DRASMYR
Matthew D. Ryan
The Smashwords Edition
Copyright 2012 Matthew D. Ryan
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Author’s Note: This book is not recommended for children under the age of 13.
Table of Contents
There’s a woman in chain mail standing across the room from me; her sword is leveled at my chest. I can smell the enchantment on the blade, it’s a strong one; maybe even strong enough to cause me harm. Still, I’m not too concerned; it’s at least a ten foot lunge and I know I move faster than she does. Indeed, she’s the one who is looking worried. My display of strength and the death of her comrade have shaken her resolve.
She’s got a pretty face, flushed with excitement but strong and in control. It is her neck that really draws me, though, so soft and inviting, filled with the warm blood I desire. The curve of her flesh glistens, waiting for a well-placed gentle kiss.
She’s breathing rapidly now, her breath coming in shallow gasps. Her trek up through the castle has sapped much of her strength. And the fear she feels is naked in her eyes. Now, she’s getting ready to pounce, just a little too much tension in her stance, her eyes just a little too focused. She couldn’t give me more warning if she were to ask my permission first.
She moves in with remarkable speed, her blade striking out like a serpent’s tongue. Even winded, she still manages to cut my cape, then prances away with her back toward the wall, ready for anything. Anything, except me.
I close the distance and with a clean sweep of my hand knock her sword clattering across the room. Stepping forward, I place myself between her and her weapon. What will she do now, I wonder? Oh, the dagger. That’s good. There’s no enchantment on that one. Not much good that, even if she could grip it well in her bloodied hand.
I laugh a little, loud enough so she can hear me, exulting in the terror I see contorting her features. She’s backing toward the door, looking for escape.
I move toward her with the speed of my kind. My hand closes over her wrist and with a quick snap, the bones are shattered and the useless dagger is sent to the floor. Vainly she flails at me with her other hand. Despite the pain in her wrist she is trying to pull free. In desperation, she brings her knee upward in a fierce jab. If I were a man, I’m sure I’d be on the ground right now. Unfortunately for her, I am no longer a man.
Her struggles are growing weaker. Perhaps the pain or the fear is wearing her down. She collapses on the ground. Her helm falls to the floor with a loud metallic clang and her long, golden tresses drape down to shroud her face. Reaching down with a lover’s touch, I cup her chin and raise her eyes to mine. Tears stream down her cheeks, sparkling in the moonlight. She’s really quite beautiful with a face befitting an angel; it is a great irony that she should fall to a devil such as I.
For the first time this evening, I speak. “Well, intruder, did you not know there is a penalty for trespassing in my lair?”
“Please, please, let me go,” she begs. “I’ll never come back, I’ll do anything you want.”
“Then tell me why you are here. Who sent you?”
“We came for the sceptre.” She glances askance at the crumpled ruin that was once her companion.
I nod in the dead man’s direction. “Yes, perhaps you can reach him. Perhaps you can take the wooden stake from his chest and drive it through my heart, thus ridding this pestilent world of my accursed presence... and perhaps I will rip your arm off if you try. Now answer the question, my dear. Who sent you?”
The naked terror in her face highlights her beauty. For a fleeting moment, I am loathe to wreck such a delicate flower. Indeed, it is the irony of her reply that seals my decision.
“It was Arcalian... the mage. Please... I don’t want to die.”
A warm, almost human smile crawls across my lips. “Don’t worry, my dear, you won’t.”
A brief flash of relief evaporates from her face changing into the gruesome horror of realization as I lunge for her throat. My teeth pierce her neck, freeing a flow of warm, sweet blood. As I feed her body goes limp in my arms and her struggles cease.
Time passes.
She is very nearly drained and quite ready. A quick movement of my hand and my left breast is exposed. Another slash and a gentle trickle of rapidly cooling blood is flowing down my chest. I gaze at my victim. Her breath is coming in ragged gasps; a moment more and she will expire. Ever so slowly I pull her to her knees before me. With my hand behind her head I pull her up and force her lips to my breast. She murmurs a weak protest, but her will, as her blood, is all but gone.
I whisper softly in the woman’s ear, “Drink, my love, and the pain and the weariness shall pass from you forever. I know you are thirsty, my love, I know you hunger. I can ease your suffering, your unendurable torments. Drink, and you shall cast off this paltry existence, this mortal shell of such feeble constitution and you shall become as I: strong, immortal, invincible.”
A moment passes before she begins to suck on the wound. I feel the blood flowing from my chest. As time slips away her strength begins to return. The flow from my chest grows stronger and I am forced to restrain her. At long last, she is finished and I lift her in my arms. Several long strides take me to the old bedchamber. She can rest here for the remainder of the evening. It may be several nights before she can hunt on her own, and I have other business to attend to.
Arcalian the mage. I had so hoped our dealings would have been more profitable, but it seems the allure of the sceptre proved too strong for him. I should have known better than to grant a wizard mercy. I should have killed him outright when he first turned up snooping around my lair. But no, I listened to that whining old man beg for his life in exchange for what? the promise of young fresh victims? An apprentice here and there plucked from the guild at the appointed times. No one misses the occasional apprentice. Wizards’ apprentices run away or die all the time. Very few survive to become a true mage. It was a brilliant plan; diabolical in every detail, sadistic in every nuance. It impressed even me with the depths of its perversity. Perhaps, after I dispense with Arcalian I can induce another member of his sorcerous guild to go along with a similar plan. After all, my newfound love may need a little practice before she starts hunting on her own. I’ll have to be more careful, though. No one can be allowed even a hint of where my lair is; that is one mistake which will never be repeated. In the mean time, I believe it’s time I paid Arcalian a visit.
