Ghost in the Ring (Ghost Night Book 1)
Page 1
GHOST IN THE RING
Jonathan Moeller
Table of Contents
Description
Chapter 1: The Dead Castle
Chapter 2: Resemblance
Chapter 3: Iron Ring
Chapter 4: A Lost Girl
Chapter 5: Sigilsoara
Chapter 6: Mother’s Indiscretions
Chapter 7: Cold Forests
Chapter 8: The Wraith
Chapter 9: Bronze Witch
Chapter 10: Mavrokhi
Chapter 11: Fight or Flight
Chapter 12: The Countess
Chapter 13: Knights of Legend
Chapter 14: No Interruptions
Chapter 15: Ruin
Chapter 16: Win Or Die
Chapter 17: Gambling
Chapter 18: The Boyar’s Hunt
Chapter 19: Valikarion
Chapter 20: Liegewoman
Epilogue
Other books by the author
About the Author
Description
Caina Amalas was once a deadly Ghost nightfighter, a spy and agent of the Emperor of Nighmar. Now she only wishes to live quietly with her husband.
But civil war grips the Empire, and Caina's skills are needed against the cruel sorcerers of the malevolent Umbarian Order.
And Caina has a dangerous connection to the Umbarians.
For Caina's mother had many secrets, secrets that might yet kill Caina herself...
Ghost in the Ring
Copyright 2017 by Jonathan Moeller.
Published by Azure Flame Media, LLC.
Cover design by Clarissa Yeo.
Ebook edition published June 2017.
All Rights Reserved.
This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination, or, if real, used fictitiously. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the express written permission of the author or publisher, except where permitted by law.
Chapter 1: The Dead Castle
On the night of her wedding to Kylon of House Kardamnos, Caina drew her husband after her into their bedchamber.
Prince Nasser had given them the use of a chamber high in the towers of the Palace of the Princes, the windows facing east towards the Alqaarin Sea. A large bed stood in the center of the chamber, and the air bore the faint scent of incense.
Caina barely noticed either of those things.
Nasser’s wife Anzima had arranged for Caina to wear the traditional garments of an Iramisian bride, a white dress that left the arms bare and a cloak and mantle of white silk. Anzima’s armies of maids had spent hours preparing Caina for the ceremony, applying makeup and arranging her hair and making certain that the dress hung just so.
Caina appreciated their work, but right now she was more concerned with getting the formal garments off.
Fortunately, Kylon was glad to help her.
She tugged at his own clothes as fast as she could manage. Anzima’s troop of servants had also found suitable garb for Kylon, a formal tunic and cloak and boots in the Kyracian style. The cloak was pinned at his left shoulder with a jeweled brooch, which was easy enough to remove. Then the tunic went over his head, and he discarded the boots and then the trousers. By then Caina had gotten all the way out of her own elaborate dress.
She started to kiss him, but Kylon’s left arm went over her shoulders and his right arm behind her knees. He lifted her from her feet in one smooth motion, and Caina let out a delighted laugh. Kylon laid her down on the bed, and Caina smiled and drew him to her.
The next several moments were intense. They shifted position, Caina straddling him, gazing into Kylon’s face as the intensity within her built and built and…
Sudden confusion flooded across Kylon’s face, followed by alarm.
What was wrong?
Caina felt the surge of sorcerous power against her back and shoulder blades, her skin prickling with it.
Ever since the disastrous day of her father’s death and long before she had received the vision of the valikarion, she had been able to sense the presence of arcane forces. Now she felt sorcerous power behind her, a peculiar power that she had never sensed before.
But it felt like necromancy, with the same familiar tinge of corruption.
Caina turned her head in a sudden mixture of fear and rage. Fear that a wielder of sorcerous force would attack her in in the heart of Iramis. Rage that someone would interrupt them on their wedding night of all times.
The vortex exploded towards her.
