by Unknown
Chapter One: A Death in Nisroch
“I need a favor,” Ascaros whispered, stopping before Isiem’s library table.
“Of course you do,” Isiem murmured back, unsurprised. He did not lift his head from the scroll he was copying.
Once, he and Ascaros had been friends. As children in the village of Crosspine, they had been almost brothers. That friendship had survived the early years of their tutelage in the Dusk Hall of Pangolais… but only the early years. The isolating influence of Zon-Kuthon’s faith and the weight of their respective sins of survival had pushed them apart. Now, as they neared the end of their time as students, that childhood friendship seemed nearly as distant as childhood itself.
The last time they had spoken seriously, almost two years ago, it had been Isiem who asked a favor of Ascaros. His friend had refused him then, Isiem reflected. It was tempting to do the same in turn.
But there was real fear in Ascaros’s voice, under his Nidalese reserve, and Isiem had never been one to abandon his friends—even old friends, even strained ones—in times of need.
Besides, he was curious. What could be so important that it would drive Ascaros to this desperate attempt at reconciliation?
Isiem put his pen aside and looked up. Ascaros was still standing before his table, unmoving. His left arm, wrapped from fingers to elbow in white linen, rested useless in a sling, as it had for years; his right hand gripped the incense-filled Osirian staff he used to mask the odor from that ruined arm. The dim silver magelights of the Dusk Hall’s library made it difficult to read Ascaros’s expression, but Isiem would not have expected to see much anyway. No Nidalese worth his name let pain show on his face.
“What do you need?” he asked.
Ascaros ran his good hand through his dark, curly hair. In Crosspine that hair had been a rich russet, but years of living under the shadow of Pangolais had drained the ruddy warmth from the boy’s locks. Now his hair was almost black, with only the barest hint of red remaining. Compared to some of the other changes the Dusk Hall had wrought in them, Ascaros’s hair was a small thing, but Isiem’s eye was often drawn back to it. They were not who they had been, either of them.
“Not here,” Ascaros said after a long hesitation. He glanced down the hushed rows of shelves. “Can we talk in your room?”
“If you like,” Isiem said. He was due to begin an apprenticeship with a Chelish wizard soon, but his new mistress had not yet come to claim him, so he still had student’s quarters in the Dusk Hall. Although small and spare, they offered more privacy than the library did.
He stood, closed his scroll case, and led the way back to his room.
With the door locked behind them, Ascaros relaxed. He leaned the silver staff against Isiem’s wall and sank into a black iron chair, leaning into its spike-filigreed back as if the thorny metal were a silk cushion. Eyes closed, he said: “I’m going to Nisroch.”
“Nisroch?” Isiem echoed. “Why?”
“Misanthe. My aunt. The one who served in the Midnight Guard. She… died.” Ascaros rubbed his dead arm through its wrappings. “I don’t have many details, but it happened in Nisroch, two days past. The Dusk Hall wants me to investigate.”
“Why you?” Isiem asked quietly.
“Because she was my aunt, I suppose.” Ascaros shrugged. “And because I am a student here, and they have some measure of control over me. Misanthe had several objects of value, and I imagine the Dusk Hall intends to claim them. I am her last living relative—or the last with any standing, which amounts to the same—so if I do not object…”
“Will you object?”
Isiem no longer puts much stock in friendship.
“I don’t even know what she had.” Ascaros pursed his lips unhappily. “An enchanted staff, a silver necklace. I remember a black mirror, too. It might have been a nightglass.”
“Yes, that could cause trouble,” Isiem murmured. Nightglasses were powerful tools, and dangerous ones. An apprentice with a nightglass could summon shadowbeasts that would strike fear into a master wizard’s heart. The Dusk Hall held the largest collection of nightglasses in Nidal, and it coveted more. It was not difficult to believe that their superiors would send a student to retrieve one—even from that student’s dead kin.
Whether the Dusk Hall had any legitimate claim to the glass almost didn’t matter. The Hall wanted it. Ascaros would therefore have to retrieve it, or risk facing their masters’ wrath. After years of seeing the scars that their teachers inflicted for far lesser transgressions, Isiem doubted his friend would be eager to disobey.