A quick glance assures me my love still lies upon the bed as if fast asleep. The room is dark, the windows shuttered with the curtains drawn; the Sun shall not touch her when He rises. Silent as death I move through the chambers and halls of the long abandoned keep. Nothing stirs save the wind outside and the rats dining on my newfound bride’s late companion. Irritated with the mess, I throw his carcass to the courtyard below and look out into the night.
Silgaren, the great moon, hangs in the sky, full and bright. Its smaller companion, Neerie, is not yet visible, although a golden glow limns the clouds far to the southeast. Spread beneath the greater moon, the Forest of Shrouding Mists fills the valley brim to brim. It is an old and ancient woodland whose unnamed horrors have always been sufficient guard to keep my castle safe—that is, until that treacherous wizard sent those assassins into my keep. Arcalian must die, as must all others who know of my existence. I’ll wring his foul neck for names.
I change shape and take to the air. It is a clear, cold night, with no clouds to hinder my vision. Below me, the dark canopy of the forest bears an even darker scar; the trail of the old river and its sister road to town and Arcalian.
Despite my near limitless power, I am cautious about openly wandering in a human city on a clear night. I have had run-ins with them before and I have no wish to draw undue notice. I soar in a long gliding circle to free my mind for concentration.
It takes but a moment.
Then the storm begins to build, drawing in clouds from the distant sea. They roil and churn in the darkening night, reaching forth with long writhing tendrils as if to grasp the town with a shadowy hand. A chilling gust of wind sweeps through the forest trees and the mists boil forth from the valley floor. All told, I spend an hour circling the town while the storm gathers its strength. Then, as the first lightnings begin to flash and the rains begin to fall, I descend on shadowy wings into the heart of Drisdak, the city on the Sea of Sorrows.
The mages guild is easy to find; its rancid stench of magic can be smelled from blocks away. It’s a tall building, made of stone, looking more like a miniature keep than a guild house. Five circular towers loom up from a central stone edifice. I have no doubt that Arcalian can be found in the highest tower in the room of the guild master, undoubtedly basking in the luxuries my services provided.
At the gate of the guild house, two armored men, spears at the ready, stand sheltered in an alcove as the rain begins to pour. I take a moment to consider my options, then wrap my dark cape about myself to hide my current attire. As I approach the guards, their spears lower to bar my way. I could kill them, of course, but that would not help me get inside.
“Oh please, sirs.” My voice takes on a pitiful, pleading tone. “I know it’s past curfew, but I was resolving some important business for my master on the far side of town and I got held up... and then the storm came... Now I’m all soaked-through without the coin to get a room.”
One guard snorts disgustedly. “So what? You know the rules. Spend the night in the gutter for all I care.”
The other man is somewhat more inquisitive. “Business? Who’s your master?”
“Why it’s the guild master Arcalian, sir.”
They exchange glances, and the first guard snorts again. “You, you’re always looking for favors, you make me sick.”
The second guard smiles. “Of course, my friend, we’ll be happy to let you in. Ignore my rude comrade here, I’ll let you in the gate myself. Just remember ol’ Peredrin, and I’ll be happy to help you anytime.” Not a noble invitation, but it will appease the ancient stricture.
The guard pulls out a key and unlocks the gate. Within moments I am inside a dry hall lit by an oil lamp hanging on the wall. If the guards were truly observant, they might notice that I cast no shadow. But guards being guards, they notice not. As they start to swing the gate shut, I turn and face them.
“Guards...” I say.
The first guard, looking perturbed, does not reply, but the second brightens immediately. “Yes, my friend...” he answers.
Their minds are weak, and the compulsion is easy. “You will not remember me.”
A glazed look comes into their eyes as I retreat down the hall. In moments, I have vanished from their sight and the first guard shakes his head. “Peredrin! Are you daft, man? Close that blasted gate.”
Peredrin’s reply is muffled by the clanging sound of iron slamming into stone. From the shadows, I smile. “Have a nice night, gentlemen.”
Turning, I proceed down the hall. After a few moments in solitude I encounter a young apprentice doing some of his own late night wanderings. He manages a quick glance in my direction, then tries to hurry past. I grab his arm.
“Do you know the way to Arcalian’s chamber?”
“Uh... yes.”
“Good. You will take me to him at once. Take the shortest route and waste no time. And when I take my leave of you, you shall have no memory of ever having seen me. Is that understood?”
His voice comes out soft, airy, almost lifeless. “Yes.”
We make rapid progress through the quiet halls until at last we reach a winding staircase. “Arcalian’s chamber is on the highest floor,” the apprentice says, pointing. Having no further need for him, I send him on his way and start climbing the stairs. They end in a large oak door smelling faintly of magic, guarded by a lone man in chain armor, long sword at his side. He bars my way with hand on hilt.
“Master Arcalian is not to be disturbed.”
Annoyed, I kill him.
I move to sniff the door. Yes, there is a ward, but it is far too weak to affect me. Arcalian is not the mage the former guild master was. In a playful mood, I knock on the time-worn wood. There is no reply. I knock again.
Finally, Arcalian’s voice answers. “Guard, I told you I was not to be disturbed. Guard...”
I hear a second voice, muffled by the door, but still loud enough for my ears to discern. “Perhaps, the guard is asleep or indisposed.”
“Then we shall find a new guard. Answer the door and get rid of whoever it is, Aristoceles... and then find that guard.”
Footsteps approach the door from the far side. “Sir, didn’t you put a ward on the door?”
“Yes, but it was just to ward off common thieves and such—it would have no effect on any of the higher mages—now open the door!”
“Perhaps a stronger ward may be warranted. Talamarius always preferred the ward of concealment to hide his private study.”