It filled the room, a spinning maelstrom of shadow and ghostly green fire. With Caina’s eyes of flesh, it looked like a miniature storm lit from within by green fire. With the vision of the valikarion, she saw the ancient necromancy that stirred within it, fueling the vortex with ribbons of eldritch fire.
Before Caina could move or even speak, the vortex engulfed her.
She felt herself ripped away from Kylon, and then she was tumbling through nothingness. She heard Kylon shout, and Caina lost his voice in the howl of the wind. The vortex stretched into an endless dark tunnel, green fire flickering and dancing in the gloom. Caina flailed, desperately trying to grab onto something, anything, as she fell. Had the spell knocked her from the tower window? Yet she didn’t see the towers of Iramis anywhere, only writhing shadows lit from within by green fire.
Then she hit the ground with enough force to make her head ring and knock the breath from her lungs.
For a moment Caina lay motionless, stunned. Bit by bit her mind started to come back into focus, noting details. She was lying on her stomach on a flagstone floor, the stones icy cold against her skin. The howling roar of the strange vortex had vanished. Sorcerous power surged through the air, her skin crawling with pins and needles from it.
Caina got her hands beneath her, the floor flat and cold beneath her hands, pushed herself up, and sprang to her feet in one motion, ready to fight or to flee as necessary.
She was in…
Caina blinked in surprise.
She had no idea where she was.
A hall of stone yawned before her, the floor paved with smooth flagstones, thick pillars supporting the vaulted ceiling. The stones were rougher than Imperial or Istarish or Iramisian stonework, and the capitals of the pillars had been carved in a strange design that she did not recognize. A dais rose at the far end of the hall, supporting a bronze statue of a warrior in scale armor and a spiked helm, a greatsword in his hands. Caina did not recognize the statue, though she thought the style of the armor was common in the eastern Empire.
Despite that, the hall would have been unremarkable. It had a sort of barbaric splendor to it, and Caina could imagine an ancient Caerish or Szaldic chieftain reigning on the dais.
It would have been unremarkable…except for the veins in the stonework.
Caina had never seen anything like it.
Hundreds of black veins threaded their way through the stones of the walls and ceiling like blood vessels in flesh. Some were no larger than Caina’s finger, and others were thicker than her leg. The veins pulsed and throbbed as if some massive heart pumped black slime through them. Portions of the walls and ceiling seemed…twisted, warped, as if the stone was growing tumors. To the vision of the valikarion, necromantic power flowed through the veins.
Caina didn’t know where she was, but she was pretty sure it was not Iramis.
“Kylon?” she said, turning in a circle. “Kylon!”
There was no sign of her husband.
&n
bsp; As far as Caina could tell, she was alone.
Where the hell was she? Some sort of spell had brought her to this place, that was clear. The cold air had a faint dusty smell as if no one had been in this room for a long, long time. Yet the very stone of the walls and floors and ceiling were charged with dark power. It was almost as if…
Was she back in the netherworld? In the netherworld, the air and ground blazed with sorcerous power. This room burned with sorcerous power, dark and necromantic, but it did not seem nearly as powerful.
Narrow windows lined the walls, and Caina walked to the nearest one. There was no glass or shutter, and a cold wind came through the window, so cold that her flesh stood out in goosebumps. Through the window, she saw…
It was so strange it took her a moment for her to process the sight.
One moment it seemed like she saw the bleak, lifeless plains of the netherworld, flat and desolate and dotted with menhirs of jagged obsidian. The next she gazed upon a snowy forest, silent and white. The sky kept shifting as well, blurring from the writhing storm clouds of the netherworld to a cold, crisp winter sky, the black expanse dotted with thousands of stars.
Caina looked left and right through the window, and saw a huge fortress rising around her.
It looked fantastical, a sprawling maze of towers and curtain walls and basilicas. It would have been a magnificent sight, but the black veins crawled everywhere over the walls, and tumorous growths bulged from the towers and the courtyards. The fortress should have been a thing of beauty, but it looked as if the stone of the citadel was being replaced by cancerous, tumorous flesh.
