by C. Greenwood
Wordlessly she tossed the weapon to the stunned barbarian. He caught it easily and examined the glowing hilt as if he half expected it to burn his hand. When it didn’t, he gave the weapon a few practice swings, testing the balance.
“Well, barbarian?” she demanded smugly. “What do you say to that?”
“I say have you got any more tricks like this one up your sleeve?” he asked with grudging admiration.
Mollified, she admitted, “Lots of them. Between my powers and your skills as a swordsman, perhaps we’ll stand a chance at accomplishing our mission. If the First Couple will it.”
“You think a lot of that First Couple of yours, don’t you, Red?” he asked. The way he said it made his opinion clear.
Still she asked, “You do not?”
“No.”
His tone was challenging, but she refused to rise to the bait. “Fine then,” she said evenly. “Don’t believe in the First Father and Mother. But believe in me.”
She prayed he wouldn’t ask why he should do that because she hadn’t the faintest idea. She only knew if this quest they were embarking on was to stand any hope of success, she would need to gain the trust of her new ally.
CHAPTER SEVEN
“My name is Orrick,” the barbarian said as he dropped the armload of kindling he had just gathered beside the campfire.
They were the first words he had spoken since they had rowed across to the mainland, skirted Shoretown, and made camp in this thicket away from the main road.
“I suppose sharing your name means you’ve decided to trust me?” asked Eydis, glancing up from the scanty meal she was dividing.
His tone was noncommittal. “Maybe.” He accepted the portion of dried fish and bread she passed him, devouring it with the impatience of a starving mongrel. From the looks of him, it had been awhile since he’d had real food. She unobtrusively slipped her portion in with his, thinking at his size he needed it more.
To cover the action, she said, “We probably shouldn’t have this fire. If there are going to be people out looking for you—”
“There will be,” he interrupted, wiping the back of his hand across his greasy lips. “Lythnian authorities want to impress my people with their swiftness in dealing with traitors. They question Kroadian commitment to the alliance. It’s always been our duty to man the border of the Lostlands, so when Endguard fell, both Kroad and Lythnia needed someone to blame. They chose me.”
Eydis didn’t know what to say to that. She wasn’t naïve enough to believe he was innocent of the treachery merely because he claimed to be. In fact, it was very difficult to view this man as a helpless victim in anything. Somehow she sensed there was more to the story. But luckily the truth about his past made no difference to her mission. Defeating the dark sorcerer and protecting the Asincourt seclusionary was all she needed of this unlikely catalyst.
So she said simply, “I had better mask your appearance, so you will not be recognized in the settlements we pass through. I can give you the face of another man.”
“As you gave Fenric my face?” he asked, scowling. “Keep your magic. I have no use for it. I never trust the stuff, nor the witches and wizards who come with it.”
“That is ridiculous,” Eydis argued. “To refuse masking is to endanger us both.”
But he would not be persuaded.
Eydis finally gave in. “We’ll stay off the roads then. And we'll avoid the towns where you might attract unwanted notice.”
“Unless you can conjure more supplies out of thin air, that’s going to be difficult,” he said. “It’s a week’s journey to the base of the mountains, unless we can get horses to speed us on our way. Meanwhile, this is the last of the food.”
Eydis retorted, “Well, I’m sorry Fenric and I didn’t have time to scrounge up more supplies. We were a little busy arranging to save your life. Anyway, I’ve come up with a plan for passing through the Elder Forest. I’ve heard of a village there where I think we can safely resupply. It’s a colony of Drycaenians—a peaceful people who have little contact with the world beyond their forest. They won’t have heard of you or your escape.”
Orrick spat on the ground. “There’s no such thing as a peaceful Lythnian.”
With an effort, she ignored the affront to her nation. “The Drycaenians are a subculture within ours. They do not share Lythnian ancestry or customs. We will be safe among them.”