“I am not Talamarius, nor do I have any wish to seclude myself to the extent that even the council cannot reach me if the need arises. Now, for the last time Aristoceles, open the door!”
“As you wish, sir.”
The door swings inward. A grey haired man in pale yellow robes stands in the doorway, one hand on the handle the other on the doorframe. “The master wishes not to be distur—”
Stepping forward with hands extended, I snap the man’s neck with a violent twist, then turn toward Arcalian. “Greetings, wizard.” The body drops to the floor.
With a startled yelp, Arcalian leaps back from his desk. “Lucian, you’re ali—”
“My dear friend, I have not been alive for a thousand years. You of all people should be aware of that.” I step slowly and deliberately past the robed man’s body.
With obvious effort, Arcalian regains his composure. He sinks slowly back into his chair and rests his elbows on the oak desk, his hands folded beneath his chin. The tome splayed out before him is thick and leather-bound. The oil lamp flickers in a draft and the mage’s shadow dances across the wall. “You have killed Aristoceles.”
My hand motions to the doorway. “And your guard. Their deaths amused me.”
“The guard will be easy to replace, but Aristoceles may prove more difficult.”
“Oh really, why is that? He didn’t smell particularly strong.” I fold my arms across my chest; there is no rush to kill this man. Indeed, it is enjoyable watching his discomfort grow. “What use was he to you?”
The wizard makes an explanatory gesture with his left hand. “Very little in the magical sense, he was always more interested in philosophy than the true arts of sorcery. But he was naive enough to be considerably loyal to me, and he had a knack for many things others might find difficult.”
I glance down at the crumpled body. “Philosophy? If I had known, I could have made him immortal. Many a lonely night have I spent pondering the mysteries of the universe. It might prove amusing to have someone who thinks he is learned in such affairs to talk to. Could you imagine, though, an immortal vampire wandering the world spending half his time drinking blood and the other half trying to justify his existence as a murderer of men? I’m sure the emotional turmoil would be agonizing, far more so than any caused by any one of his ridiculous paradoxes, be it on place, motion, or the meaning of time.”
“Lucian, my friend,” Arcalian says, leaning back in his chair, “you always seem to amaze me with your knowledge of things both common and obscure. Are you truly as well-read as you seem?” He masks his fear well, but the smell of magic has a new companion, the odor of human sweat. A lonely bead of perspiration dripping from the wizard’s brow betrays the man’s true feelings.
“A thousand years leaves one ample time to read.”
“I suppose it does. I am curious, however. Something you suggested intrigues me. If you were to change my friend into a vampire—”
“It is too late. He is dead and I didn’t even bite him.”
“Yes, but if he were to become a vampire would he retain that much of his original identity? Would he still be a philosopher in mind, yet a vampire in body?”
“I’m not really sure. It’s been so long since I was mortal, I truly don’t remember.”
“It’s a shame that you killed him so quickly, perhaps if you had been more patient.”
This discussion is growing tedious. It will be best if I end it. “It doesn’t matter, I can always find another philosopher if I become overly curious. Perhaps even a mage.”
Arcalian’s lips thin and his complexion pales. Nevertheless, he still tries to continue the charade. “A mage? What an interesting idea. Imagine, a vampire with the power of magic at his beck and call...”
“Don’t worry. It won’t be you. I intend to kill you outright. I don’t like you enough to give you that much power. The woman you sent to destroy me, though, she, I intend to keep.”
Arcalian looks at me with a forcibly puzzled expression on his face. There is a hint of panic in his eyes. “The woman I sent… I’m afraid I don’t understand what you mean.”
“Come now, don't you remember? She had blond hair, blue eyes, and a magical sword capable of severing my head. And I mustn’t forget her companion—the small dark-haired fellow with the wooden stakes—awfully handy to have around when you’re hunting vampires. They almost succeeded too, but tragically, they were running just a little late. Imagine my surprise this evening when I awoke to the grating sound of my own coffin being opened. Well, the rogue now wears his favorite stake, and the woman... she is now my bride! Do you remember now?”
“You are mistaken. I... have no knowledge of these... things.” He makes a furtive glance toward the wand lying beside the book on his desk, within easy reach if I moved as slowly as a mortal.
“Mistaken? I think not. ‘Lucian, you’re alive!’ Your performance at my entrance has already convicted you of your crime.” I place both my hands on his desk and lean toward him, snarling. “And with no court at hand, I am forced to pass judgment myself.” I straighten locking my eyes with his.
With human slowness, he makes a lunge for his wand. I too lunge, hurling his desk aside like a desiccated leaf in the autumn wind. My left hand clasps his right and twists it back almost to the point of breaking but not quite, not yet. He gasps in pain and a bolt of energy unleashed from the wand goes awry to reduce a far bookshelf to a smoking ruin.
“Before I send you to the grave, old friend, I need to know one thing. Who else amongst your scholarly kindred have you told of my existence? Answer me!” I apply a trace more pressure to his wrist, grinding the bones together with excruciating force.
His face contorts in pain, yet he still manages to work defiance into his glare. “I’d rather swallow my own tongue.”
“I had so hoped it wouldn’t end like this,” I whisper gently in his ear. With a sudden twist I snap his forearm and crush his wrist, eliciting a scream of pain echoed by a lightning flash at the window. Ever so gently, I wrap the fingers of my right hand around his throat.
His eyes glow with hatred. “Burn in Hell you undead bastard.” Shrieking, he thrusts his other hand toward my face, a hand which bursts into flame as it touches my skin.
