Duchy of Pelgaid, secluded pond
Gerald felt somewhat conflicted in terms of what to think about the Grand Master's way of treating them, going as far as to calling their relationship that of partners, and citing that he thought of the three of them as equals. It was all very nice in principle, of course, which was probably what made it seem so suspicious to him. Demon lords normally did not do “nice”, unless they did so in order to manipulate someone into doing their bidding somehow. Add to that that the demon lord in question was the worst of the bunch - the infamous Lord of Lies, master of deceit and manipulation, and the single most nefarious demon in existence – and his uncharacteristically humble and pleasant way of treating them, as well as his generosity when helping them, had plenty of reason to make them paranoid.
He did not say anything, though, nor did he have any reason to protest against the notion of them being partners and equals. Speaking purely as two businessmen making a deal with another, the Grand Master's logic made perfect sense... but he was beginning to seem far too altruistic for one of the prime evils of the planes.
The matter of their protector during their potentially coming back for them later on in order to erase another couple of witnesses was something the necromancer had initially just presumed they would be safe from, but which he did offer a nod of acknowledgement to Jillian for actually questioning. With how cooperative the Grand Master had been thus far, it would not at all be surprising to Gerald if the cunning fiend had managed to weave a trap into all of this
somewhere, and giving his “exceptionally capable” servant a reason to come back of his own volition to kill them after succeeding did seem like the Grand Master's style.
“Of course,” the demon waved her off. “One of the two things that can keep him from killing you is if I tell him not to, which I will, and I will continue to prohibit him from killing you even after you've won our wager. Although... it is worth noting that I could retract that prohibition at any time. Not that that matters a lot; if you ever gave me a reason to want you dead, all I had to do was to tell him to kill you. It won't change anything in that regard; you will be no more in danger of him than you would normally be if you made an enemy of me.”
“Is that a threat?” Gerald hissed, immediately on the defensive.
“Of course it is, I thought that was obvious,” the other confirmed with a shrug. “But then, my entire existence is an implied threat to all beings of the planes, is it not? It's no different from anyone else, no different from before: my enemies die. So don't be my enemy.”
“Dome of hands?” the Grand Master repeated in wonder when Jillian confronted him about it, and the demon lord looked up puzzledly before bursting out laughing. “Oh right, of course, the hands of fate. I didn't even think about that. I can't see these hands, you see;
my hands of fate form around my real body, in the Skull Tower. What you see is
your hands of fate. It's one of the aspects of the power of my contracts; they aren't really 'about' anything, nor am I the one causing them. They are a manifestation of our intertwining fates and redefined limitations, as far as I know. Only someone physically present and with a connected fate would be able to see them... which I should imagine means that Eliza sees them. Did you know she made a deal with me once? Oh, how young and selfish she was back then...”
“There is no necessity for these two to obtain awareness of that,” came Crone's voice through the wall of their shadowy cage, not at all muffled by its ephemeral presence.
“You want to silence me? Feel free to deactivate the sigil stone. In the meantime...” The Grand Master waved a translucent hand, and the shadowy hands surrounding them rapidly dissipated, leaving no evidence of their passing behind. Once again visible to the duo of magi, Crone appeared angry, probably because of the Grand Master's unnecessary revelation, and Renold – as far as the dragon's mien could be compared to humanoid expressions – seemed worried.
“As for your other questions,” the demon continued, “my agent will find you in Fokon, likely while you are still a ways off from the Joint Temple of Immortals, and he will take care of the planning from there. And those two,” he gestured at Renold and Crone, “can do however little or much they want, though it's worth noting that the dragon doesn't carry my protection, and Eliza is seriously gambling with hers by disturbing me with my own sigil stone. I can't guarantee that my agent won't kill them on sight.”
Gerald stared at the Grand Master incredulously. “Are you saying that if we accept the help of your agent, he won't allow Crone and Renold to help?” He shook his head. “I realize that they haven't agreed to help us, but I can't imagine that your man is anywhere near as dangerous as the two of them.”
“You have no idea,” the fiend laughed. “Not even I know this agent's limits. He is my fixer, and I have yet to encounter any situation that he haven't been able to resolve.” He paused thoughtfully. “And even if the two of them were a match for him at their best, weren't you going to go after my general first? Hunt down and seal away Hazzergash, before he can escape back to Cave Bear's Keep? Do you imagine that those two will have much strength left after facing off against the demonic Lord of Fire? Believe me, you would be much better off relying on my fixer than on those two. No offense.”
“Didn't you say that your agent was human?” Gerald asked. “Renold is an elder dragon, and Crone is an exceptionally powerful mage! Can he compete with that?”
“There is no competition; the Fixer is more dangerous than both of them combined.”
The Duchy of Zerul, by a road in southwest
Olan smiled widely, looking from Iridiel to Domhnall as each of them expressed their surprise at his ability to speak their language. It was not that he wanted to impress them, though; he was just happy that this strange ability of his to understand and communicate with anyone in any language proved useful. Somehow, it did not even occur to him that it would be better to keep the ability a secret from the others – why would he, anyway? They were his friends – or that it might seem intimidating. He just wanted to be useful somehow, rather than just being the old guy with amnesia.
Where that thought came from – the thought that he was “old” - he was not sure. He appeared middle-aged at worst, and his body generally felt as energic and capable as that of a man in his prime, but there was something indeterminably and fundamentally true in the presumtion that he was old, he felt.
When both of them spoke to him, though – Domhnall in Rodorian, Iridiel in Éireann – he decided to answer both of them, though he felt something in his head
stretch... and when he spoke, without meaning to or even being fully aware of what he was doing, he did so in a language that was Rodorian
and Éireann... and every other language in existence. Without even realizing it, Olan's confused mind switched to speaking in True Words.
“I can speak any language, you know” he shrugged, not even fully conscious of small amounts of magical energy being drained from his soul with every word he uttered. “I don't know how, but I can, somehow. Lost my memory earlier today, when I got roughed up a bit by a god, so...” He looked back at Jaelnec, Thaler and Aemoten, the former of which seemed dumbfolded by what was happening. “I don't even think I told my friends about it, you know? Besides Thaler.”