Read Soul of Skulls (Book 6) Online
Authors: Jonathan Moeller
“Lord Mazael is one of the greatest commanders of our time,” said Lord Tancred, sweating despite the chill of the underground passage. “He will be able to help us.”
“I am pleased that we are in agreement,” said Rhea. “But I suggest we depart at once. Pardon, my lords.”
She pushed through the nobles and walked to the blank stone wall at the end of the corridor. She squinted at it for a moment, nodded, and then knocked on one of the stones five times in quick succession. Rachel heard a loud click, and then a low grinding noise as the wall swung aside to reveal a hidden doorway. A man in a black coat stepped through the doorway, torchlight glimmering on his pale hair.
"My lady," said Circan, bowing to Rhea. "I am pleased to see that you made it."
"I am glad you are here, Circan," said Rhea. "The horses are ready?"
"Yes, my lady," said Circan. "They await outside the curtain wall. I suggest we make haste."
"I appreciate a man with sense," said Rhea. "The rest of your, gather your arms and armor, and we shall leave."
###
The gloomy tunnels of the Trysting Ways closed around Rachel like icy fingers.
She knew the history of the Ways, how Knightcastle had been built up over the centuries, how the various kings and lords had added secret passage after secret passage until they finally congealed into a vast labyrinth running through the castle and into the surrounding hills. Yet the name suggested a pleasant meadow, a place where lords and their lovers could carry on secret trysts.
Instead the Trysting Ways felt like a catacomb. Stone arches rose into the darkness, the walls stained with moisture. The tunnels were silent as a tomb, save for the tap of their footfalls and the rasp of their breathing. Rachel huddled close to Gerald, her eyes darting back to make sure Elsie kept pace with Aldane. Her arms ached from carrying Belifane, but she would not let him go.
She would have carried both children, if she had been strong enough.
The stone tunnel widened into a large hall that looked as if it might have been a church once. Bits of dusty wood littered the floor, and a score of stone sarcophagi lined both walls. Their lids had been smashed, the broken chunks lying among the wood. The corpses within had risen as runedead, Rachel realized, when the green fire of the Great Rising filled the sky.
She shivered again, worse than before.
"There," said Circan, pointing at the far end of the hall. A narrow stone doorway waited there, and beyond Rachel saw a set of ascending stairs. "Those open up at the base of the outer wall."
"Good," said Rhea. "We..."
A flicker of green light caught Rachel's eye.
She looked up and saw a dozen pools of green mist swirling on the hall's vaulted ceiling. Rachel blinked, thinking that the dim torchlight had played tricks on her eyes. But the light brightened, and a dozen forms fashioned of green light and smoke descended from the ceiling.
Lucan had found them.
"Runedead!" said Rachel. "My lords, runedead!"
Shouts rang out as the lords drew their swords.
"A circle!" said Tobias. "The women and children in the center, now!"
"Oil!" said Circan. "My lords, wizard's oil, quickly!"
Circan sprinted around the circle, sprinkling wizard's oil on the bared blades, and one by one they caught fire with ghostly white flame.
And then the runedead hardened into solid form and attacked.
Bloody chaos reigned around Rachel. A lord fell to the ground with a clatter of armor, blood gushing from his throat. Lord Nicholas wheeled, his burning sword taking the head from a runedead. Gerald struck right and left, taking one of the undead with every blow. Yet more and more green light flared overhead, flooding the hall with a ghostly radiance.
"The stairs!" said Circan, gesturing. A blast of invisible force slammed a runedead into the wall. "The wards on the outer wall will keep the runedead from becoming immaterial, and I can block the passage!"
"Go!" roared Tobias, his blade splitting an undead skull. Already the white flames on the lords' swords dimmed and sputtered. "On my mark, run for..."
A runedead turned ghostly and stepped through the men, hardening into flesh behind them. Rachel shouted, backing away, but the runedead reached past her and lunged at Rhea.
Lord Malden's wife and Gerald's mother died with a look of indignant surprise on her face.
"Mother!" screamed Tobias, wheeling and cutting down the runedead that had slain Rhea.
And as he did, he turned his back on the other runedead.
"Tobias!" said Gerald. "Look..."
A runedead reached out, seized Tobias's neck, and twisted.
The crackling noise of shattered bone seemed deafening, and Tobias fell besides Rhea. Gerald stared at his brother, shock on his face. Then he looked at Rachel, and his expression hardened into grim resolution.