The pain... The little mortal hurt me. He hurt me. I shove him away and step back. My vision in one eye is gone and my face is wracked with agony. I see him there, leaning against the toppled wreckage of his desk, panting. His left hand is wreathed with fire and a silver ring on his finger pulses with a liquid light.
“Not as easy as you thought, am I, Lucian.” He has an evil, almost confident look in his eye. A small gesture from his left hand and the flames sprout into a sword of fire.
I finger my left eye and the side of my face; it is quite numb now. I return my attention to the wizard and his sword. “Your late master gave me worse.”
“Talamarius? He was a knave. I could have taken him myself. I didn’t need you. I don’t need you.”
He lunges forward swinging his sword in a wide arc. With my right hand I catch his wrist, with my left I grasp his throat.
“You haven’t... won... yet,” he says, gasping.
The five fingers of his left hand open wide. The sword of fire melts into a wave of flames rolling across my arm, coursing toward my shoulder. Agony erupts along my body and with a howl I lunge, sinking my teeth deep into his neck. Still he struggles on, scourging my arm with his unearthly fire. But though the pain is great, my probing teeth have found an artery and I know his time is short. In violent spurts his lifeblood gushes from him, smearing my face and shirt and running in warm rivulets down my throat. Within moments, the flame dies down. The pain, however, remains; it is much slower in the ebbing.
For nearly half an hour I remain there, feeding. When his white body finally sags to the floor, my vision is beginning to return.
“Well, Arcalian.” I say, studying his corpse. “It was almost a battle, but I will not honor you by calling you adversary. No, I will treat you as you deserve; my ravens are always hungry, and I’m sure you’ll make a fine repast.”
Minutes later, I am leaning out the window clutching Arcalian’s body with one hand. My gaze lingers in the center of the room where a conflagration is beginning amidst a pile of broken furniture and broken bodies. The scent of old magics mingles sickeningly with the scent of burning flesh. With one last parting smile and a leap into the night, I scurry across the roof of the guild house dragging the old wizard’s body in the rain. With his corpse in tow, it may take several hours to reach my castle, but Silgaren is only an hour past its zenith; I have time.
A gentle rapping echoed in the chamber.
Regecon stirred under the sheets of his bed.
The rapping on the door continued.
With a weary sigh, Regecon sat up and rubbed the sleep from his eyes. “I’ll be with you in a moment,” he called. A glance toward the window told him it was still dark out—many long hours until the dawn. “This had better be good.” Mumbling to himself, the fire mage slid his feet over the side of the bed.
He stretched and yawned loudly. He stood, wrapped his red-orange robe about his shoulders, then strode toward the far door to open it. In the hallway outside, a young man in servant’s garb stood trembling in excitement.
“The night watchman sent me for you, sir,” he said. “There’s a fire in the High Tower. You must come at once.”
“A fire? Is it a large one?” Regecon asked, all thought of sleep vanishing. “What of Arcalian?”
“It has gutted the upper level, sir, and no one has seen or heard from either Arcalian or Aristoceles since it was discovered. Please, sir, you must come at once.”
“I’ll head there immediately. Go and wake Toreg.” As a master of seacraft, Toreg possessed skills with elemental water that could prove useful if the fire got beyond Regecon’s control. “Quickly, now.”
With long hurried strides Regecon headed down the hall, his thoughts troubled. A fire in the guild master’s quarters was a serious matter. Arcalian possessed considerable knowledge of flamecraft as well as seacraft; if a blaze was beyond his control, something must be terribly wrong. What could have possibly happened?
It was only a short distance to the High Tower, yet by the time Regecon arrived a small crowd of servants and white-robed apprentices had gathered before the steps of the great staircase. After several moments of searching, Regecon at last spied the night watchman in quiet debate with a young apprentice. The conversation became audible as Regecon approached.
“I don’t care if the mages can handle it. We’re not about to sit by and watch. The fire could gut the whole tower by the time they get here. Now take your friends and some of those servants and start hauling up buckets of water from the cellar well.”
“That won’t be necessary Mathagarr,” Regecon said, interrupting the watchman. The apprentice smiled in a quiet ‘I-told-you-so’ fashion, but a shrewd glance from the mage wiped the look from his face. Abashed, the apprentice looked down at his feet.
Mathagarr and Regecon had known each other for nearly twenty years, ever since Regecon first came to the town of Drisdak to study magic. And though Regecon was born of noble blood and Mathagarr had been little more than an adventurous commoner, they had become and remained fast friends.
Regecon turned to the night watchman, his expression sober. “If you would just fill me in, I believe I can handle things, although I have sent for Toreg just in case.”
“Certainly, Councilman,” Mathagarr said in a formal tone; in the company of others, the guardsman took care with his speech, primarily because of a certain episode he had had with Toreg a few months back. Mathagarr had been addressing the Council of High Mages on a simple matter concerning several late night pilferings that had occurred. In the middle of his speech, the watchman had made the mistake of referring to Regecon by name. Toreg had become irate, calling Mathagarr to order and insisting that all mages be given the respect they deserved when being addressed by the “commoners.” To a certain extent Regecon had agreed with Toreg, at least when the council was in session. However, there was such a thing as taking propriety too far. Toreg had pursued his case to the extreme, even insinuating that Mathagarr was somehow involved with the thefts—an insinuation Regecon found patently absurd. It was not until Morcallenon, the head diviner, had cleared things up and the real thief placed in custody that Toreg had even begun to speak directly to Mathagarr again. Since then Mathagarr took great pains to address Regecon in public as ‘sir’ or ‘Councilman.’