“When do you leave?” he asked.
Ascaros raised his head and looked at him. “Tomorrow. I am allowed one companion. One of the masters offered, but… I would feel better if I had a friend. Will you come?”
“Of course,” Isiem said.
∗∗∗
Black and swollen and slow, the Usk River poured from the hinterlands of Nidal into the sea. It carried the shadowcallers’ vessel from the Uskwood to the coast, and it bore them past the massive, rust-streaked Rivergate that filtered incoming traffic. At the Rivergate their documents were checked three times, their identities questioned, every parcel in their belongings opened and examined—but all of it was done in under twenty minutes. Nisroch saw more merchants and travelers than any other city in Nidal, and its sternly efficient officials kept its traffic moving.
Isiem’s first impression of the city, as their boat passed through the rain-swept walls, was of towering gloom. Nisroch was known as the Maw of Shadow, and while it did not have Pangolais’s black trees to cast its inhabitants into an eternal twilight, its dense gray storm clouds had much the same effect. He wondered whether the hand of Zon-Kuthon kept those massed clouds hanging over the city; surely no natural storm would linger so long.
Spires and mausoleums crowded the banks of the city’s wealthy northern quarters, throwing jagged shadows across the river. To the south, the city’s laborers and commoners lived in smaller homes of basalt and dark wood. Two immense bridges, their wet black stone carved into lovingly detailed depictions of tormented petitioners, connected the halves of the city. Rainwater cascaded down the bridges’ sides in shivering cascades, drenching the boats that passed below.
High above the Nisrochi nobles’ silver-edged towers and iron-gated mansions, the Cathedral of Bone loomed. Sixty feet high and raised even higher on an artificial hill of stepped stone, the cathedral was a gleaming white pearl in a grim black city. It was built entirely of human bone—and the building, legend claimed, was never done. Squinting through the rain, Isiem thought he could make out a lattice of scaffolding clinging to the west side. Somewhere nearby, he knew, Kuthite torturers would be stripping more bones from victims’ bodies and washing them in acid to cleanse them for the faith.
“We’ll go there first,” Ascaros said. “We must report to the Over-Diocesan and be formally welcomed into the city.”
“And if we don’t?”
“It isn’t a choice.”
Ascaros’s prediction proved correct. No sooner had their boat docked than five Nisrochi officials approached them on the pier. Three wore the harbormaster’s silver pin over their plain black robes. Two wore the spiked chain of Zon-Kuthon.
“We welcome you to Nisroch,” one of the Kuthites said. She was a short, round woman, her fingernails gnawed to uneven stubs. Her eyebrows were plucked completely bald, an affectation that Isiem had noticed among several of the harbor officials as well.
The other Kuthite was a man. He seemed younger than his companion, or perhaps merely subservient to her. His eyebrows, too, were plucked bare, and his head was shaved clean—a look that did not flatter his bumpy scalp or pallid gray complexion. Although he was not fat, the s
kin of his jowls hung around his chin in loose, sagging folds. He carried himself hunched inward, as if perpetually cringing away from the unseen blows of fate.
Isiem disliked him instantly. But the shadowcaller kept his manner neutral as he replied: “We are grateful for your welcome.”
“The Over-Diocesan invites you to pay your respects at the Cathedral,” the woman said.
“We are honored to accept,” Ascaros said.
“I’ll have your belongings brought up shortly,” the boat’s captain called behind them as his passengers departed. Neither the shadowcallers nor the Kuthite clerics acknowledged his words as they crossed the rain-slick pier. All knew the captain would have been badly beaten if he had failed to observe the proper courtesies. Impoliteness was not tolerated in Nidal, least of all impoliteness to one’s betters.
It was a thought that loomed large in Isiem’s mind as they approached the Cathedral of Bone. A single steep, narrow staircase led to the cathedral, slicing through the immense stone steps that supported the macabre edifice.
Small shrines flanked the stairs, each attended by one to three black-clad Kuthite dedicants and an equal number of petitioners offering themselves up for a show of piety in pain. The oldest of the shrines were built entirely of human bone; the newer and poorer ones still had animal bones woven into their walls.
