wolff96 said:
Hey, I was right!
I mentioned to a friend that reads this story hour that Varo's little side-trip had to be about finding baneful relics for either a binding or a banishment spell.
Okay, well, it hasn't been confirmed yet, but that sure seems like what Maphistal is worried about...
Turns out ol' Skeletor was right to be worried!

Of course, he's quite a few CR lower than Orcus.
I'm looking forward to next week's postings, I enjoyed how the upcoming sequence turned out. Expect a few twists... unless you've been following along carefully, in which case you may already have seen what's coming.
* * * * *
Chapter 349
THE WILL OF THE GODS
Dar’s sacrifice had bought only a few seconds, and Maphistal’s mace whipped around like a serpent’s head, coming down toward Varo’s skull.
But those seconds had been all that Varo had needed. White fire erupted between the fingers of his clenched fist as he extended it toward the demon, and this time, the words he spoke shook off the very walls of the chamber.
“IN THE NAME OF THE GODS OF MAN, I COMMAND YOU TO BEGONE!”
Maphistal shrieked as the lines of white light pierced it. The demon’s
unholy aura dissipated before those penetrating rays, and as space twisted around it the demon’s form became distorted, enlongating as it was dragged backwards into a tiny opening in the fabric of reality.
And then it was gone, and quiet returned to the chamber.
Dar got up, with Allera’s help, her
heal spell restoring his body even as he grimaced and straightened out his damaged arm to let the purging magic flow. “What just happened?”
“He
banished the demon back to the Abyss,” Letellia said. The sorceress seemed none the worse for wear, although Alderis still seemed somewhat disoriented behind her.
“I seem to recall you trying something like that the last time we fought that bastard,” Dar said. “It didn’t work quite so well then, and the demon seemed stronger, if anything, this time.”
Varo nodded. He unclenched his hand, and a fine white powder fell from between his fingers, trickling down to the floor. “I drew upon an additional resource this time.”
“What? Remember, no bull, Varo.”
“The Drusians call them the
Tears of the Gods. They are potent devices that augment spell power, but do not ask me more about them; assume that anything that is said here echoes in the ears of our adversary.”
“Is it gone for good?” Allera asked.
“I do not believe it will be able to return soon enough for it to make a difference,” Varo said. “But we should not linger long.”
Dar looked back at the spot where Talen had fallen; there was nothing left of him. “What about them?”
Varo shrugged. “Vampires are difficult to destroy. I did not see any sign of their gaseous forms during the battle, but that does not necessarily mean that they were annihilated. In any case, Talen Karedes is no longer a factor in our mission.”
“You knew he would betray us,” Dar said.
“I knew it was a likely possibility. I planned a contingency with Allera, should this happen. I would not touch that, not yet.”
The last sentence was directed at Alderis, who had started walking toward the black portal, haltingly, as if being dragged against his will. “This is why we are here,” the elf said.
“Yes,” Varo said. “Our enemy lies on the far side.”
“So why aren’t more demons pouring out of it?” Dar asked.
“Maybe he’s saving them all on the other side,” Letellia ventured.
“We can only deal with what we can see and understand,” Varo said.
“The demon stepped through it easily enough,” Dar said.
“The Portal of Darkness is a sundering in the barrier between realities,” Varo replied. “It is not like a conventional door.”
“You said we had to force our way through,” Allera said. “That you, Dar, and Alderis were the key.”
“Yes. It will not be easy, and success is by no means certain. The Demon will oppose us with his full strength; he is not yet ready to enter fully into our world, and will not seek a confrontation that is not of his own choosing.”
“What about what Maphistal said?” Letellia prodded. “He said that this was all part of Orcus’s plan.”
“Orcus knows what is in the
Codex Thanara, and likely understand it better than any of us. He has tried to use us, and when that has failed, to destroy us. But ultimately, the choice we make here will be ours.” The cleric looked at both Dar and Alderis as he said the last words.
“So we are doing this, then?” Letellia asked. “The five of us, against a demon prince. In his own lair.”
“It is that, or accept the death of our world,” Varo said. “Orcus will grow stronger as we delay, and by the time that the armies of Camar and its allies arrive, it will be too late. We have driven off Orcus’s lieutenant, and inflicted serious damage to his legions. Now is the time to strike.”
“Do we have a chance?” Allera asked quietly.
Varo’s look at her was almost gentle. “Ultimately, all we can have is faith.”
Dar snorted. The fighter removed his helmet, and fixed the full force of his gaze upon Varo. The cleric faced that stare with equanimity. For almost a full minute, the two stood there in silence.
Finally, Dar turned back toward the black barrier. “All right. What do we have to do?”
Varo walked forward. Alderis was already standing at the portal, almost eager, his body trembling. The elf’s hand rose up to his chest, rubbing at it through his robe. Dar looked down at
Valor, the steel blazing in his hand. He slid the weapon into its sheath. He looked back at Allera, doubts blazing in his mind. The portal rose up before him like a battlement, a slice of darkness that reflected their lights like a black mirror.
The cleric removed one of his black gloves. “As one,” he said. As the other two took up position next to him, Varo lifted his hand toward the blackness.
“It’s cold,” Dar said, as his palm rested against the surface of the portal. “And solid,” he added, thumping it hard with his flesh. Opposite him, on the other side of Varo, Alderis flinched as his slender hand pressed against the black.
“A toll will be exacted,” Varo said. “The sacrifice must be made, to open the way.”
Letellia and Allera watched as the three men stood there, hands pressed up against the portal.
“Nothing is happening,” Dar muttered.
“Faith,” the cleric said. And then, as if his word had been a trigger, their hands started to sink
into the barrier. Dar started, and Alderis paled, but none of them faltered.
“Remember, the fate of our world relies on...”
But Varo’s words faded into black.