Although he looked doubtful, he didn’t argue further. Good. He must learn to trust her judgment if he was to be of any use to her or the oracle in fighting Rathnakar. According to her vision in the pool, the catalysts must cooperate to have a hope of victory.
The Kroadian finished his meal in silence before rolling up to sleep in the cloak she had supplied him. Eydis followed suit, although it wasn’t yet dark. Under the circumstances it seemed wisest to use the daylight hours for sleep and do most of their traveling under cover of darkness. Weary and sore muscled from rowing the boat and spending a sleepless night hiding atop a tomb, she drifted quickly to sleep.
* * *
Eydis was atop the walls of the Asincourt seclusionary, the Arxus Mountains looming darkly in the distance. Below her, an army of undead swarmed like ants, scaling the protective walls while meager forces attempted to hold them back. The battle was lost, but surrender was not an option for the defenders. Eydis and Orrick stood back-to-back, panting, swords drawn, brows streaked with sweat and blood, fighting wave after wave of undead soldiers.
The enemy flooded the wall like ocean waves breaking against a rock. Corpses piled high at Eydis feet, but no matter how many she slew, more of the undead soldiers spilled in to fill the gaps in their ranks. Thunder sounded in the distance while black storm clouds roiled over the mountains, and blinding bolts of lightning streaked the sky. It was as if nature itself had turned against the defenders.
A shrill scream sounded in the courtyard below and was drowned out by a thunderclap. Eydis looked to see the defenses had been breached. Undead were clearing the walls and swarming into the courtyard, cutting down unarmed attendants and helpless children. With a cry of anguished outrage, Eydis let down her guard. In that moment of distraction, an undead soldier dodged past her sword and slammed into her, shoving them both off the wall. She managed to grab the edge with one hand, even as her attacker sailed past, falling to oblivion. She dug her fingertips into the rough stone, even as her feet scrabbled unsuccessfully for purchase. Her grip was slipping.
Suddenly a strong hand caught hold of her forearm. “Give me your hand!” Orrick shouted over the roar of battle. Eydis looked up into his sweat-streaked face and intense eyes, and she made a mistake. She trusted him.
Transferring her grip to his large hands, she waited to be hauled up. Instead, she was startled when he swung her sideways and outward, before letting her go. Flailing, she fell through the air, plunging toward death. She caught a last glimpse of the stark figure of the barbarian standing tall atop the walls of Asincourt. Then she hit the ground.
* * *
Waking with a start, Eydis bolted upright, body drenched in sweat and heart hammering against her ribs. It took a moment to remember where she was, that there was no undead army surrounding her, and no Asincourt seclusionary in sight. She was alone but for a few evening stars starting to twinkle in the sky and the soft snoring of the Kroadian sleeping on the other side of the dying campfire.
Lying back down, she tried to decide whether what she had witnessed was merely a vivid dream or a vision, a warning from the First Mother of events to come. One thing was certain, she decided. Whatever happened in the coming days, she would be watching this Orrick of Kroad very carefully.
CHAPTER EIGHT
Varian
Varian sometimes had vague memories of what his life was like before the master came. Dimly he recalled the mortal necessities that had once troubled him. The drive for food and sleep. The duty of tending to the dead within the tomb.
Strange that he now tended them in such a different
way, he thought, beholding the creature before him. It claimed to have a name from its previous life, in which it had served the master. Naroz. But to Varian it would never be anything but a monster in whose presence he always felt the urge to clutch the amulet dangling from him neck. The artifact had given him the power to wake Naroz from the dead and, he hoped, gave him some control over the creature still.
“What is the master’s command?” the undead grated through a row of teeth jutting like broken spikes from its rotten jaw.
Varian avoided looking at Naroz’s face, partially decayed to reveal bone beneath gray skin and muscle. The places where worms had bored trails through the flesh were enough to turn the strongest stomach. Hanks of the creature’s greasy hair writhed with vermin, and the clothing that hadn’t rotted from his broad frame was matted with the blood he had died in and the dried juices of decomposition.
