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Ren of Atikala: The Empire of Dust

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by David Adams




  Contents

  Copyright Information

  Blurb

  Books

  First Page Header

  Map #1

  Reina Firehair

  Prologue

  Act I

  Chapter I

  Chapter II

  Chapter III

  Chapter IV

  Chapter V

  Chapter VI

  Chapter VII

  Chapter VIII

  Act II

  Chapter IX

  Chapter X

  Chapter XI

  Chapter XII

  Chapter XIII

  Chapter XIV

  Chapter XV

  Chapter XVI

  Act III

  Chapter XVII

  Chapter XVIII

  Chapter IXX

  Chapter XX

  Chapter XXI

  Chapter XXII

  Chapter XXIII

  Chapter XXIV

  Epilogue

  Fantasy and Sci-Fi

  Open Gaming Content

  Ren of Atikala: The Empire of Dust by David Adams

  Copyright David Adams

  2016

  I am Ren of Atikala. Warlord. Conqueror. Murderer. I have many stories yet to tell, but this one is the most bloody.

  There was a time I thought I was a god. Something greater than inconsequential mortals, better than my kobold kin, better than elves and dwarves and everyone. Peerless. Indefatigable. Monomaniacal in my quest for superiority.

  Everything I had done to lead me to this point ultimately hurt me. Death was my shadow, and I cast it everywhere I went. It grew larger and larger, sucking in everyone around me and swallowing them whole. Then it fell on me.

  This is the story about why I am not a hero.

  Book three of the Kobolds series.

  Books by David Adams

  The Lacuna series (science fiction)

  Lacuna

  The Sands of Karathi

  The Spectre of Oblivion

  The Ashes of Humanity

  The Prelude to Eternity

  The Requiem of Steel (coming 2016)

  Magnet

  Magnet: Special Mission

  Magnet: Marauder

  Magnet: Scarecrow

  Magnet Saves Christmas

  Magnet: Ironheart (coming 2015)

  Faith

  Imperfect

  The Kobolds series (fantasy)

  Ren of Atikala

  The Scars of Northaven

  The Empire of Dust

  The Pariahs

  The Pariahs: Freelands

  The Pariahs: Elfholme

  The Pariahs: The Abyss (coming soon!)

  Sacrifice

  The Symphony of War series (science fiction)

  Symphony of War: The Polema Campaign

  Symphony of War: The Eris Campaign (coming 2016)

  The Immortals: Kronis Valley

  The Immortals: Anchorage

  The Immortals: Southport (coming 2016)

  Other Books

  Insufficient

  Insurrection

  Injustice (coming 2016)

  Who Will Save Supergirl?

  Evelyn’s Locket

  The Gossamer Shard

  Pavlov’s Dogs

  Hammerfall (coming 2016!)

  Ren of Atikala

  The Empire of Dust

  Alteron Devateri, the peerless, mightiest wizard who ever lived, unearthed a great many arcane truths before his disappearance. The greatest of which was the power of immortality.

  Innumerable wizards have wasted their lives futilely searching for longevity. All failed, save Devateri. The answer was, as these things tended to be, extraordinarily simple. He called it The Truth of Two Deaths.

  A man dies when his heart stops. He dies again the last time his name is ever spoken.

  Never let your world forget you.

  PROLOGUE

  Magmellion

  I WAS BATHED IN LIGHT so bright it burned away every shadow.

  The great forges in the heart of Ssarsdale lit up the whole of my city, turning the eternal darkness of the underworld into a white glare beyond daylight. For eyes unaccustomed to such intensity, it came as a blinding intrusion, creeping into the cracks of spiring buildings and gushing through windows. But my eyes were accustomed to the brightness; my time on Drathari’s surface had taught me many things.

  Including how to tolerate pain.

  All around me kobolds scurried and worked, pumping the bellows and feeding the fires. A chain of workers threw lumps of dried mushroom stalks into the furnace, stoking it to greater heights. The forging had required much planning. Each breath of air the furnace consumed was taking one from my people—air was a precious commodity in the underworld—but the secondary ventilation shafts we had dug would bring us enough to breathe.

  The workers were miserable, but they toiled without complaint, as they had for months on various tasks leading to this moment. Mining of the deep iron ore had killed hundreds. Research into arcane forging cost us many Darkguard; my assassins convinced surface wizards to part with their trinkets…and convinced those who were less willing.

  The price of the reagents had been paid in blood. Still my people worked. Kobolds were used to suffering.

  “Leader Ren Humansbane,” said Kresselack, my Master of the Forge, his dark scales orange in the glow of the furnace. “The heat rises. The gate to the elemental plane is almost open. We are ready for you.”

  “Thank you,” I said. “Let us waste no more time.”

  Kresselack bowed his head almost to the floor. I touched the spines on his head as thanks, and shrugged off my robes.

  Although this was done in full view of a sizeable fraction of the city, kobolds did not attach the same sexuality to being unclothed that most other races did. Nudity was not a stimulus for us; we had our noses for that. The matter was purely practical. No cloth could survive the intense temperature inside the fire.

  The throng around me chanted my name. I shut them out as I moved towards the inferno.

