52
as long as they never had to
lay eyes on the d row or viewthe results
of thei r efforts.But
drow society is predicated on a foundation
ofter-ror
and slavery, and the most desirable slav
es live on theworld's surface: humans
, dwarves, and best of all, otherelves. To the dark elves,
raiding the surface for captivesand treasure isn't
just a cultura l and military tradition,but also an economic necessity.Some raids are major operations
that involve hun-dreds of warrior
s, mages, priestesses, a nd giant spiders,a large enough
force to overwhelm a community. Theinvaders would
sweep through the town in the dark ofnight, shackle
the best potential s laves into long trainsof chattel, kill everyone who r
esisted, burn everything tothe ground, and set their sights
on the next town in line.Most of the dark elves' raids
, however, a re small,s tealthy,
one-night missions. The drow scout their
tar-gets
in advance, then s trike on a night when
the moon isnew or its light is obscur
ed by thick clouds. They mightkill indiscriminately to
spread terror, while at othertimes they s lip into
a village, knock out their targets withpoison, and spirit
their captives away without even wak-ing the neighborhood dogs. Sometimes
a raid uses bothtactics; one squad sets fires or sets off
alarms to focusthe defenders'
attention on one area, as another teamstrikes at the
real target on the other s ide of town.Loot is a
secondary goal on almost all raids; takingprisoners is the primary objective.
Some of the darke lves' victims become slaves,
some end up as food for gi-ant spiders or other monsters
that the drow have trainedCH1\PTER 2 I ELVESto serve
them, and some are la id out across bloodstained altars and sacrifi
ced to Lolth.The drow know how
vulnerable they are during day-light, so they typically
plan raids that can be executedwithin the span of a single night. As a rule
, that meanstheir target must be no more than a few
hours' march-eight to twelve miles is typical- from
a n entrance to theUnderdark. Ideally,
they'll have more than one returnpath mapped out;
if an escape route is blocked, they canswitch to another
and get safely home.Once the
raiders get inside their escape tunnel, they'
reusually safe. Opposing forces se
ldom pursue the drowbelow ground for good reason- beyond the light lies
unmapped enemy territory wher
e everything they meetis likely
to be hostile. In special circumstances,
such asif one
of the raiders' captives is a royal heir or
the scionof a wealthy family, advent
ure rs might be hired to mounta rescue mission. Otherwis
e, it's rare for any rescuersto follow the kidnappers'
trail deep into the deadly dark-ness without becoming victims themselves.SLAVES AND
STATUSThe drow are
known and feared throughout the worldfor their practice
o f slavery, but those who have vis itedtheir cities report that slaves ar
e n't as prevalent as thedark elves' re putation would sugges
t. In general, onlypowerful houses hold significant
numbers of slaves, andthe s laves
of a house are never more numerous
than itspopulation
of drow.Sla
ves are often kept as signs of status as
much as fortheir intrinsic worth as
laborers. When they are put towork, they a re also put
on display, doing jobs that e nable