H OLES I N LOLT H'S WEB
Lolth is far from omniscient, despite what her priestesses
say. There are drow who live without bending to the tyr-
anny of
her worship. Communities of renegades who
dispute Lolth's primacy often raise another of
the Dark
Seldarine up as
their patron. Although this amounts to ex-
changing one evil oppressor for another, any escape from
Lolth's web can feel like freedom.
The Acropolis ofThanatos, erected
in the ruins of a
drow city wiped out by plague in the Underdark
of FaerOn,
was home to a drow settlement of a few thousan
d ruled
by necromancer clerics of Kiaransalee. It existed
for a few
decades before worshipers of Lolth and worshipers of
Eil-
istraee teamed up to eliminate its leaders.
never portrayed unmasked, and partly because anonym
ity is a wise precaution
when one challenges the social
structure of the drow in even
a small way.
To quash any challenge to the matriarchy that Vhaer-
aun might inspire in his followers, some drow commu-
nities
preach that he wears a mask to hide the terrible
scars from the wounds inflicted
on him by Lolth as pun-
ishment for his arrogance. His silence
, too, is part of his
punishment, for his tongue was removed
for questioning
Lolth's orders.
Worshipers of Vhaeraun who believe this
dogma sometimes
ritually scar and silence themselves
as signs of their
devotion, and then serve as voiceless,
masked bodyguards for the matrons of their
house.
ZINZERENA
As the patron of assassination,
illusions, and lies,
Zinzerena personifies cruelty, stealth, misdirection, and
survival by any means necessary. In some ways, Malyk
is her reflection, and in many interpretations of the
age-old stories, the two gods are
siblings or lovers. But
Zinzerena is more palatable to female
drow than Malyk,
and she condones the study of arcane
magic.
The litu
rgy of Zinzerena is passed on in the form of
folk tales, for
her faith has no place among the lead-
ership of drow
society. Her tales usually describe her
hiding and waiting until her foes are weakened
or lax
in their attention before she attacks. Those who
respect
or revere Zinzerena are almost always of modest
social
status, or worse. Even
the most prestigious of noble
estates, where a high priestess
reigns supreme, might
have a number of her followers among the commoners
who work as servants and staff. Only the most capri-
cious of nobles would enter her priesthood, though
some have done so. Inevitably
, when such traitors are
discovered, they are cast out from
their houses. Ironi-
cally, these maverick nobles often
become leading fig-
ures
in Zinzerena's cult, for they are the best educated
and most
politically experienced of her followers. Her
adherents
come from a wide range of occupations, in-
cluding common thieves, laborers, guides,
physicians,
poets, and nearly any other profession. What
they all
share is a rebellious spirit and a desire for change.
In some stories,
Zinzerena is Lolth's daughter, who
was spir ited away and
hidden from her by iJlusions.
In other tales, she begins
life as a mortal elf who uses
glamors to trick her way into the company of the gods.
Regardless, Zinzerena always has some element of
illusion magic about her, and
she uses it and other de-
CH1\PTE
R 2 I ELVES
ceptions to get the better of more powerful opponents.
Deceit and taking advantage
of others' weaknesse s are
recurring
themes in the tales of her exploits. The only
figure
in the Dark Seldarine immune to Zinzerena's de-
ceptions is Lolth, although even the
Queen of Spiders is
sometimes
tricked when Zinzerena shifts blame for her
actions onto
others.
Not many female drow devote their lives to
the study
of magic, beca
use it's held to be a low-status avocation
more suited to males. Most females who pursue
it seri-
ously do so in secret. Even rumors that a drow matron
practices arcane magic
, if they aren't quashed, can sab-
otage her standing in society. Yet there's no denying
that
knowledge of arcane magic could be a great boon to
an
ambitious female. Zinz
erena's worshipers encourage
this pursuit and offer tutelage and tools in exchange for
a candidate's alliance with Zinzerena's secret cult.
EILISTRAEE
Most
drow know nothing of Eilistraee. Matron mothers
of the most
powerful houses closely guard the scrolls
that chronicle her existence. They retain
them for the
sake of remaining aware of the enemy they
describe: a
drow god who would spirit away all of Lolth's
worship-
ers to the sur face world.
The matron mothe
rs warn those who go to the surface
on raids to retreat
if they can s ee the moon-practical
advice, it would seem. But an equally important reason
is that Eilistraee is known to work her wiles under the
light of the moon, so that
drow are more susceptible to
her lure at such times. The
matrons also direct the raid-
ers to flee back underground
if any of their number hear
music they find appealing, such
as a parent's lullaby
or the chorus of a rousing song carried
on the mind,
because
Eilistraee's call to drow who would be free of
Lolth's web
is often delivered within dulcet tunes that
aren't of
otherworldly origin.
Eilistraee is a god of moonlight, song, dance,
and,
most important, the rejection of the evil ways
of Loi th.
Drow who feel
like outsiders in their society, who react
with disgust to the evils
perpetrated by their kind, who
come to the surface
and fall in love with the stars- these
are the ones who might be pleased to hear Eilistraee's
call. If they respond to it by going to the surface and
staying there, Eilistraee offers no guarantee of their
safety and no promise of acceptance
in the world above.
But she opens her followers'
hearts to the wonder of the
nature in the night, and he r songs
and signs can show a
drow
how to persevere in that alien environment.
The
scrolls that the matron mothers guard so closely
attest
that Eilistraee turned against Lolth but knew
better than to seek solace among the Se
ldarine. Her po-
sition among the other drow gods remains
uncertain, as
is the fate of
the souls of those who turn to her worship.
Drow who are
beloved by Eilistraee sometimes appear
to vanish when they die
, as the body dissolves into pale
light and leaves no
clue to where the soul has gone.
VULKOOR
Drow of the world of Eberron
worship a scorpion-god
named Vulkoor, which is their world
's equivalent of
Lolth.
Vulkoor is often portrayed or envisioned as a
giant
scorpion or as a hybrid creature with the head,