Book Read Free

The Third Soul Omnibus Two

Page 48

by Jonathan Moeller


  A demonborn man stood in the doorway, staring at him.

  The man looked no more than twenty years old. He wore a black cloak, scuffed boots, ragged trousers, and a worn leather jerkin over a coat of mail. A sword and a dagger hung from his belt.

  He had the red eyes of a possessed man.

  Despite his sudden fear and shock, Ganlon thought he had never seen a man so young look so weary.

  “I don’t want trouble,” said Ganlon.

  The red-eyed man sighed. “Nor do I. I don’t want your coin, your goods, your inn, your virgin daughters. All I want is some food and something to drink.” He hesitated. “I have coin.”

  “Aye?” said Ganlon. “I’ve…some fish left from last night. Some ale, if you don’t mind.”

  “I don’t,” said the red-eyed man. “I’ll take it outside.” He tried to smile. It only made him look grimmer. “No sense bringing evil into your house.”

  “Aye,” said Ganlon. The demonborn man left. For a moment Ganlon considered barring the door. Instead he took some fish, some cheese, and a wooden mug of ale and went outside.

  Ganlon’s inn sat on a bluff overlooking both the village and the sea. High grasses waved in the salty breeze, and the red-eyed man sat on a boulder, staring at the ocean. A magnificent warhorse grazed nearby.

  “Thank you,” said the man, taking the food and pressing a silver penny into Ganlon’s leathery palm.

  “So…what brings you to the village, then?” said Ganlon. “Business?” Mayhap the red-eyed man was from exotic lands, though his accent marked him as Khauldish.

  “The ocean,” said the red-eyed man. “I wanted to see it again.”

  “You did?”

  “I love the ocean.

  Ganlon considered this. Any man who loved the ocean couldn’t be all bad. “As do I. I am Ganlon. I keep the inn.”

  “Raelum, once of Khauldun, now of nowhere,” said the demonborn man. He took a bite of fish.

  “Nowhere?” said Ganlon. “A mercenary, then?” Raelum looked haunted. Perhaps he had survived some dreadful battle, though he looked too young to have fought with Lord Corthain at the Dark River.

  “No,” said Raelum. “But I’ve traveled far. To High Morgon, then to ancient Arvandil, to the Silvercrown Mountains and the very edge of the Old Empire ”

  “Have you?” said Ganlon, smiling. Those were names from a song. But, then, maybe it explained the man’s red eyes.

  “You don’t believe me,” said Raelum. “I don’t expect you to. But I’ve seen things that would drive you mad. Perhaps they have driven me mad.”

  “A ghoul tried to break into the village, once, about five years ago,” said Ganlon, shuddering at the memory. They had feathered it with burning arrows. How the hideous thing had screamed! “But we drove if off.”

  “I’m sure you did,” said Raelum. “But I came to the edge of the Old Empire and back to here. I wanted to see the ocean one more time.”

  “Aye,” said Ganlon, still uneasy. “And now that you’ve seen the ocean, what will you do?”

  “I don’t know,” said Raelum. He bowed his head and sat in silence.

  A scream echoed over the village.

  Raelum’s head snapped up.

  Ganlon frowned, shuffling to the edge of the bluff. He glimpsed women and children running from the village. Behind them ran hulking forms in gleaming armor. Further up the coast lay a pair of beached longships, their bows carved in shapes of hideous beasts.

  A terrified chill shot down Ganlon’s spine.

  “Oh, no,” he said. “Northmen.”

  “What?” said Raelum, moving to his side.

  “No, no,” said Ganlon. A house caught fire. “The Northmen. They must have beached their ships, come ashore in the night! They’ll carry us off as slaves…”

  At the word “slaves” a low growl came from Raelum’s lips.

  “My bow,” gasped Ganlon, “my bow, I’ve got to get my bow…”

  He turned and froze at the expression on Raelum’s face.

  All doubt and weariness had fallen from Raelum’s red eyes. In their place rose a grim, unwavering determination. Raelum pulled a helmet from its shoulder strap, set it on his head, and leapt up onto the horse’s back.

  As Ganlon watched, he galloped down the bluff, black cloak billowing behind them.

  ###

  The chieftain of the Northmen laughed. “Come, you dogs! Get these rabble into chains!”

  He watched as his Northmen shoved the terrified fisher-folk into shackles.

  This was more like it, the chieftain thought. To think they had raided the desolate northlands! Here there were fat merchant ships, ripe for the picking. Here were healthy folk and beautiful women who would fetch a fine price in the slave markets of Carth and Khauldun.

  And, thought the chieftain with a shudder, no red-eyed devils lurked here, ready to spring from the shadows with a sword of fire.

  “Move!” roared the chieftain, brandishing his broadsword.

  Someone screamed, and steel clanged on steel.

  The chieftain frowned, turned, and saw three of his men fleeing towards him. They ran past him, sprinting for the ships.

  “What?” he bellowed. “Cowardly dogs! Come back!”

  He saw the horseman.

  The armored rider galloped through the village, striking down Northmen right and left. Those that stood against him fell. The others turned and fled in terror, shrieking. Even as the chieftain watched, the man galloped past the terrified villagers, his sword striking the chains from their arms.

  The chieftain laughed and strode towards the rider, broadsword at the ready.

  Then the chieftain saw the helmeted rider’s face.

  His throat went dry.

  It was him, the red-eyed devil from the northlands.