  Ren! Ren! Ren!

  Four kobolds used huge metal poles to pry open the metal grate that covered the forge; exposed, the roar intensified, sucking in air as though it were drowning. I approached without fear. Flame was my old friend.

  The lip of the forge glowed angrily. The fire within, hot enough to melt steel, felt as pleasant as a cool breeze to me.

  Carefully, so I wouldn’t fall, I climbed into the inferno. Lumps of charcoaled mushrooms crunched underneath my feet. Hot air swirled all around me, ashes settling into my scales.

  Iron clanked, loud enough to be heard over the roar of the fire. An iron ingot, stamped with the seal of Ssarsdale, descended towards me on chains. Three kobolds controlled the chain from outside. My brethren did not share my immunities; despite their distance and protective padded clothing, I could see the discomfort on their faces, eyes squinted, their long tongues extended as they tried to cool themselves.

  I unhooked the chain and hoisted the lump of metal. It was not nearly as heavy as I expected. My strength had grown with every passing day, in a way I could not control but found both useful and pleasurable.

  Enjoying my newfound power would have to wait. I moved to the centre of the forge where the heat was highest. The iron began to glow in my hand as it heated, softening and sagging around the edges. I moulded it as one might mould clay, twisting it in my hands, turning it over and over, squashing it from one end until it was a rough square.

  I compared the metal to the mould we had created. It would fit. I had to hurry; the iron began to sag like wet paper, making it difficult to hold. I placed the soft metal against the flat stone, smoothing
it with my hands. Pushing the semiliquid around until it took shape. Rubbing in charcoal to strengthen it.

  Soon it was hardened steel in the shape of a shoulder plate. I placed it at the edge of the fire, cooling it just below its melting point. Kresselack balanced the heat perfectly.

  Another ingot became a breastplate. Another, the rear plate. Shin guards. Leg guards. Knee joints. Wrists. Neck. I funnelled liquid steel into the moulds that would make fingers for gauntlets. A helm, fitted to my snout.

  Using absolutely nothing but my bare hands, I forged a full suit of plate in a pillar of roaring flame.

  Plate was an unthinkable luxury under normal circumstances. The amount of metal it had consumed would make a hundred fine suits of chainmail, yet this suit would armour only me. The extravagance seemed perverse almost. No normal kobold should be worth such effort.

  Fortunately I was no normal kobold.

  Such skills were foreign to me. I had practised the forging a dozen times, at a lower heat to conserve fuel, working with lead. Although these skills typically took a lifetime to master, in just a few months, I had become quite the armour smith.

  This piece, however, was no practice. If I made a mistake, months of work would be ruined.

  But I made no mistakes. The armour was perfect, each piece just as I envisioned it. It would be a fine set of armour, able to turn away blades and arrows alike.

  My work was half done.

  At my signal, all the remaining fuel was dumped into the furnace, and all four heat regulators were opened. The forge drank in air, and the flames reached their zenith. Outside, even the kobolds wearing heat protection were driven back, crying in pain.

  Hotter. Brighter. So intense I could barely see, even with my daylight-accustomed eyes. Yet still I spellcast, pouring out magic into the area, tearing a rip in the fabric between planes, from this world to one of elemental fire. A crack of orange and white. Pure heat. Pure light. Even with my eyes almost closed, it was agonising.

  The crack widened. The barrier between this plane of existence and the world of flame was weakening. I had to hold out.

  Right as I almost gave up and ordered the gates closed, something caressed my arm. It felt like a feather, a limb made of pure flame, its fingers clawing at me, trying to sear my flesh. A thousand other flame-hands joined the first, stretching out from the embers that littered the ground, grasping for me, ghostly and ethereal. They were elementals, beings whose whole bodies were pure heat made living.

  The grasping hands sought to steal me away into their realm of heat, but as they reached for me, I reached for them. I grabbed the largest one, and with a firm tug, pulled a fire elemental into Drathari.

  The creature took the form of an androgynous hunched elf with a body of flame and smoke for hair. Its limbs were impossibly wry and thin, and even bent as it was, the being stood twice as tall as me. It had two blue smouldering pits for eyes. Behind it, the glowing rift snapped closed.

  Snarling angrily, a sound like a geyser spitting a torrent of water, the elemental reached for me, but its touch was as harmless as a gentle breeze. Realising this—it had a cunningness that its simple features concealed—I swore it regarded me with bitter disdain.

  “Who steals me from my home?” It hissed at me in a language that sounded like crackling leaves, popping logs, and boiling water. I could not normally speak the elemental tongues but had prepared a spell in advance that would allow us to communicate. “Little thing my flame cannot melt? What manner of creature dares to pluck an elder of flame from their throne?”

  An elder? I had not expected to do so well; this was both fortuitous and troubling. The greater the power of the elemental, the greater the reward I would have for binding it to my service. So, too, was the potential risk.

  “I am Ren of Atikala,” I said, as boldly as I could. “I demand your service.”

  “Ren of Atikala. A flesh being of the material plane. I hear the kobold’s demands.” Its tone became more aggressive. “And I refuse them. Return me to my pit, far away from this cold, hard place.”