The suffering that took place within those shrines was voluntary—mostly—but the screams and whimpers echoed in Isiem’s ears as he walked past, keeping his gaze fixed on the church’s doors so he would not have to see. Iron pincers, liars’ masks, thumbscrews, salt knives, branding by frost and fire… and those were the tortures people chose to undergo. There were worse things in the dungeons under the Dusk Hall, and Isiem did not doubt that there were worse yet in the depths of the cathedral. The ascent was a pointed reminder of what a breach of etiquette could cost.
It was not the Over-Diocesan who met them at the cathedral’s ornate bone doors, however, but a younger priestess wrapped in a clanking mantle of chains. Deep red scratches covered every inch of her skin except for her face, creating the impression of a flayed undead creature wearing a perfect porcelain mask.
“You will be Ascaros of the Dusk Hall,” she said. “Your companion?”
“Isiem, also of the Dusk Hall.” Ascaros inclined his head slightly over his folded hands. Beside him, Isiem did the same. “We thank you for your welcome, but we are eager to begin our work.”
“Yes. Of course. The death of Misanthe.” The cleric raised her bald eyebrows. “A member of the Midnight Guard, was she not? Remind me, please: what is the Dusk Hall’s interest in that?”
“She was a Midnight Guard,” Ascaros said. “But she was also one of our masters. Assignment to the Midnight Guard is temporary; membership in the Dusk Hall is not. She had finished her assignment in Cheliax and was on her way back to us when she died. And,” he added, as though it were an afterthought, “she was my aunt.”
The priestess dismissed that bit of information with a grunt. “I suppose the Dusk Hall does have some stake in it, then. Very well. She died while clearing the Hovels. The vermin were fighting back this time, so we asked if she would assist our own efforts. She kindly agreed to assist us. Unfortunately, it seems the vermin had a nastier bite than she realized.”
“My aunt was slain by… paupers?” Ascaros sounded strangled.
“Calling them paupers would be kinder than they deserve. They are wretches. Human filth. They cling to our city like barnacles to a ship, and like barnacles, they must be scraped off.” The priestess shrugged. “In any case, you are welcome to go to the Hovels if you like, although no guard can be spared for you. You may also collect her belongings. They are being held in storage at the cathedral. Voraic will show you the way.” She gestured to the bald, stooped man who had accompanied them from the pier. “There may be more he can tell you. He was her apprentice, and the last to see her alive.”
“Were you,” Ascaros said flatly, turning to the man. By his tone, he liked Voraic even less than Isiem did.
The bald Kuthite bowed his head. The silver hoops threaded through his ears clinked against one another. “Yes.”
“How did she die?”
“Bravely.” Voraic kept his gaze fixed downward, looking at none of them, but Isiem still caught the grimace that wracked the gray man’s face as he spoke. “But badly.” He hesitated. “I can take you there, if you would like to see the place.”
“Show us,” Ascaros said.
Chapter Two: Hovels
The Hovels lived up to their name.
The poorest and most wretched of Nisroch’s people did not live in the city. They huddled outside its walls, clustered in a miserable, mud-drenched shantytown by the Leper’s Gate. There was little stable ground to support them, so the denizens of the Hovels built high and dense, creating a teetering warren of sticks that seemed a sneeze away from collapse at any moment.
Swaths of sucking mud surrounded the Hovels, filling the entire tangled labyrinth with the stench of rotting fish and worse. Isiem saw paupers picking through the filth in search of food or usable refuse. They wore stilts and masks of wadded rags in a futile attempt to protect themselves from disease as they poked through the city’s garbage.
Other paupers bore the sigil of the Morbidium—three links of heavy chain run through by a scalpel—scarred or branded on their skin. The mark signified that they had sold their bodies to the scholars of the Morbidium for experimentation. It allowed them temporary safe passage through Nisroch’s walls… until the scholars were done with them.
