Zellohar Read online

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  "Truly Drixel," Vderryl added, enjoying the other's discomfort. "If you are so fearful of him, why did you answer his summons? It's not as if he held you at sword-point through his scrying mirror."

  Laughter echoed through the ancient halls at their reluctant companion's expense, but stilled at his scorching reply.

  "Very well, all ye merry money grubbers," Drixel said with a dangerous glare. "But we shall see, when the blood ceases to flow and the wounds begin to fester, whom Lord Darkmist sees as more valuable, one who works for a reward, or one who would sooner march into Necrol itself than risk his displeasure."

  Silence hung heavily as the reacquainted squires measured one another anew. They had fought side by side, killed together, plundered together, and prayed to the Demon God together. And none trusted another more than he would a rabid rat.

  "Come, kinsmen," Dekhmaal said, interposing himself between the others. "Let us not argue further while our liege awaits our arrival."

  The open glares of distrust eased and the small troop moved deeper into the keep. They kept to the wide central corridor that bisected the upper level until they reached a deep alcove shielding a set of immense doors. These doors differed from others they'd passed only in the runes etched into the stone, and the fact that they were closed.

  As they entered the alcove, each withdrew a small parcel wrapped in soft leather from a pocket or pouch. A faint glow emanated even through the thick wrappings. As Dekhmaal drew his covering away, sharp rays of green light pierced the gloom, glittering off of the silver tracings on the doors. Gasps of surprise escaped the pale lips of the Dukarr. The others held their parcels tensely, both unnerved by the intensity and, although none would admit it, the beauty of the light from the palm-sized emerald.

  "Has it always glowed like that?" Ghendal asked, his voice quavering with a hint of nervousness.

  Dekhmaal tore his eyes from the spectacle and regarded his companions. He had almost dropped the gem; now he held it as if it might burn him.

  "No," he said with a tremor in his voice, "it glowed faintly, sometimes brighter, sometimes dimmer, but never like this."

  "It must be the doors," suggested Drixel, squinting at the runes covering the massive portal.

  "Possibly," said Vderryl, trying to put a ring of courage in his voice. "If so, all the others should glow the same radiance. Ghendal, remove the wrappings from your stone."

  Ghendal looked at him through eyes slitted against the glare of the emerald. He briefly considered refusing the command simply on the premise that Vderryl had no actual authority over him, but saw no profit in confronting him now.

  "Very well," he said, tossing the leather wrappings aside with a flick of his wrist and thrusting the gem toward Vderryl.

  White light flooded the alcove, blinding all save Ghendal, who had closed his eyes before revealing the stunning diamond. He squinted cautiously to see the reactions of his companions. They had all thrown up hands to shield themselves from the ghastly light.

  "Cover the blasted thing!" Vderryl snapped, scowling from behind his hands.

  "Very well," Ghendal said in the same calm tone. He wrapped the gem, leaving only the green light of the emerald.

  "I think we can assume that the others will act similarly. It must be their proximity to the doors." Vderryl managed to keep his voice even this time. "We will place the diamond in last so we do not have to endure that blinding glare as long."

  The others shot looks of astonishment at Vderryl, then questioning glances at one another. Finally one of them spoke.

  "Lord Darkmist was explicit," said Dekhmaal, holding the glowing emerald to one side. "The gems are to be placed in the doors in the order dictated by the runes.

  The others murmured agreement then looked to Vderryl.

  "Of course," he said, trying to recover his composure. "I merely meant that we should delay unwrapping the diamond until it need be."

  The others shrugged off his explanation and began examining the inscriptions. Many of the symbols were runescript, which would require magic to decipher. These, however, were part of the enchantment laid upon the portal itself, and had little to do with the inscriptions in plain dwarvish around four small recesses set in the center of the doors.

  The instructions were straight forward, directing the order and placement of the gems. After reading the message, Dekhmaal stepped forward to place the emerald in the right-hand depression. As the stone seated into place, new runes flashed onto the door's surface. These gave off a green glow, seeming to draw light from the emerald. Dekhmaal stepped back, glancing around to see who held the next gem.

