"Brace for it!"
The great stone door rumbled and lifted open, massive hidden gears turning, the machinery creaking and straining as unseen monsters pulled it up and out of the way. I glanced up at Sandra, and she glanced back. I hoped she was as good an aim as we needed her to be.
A dark bluish figure a foot or two taller than me darted through the door's gap in the dim torch-light, but I could see it by its glowing green eyes, and by the glimmer of the dark, spiked club it swung in circles over its head. Another goblin followed behind it. I raised my sword and shield and prepared to dodge their attack.
There was a twang high overhead. The first goblin bobbled and fell in surprise, an arrow protruding from an eye. Another twang, and the goblin behind it fell.
I look up at Sandra again, but she was focused, her bow at the ready, another arrow nocked.
Two more fell, and then the onrushing goblins reached me.
I dodged the swing of the first, and the stupid monster's club landed squarely in the face of one of his compatriots. I rolled on the floor, barely missing the strike of another club into the ground, and another goblin fell, and another.
Suddenly, I realized that the goblins were thinning. Only a dozen or so were here, guarding the treasure. We had killed many on the way here, but surely a greater horde waited in the far cavern behind these. I couldn't fathom why so few were left β other than perhaps they had grown bored and wandered off to more-frequently-visited dungeons. Not that I was complaining.
Another fell, and another, one by my sword to its belly, another by an arrow to its eye. Sandra had always been a good shot, but I still marveled that hanging upside-down from the ceiling, she was managing to strike them. They didn't seem to know what was hitting them, and they were now wildly attacking the air above them. Clinging tightly to the webbing she'd strung between the stalactites, Sandra was far too high above for them to reach, and they were easy pickings.
The last one burst through the doorway, running in a blind rage, and Sandra's next arrow missed, lodging in its shoulder, and it dropped its club. I darted forward, and just as it swung at me, I drove my sword straight up its sternum and into its heart. I missed my timing, though, and the odious beast collapsed on top of me.
"Henry!" Sandra's voice echoed through the chamber as I fell under the goblin's weight. I landed with a thud on the stone floor, my hands bracing against the monster. It weighed maybe three hundred pounds β too heavy to move, but not enough to crush me when it fell slowly.
"Hold on, I'll get you!" she cried, and loosed some line, quickly descending to me.
"Ungh," I groaned, trying to keep the goblin from squishing me.
The spider girl landed beside me and raced over, skittering on her eight legs. "Don't worry, don't worry, I got this!" she said. She spun some more webbing and tied it to the dead goblin's arms and shoulders and back, then pulled once, twice, and with a heave, we rolled the thing over and off me.
I sat up, breathing hard.
"Are you alright?" she said.
"Yeah, yeah, I'm fine," I said, brushing myself off and slowly standing up. "I should've dodged between its legs."
She nodded.
She turned toward the doorway. There was a mound of gold coins on the far side, lumped into a hill, and perched on its top, there was a small, glassy white orb, gently glowing in the darkness.
"Is β that it?" she said.
"It has to be," I said. "All the clues. The thousand stairs. The riddle lynx. The deepest chamber. The hordes of the night. What else could it be but the Orb of Restoration?"
Sandra looked back over her shoulder at the massive black spider body behind her. "Do you really think it could β lift this curse?"
"It has to. It can restore any damage, heal any wound, cure any illness."
She didn't look very sure, but we turned and stepped toward the open door.
I held out a hand as she took a step. "There are supposed to be booby-traps in the chamber," I said. "Let me go first."
"But I'm faster than you are," she said.
"You're also bigger," I replied.
She glared at me but fell silent.
I took a ginger step through the doorway, and another. The texts said there were two more traps, a falling magical axe at the portcullis, and poison spears launched from the walls. I wasn't much of a swordsman β but a thief? Those skills I knew.
Holding my torch aloft, I looked down and found a fine black string, running along the floor. I reached out with my sword, the blade flat, and tugged with its tip at the string. The great axe slammed down in front of me into a gap in the stone and lodged there. First trap avoided.
Passing beside it, I knelt to the ground. There wasn't anything obvious on the ground, but I could pick out holes in the wall. The spears were real, and they had to be driven by a mechanism nearby. I studied the stones in the floor. Yep. That flagstone, and that one. Step on either, and they'd surely trigger it.
I tossed my shield onto one of them.
Wind whistled past my ears, as two dozen spears shot from the holes and embedded themselves in the far walls. One narrowly missed the axe, whizzing past to the great chamber beyond, and past a nervous Sandra.
"Are you okay in there?"
"I'm fine, don't worry," I said. "These traps were easy. There are good parts about dating a thief."
"Like how my purse always seems to be missing a coin or two and I'm always worried about you?" she retorted.
I climbed up the small golden hill. The Orb was neatly perched at the top. A faint white light glowed inside. I reached out, breathed, and picked it up.
Nothing happened. I breathed a sigh of relief.
I turned and came back out, slipping past the fallen axe.
I held it up in front of her. "Well, this is it."
"Do you think it will work?" she said, biting her lip.
"If the stories are right, it has to," I said. "Go ahead. Take it. This is what we've been searching for."
She nodded, but before she took it, she reached into her side-pack and withdrew a long red cloth.
"What's that for?"
She tied it around her waist. "For not being half-naked when I change back," she said. "If this works, I'm not walking out of here without a skirt."
I nodded and took out the small book hidden in my pack. I flipped through the pages. "Here," I said, pointing. "The incantation. Hold the Orb tightly, in both hands, and say these words."
She peered into the book, reading carefully. She nodded. Then she took a few steps back.
"Here β goes nothing," she said.
She held up the Orb and spoke loudly and clearly β "
Colaisa β edramos
!"
A white light burst from the Orb, surrounding her, a swirling brilliant wind like a thousand strips of glowing cloth, wrapping tightly around her body, and suddenly there was a great flash of light. I shielded my eyes, looking away.
The light faded, leaving only my torch. I looked back.
Sandra was standing there, a little blinded by the light.
"What β?" I said.
"Did it work?" she said. "Am I β am I really human again!?"