  Somehow, somehow he had followed them here.

  The chieftain screamed, and screamed, and did not stop screaming until the red-eyed man’s sword came down.

  THE END

  Thank you for reading THE TOMB OF BALIGANT. Look for more adventures with Raelum, Rachaelis Morulan, and Corthain Kalarien in late 2014 or early 2015. To receive immediate notification of new releases, sign up for my newsletter or watch for news on my Facebook page.

  About the Author

  Standing over six feet tall, Jonathan Moeller has the piercing blue eyes of a Conan of Cimmeria, the bronze-colored hair a Visigothic warrior-king, and the stern visage of a captain of men, none of which are useful in his career as a computer repairman, alas.

  He has written the DEMONSOULED series of sword-and-sorcery novels, and continues to write THE GHOSTS sequence about assassin and spy Caina Amalas, the COMPUTER BEGINNER'S GUIDE series of computer books, and numerous other works.

  Visit his website at:

  http://www.jonathanmoeller.com

  Visit his technology blog at:

  http://www.jonathanmoeller.com/screed

  Contact him at:

  jmcontact@jonathanmoeller.com

  You can sign up for his email newsletter here, or watch for news on his Facebook page.

  Other books by the author

  The Frostborn Series

  Frostborn: The Gray Knight

  The Orc's Tale (Tales of the Frostborn short story)

  The Third Soul Series

  The Testing

  The Assassins

  The Blood Shaman

  The High Demon

  The Burning Child

  The Outlaw Adept

  The Black Paladin

  The Tomb of Baligant

  The Third Soul Omnibus One

  The Third Soul Omnibus Two

  Computer Beginner's Guides

  The Ubuntu Beginner's Guide

  The Windows Command Line Beginner's Guide

  The Linux Command Line Beginner's Guide

  The Ubuntu Desktop Beginner's Guide

  The Windows 8 Beginner's Guide

  The Linux Mint Beginner's Guide

  The Ghosts S
eries

  Child of the Ghosts

  Ghost in the Flames

  Ghost in the Blood

  Ghost in the Storm

  Ghost in the Stone

  Ghost in the Forge

  Ghost in the Ashes

  Ghost Dagger (World of the Ghosts novella)

  Ghost Aria (World of the Ghosts short story)

  Ghost Claws (World of the Ghosts short story)

  The Demonsouled Series

  Demonsouled

  Soul of Tyrants

  Soul of Serpents

  Soul of Dragons

  Soul of Sorcery

  Soul of Skulls

  Soul of Swords

  The Dragon's Shadow (World of the Demonsouled novella)

  The Wandering Knight (World of the Demonsouled short story)

  The Tournament Knight (World of the Demonsouled short story)

  The Tower of Endless Worlds Series

  The Tower of Endless Worlds

  A Knight of the Sacred Blade

  A Wizard of the White Council

  The Destroyer of Worlds

  $1.99 Dark Fantasy

  Driven and Other Stories

  The Devil's Agent

  Angel Sword and Other Stories

  Table of Contents

  Description

  Other books by the author

  The Third Soul VI: The Outlaw Adept

  Chapter 1 - Departures

  Chapter 2 - Wards of Alarm

  Chapter 3 - Blood Sigils

  Chapter 4 - Wrath of the Conclave

  Chapter 5 - The College Historia

  Chapter 6 - Ancient Lore

  Chapter 7 - Thoughtmeld

  Chapter 8 - High Art and Blood Sorcery

  Chapter 9 - The Renegade

  Chapter 10 - Tribunal

  The Third Soul VII: The Black Paladin

  Chapter 1 - Ghouls in the Wood

  Chapter 2 - Demonborn

  Chapter 3 - Thief of Khauldun

  Chapter 4 - The Ruined Keep

  Chapter 5 - The Dead Monastery

  Chapter 6 - The First Brother of St. Arik’s

  Chapter 7 - Marsile’s Tribute

  Chapter 8 - Northmen

  Chapter 9 - The Orphanage

  Chapter 10 - Allies of Necessity

  Chapter 11 - The Abbey of St. Tarill

  Chapter 12 - Murderer

  Chapter 13 - The Knight in the Green Cloak

  Chapter 14 - Draugvir

  Chapter 15 - Nightmares in the Dark

  Chapter 16 - Shrine Duel

  Chapter 17 – Blood Scent

  Chapter 18 - Hierarchs of the Old Empire

  Chapter 19 - The Making of a Paladin

  The Third Soul VIII: The Tomb of Baligant

  Chapter 1 - Pursuit

  Chapter 2 - Servants of Baligant

  Chapter 3 - Arthuras

  Chapter 4 - Abbotsford

  Chapter 5 - The Guardians

  Chapter 6 - Silver Knights and Demon Knights

  Chapter 7 - Recruiting

  Chapter 8 - The Nameless City

  Chapter 9 - Stench of the Dead

  Chapter 10 - A New Master

  Chapter 11 - The High Temple

  Chapter 12 - Catacombs

  Chapter 13 - Hunters and Hunted

  Chapter 14 - For Justice

  Chapter 15 - Ashborn

  Chapter 16 - Moragannon

  Chapter 17 - Those Who Wait

  Chapter 18 - Baligant

  Chapter 19 - Broken Sword

  Chapter 20 - The Ocean

  Epilogue - Black Paladin

  About the Author

  Other books by the author

 

 

 


‹ Prev