Read Requiem's Song (Book 1) Online

Authors: Daniel Arenson

Requiem's Song (Book 1) (12 page)

"Fifty
years ago, these stars began to shine," Maev said softly.
"Grandfather was among the first in the world to become a
dragon. The stars gave him this magic." She smiled to remember
his stories. "And he gave it to our father. And that great
grizzly bear passed it on to us. If the stars blessed our family,
perhaps they blessed another family too. Perhaps they blessed Prince
Sena of Eteer. And if it's true . . . if he's imprisoned . . . we
have to save him." She clutched her brother's hand. "We
have to bring him home."

They
kept walking in silence, listening to the crickets and rustling
grass. When they were far enough from the town, Maev closed her eyes
and summoned her magic. It flowed through her, warmer than mulled
wine, easing the pain of her wounds. She beat her wings, rising into
the air, a green dragon in the night. At her side, more wings
thudded, and she saw her brother soar too, a red dragon with long
white horns.

Silent,
keeping their fire low, they rose and caught an air current. They
glided through the night, heading away from the villages that hunted
their kind . . . heading toward that distant mountain, that new home,
that place of safety and warmth in a cold world.

 
 
ANGEL

She crouched in the darkness, a
queen of rock and fire, and licked the blood off her long, clawed
fingers, savoring the coppery heat, shuddering as the hooks upon her
tongue lapped the goodness, and she unfurled that tongue, stretching
out a dripping serpent, and Angel howled in the depths in her hunger
and lust.

"It is sweet, my children,
my terrors," she hissed. Saliva dripped down her maw to steam
against the stone floor. The cracks upon her body widened, leaking
smoke and fire. "The blood nourishes. The blood is darkness."

Her meal writhed before her, all
but drained, a gray husk of a thing. Once it had been three; she had
molded them together, cutting and sewing, stitching twins like dolls,
bloating the beast with embers and meat and sweet drippings of fat,
letting it fester, letting it grow. Now she drank from her twisted
creation, her living wineskin of meat and marrow. She drove her head
down, thrusting her hollowed teeth through its skin, and sucked,
sucked, lapped the sweetness, the red and black, the heat and
stickiness. Its many arms twitched, and its mouths, sewn together,
whimpered and begged, and its eyes blinked and wept where she had
placed them, and still Angel drank, leaving it an empty shell, a
shriveled thing, only skin over bones.

"Yes, my dears." She
licked the creature, her conjoined twins, her meals in the darkness.
"You will live. I will fatten you again, and you will grow, and
more will join you. I will sew you into a great feast."

It begged her for death, tears
pouring. She laughed. She shoved it aside, leaped, and scuttled
through the depths. Her leather wings beat, wafting smoke and stench,
and her four arms flailed, ending with claws, cutting into the stone.
Around her they lay, the creatures she had sewn together. The largest
was a hundred strong, bodies morphed into a writhing hill, sacks of
blood and rot, meals to last through her long, ancient banishment.

Upon their anguished faces she
ran, cutting into them, digging, spurting, scattering flesh, until
she scampered up the craggy cavern wall. Her wings stretched wide,
and the blood coursed through her, heating her, and flames blasted
from her cracked body of stone. She let out a howl of lust, a cry
that echoed through the chamber, for blood was not enough, and
filling her belly could never sate her, for her loins burned with the
greatest heat, crying for release, begging to feast like her maw had
feasted.

She left her chamber of blood,
her hall of husks, her place of feeding, and she scuttled through the
tunnel, a creature of fire, until she burst into a new hall, fell,
spread her wings, rose, crackled in an inferno. Her flames blasted
out, and she shrieked until her voice echoed, and the fire rose from
her loins to crawl across her cracked belly, her stony breasts, her
four arms of rock and her claws of metal.

Before her they knelt,
shuddered, sang, cowered, begged, shrieked, mocked, prayed—her
soldiers of the Abyss, her endless twisted things to praise her, to
worship her, to thrust into her in a vain attempt to satisfy her
lust, for only human flesh could silence her craving. She gazed upon
them. Creatures of oozing flesh, their skin peeled away, their
muscles dripping, their bones white and wet. Creatures of stone like
her, their bodies cracked and dry and leaking smoke. Creatures of
fat, slithering, sliding, seeping, leaving their wet trails, stuffing
their folds of fat with worms and maggots and snakes and all things
that crawled and burrowed. Creatures hooded. Creatures naked.
Creatures inside out, organs glistening. Creatures of smoke, of horn,
of scale, of rot. All filled the chamber before her, from beasts
thrice her size to rotting, clattering centipedes that crawled around
her legs, their segments formed of human heads.