"Run!" he roared. "All of you, run for the stairs! Now! Now!"
The maids and Elsie dashed for the stairs, and Rachel followed suit as the men distracted the runedead. A moment later the surviving lords and Circan sprinted for the stairs. Rachel scrambled up the slippery steps, her heart pounding, Belifane a warm bundle in her arms. The lords raced after them with a clatter of armor. Rachel looked back, saw Circan standing at the base of the stairs, a copper tube gleaming in his hand.
An instant later of a billowing gout of yellow-orange flames erupted from the tube, tearing into the hall. Rachel saw a dozen charging runedead go up in flames, the fire devouring the necromancy animating their undead flesh.
The fire reflected off the tears on her husband's face.
"Go!" yelled Circan, hurrying up the stairs. "It won't last for long. Go!"
###
They galloped to the east, away from Knightcastle, and as they did, Gerald took one last look back.
All his life, Knightcastle had been his home, a place of beauty, a place he had struggled to defend. In the dim moonlight, it still looked beautiful. Yet he saw hundreds of points of green light upon its walls and in its towers, as if ghostly bonfires blazed within the castle.
The runedead, standing guard over Knightcastle.
Knightcastle had become a place of death and horror...and Lucan Mandragon had wrought it.
For the sake of his murdered brother and mother, for the sake of his children, Gerald swore that he would return.
"Gerald!" said Rachel.
He turned his head, saw his wife staring at him. He had fallen behind the others.
Gerald put spurs to his horse. He would return and drive out the evil that had infested Knightcastle.
But first, he had to see Rachel and his sons to safety.
They rode to the east as fast as they dared.
Chapter 38 - Regeneration
The roads in the Stormvales had grown more crowded.
Riothamus had expected to see peasants fleeing the Aegonar, of course. If the choice was between submitting to the serpent-worshipping Aegonar and running, a sensible man would run.
Yet they also saw peasants fleeing from Knightreach and Mastaria.
Riothamus spoke to a few of them and heard their tales. A great horde of runedead had descended upon Knightreach, they said, and had conquered Knightcastle and put the nobles to death. Others claimed that the Justiciars had gone on murderous rampages, riding through villages and killing dozens of peasants with peculiar black daggers wreathed in green flame.
That reminded Riothamus of the Glamdaigyr and the Great Rising. At least the Glamdaigyr had been destroyed with the collapse of the Great Rising, and could work no further horrors.
Still other peasants told tales of a dark wizard in a steel mask who enslaved Lord Malden and the Justiciar Grand Master, summoned up a horde of runedead, and commanded the Lord of Knightcastle and Caldarus to conquer the world in his name.
“What is happening in Knightcastle?” said Riothamus after they passed another group of weary travelers.
Molly shrugged. “I’ve never been to Knightreach. You know more about it than I do, Father.”
Mazael stared at the road ahead. “Runedead, most likely. Maybe some opportunistic wizard took control of a few thousand runedead decided to carve out a little kingdom for himself. But why does Skalatan want Knightcastle?”
Riothamus did not know.
Mazael shook his head. “Later. We will find out what is happening later. Right now I have something more important to do.”
His hand strayed to the bag holding the vial of blood.
###
Mazael expected to find chaos on his return to the Grim Marches. He had hoped Lord Robert and Earnachar and the others could cooperate, but he had not been entirely certain. Hopefully they would have stopped short of an open civil war.
But as he rode through the plains and spoke with villagers and travelers, he received no ill news. Certainly, there had been attacks from runedead, and more refugees settling in the Grim Marches, but the Malrags and the runedead had left many empty lands to spare. The lords and the headmen bickered constantly, but lords always bickered, and they dared not make war upon each other. Otherwise Lord Mazael would return in wrath and punish them.
Mazael grinned at the thought.
Word of his return spread, and by the time they reached the gates of Cravenlock Town, the castle looming overhead on its rocky hill like a dark wizard’s fortress from a child’s tale, the lords and headmen awaited him.
“My lord,” said Sir Hagen Bridgebane, grim behind his black beard, “it is good you have returned.”
“Aye,” said Lord Robert Highgate, whose chain mail made him look a bit like a steel pear. “We kept the peace, though with no help from these stiff-necked Tervingi.”