  “I will,” I said. “Conditionally.”

  Bargaining with extraplanar creatures was difficult at best. Their minds did not work the way ours did; they came from a fundamentally different universe where even the most basic tenants of existence would often be completely alien.

  “State your terms,” it crackled. “Ren of Atikala, she who so readily spurns my touch.”

  Elementals craved nothing more than to be surrounded by, or immersed in, the element of which they were comprised; this was only natural, as elementals were immortal manifestations of their primal forms. One of their elders, proud and noble, would do anything to return to its home before its throne was usurped. It would be patient in its suffering.

  “Imbue my steel with your essence,” I said. “Serve me in battle. Empower my spells. Obey my every command and be released in time.”

  “I will not be your eternal prisoner,” it spat, the blue lights of its eyes flaring. “To live as cold metal in a cold world.”

  “Temporarily,” I stressed. “Barely a grain through the hourglass for you.”

  The elemental elder’s eyes narrowed dangerously. Greater elementals had powers extending beyond their caress.

  I raised my hand. The bellows closed, and almost immediately, the temperature dropped. The forgefires dulled, and the metal faded to a rosy pink. The colour reminded me of dwarf flesh.

  Anger turned to fear in the elemental’s eyes. Cold would be the end of it.

  Threats were always a gamble. The elder could escape the furnace, burn hundreds and hundreds of kobolds before it eventually died, and it knew I knew.

  And I didn’t care. The need to survive would smother its pride.

  I hoped.

  It was a controlled gamble. I kept my hand raised, and the white-hot coals faded to rose red.

  “Wait,” it pleaded, its voice hissing like steam. “Restore the heat.”

  How satisfying. I lowered my arm, and the bellows reopened.” Serve me for a hundred years, and I swear to you, you will be returned to your home.”

  “Far too long! You ask too much of me!”

  One again I raised my hand. Cool air, chilled by the underworld, rushed in. The fire-elf withered and curled in pain.

  “Obey,” I said, a slight hiss in my tone. “Or be destroyed.”

  “I accept!” It wailed. “One hundred years!”

  The bellows restarted. The temperature climbed slowly. This was fortunate; our mushroom farms had only provided a limited supply of fuel.

  “What is your name?” I asked.

  Light flared in the elemental’s eyes. “What does a slave’s name matter to the mistress?”

  “Names have power,” I said. “And if you are to serve me, I will have power over you.”

  It seemed to hesitate, the blue pits of its eyes flickering before he spoke. “I am Grand-Ember Magmellion, Lord of Ashes.”

  “Lord of Ashes.” I smiled toothily. “An appropriately thematic title for a being of fire.”

  He glared at me. “No more appropriate than nothing for a kobold.”

  I flicked the tip of my tail, taking in a deep breath of the charred air, focusing my magic inward. Arcane energy flowed from my fingertips. I lowered both hands onto the almost-molten metal, and using my claws, scratched symbols into the soft steel.

  I turned my thoughts inward. Casting spells was one thing, enchanting armour, another entirely. Not more or less difficult. Simply a different skill. I let my instincts guide me, as I typically did when casting.

  For a moment nothing happened. I kept my composure, letting the flames lick at my body, burning all around me. I relaxed, totally and completely, and I let my mind wander.

  A tingle spread down my hands. They moved of their own accord, settling once again over the half-molten metal of the breastplate. A soft rain of blue sparks fell from my fingers like falling stars, settling into the scratches in the metal, infusing it with a fr
action of my power.

  The cloud spread to the other pieces, falling over the metal and infusing them with energy. As they did, I felt more and more drained, as though I had been standing in the same spot for days. My legs ached.

  I should have stopped, but a sudden wave of doubt stole my attention. Armour would restrict my movement. If the steel failed me, it would be worse than nothing.

  I forced magic into the armour. The good feelings faded, and my hands shook. I scrunched up my face, ignoring the protestations of my arms and legs. Soon my whole body was screaming for me to stop, and willpower was all I had to keep me going. I had to complete the enchantment.

  Then came the naming. I could barely breathe, let alone speak, but somehow the words found their way to my bloodied lips.

  “I name thee Carapace of Ashes,” I murmured, intoning the words as I inscribed them, empowering them with surges of arcane power. “Heart of Flame, Death of Daggers, Shield of My Body, and Fuel of My Spells. Forged by Ren of Atikala, the binding of Grand-Ember Magmellion, Lord of Ashes. He is bound for one hundred years from this day.”

  “Or until your death,” said Magmellion. “I’ll not spend a century wrapped around a corpse.”

  The ache was almost unbearable. Magmellion was stalling me, trying to force my magic to fail, so he could be released. I could fight him and resist, but it seemed a reasonable concession.

  “Or my death,” I said. “When armour is dust and magic binding fades, steel cannot contain you, and you will be returned home.”

  “Then let it be done.”

  With a low groan like tearing paper, Magmellion inhaled, sucking in ashes from the floor of the furnace. His body seemed to liquefy and reform into a thin sheet, lying over the metal plates of my new armour. He sank into the pits I scratched, like water, my runes glowing with a bright light before fading.

 

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