Varian swallowed. “The master has assigned you a mission,” he said. “He is confident you will be eager to show your gratitude for the second life he has given you and that you will not fail him.”
The creature’s answering hiss was foul with the stench of death.
Varian rushed on. “The first step to preparing the way for the master’s return lies in the seizure of a stronghold, an old fortress converted to a seclusionary standing at the base of the dwarf mountains. He who holds that fortress possesses a powerful foothold from which to strike at both Lythnia and the dwarf kingdom of Arxus. More importantly, there is an artifact kept there that is of value to the master.”
“To hold a fortress an army is needed,” growled Naroz.
“Eventually yes. But raising an army is not your task. Neither is seizing the seclusionary at Asincourt.”
Varian paced the length of the chamber, uneasy under the scrutiny of the undead. There was something deeply unnerving about Naroz’s eyeless gaze. Despite the two stakes driven through his sockets, the creature maintained a disturbing ability to sense motion and surroundings. Perhaps the three hounds at his feet somehow conveyed that information to him. The fiery beasts glowered up at Varian now, flames burning in their eyes, smoke seeping from noses and slavering jaws, and ears flattened atop massive heads. The ribs protruding painfully beneath their black hides suggested the animals never had and never could eat enough to sate their eternal hunger. Would Naroz stop them if they tried to devour him?
Varian shoved the thought from his mind and said, “The master has learned of an attempt to thwart his plans. A group of would-be heroes hope to prevent his seizure of the Asincourt seclusionary. He has commanded these heroes be intercepted and destroyed before they reach the baselands. The mission requires speed and stealth, a task for which you and your hunger hounds are uniquely suited.”
“It shall be as the master wishes,” grated Naroz, stretching his lips to show blackened gums. “We will hunt down these heroes.”
* * *
“Is it done?” the master asked.
Varian prostrated himself on the cold floor before Rathnakar’s throne. “Yes, Your Greatness. Naroz and his hounds have departed for the rangelands.”
The master’s satisfied laughter rumbled around the ancient throne room, echoing up to the vaulted ceiling.
They were now many levels deeper within the crypts than Varian had ever ventured in the past. To think of living and working up there all those years, unaware of the magnitude of the subterranean ruins over which the tombs were built! The Lythnian rulers and speakers of old had been arrogant, building the tombs of their kings and heroes over the crumbled palace of an older civilization, a conquered enemy. It seemed a strange irony that same enemy had risen again and once more occupied his crumbling throne room, with its cobweb-covered wall friezes and decaying tapestries.
The master interrupted his thoughts, saying, “Naroz and his hunger hounds are a match for any mortals. But we will not depend wholly on their strength and cunning. We will send reinforcements.”
“What reinforcements, Master?” asked Varian. “It was only good fortune and the power of the amulet that led us to unearth the burial vault of Naroz and his hounds so easily. You say there are enough corpses buried beneath our feet to create a formidable army of undead. An army fit for the seizure of a fortress. But the Lythnians of ancient days sealed those dark corridors and chambers, stone by stone. To open up the blocked passages and summon the undead will take time. And more energy than the amulet can quickly conduct through me.”
He didn’t speak his fear, that the amount of magic coursing through him by way of the amulet would burn him to a blackened shell. Even summoning Naroz and his fiery hounds back from the dead had been a draining experience.
The master’s eyes burned. “Do not suppose the rotting corpses beneath this tomb are the only tools at my disposal. My ancient alliance with the creatures of the Lostlands has not been forgotten. There are many still in that wild region who will answer my call.”
“But how to send out this call?” Varian queried.
The master made an impatient gesture toward the large raven perched atop the back of his throne. Obediently, the bird fluttered down to light on his gauntleted hand. There was something unnatural about the winged creature with its glittering golden eyes. Strange to see such a wild creature living willingly underground, when most of its kind would have sought freedom above the surface. But then most birds had not spent centuries entombed in a crypt either.