Caina stepped back from the window, shivering in the chill.
She suspected the fortress was caught halfway between the netherworld and the material world. That explained the powerful auras around her. And if the fortress was pulled all the way into the netherworld, Caina wanted to be long gone by the time that happened.
But how had she gotten here? Had it happened by accident?
Or had someone drawn Caina here deliberately?
No, she had to focus on the urgent problem, on escaping the fortress.
A shudder went through her limbs, and Caina realized that she had a more immediate difficulty.
She needed to find some clothing before she froze to death.
Save for her perfume, some smeared makeup, and a mixture of Kylon’s sweat and her own, she was stark naked. If she didn’t find some clothing or a source of heat, she was going to freeze to death, especially if she strayed too close to those windows.
Dread stabbed through her, not for herself, but for Kylon. What had happened to him? Had the vortex drawn him here? Or had something worse befallen him?
With considerable effort, Caina dismissed that fear. She could worry about Kylon once she made sure that she wasn’t going to freeze to death. And in truth, Kylon could defend himself better than she could.
Caina turned, looking for a door, and a glint of light on her left wrist caught her eye.
She wasn’t entirely naked.
Her pyrikon bracelet still rested on her left wrist, currently in the form of an intricate chain of ghostsilver links. In the heat of the moment with Kylon, she had forgotten to take it off, not that it had gotten into the way. The pyrikon had proven useful many times, and it might prove useful here.
And Caina wasn’t unarmed.
She would never be completely unarmed for the rest of her life, thanks to the ordeals she had undergone in Istarinmul. The fingers of her right hand flexed a few times, and then she held out her hand and concentrated.
For a heartbeat, nothing happened, and then shards of silver light appeared out of nothingness and assembled themselves in her hand, forming into a short, curved sword forged of ghostsilver, the blade written with Iramisian characters. The valikon had been forged by the Iramisian loremasters, and it was proof against sorcery while the spells wrapped within its blade could destroy spirits. The sword shuddered Caina’s hand, and the blade burned with white flames, reacting to the dark power in the air around her.
The valikon had bonded to her, and she could summon and dismiss it at will. Given her lifelong hatred of sorcery, Caina wasn’t sure how she felt about that, but the sword was useful. And since she would have no weapons otherwise, she would not complain.
A pair of wooden doors stood at the opposite end of the hall from the dais, banded in dark iron. Save for the windows, they were the only way out of the hall, and Caina did not fancy climbing down the side of the fortress.
She crossed to the doors, listened at them for a moment, and heard nothing but the moan of the wind from the windows.
Caina nodded to herself and dismissed the valikon. It shattered into glowing shards and vanished. Its fire would be visible from some distance off. Better to remain unnoticed by whoever or whatever ruled this fortress.
A deep breath, and she eased open one of the doors, peering through the gap.
Beyond was a wide corridor. No, not a corridor – an arcade with pillars running alone one side. Through the pillars, she saw a wide courtyard overgrown with twisted, corrupted-looking vegetation. Towers and walls loomed over the other three sides of the garden, their surfaces covered with black veins and bulging, uneven growths. Caina looked up one side of the arcade and down the other, but it was deserted, and she saw nothing moving in the windows overlooking the garden.
Yet on one side of the arcade, she saw firelight leaking from a doorway.
She slipped through the doors and into the arcade, keeping close to the wall to remain out of sight of the windows. Her bare feet made no sound against the floor. A flicker of amusement went through her. She had never realized how easy it was to move in total silence while naked. Of course, a naked woman would draw attention, and gods, it was cold here. Caina was shivering, the muscles of her shoulders and arms jerking involuntarily, and if she didn’t find some clothing or at least some warmth, she was going to be in a lot of trouble.
A flicker of motion caught her eye.