  Vderryl stepped boldly forward as he removed a glowing ruby from its wrappings with a flourish, drenching the alcove with light the color of blood. He placed the gem in the lowest depression, and was rewarded with another change in the runes.

  Ghendal presented his gem and the alcove was once again flooded with the pure white light of the diamond. However, once the jewel was placed into the highest socket, the light mellowed and took up the red and green of the other gems.

  Finally Drixel moved forward, studying the new patterns on the door before withdrawing a sapphire from its soft leather wrappings. The deep blue of a pristine ocean washed over the corridor, adding an icy chill to everything it illuminated. The sapphire clicked into the left-hand socket, heralding a flash of blue runes.

  A deep thrum of power, starting lower than audible but rising in pitch, emanated from the very stone surrounding them. With the rising tone, the light of the gems dimmed, and the runes flared. A resonant boom shook the mountain, extinguishing the runes and returning the gems to their previous glow.

  A fissure appeared in the center of the portal and the doors began to swing inward. Light cleaved the darkness beyond, revealing a wide stair. Warmth wafted up from below, bringing familiar scents to the Dukarr. Pale eyes flickered to one another, then back into the depths before them.

  "Well, do we wait here for Lord Darkmist to rise prophetically from the depths, or start down and meet him on his own ground?" Vderryl asked with a scoff.

  "His orders were to wait," Dekhmaal said, staring, astonished at his companion's boldness.

  "We wait," added Drixel. "I shall not start out our new era of service to Lord Darkmist by disregarding his orders."

  "I agree," said Ghendal flatly, shooting a disapproving scowl at Vderryl. "I shall not risk my lord's displeasure before we have even been reunited."

  Vderryl gave a derisive snort and turned his back on the others, a terrible insult in their society, for it showed that you consider the other no threat, and not worthy of your attention.

  "I wonder if Darkmist knows what kind of Dukarr he has in his service?" he mumbled loud enough for the others to hear.

  Hands strayed toward sword hilts and spell components, but froze as a voice from behind them split the silence.

  "Actually, I know a great deal more about those in my service than you may think, Vderryl."

  The four whirled, gaping at the figure that had appeared at the head of the stairs. He was shrouded in a long black cloak; silver tracings glittered along the hem, the pattern writhing under their gazes. Under the garment glinted dark armor, its ebony luster absorbing light, except along the edges, where the plates were worked in silver. The great broadsword Anol Arath—Doom Giver—hung at his hip, the demon-skull crosspiece set with cut-obsidian eyes that devoured the gaze of any that beheld them. The helm obscuring the man's face was wrought in the shape of a demon, its bat-like wings folded back, the ruby eyes and toothy visage forming the crest.

  "Lord Darkmist," they stammered as they dropped to one knee, arms spread in the traditional position of subservience.

  "Arise, my squires," Darkmist said, his dead blue-grey lips smiling as he stepped forward. "You have served me well, and I owe you much for my rescue." As the four rose, he moved among them, clasping shoulders in greeting as he spoke.

  "To show my gratitude, none of you ever need kneel in my pr
esence again. And as my vengeance for eighty-seven years of imprisonment scours the surface world, you shall ride the crest of that wave, and reap the wealth of an entire continent."

  The squires smiled at his praise, but quelled shivers of fear and revulsion at his chill touch and pale, pupilless gaze. They knew his pleasant moods were brief, and doubted that his long confinement had improved his temperament.

  "But first," the Dark Lord continued, "we have much work to do. If you would all recover the gems you placed into the doors, I will give you your instructions."

  As the Dukarr moved to obey, Darkmist outlined his plans. When they stood before him once again, he withdrew three small leather bags from beneath his cloak.

  "Each of these contains enough wealth to raise a small army, which is exactly what I want you to do." He handed one of the bags to Ghendal, one to Drixel and the last to Dekhmaal, leaving Vderryl waiting expectantly. "When I bid you return, do so with as large a force as you can muster. But your main concern will be to protect the gems you carry. Whatever it takes, you must ensure the return of the gems, for they are critical to my plans."