“If you would just follow me to the staircase, sir,” Mathagarr continued, “I’ll give you the details. I was doing my usual rounds when I heard a loud crash from above. I went up the stairs to investigate and found Guild Master Arcalian’s chamber doorframe collapsed and his room ablaze. The heat and smoke were far too intense for me to brave alone and I could hear the floor beginning to crack and give. I called loudly for Master Arcalian and with no answer forthcoming, I returned downstairs to get help. I sent one of the servants to fetch you and I gathered several others and was about to send them off to get buckets of water when you arrived.”
“Thank you, Mathagarr,” Regecon said, “You have done we—” A horrendous explosion and crash reverberated down the hall from above, shaking the staircase and sending an apprentice stumbling to his knees. “What was that?”
“It must be the chamber floor, sir,” Mathagarr answered. “It has probably collapsed, no doubt spreading the fire to the storage room on the lower level.”
“Then I mustn’t waste my time further in discussion. Mathagarr, disperse the crowd and send Toreg up after me as soon as he arrives.”
“Yes, sir.”
With nothing else to delay him, Regecon turned and took the first three steps in a single bound, then proceeded in a similar fashion up the winding stairs. After two complete spirals, he came to the level of the storage room. Already smoke could be seen issuing from the crack beneath the heavy door. He placed his palm flat on the surface of the wood, and then pulled it away thoughtfully as he felt the gentle warmth.
He took time to cast a brief charm against possible backdrafts, then turned the great door handle and gave a firm shove. A moment’s worth of mild resistance gave way with a groan and the great door swung inward. A blast of thick black smoke sent Regecon staggering back onto the staircase, coughing to catch his breath. Waving the smoke from his face and hacking loudly, Regecon murmured a second incantation, took a deep breath of fresh air, then strode into the chamber to gaze upon a hellish scene.
At one time the chamber had been simply furnished with a variety of wooden shelves and crates lining its walls, stock full of clean linens and the occasional odd old clothes. Now the room resembled the abode of the most hellish fiend of nightmare. The wooden floor of the mage’s study above had collapsed, scattering debris everywhere. Two of the linen shelves on opposite sides of the room lay on their sides under the crushing weight of the largest intact slab of the fallen ceiling. In the center of the room, as if in defiance, two smoldering crates stood stacked one upon the other while the rest of the chamber drifted in and out of view behind roaring flames.
Looking up, Regecon saw the remnants of the upper level floor reaching out to form jagged smoldering overhangs. Through the billowing smoke he sighted two such overhangs holding precariously in place what looked to be another large section of the floor—with a start Regecon realized this was the roof of the tower, his probing eyes spying the gleam of a star through a clear patch in the smoke. A groan from beneath his feet brought the mage’s attention back to his own floor. With the wreckage of at least one and a half upper stories weighing down upon it and the fire growing in intensity with each passing moment, he knew his time was short.
Regecon strode purposefully toward the center of the room, the flames dancing around him as he walked. Shortly, he stood before the two burning crates like a devout priest before the sacred statue of his god. Placing his finger on the highest of the two crates he uttered a single word. He retreated three steps, then spread his arms wide and called out in a loud, powerful voice.
With a surprising suddenness, order appeared amidst the chaos. No longer did the flames flicker and blaze in the random fashion accorded by their nature, but rather each began to dance in harmony with the others to a strange and silent tune. While Regecon began to chant, a pulsing light filled the room, like the beating of a gargantuan heart. The fire, caught in his magic, thrashed and convulsed like a living thing filled with rage, bent on consuming everything in its path. Its fiery will locked with Regecon’s forcing the mage to grunt from the strain. But he delved deep. He channeled torrents of magical energy, using his own body as a conduit to guide the fire and direct its movements. Slowly, sluggishly the flames responded. No longer wild and rampant, they became a guided force with purpose. Around and around they crawled, spiraling in toward the two crates beckoning from the center of the room. The flames embracing the crates grew brighter and stronger as their myriad brethren tumbled in to join them. And as the flames continued to pour in, those which were first to arrive were pushed further and further inward, until at last they were smothered under the continuing onslaught. The outer most edge of the fire diminished, leaving a trail of charred and smoking debris.
Slowly, inexorably, the monster lost its will and the fire began to die. Its heart continued to blaze, roaring up in fury, but its writhing tentacles shriveled away, fading into nothingness.
Finally, all that remained of the fire was its pulsing heart, beating in the center of the room, consuming the wooden crates in its hellish furnace. Uttering a single word, Regecon strode forward to strike the flames with his open palm. With a last desperate hiss, the fire went out and darkness closed in.
Regecon heard voices outside on the stairs and shortly, Mathagarr arrived carrying an oil lamp. Behind him came Toreg, arms folded at his chest, eyebrow arched in quizzical dissatisfaction.
Weary now, Regecon lacked even the energy to move; he simply bowed his head and stood amidst the smoking wreckage. All about him, scattered pieces of what was once Arcalian’s floor lay tumbled in chaos. The gutted remains of wooden crates lay strewn about, blackened shelves littered the floor, and a lone half-eaten desk sat propped against a large slab of flooring near the back wall. Amongst all that wreckage only the center of the room seemed clear; where once two crates had stood, only fine white ash remained.
Regecon groaned, and stooped in pain, bracing himself with hands on thighs.
Kicking aside debris, Mathagarr rushed to the mage’s side, grabbing his arm to steady him and keep him on his feet.
“It’s all right. Just give me a minute,” Regecon said, wearily.
Mathagarr placed one hand on his shoulder. “Are you sure?” he asked.
“Really, I’ll be fine. It was just the finishing touches on that one. The dousing at the end took a lot out of me. Just let me catch my breath...”