All praised her.

She was Angel.

She was fire and light and a
beacon of darkness.

"Kneel before me!" she
cried, voice slamming against the stone walls, this place far under
the world, this trap, this prison. "Worship me and fill me. Send
one forth."

They rustled, clattered,
squealed, and groaned beneath her feet. Angel screamed, her cry
shattering flesh below, breaking bones, snapping eardrums, scattering
blood. She pointed a dripping claw, selecting one, a mummified thing,
its head long and topped with a disk of bone, its mouth rustling with
maggots, it belly sliced open to reveal nests of snakes. It moved
toward her on hooves, and Angel lowered herself on her four elbows,
and she howled when the creature thrust into her with its barbed
tool, and she dug into the stone, and she spewed flame from her maw
as he took her. Around her in the cave, smelling her sex, the other
creatures of the Abyss clawed and grabbed one another, copulating in
pools of drool and rot, howling to the stone ceiling, filling the
chamber with stench and whimpers and groans.

Yet it was all for naught. Even
as her paramour took her, she knew no filling of her craving, and she
knew no life would quicken within her, for thus was her curse. Thus
was her banishment, her prison, to forever crave a child, to forever
feel the emptiness in her womb, for only the seed of living men—of
the flesh that moved above the rock—could fill her with life, with a
rotting, pulsing spawn.

When the summons hit her, Angel
hissed and raised her dripping maw.

A summons? After so long?

She screamed.

She sprayed lava from her mouth,
and she pulled herself off the beast that mounted her, and she beat
her wings.

"A summons! I am called!"

She flapped her wings,
scattering the stench of the pit, churning smoke and fire. Flames
burst across her, and the calling burned her. She shut her eyes,
opened her arms, uncurled her claws.

"Speak, sack of flesh!
Speak, creature overground!"

Astral arms pulled her, sucking
her up into the stone, tugging her through tunnels. She laughed, wind
shrieking around her, rock cracking against her. It had been so many
years, so long since the creatures above had summoned her, weak and
small and tempting, so beautiful, so warm.

Inferno blazed, and the world
cracked, and when she opened her eyes again, Angel stood in a new
place, an old chamber, the hall of the kings aboveground.

She laughed, spreading her wings
wide, scattering her fire. The sparks landed upon tapestries, burning
them, filling this place with her heat. Here was the Hall of Eteer,
the throne room of the kings who ruled above her own rotted kingdom.
Many times they had called her here in days of old, ancient lords of
sunlight, and she had spoken with them, treated with them, and
sometimes snatched them into the depths to sew into her sacks of
blood.

A new king sat before her upon
the throne, younger than the last one, tall and broad. His head was
bald, his skin bronzed from sunlight, and true bronze—that metal she
had taught the smiths of Eteer to forge—covered him as armor.

Angel hissed at him, sending out
her tongue to taste him, licking, exploring. She cackled, drool
spilling from her, burning holes into the mosaic beneath her claws.

"You are new," she
said, smoke seeping between her fangs.

The mortal stared, face grim,
and she saw herself reflected in his eyes: a woman carved of volcanic
rock, cracked and red and black, flames engulfing her, her leathern
wings wide, her four arms long and tipped with claws, a queen, a
barren thing, a goddess of lust and hunger and emptiness.

"I am Raem Seran, son of
the fallen Nir-Ur, King of Eteer." Even in her heat, and even as
she hissed and spat embers upon him, he did not cower, and he did not
avert his eyes. "I now sit upon the kingdom's throne. As is my
right, I summon you to my service, Queen of the Abyss."

Angel cackled.

Her laughter blasted back his
cloak, seared his skin, and splattered him with her steaming saliva.
She beat her wings and rose higher, leaving a wake of fire. She
stretched out her arms, letting him admire her nakedness, her loins
like burning embers, her pulsing womb that ached for his seed.

"Serve you, King?" She
spat out the last word as an insult. "Perhaps you would serve me
in my pit. I will take you, copulate with you, and give you to my
demons, so they might thrust into you, and you will feed us with your
blood, and we will—"

"Silence!" he said,
rising from his throne. "You are a queen of banishment, ruler of
a prison cell. My forebears bound you to my dynasty. As is my right,
I command you. You will rise. You will fight for me."