  "But I don't understand, my Lord." Vderryl shifted uncomfortably. "Why not just keep all the gems here safely in your possession? And what is my task to be?"

  Darkmist's smile dissolved, his shoulders stiffening as if a sudden pain stabbed him. The others sensed his building rage, but before they could speak or move he gave a slight toss of his head and smiled once again. Reaching out a gloved hand he clasped Vderryl firmly on the shoulder in camaraderie.

  "Trust in your commander, Vderryl," he said, seeming to relish the shiver that raced up his underling's spine. "There are good reasons for separating the gems that need not concern you. As for your part, you are to stay here with me and fill a position that suits you better than the others."

  With this, Darkmist turned and bid the others farewell. Then he turned to Vderryl, spoke a few syllables, reached out and touched him. They vanished with a popping noise, as air rushed into the spaces they vacated. The squires stood for a moment, then bid each other farewell and proceeded out of the keep. When they were gone, dark shapes rose from the depths of the stair and fanned out into the upper keep's gloomy passages.

  In a dimly lit chamber in the depths of the mountain, Lord Darkmist and Vderryl materialized. The Dukarr stumbled, but recovered quickly and turned to his master, only to find Darkmist staring at him from behind the gruesome helm. Vderryl's skin crawled under the scrutiny. He tried to mask his uneasiness by inspecting the dwarven stonework, which had been gouged and chipped, giving the overall appearance of a piece of art that had been rudely violated. He squared his shoulders and masked his discomfort.

  "Welcome to Zellohar, Vderryl," Darkmist said in a voice like volcanic glass, sharp and dark as death. He turned and started down one of the cavernous hallways, beckoning his squire to follow. "I apologize for bringing you down here so abruptly, but it would have taken several hours for us to reach this level, had we walked."

  After a few turns, they reached the end of a corridor and a huge portal set with doors of solid onyx. Darkmist approached the ebony slabs and made an intricate sign with his hand. An immense locking mechanism squealed as it opened, and the doors began to swing outward.

  "This is where you will be spending a great deal of your time, Vderryl," Darkmist explained, motioning him forward. "I would like to introduce you to a close associate of mine, who will explain your position quite thoroughly."

  As the two entered, Vderryl squinted into the gloom. A sulfurous reek not uncommon to some deep caverns assailed his nostrils, and the temperature rose with every step. As the air became hazy, Vderryl began to sweat under his heavy garments. The room had a sense of power to it; he could feel it. That power would be his, he knew it. He thanked the Demon God for giving Darkmist the ability to recognize his talents.

  As they continued, a glow illuminated distant walls, giving him a better view a natural cavern with a wide trail cut into the floor, which they followed. The glow brightened, resolving into a great chasm from which torrents of super-heated air rose up around a bridge of cut stone. When they stopped about twenty paces from it, the dark squire gave his master a quizzical look.

  "This might seem a rather harsh environment," began Darkmist, "but Phlegothax finds it rather soothing."

  Vderryl froze, his jaw dropping as he recognized the name. His paralysis vanished, however, as a huge clawed hand reached over the lip of the smoldering chasm. He looked once more to his master, but when he saw the maniacal grin beneath that helm, he knew he had been betrayed.

  He leapt away from Darkmist, drawing his sword and bringing a spell to his lips, but as he spoke, a huge hand crushed the air from his lungs. He swung at it, but his sword only skittered along the armored scales. A harsh scream escaped his lips as the grip tightened. He felt several ribs snap under the pressure, then his vision began to dim.

  "The gem is in his cloak, Phlegothax," Darkmist said as he turned to leave. "Please don't eat it."

  As the Nekdukarr's dark form receded into the gloom, the iron circlet once gracing Vderryl's pale brow clattered to the cavern floor. The dark metal squealed as it bent in on itself, transforming into its true shape, a long black snake-like creature with glowing red eyes. A crackling noise and a light shower of its former master's blood startled the small demon, and it slithered into the shadows.