“Nonsense!” said Earnachar, stepping forward. “Let it be known that Earnachar son of Balnachar was faithful to his oaths, just as mighty Tervingar himself honored his oaths in war!”
“Good,” said Mazael. “You honored my trust in you.” His mind burned with impatience, and he wanted to gallop to Castle Cravenlock’s courtyard. “Bid your thains and knights and armsmen to prepare for war. We face…”
“Golden knight!”
A thin peasant stood behind the nobles. The man looked familiar, though Mazael could not place him. Then he remembered Ryker, the former bailiff of Bluepeak Village, his home destroyed by the runedead.
“It is good to see you safe, sir knight,” said Ryker. “Was your business successful?”
“Yes,” said Mazael, “though it was a close thing.”
“Thank you again for your aid against the bandits,” said Ryker, “and for sending us here. Sir Hagen indeed found us lands, as you said he would.”
Hagen frowned. “I settled Ryker and his folk near Stone Tower, my lord. But you’ve met Lord Mazael already?”
Ryker blinked…and then his eyes grew wide. It heartened Mazael. Perhaps it was not all in vain. Perhaps once Skalatan was defeated and the runedead subdued, his people could live in peace and quiet.
Mazael grinned. “Come, my lords. We have work before us…but there is something I must first do.”
###
An hour later Mazael stood before the tree Riothamus had grown in the courtyard of Castle Cravenlock. Romaria looked utterly unchanged, her eyes closed, her chest rising and falling as she breathed, the countless tiny roots threading into her skin like wooden veins.
Riothamus worked nearby, preparing the vial of Skalatan’s blood. Molly stood next to him, and a crowd of nobles and peasants had gathered.
“Riothamus,” said Mazael, voice quiet. “Thank you for this. You saved her life.”
Riothamus shrugged. “You found Skalatan, my lord.”
“And you saved her life long enough for me to find him,” said Mazael. “You fashioned the compass. Aegidia would be proud of you, if she were here. And your own father, I think, if the Malrags had spared him.”
Riothamus looked at him in surprise. He was usually solemn, but a smile spread over his face. “Thank you, my lord. And may I say…I expect you are a terrible disappointment to your father.”
Mazael laughed. “I certainly hope so.”
“I am ready,” said Riothamus.
“Do it,” said Mazael, taking a deep breath.
Riothamus muttered a spell, lifting the staff of the Guardian. The tree stirred in response, its branches rustling, and the roots threading Romaria’s skin rippled. Riothamus rested the end of his staff in the roots, the golden light of the staff's sigils brightening.
Then he opened the vial and poured Skalatan’s blood into the roots.
There was a pulse of golden light, and then the entire tree shone with the same glow. Mazael watched as the light poured down the roots and into Romaria’s skin. For an instant she seemed wreathed in a cocoon of golden radiance. Then the light faded away, and one by one the roots withdrew from her skin and sank back into the hard earth of the courtyard.
For a moment nothing happened. Mazael stared at Romaria, his heart pounding against his ribs like a war drum.
Then Romaria took a deep breath, and her blue eyes opened.
###
A series of broken images flashed through Romaria’s thoughts.
Malaric of Barellion, a poisoned dagger in his hand.
The runedead rising from the earth as ghostly wraiths, hardening into cold dead flesh.
Mazael falling to the earth, dying.
A burning fire in her blood, killing her.
Slowly she realized that the poisoned fire had left, that she felt wonderful.
Her eyes cleared, and at last she lifted her head.
She lay beneath a tree in Castle Cravenlock’s courtyard, which was peculiar, because there were no trees in the castle’s courtyard. Her sword and armor were gone, and her clothing was ragged and torn. A crowd of nobles, Tervingi, and servants stood around her.
Mazael knelt besides her.
Romaria blinked. “Mazael?”
He looked older. As if he had aged five years since the last time she had seen him, the lines in his face deeper, gray in his brown hair and beard. And yet he looked relieved, so relieved, like some vast burden had just been taken from him.
“You’re awake,” he said, his voice little more than a scratchy whisper.
“Yes,” she said. “Why wouldn’t I be? What has happened?”
For an answer, he caught her in his arms so tightly that her ribs ached.
###
Mazael helped Romaria to stand.
She looked at him with a mixture of amusement and confusion. Later, he would explain to her what had happened. Later he would find a way to defeat the Aegonar and Skalatan.
But for now, Romaria was alive and cured.
And that was enough.