Toreg approached through the tumult. “All things considered, Regecon, you could have waited.” The water mage stopped halfway through the wreckage and stooped down to pick up something. He studied it a moment, then continued forward carrying what looked like a blackened piece of twisted leather in his hand. “It wasn’t wise tackling that fire all by yourself. From the looks of it, it was an exceptionally large one... and exceptionally hot as well.” He handed the twisted leather to Regecon. “Look at this.”
Regecon took the piece of leather in his hand and straightened his back, his weariness expunged by curiosity. With deft movements, he worked on untwisting the leather into a rough rectangle, nearly two feet long and half as wide. “Look’s like a book covering... Damn, it’s one of Arcalian’s spellbooks. The fire ate through the ward and everything...”
“Yes, it did. And if that’s all that’s left of that one, you can pretty much assume his other spellbooks are ruined as well, not to mention all the other books he had which weren’t magical but were nonetheless of immense academic value. They weren’t even protected. It is truly an immeasurable loss.”
“Unless, he managed to escape and take some of his books with him...” Regecon regretted the words almost as soon as they left his lips. Why were they discussing books when there were men still missing?
“Escape? Councilman, your skill in flamecraft does not exceed Arcalian’s by much, and I know he is much more learned about the ways of seacraft than you. He could have handled this fire long before we arrived; I have little doubt of that.”
Regecon considered the thought a moment, then said, “You are probably right, Toreg, but—“
“Sirs,” Mathagarr interrupted with a touch of uneasiness in his voice. “I think... I see something.” He motioned across the room. “It looks... like a piece of metal of some kind.”
Both mages watched as the guardsman waded through the still-smoking debris. He was perhaps fifteen feet away and up to his knees in wreckage when he finally stopped, set the lamp down on a blackened crate, and kneeled down to sift through a pile of rubble. “By the Sickle,” he said, studying something in his hands. His back blocked the wizards’ view.
Toreg snorted in irritation. “Well, what is it?”
Mathagarr turned, wiping soot from the mysterious object as he did so. He took a single step forward thrusting his hands before him to display their burden. Although still blackened and dirty, a portion of the object had been wiped clean. It was not difficult to identify. A small metal helm gleamed in the dim lamp light.
Regecon straightened in alarm. “Bloody Hell! Start digging!”
Toreg glanced briefly from the soot-covered floor to his clean blue night robe. “I shall gather some more help,” he said, then turned toward the door.
“Toreg!” Regecon said, as he whirled on the older man. “There may be men buried in there. We have to get them out! If there is even the remotest possibility that someone is ali—”
Toreg returned Regecon’s angry glare with a cool look of his own—an icy, passionless look, devoid of any trace of human emotion. “Don’t be ridiculous. If you find someone, do you have any doubt about the condition they will be in? This room needs be cleaned and the wreckage removed. Twenty-pair hands can do the work much faster than three.”
Although irritated by his cold reasoning, Regecon again had to admit Toreg was right. It was foolish to think anyone they found could still be alive. He himself had seen the full fury of the fire. “Go then, but be quick about it... and make sure you grab Morcallenon, I’ll want him to do a divining as soon as possible.”
“As you wish, Councilman. I will return as soon as I can.”
With that Toreg turned and left.
“Well, Mathagarr,” Regecon said, “it’s just you and me for now.”
“With all due respect to Mage Toreg, I kind of prefer it that way. I never much cared for his manners, if you don’t mind my saying so.”
Regecon nodded. “I’ve always had an open ear for you, old friend. I, more than anyone else, know Toreg is somewhat lacking in tact, but he’s not a bad man, not really... just a little cold.”
“You are too lenient. He’s not like you, he treats me more like a dog than a man... and it’s not just me. The servants, the other guards, even the apprentices have the same complaint. Anyone not a full mage is little more than dirt to him.”
“If I remember, I’ll try to talk to him. There’s little I can do really, he’s been with the guild too long and he’s on his way to becoming a council member himself soon... But come now, we must start digging.”
It looked to be tedious work, slow and painstaking, but the two men threw themselves vigorously at the task. Lifting and tossing aside countless remnants of the destruction, they began sorting the wreckage into three distinct piles. Each blackened board, each twisted spellbook, they tossed aside searching for some sign of anything human.
“Look here, I think I see something.” Mathagarr stooped down on to his knees, brushing aside a small pile of debris. “By the Scythe-Bearer’s Sickle,” he said. From beneath a fallen beam of oak, fingers spread wide as if waving a sad farewell, a charred skeletal hand stretched out with its flesh all but burnt away.
As the watchman continued to dig, Regecon paused to stare at the hand, somehow sensing that this had been more than a simple fire. They were on the threshold of something far deeper and more mysterious. Mathagarr too, seemed to sense something amiss.
“Something isn’t right here.”
Regecon nodded. “I know. Something went wrong here... very, very wrong.”
With a loud grunt the two men heaved up the fallen beam and tossed it aside, then looked down at their find. Crushed under the weight of the beam and almost completely consumed by fire, the remains of a man in armor could be seen. His chain armor was blackened and sooty, his sword at his side was broken at the hilt, and his face was a charred and grinning skull.
Coragan watched the gold coin spin in the air. It turned over and over several times, glinting in the light as it reached its apex, then began to descend. At last, his blue-cloaked comrade, Galladrin, reached out, snatched the coin from its course, and slammed it on the table.
“What do you know, it’s the dragon’s head,” Galladrin said to their other companion, Borak, a muscle-bound giant of a man. “Come on, let’s play.”
Galladrin moved toward the knife board at the far wall, nimbly side stepping several of the inn’s other patrons. Borak lumbered behind, less agile but far more intimidating; the patrons moved quickly out of the behemoth’s path.