  CHAPTER 2

  Sweat rolled down Avari's shoulders as she heaved another bundle of hay onto the lift pallet. Straightening, she rubbed her fists into the burning muscles of her back to score away the pain. She sighed as she surveyed the work that still awaited her. More than half the fall haying lie in neat bundles on the floor of the barn. By the end of the day, it had to be loaded onto the lift, hoisted into the loft and unloaded again. She twisted her back sharply to help alleviate the ache of fatigue, and thanked the goddess of the harvest that haying only came once a year. As she leaned to pick up another bundle, however, a knife thunked into the post that stood less than a hand-span from her head.

  She whirled and dove, catching up the pitchfork she had been using. Righting herself from the roll, she caught the glint of another thrown dagger, but managed to intercept the deadly missile with the haft of the fork; it tumbling harmlessly into the haystack. Her adversary was not visible, but she did not expect him to be standing in plain sight. She moved again, looking for both a better weapon and her opponent's location. The barn was still. Slowly she crept closer to the barn door, holding the pitchfork slightly in front of her, until she could see the yard. Nothing. That must mean...

  "Oh no!" she gasped as she realized the trap, but it was too late. Something heavy hit her squarely between the shoulders before she could turn toward the open window behind her. Her attacker smirked at her as he leaned through the window, resting his forearms on the sill. The amused expression on his face slowly turned to sorrow.

  "I'm sorry, Avari, but you're dead." He shook his head. "You've got six-inches of steel sticking into your back, and you probably won't last much longer. It was nice knowing you."

  Avari sighed as she picked up the rock that lay at her feet, and rubbed the new ache in her back.

  "Father, you have wounded both my back and my pride. But how do you expect me to finish pitching this hay if I'm dead? I guess you'll have to take over, though I'd like to see you climb the ladder to the loft!" With her last words, she hefted the stone and flung it at the window. He ducked, cursing profusely.

  "Child, you'll be the death of me yet, not to mention the ruin of the barn!" He fingered the gouge that the rock had put in the window frame. Looking up, he caught a big grin on her face, which she quickly replaced with a more solemn mien.

  "Ahh, what'll I do with you?" he said as he made his way around to the barn door, while her laughter rang from inside.

  As he entered, he took stock of his only child leaning against the towering bales of hay. Nearly his height, she was both taller and broader at the should
er than most men. Years of hard labor had built muscles capable of tossing those bales of hay or restraining the wildest green horse in their corral. His training had granted her the grace seen in those who know their own strength. Her rust-streaked sandy hair and green eyes she had inherited from her mother, but there the resemblance ended. Her mother had been a petite woman with pale skin, gentle manners and a soft voice. And here stood their daughter, her hair damp with sweat and clinging to her face and neck, her sturdy muscles evident through the thin leather of her leggings and in her tanned arms crossed over her chest. Her big white teeth gleamed from under sharp features liberally sprinkled with freckles that had not faded with womanhood. Not a beauty in the usual sense of the word, with milky skin and a fragile air, but she was strong and healthy and spirited, and he loved her more than life itself.

  "Well, that's the biggest smile I've ever seen on a dead person," he said, scowling at her. "And you would be dead if that stone had actually been a dagger."

  Avari looked at the pile of hay she was pushing around with her foot. "I know, father. I just wasn't thinking straight. But who else is going to attack me in the barn in broad daylight?"

  "How do you know when or where an enemy will sneak up on you? Do you expect all attacks to come from a charging orc, screaming to let you know he's there?" Her father's voice had turned rough and his face red. "It's that kind of thinking that lay half my leg on a barroom floor! And it's that kind of thinking that put your mother in her grave!" He sat down on a bale, his face in his hands.

  Avari stood quiet, startled at this rare outburst, not knowing what to say. Finally her father looked up, his rage gone, and smiled at her.

  "Forgive my ranting. I only want you to understand the importance of self-defense in this world. I've taught you all I can. I know you think these little ambushes of mine are bothersome, but trouble always seems to come when you're not expecting it, or when you're weary or unprepared. I just don't ever want to lose you the way I lost your mother."