Stroking a metal-clad finger over the bird’s chest to smooth its ruffled feathers, the master said, “Death shall be our messenger. He shall carry my words to those we cannot yet reach by other means.”
It took Varian a moment to realize Death was the raven’s name.
“Go now, my winged minion,” the master ordered. “Spread your wings toward the north, to the Lostlands. And when you find the Aviads, tell them their old master has returned to the realm of the living.”
The bird blinked its bright eyes and took flight, circling the room and then soaring up toward the ceiling where a narrow ventilation slit let in a faint gleam of light from the level above. Clearly it knew how to escape the tombs, when it wished.
“What now, my lord?” asked Varian as the raven disappeared from view.
“Now,” said the master, “we wait.”
CHAPTER NINE
Geveral
Geveral Corvinus had knelt in this stiff position for so long his knees were growing numb. A line of tiny black ants had begun a bold march up the side of one of his boots, but he didn’t dare break his concentration long enough to swat them off. His whole focus was fixed on one thing. The little green shoot of a sweet-bean sprouting from the earth before him. At least it should be sprouting right now. But it wasn’t. Mentally, Geveral delved beneath the soft soil, directing a thin trickle of magic into the delicate roots. The effort from even that small amount of magical manipulation made sweat break out on his forehead and turned the dull ache behind his silver-hued eyes into a throbbing pain. He scarcely felt the discomfort, his attention riveted on the stubborn sprout. He envisioned it swelling and growing taller, new leaves unfurling from the green stem.
Grow, burn you. Grow!
But it didn’t grow. And his strength was giving out. Sighing in frustration, Geveral let go of his magic and rocked back on his heels, contemplating the object of his failure. That stubborn little sprout seemed to sum up all the disappointment of the past few years. On angry impulse, he ripped it out by its pale hairlike roots and hurled it into the undergrowth edging the clearing.
Regret was instantaneous. What had Mentor Kesava taught him? To respect even the smallest and most insignificant forms of life. He glanced over his shoulder to be sure his mentor hadn’t seen.
But Kesava was busy a short distance away, teaching a youngling half Geveral’s age how to form dew on the ground. Another exercise Geveral still struggled with.
Something cold touched his knee, breaking into his line of thought. He looked down to find a sheet of frost forming over one of his boots, it
s icy crystals climbing up his leg.
“Sorry, Geveral,” said a black-haired female youngling who was practicing nearby. “I was targeting that spiny shrub. I didn’t mean to freeze you.”
“It’s all right,” he said. “At least someone is succeeding.”
“Is that self-defeat I hear?” asked a sharp voice over his shoulder.
Burn him, but Mentor Kesava was as quick and stealthy as a fox when he wanted to be. How had he gotten here so fast?
“I’m trying my best, Mentor,” Geveral told him, half-ashamed of the defiance in his tone but unable to crush the feeling.
“Trying at what? Trying to dwell on failure?” asked Kesava. “Trying to cultivate self-pity instead of the flora?”
Geveral took a deep breath. The criticism wasn’t undeserved. “Why do you not give up on me, Mentor?” he asked. “Are you not satisfied by now that I’m not meant to be a Drycaenian mage? My nature magic is weak. Stunted. At nineteen summers, I’m the oldest pupil under your tutelage. Yet I’ve mastered only the most basic concepts. It is obvious I lack the talent to move on to the academy. They would never accept such a poor student.”
“The only thing you lack,” Mentor Kesava snapped, “is focus and discipline. It is your fear and defeatism that holds you back. Do not blame that on your magic.”
It was clear by the way the old man chewed his mustache that his store of patience ran low. Geveral thought of apologizing. But his mentor was already stamping away to help the next pupil, a boy of around fourteen who was attempting to raise the temperature around a patch of bitter-berries. His efforts appeared to be wilting the plants, rather than ripening the berries, but at least he was trying. Something Geveral had best get back to.