For a handful of gold, they sold their flesh, their bones, their sanity. Then, stripped of everything that interested the scholars, they were discarded. They drifted to the Hovels and stayed there for whatever days or weeks were left to them. The unlucky ones, Isiem had heard, could persist for years.
“Why would anyone choose to live here?” Ascaros muttered through the sleeve pressed over his face. He lagged behind as Voraic led them through the Leper’s Gate, eyeing the damaged souls who wandered the slums.
“Because they want to live, and there is nowhere else for them to do it,” Voraic said. There was an odd note of sympathy in his voice. Behind his back, Ascaros and Isiem exchanged a look. Proper Nidalese did not express pity for their inferiors.
“I’d sooner die than live like this,” Isiem said. He meant it. The Kuthite church taught that beggars and paupers were parasites on society; the only reason they were not purged immediately was because their sufferings pleased Zon-Kuthon. It was not a doctrine that lent itself to charity.
“The rest of them should too,” Ascaros said. “Have some shred of dignity. There’s none in living in the Hovels, and there’s no way out.”
“There is,” Voraic said, pushing open the creaking gate. He stepped through the gap in Nisroch’s great black walls, passing from rainy gloom into midnight and back into rain.
Again the shadowcallers exchanged a glance as they followed him. Then Ascaros said, carefully neutral: “You speak from experience?”
“I do.”
For a time it seemed that he would not elaborate. The gate closed behind them. Isiem watched a knot of small children, some thirty feet away, fight one another for the corpse of a starved orange tomcat. Their struggle was as grimly silent as it was vicious. Beggars’ get they might be, but these children were still Nidalese.
A scrawny boy, bleeding from the temple, ran off with the dead cat. The others scattered from the shadowcallers’ approach. Clearly they had learned to be wary of visitors coming from the city.
“I was like him, once,” Voraic said softly, lifting a sleeved hand toward the boy with the cat. “Desperate. Starving. Willing to fight—to kill—for a meal like that. Most days, I didn’t have the chance. I lived in the mud with my mother and four siblings. By the time I was ten, two of those four were dead, and my mother had had two more. I don’t remember any of our fathers.”
“A terribly sad story,” Ascaros said arid
ly.
“How did you get out?” Isiem asked.
“Misanthe lifted me from the Hovels,” Voraic said. His robes quivered and he hunched a little further down, keeping his back toward his companions. “It was during one of the burnings. Ten… fifteen burnings ago. I don’t remember. They happen every year, twice a year sometimes. It’s hard to keep count. I was ten. It was summertime, and the smell was bad. The Over-Diocesan sent her faithful to cleanse the Hovels. Their poisoned fires tore through the buildings, and they marched through the streets, killing anyone who managed to survive the smoke.
“My mother pushed me through the flames toward them. I knew what she was doing; she wasn’t the only one to try it. Children who are stoic enough—Nidalese enough—to endure extraordinary pain without crying sometimes find acceptance among the ranks of the faithful. My siblings were too weak to have a chance. But I endured the fire without flinching, and when I stumbled back to my feet in front of the masters, I saw a glimmering of respect.
“Misanthe stopped the others from killing me. She said I had promise. She tested that promise before she took me, but I passed. And so I became her apprentice.”
“Tested it how?” Isiem asked.
Ascaros would do well to guard his emotions.
A small shrug rippled Voraic’s rain-soaked robes. His voice was steady but toneless. “She found my mother. She killed her. Then and there, in the smoke. There were screams all around us from others burning in the Hovels. My friends, some of them. My brothers and sisters. But Misanthe told me not to take my eyes off what she was doing, no matter what went on around us. I obeyed. And I did not cry. At the end of it, she said I had proven myself well enough to be worthy of magic… eventually. She did not want a useless child. So I trained in Nisroch, first, and in time she came back for me.”
A path of broken planks sunk into the mud served as stepping stones to the Hovels. Ascaros lifted the hem of his charcoal-gray shadowcaller’s robes away from the filth, grimacing as his boots squelched in the sodden earth. Ramshackle buildings closed around them, funneling the rainwater into tumbling rivers that slid from warped roof boards and splashed into the mud. “Were you with her in Westcrown?”