Coragan sighed. They played knives a lot these days. There seemed little else to do in the quiet town of Drisdak. They hadn’t had a job in over a week, and Coragan was loathe to go back to his former employer. Needless to say, they were running out of money. He figured three, maybe four, more days and they’d be broke.
There was a thunk as Galladrin’s knife stuck in the board just a few inches to the left of the bullseye. He could have hit it if he’d wanted to; the rogue’s skill at throwing knives was only exceeded by his skill with the rapier at his side. A fair shot himself, Coragan was no match for Galladrin. He had learned weeks ago not to play knives for real money when Galladrin was around. Of course, he and Borak weren’t really playing for keeps. They were just getting the game started, hoping to lure some unsuspecting victim in to earn a little extra coin.
One of Borak’s throws went wide and sank deep in the post to the right of the board, loosening a large splinter of wood. Coragan winced. The innkeeper would not be happy about that. It was hard work keeping any inn in a hospitable condition, and The Maiden’s Blush was no exception. Of course, Galladrin was not one to give up coin without need. With a quick but casual step he maneuvered to block the blade from the innkeeper’s view and deftly removed it from the wall. He then turned and handed the knife back to Borak, frowning sourly. A quick glance and his eyes met Coragan’s. The rogue krinkled his mouth into an unsatisfied twist and slowly shook his head in annoyance. Coragan returned the look with an irritated frown of his own, then slid three more coins toward the money they were leaving for the innkeeper’s tip.
That should cover it, he thought. It was a pain cleaning up after Galladrin and Borak, but he’d rather do that than live with that uncomfortable nagging twist in the pit of his stomach that he’d encountered so often of late. Some doubts were inevitable in his profession, but lately he was having a difficult time with his chosen career. So much so, he had called it quits on his former employer and taken up to find work elsewhere. He was a bounty hunter by trade, and a good one. Lately, however, he had begun to feel more and more like a hired assassin.
It had started when he was young on a simple farm in a small town in northern Esperia. His parents had been hard working, loving, and kind. One night, a wounded man staggered onto their farm. His father, Mortugan, a deeply religious man, had known his duty to the stranger. Without a word he opened up his house and offered a bed and food to the wounded man. Sharine, Coragan’s mother, cleaned and bandaged the man’s wounds, gently removing the arrows from his thigh and shoulder. As it turned out, the stranger was a bounty hunter, hired by a local baron to hunt down and bring to justice several well known thieves. A skilled hunter, the man had captured one of the thieves and was closing in on the others when they picked up his scent and laid a trap for him. He walked right into an ambush and barely escaped with his life. The story amazed the young Coragan. Through the rest of the week, while the man recovered from his injuries, Coragan sought him out to hear tales of his exploits. Every spare minute he had he spent listening to those stories, savoring them. Of course, given the life of a farmer’s son those minutes numbered few indeed, but that just made them all the more precious. Ultimately, the stranger recovered from his injuries and took his leave from the farm, but all through the rest of that summer Coragan continually found himself daydreaming as he tilled the fields and milked the cows. Who else was there to bring down the fabled Draknar the Black, or Urthar One-Eye but Coragan the Brave, Coragan the Mighty, the fiercest bounty hunter of all? From that point on, he set his heart on becoming a bounty hunter.
As the seasons passed, he made every effort he could to make his dream a reality. In what little spare time he had he joined the small town militia, hoping to learn the weapons of the trade. It was hard work, trying to become a bounty hunter while still managing to help on the farm. More than once he found himself wishing he could be rid of the farm forever and be on his way to fame and glory. However, he remained loyal to his parents, working diligently to bring in each season’s harvest. In his seventeenth year, though, things changed forever.
He returned home from the militia one day to an empty field. He searched about the farm and through the house, looking for his parents, yet they were nowhere to be found. He called out for them, but they did not answer, and the rapidly descending darkness was making the search more difficult by the minute. Finally, just as Neerie, the miner’s moon, began to peak over the horizon, he found them in the shed. His father had been bound, beaten and gagged. His face was scratched and smeared with blood, his eye blackened, and several teeth were knocked out. His mother, however, did not fare so well. She was quite dead. The raiders had raped and killed her while his bound father was forced to watch, helpless.
In the few months that followed, Coragan gave up on becoming a bounty hunter. His father needed all the help he could get to run the farm and even that wasn’t enough. With the death of his wife, something had died in his father as well. He stopped eating, he barely slept, and he moved without focus, mindlessly working the fields without conviction. He spoke to no one save Coragan, and then only briefly. Coragan could do nothing but watch over the following weeks as his father withered away. It was three months to the day of his mother’s death when her husband went to join her.
Coragan had wept bitterly that night. The next day he swore vengeance over both his parents’ graves. Within a week he sold the farm and began the life that was his childhood dream. The three men who had destroyed his family were the first of many to fall before Coragan of Esperia. They were the most difficult too, although not in a physical sense. It had been nearly all he could do not to kill the men himself. However, the self-control was well rewarded; he took great pleasure in watching the men hang.
That was nearly nine years ago, now, and since that time he had remained true to his childhood aspiration. Many a long night he had spent in run-down inns eavesdropping and asking the occasional shrewd question, always in search of some wanted criminal. Many a hardened killer had met his match in Coragan—Coragan’s skill with both sword and crossbow made him deadly in a confrontation.
In the beginning, he found the bounty hunter’s life nothing short of glorious. His fame spread quickly and the offered quests seemed noble, just, and ripe with opportunities for heroism. He developed a formidable reputation as a man of both honor and determination with a knack for capturing even the cleverest of foes.
But the glory did not last.