Angel beat her wings, drew near,
and placed her claws upon his chest. They dug grooves through his
armor and into his skin, and his blood spilled, and she licked his
cheek and hissed into his ear.

"Your forebears never dared
free me. If I fight, King, I will burn the world."

He reached into her flames. He
grabbed her shoulders and pushed her back, not flinching even from
her heat.

"You will burn only those I
command you to. Weredragons infest my kingdom, diseased humans who
can take dragon forms. They will be yours to slay. Raise your horde!
Bring forth the creatures of the underworld. The demons of the Abyss
will rise. You will live in the world once more, as you did in
ancient days, and you will hunt weredragons."

Angel shrieked. Her cry cracked
a column to her left. The tapestries burned all around, falling to
the floor.

"For ten thousand years, we
lingered in the darkness. You will free us?"

Raem shook his head. "No. I
grant you no freedom. I grant you servitude in sunlight. Fight for
me, Angel. You will feel the sunlight upon you. You will fly in open
sky, covering my kingdom. But still you will be bound to me."

She tilted her head, snapped her
teeth, and clawed at him. "I demand more! I demand . . ."
She grinned, and smoke rose between her teeth to blind her. "I
demand human wombs. Let my demons choose brides among your women. Let
them breed with them. Let the seed of the Abyss infect mortal
bellies, so that the daughters of Eteer may bear us children. Agree
to this, mortal man, and I will slay your weredragons."

Raem stared at her in silence,
eyes hard, lips tight.

He nodded.

Angel laughed.

She tossed back her head,
stretched out her four arms, beat her wings, spread her flame, and
her laughter rang and the ceiling rained dust.

"It will be so!"

She stamped down her feet, and
cracks raced across the floor. Claws rose between them, widening the
gaps, and mouths gaped, and tongues explored, and eyes peered, and
smoke wafted. The mosaic shattered and they emerged: crawling,
flying, slithering, seeping, dragging, scuttling, creatures of ooze,
of fat, of scales, of horns, of dried flesh, of weeping sores. Large
and small, they emerged into the hall of Eteer's king, freed,
famished—the demons of the Abyss.

"We will hunt weredragons!"
Angel shouted through her laughter, and they filled the hall around
her. "We will mate with mortal flesh! Spread across the city,
children of rot. Choose brides among the women. Sniff out reptiles
and slay them. Kill and breed! Crush and bring forth life!"

They stormed through the hall, a
geyser of rot, cracking the columns, crashing through doors,
shattering windows, flowing into the city and the searing sunlight
that had been forbidden for so long. Their howls shook the world,
almost drowning the screams of the mortals.

They left the hall singed, globs
of rot dripping from the charred tapestries, the floor shattered, the
mosaic stones scattered like dragon scales. Still he stood before
her, this new king, this human of hot skin and blood.

She placed her arms around him.

"I need no bride," she
whispered and licked his face, tearing his skin with the hooks of her
tongue. "You will be mine."

She tugged and they fell upon
the shattered floor, limbs dangling across the open pit's ledge, and
there she copulated with him, a sticky dance of stone and skin, of
blood and fire, and she screamed as they merged, and she laughed and
clawed the floor.

She had found freedom. She had
found release for her fire. And soon . . . soon she would find
dragons to burn.

 
 
JEID

"Grizzly, I am
leaving
."
Maev crossed her arms, thrust out her bottom lip, and raised her
chin. "I'm flying across the sea and into a bronze kingdom, and
you can't stop me."

Standing in the canyon, Jeid
Blacksmith stared at his daughter, rage and fear mingling inside him.
He clutched his axe so tightly he thought he might snap the shaft.
His arms shook. A growl rose in his throat. Finally he could not
contain it; he tossed back his shaggy, bearded head and shouted
wordlessly. His cry echoed within the mossy walls of the canyon,
shaking the stones. This was an ancient crack in the world—boulders
perched precariously atop pillars of stone, trees clinging to craggy
walls, natural cairns of sharp rocks, and caves running into the
depths of the earth. This natural fortress of walls, tunnels, and
towers had stood here since the dawn of time. Now Jeid howled so
loudly he thought the sound could shatter the old stones, burying him
and his daughter forever.

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