Had something moved in one of the windows? She froze, gazing at the mass of black-veined stone, her head jerking a little in the cold. As far as she could tell, nothing was moving behind the windows.
But Caina doubted she was alone in this place.
Something had brought her here. Better to get out of sight as soon as possible. Caina resumed walking and then broke into a jog. Her bare footfalls made little enough sound. The doorway at the end of the arcade grew closer, the firelight brighter. Caina stopped and pressed herself against the wall next to the door, the chill from the stone soaking into her skin. She peered around the edge of the doorway, wondering if she was about to see a guardroom or a barracks…
Surprise flickered through her.
It was a library.
The room beyond was large, with high wooden shelves of books climbing the walls to the vaulted ceiling. More of those black veins and twisted growths covered the ceiling, but the shelves hid the stone walls. Four long wooden tables stood in a row, with four chairs at each table. The shelves sagged beneath the weight of hundreds of dusty books. On the right wall was an enormous fireplace, a fire blazing within it. No smoke came from the flames, but even from this distance Caina felt the heat, and it was a blessed relief.
She would have run to the fire at once, but the second half of her surprise held her back.
Because undead creatures wandered through the library.
There were six of the things, and Caina saw the currents of necromantic energy that animated them. Three of the undead wore armor and carried swords of archaic design. The other three wore dusty robes that had once been ornate and bright, hats of rotting fur perched atop their heads. All six creatures were skeletal and withered, leathery flesh cracking against brittle bone.
Caina stared at them for a moment, and then stepped through the doorway, making no effort to conceal herself.
And as she expected, none of the undead could see her.
She was a valikarion, and neith
er spirits nor sorcerous spells could detect her presence. The eyes and ears of the undead had rotted away long ago, and they relied upon their sorcerous senses to perceive living creatures. Since she could not be detected by any sorcery, they could not perceive her.
Caina crossed the library and stopped before the fireplace, spreading her hands before her and soaking in the warmth radiating from the fire. She could see the sorcery that sustained it, part of the power that surged through the stonework of the fortress, but she didn’t care. Sorcerous or not, the fire gave off heat. She stepped to the side to let an undead soldier shuffle past her and then moved back into the warmth of the fire.
As her limbs warmed, she considered what to do next. Clothing? The undead wore robes, but the thought of putting the rotted, crumbling cloth against her skin made her stomach turn. Instead, her eyes turned instead to the dusty books on the shelves of the library. Perhaps they could tell her where she was.
Keeping one eye on the undead, Caina plucked the nearest book from the shelf and paged through it. The alphabet was unfamiliar to her, and she did not recognize the language. Wait, no, that wasn’t right. The alphabet was the Kagari alphabet, which was used almost exclusively in the northeastern regions of the Empire. Long ago, the nomadic Kagari hordes had ruled most of what was now the eastern Empire, and the then-illiterate Kagari had forced one of their conquered peoples to devise an alphabet for them. The Emperor and the Legions had broken the power of the Kagari khans, but the alphabet lingered in the hinterlands of the eastern Empire.
Had the vortex brought her to the eastern half of the Empire? That seemed unlikely. And a book collector could certainly obtain a book in Kagari script easily enough. Caina shelved the volume and took another. This one was in High Nighmarian, her native tongue, and it was a history of the Empire. It was also an old history of the Empire. A very old history, come to think of it. The style of the High Nighmarian was ancient, and the book’s account did not even reach the end of the Third Empire two thousand years ago.
She shelved the book and took another, glancing at the undead to check their positions. This book was a history of the Imperial Magisterium, the governing body of the Empire’s sorcerers. At least it had been the governing body of the Empire’s sorcerers until the Umbarian Order had come out of the shadows, but that was another story. Again, the book looked and felt ancient, and did not reach the end of the Third Empire. Caina took a third book in High Nighmarian. This one was about a man named Rasarion Yagar, the last King of Ulkaar, and his defeat of the Kagari Great Khan and his descent into madness after…