Somewhere along the way—Coragan could not remember where or how— something changed. More and more often he found himself on the more dubious side of justice. Slowly, the seedier side of nobility seemed to infiltrate his many contracts. Again and again he found himself on the hunt of some poor soul whose worst crime may have been an insult to some noble’s petty honor. All the same he hunted the men down and brought them before the courts of nobility naively thinking that justice would prevail if the men were truly innocent. One by one he watched the men hang, his stomach twisting with revulsion at what he had become. The last man he had dragged in had been a humble porter accused of seducing the Count of Torine’s wife and plotting the count’s murder. Since the start Coragan had had serious doubts of the man’s guilt and never encountered anything to convince him otherwise. Even if he had, given the countess’ whispered reputation, he hardly thought the porter alone deserved to bear the brunt of the punishment. That man’s death had been the last in a series of disappointing revelations about the nature of noble law; a law without mercy, without compassion, and very often, without even a trace of justice. He remembered watching the porter before he died, a pitiful sight, standing alone on the scaffolding of the gallows, his tattered clothes whipping in the early morning as the sun rose at his back, his last look borne not by the eyes of a cold and hardened killer, but by the desperate eyes of an unjustly punished man whose gaze simply asked why. Coragan had seen those eyes looking at him and felt his stomach flip over in his belly. The next day he collected his coin from the Count of Torine and left swearing never to be on the wrong side of justice ever again. That was two months ago.
The question of evil—that was the problem. Nothing he hunted seemed evil anymore, just another victim of the maelstrom of life whose only fault lay in finding himself on the opposite end of a tug-a-rope against a noble with all the power. There was nothing evil in the men he hunted; nothing twisted beyond the limits of human compassion. What he needed was someone as dark as darkness itself, someone he could hunt and not feel guilty about killing. Until then, he had no intention of being a bounty hunter ever again. As poor as he was now he felt much better, still burdened by guilt, but not the emissary of unrighteous doom. No amount of money was worth that feeling. He’d rather starve in the gutter.
He looked over at Galladrin and Borak engrossed in their knife game, his recently acquired companions. He’d met them about a month and a half ago, at a run-down inn in Sestak. Galladrin was a little too roguish at times, but not altogether bad. A ribald and a scoundrel, the man sometimes surprised Coragan with a touch of softness in his heart. Borak, on the other hand, was strange. Coragan had known the man a week and thought him mute before he first used his tongue. Of his skill and strength in combat, there was no question—Coragan had once seen him cleave a man nearly in two with that great axe of his—but the man just never spoke.
A blast of cold air drew Coragan’s attention to the tavern door. A man dressed in chain armor with the bearing of a guardsman struggled to close the door against the howling wind outside. The man completed his task, then turned to scan the room. He took several steps toward the bar and almost immediately a large group of men deliberately scattered out of his way. Only then did Coragan notice the yellow sash tied around his forearm: an expensive sash, made of fine silk. Hanging down from his arm a lone square bore an easily recognizable symbol traced in black lace—an upright staff thrust into the earth, around which two serpents coiled and above which two ravens circled—the mages guild. Coragan snorted in disgust and turned his attention back to Galladrin’s knife game.
They had found a few takers after all: a man and a woman. The man had long blond hair tied back in a strange knot at the base of his head. He wore a travel stained cloak and had a short sword at his side. The woman had short cropped hair and a cloak of fine black fur. She had no visible weapons, but she walked with a fluid grace that hinted of deadly strength. May prove to be an interesting bout after all, Coragan thought.
Borak went first. Apparently warmed up, his aim had improved; he succeeded in hitting the board with every throw. Only one landed relatively close to the bullseye and Coragan suspected that had been more a matter of luck. The golden-haired man went next. His was an even spread: one complete miss, one shot to the midboard, and one bullseye. Now, it was Galladrin’s turn. Always the showman the rogue turned up one bullseye and two shots to the midboard just edging past the blond man’s total. The woman followed. With gentle ease she extricated the knives from the board and stepped back, weighing each blade carefully in her hand. She made a brief survey of the room and passed a warm smile to Galladrin. Then she whipped off three shots to the bullseye in rapid succession. Coragan started in both surprise and worry; they could not afford a loss.
The next round passed in a similar manner with Galladrin scoring three bullseyes, the woman scoring two with one shot the midboard, and both Borak and the golden-haired man performing much like they did before. The following round saw Borak and the golden-haired man eliminated leaving Galladrin—set back again by a single awkward throw—trailing the woman by two points.
“Coragan of Esperia?”
Coragan turned at the sound of his name, his eyes catching a flash of yellow. Looking up, he saw a man in the garb of a soldier, his right arm adorned with staff, serpents and ravens. Coragan’s face dropped into a deeper frown. “Yes. Do I know you?”
“No, you do not—but I was wondering if I could have a word with you. Do you mind?” The man motioned to the vacant chair on Coragan’s left.
Coragan thought a moment, looking the man over as he did so. The patch on his arm marked him as a mage’s guard; that alone meant trouble. However, at least he didn’t bear the mark of the Count of Torine; that man had set a price on Coragan’s head. “You may sit there if you wish, but if you intend to share my table, you will also share your name.”
The man sat down as he spoke. “Fair enough. My name is Mathagarr and I work for the mages guild—”
“I can see that.” Coragan nodded toward the yellow sash then turned his gaze back toward the knife game. Quite a crowd had gathered to watch the struggle. Galladrin had cut the woman’s lead, but still lagged. He stood, poised for the drama, two blades in his left hand, the other ready to be thrown in his right. The blades flew effortlessly from his hands. Three bullseyes. The crowd gasped. If nothing else, Galladrin was enjoying himself. The woman stepped up, blades at the ready. With as much poise and grace as Galladrin, the woman sent the knives into the center of the board.