necrotic energy suddenly linked the banshee to her two Will o’ Wisp companions as she drained their undead life force, snuffing them out in an instant and regaining some of her strength. “Okay, why don’t you eat some more!” Bob shouted. “Hear the words of my god, Sune!” He sang out a holy incantation and sent a second guiding bolt rocketing towards Agatha. There was an unearthly sigh as the bolt connected with the banshee. The radiant bomb went off, sending shock waves through Agatha’s bucking body. The banshee froze, arms outstretched, as she was bathed in radiant light from her head down to her indeterminate spectral legs. Flashes of light twisted Agatha’s features from her horrible undead visage back to the beautiful elven maiden she had been in life, and back again, as though she was losing control over her form. She slowly drifted from the air over the clearing down to ground level. As she settled onto the ground, parts of her body began to flake off and disintegrate in the withering glare of the radiant light. She reached out a hand to Xylon. “Xylon…” she whispered pleadingly as she continued to disintegrate. “Why?” And then she was gone, consumed by the radiant fire. “Looks like the banshee was,” Bob paused for effect. “Banished.” “Rest in peace,” Varien said. He turned to Xylon. “Was it good for you?” “Sorry it had to end this way,” Radegast clapped a hand on Xylon’s shoulder. “And sorry to leave your bed so cold.” “I’m sorry I started shit,” Xylon said. “Well yes you did set her on fire.” Radegast said. “But I got some more answers, and got the curse lifted. It had to be this way.” Varien watched Agatha’s hut as it burned. “Call me crazy, but I still think this is a safer place to rest than beneath the trees tonight.” “I’m sensing a pattern here,” Bob said to Xylon. “You sleep with things, they turn around and attack us, and then we have to kill them.” Xylon stared wistfully at what was left of Agatha. “I never slept with her,” he murmured. “Flirted, yeah, but that was because I wanted my powers back.” “Well then,” Radegast said. “When we get back to civilization we’ll have to find you a nice brothel.” Snow began to gently fall in the clearing as the last of the fires burned out.