Arc 4: Chapter 17: The Forest of Heads
Oathbreaker: A Dark Fantasy Web Serial
Arc 4: Chapter 17: The Forest of Heads
I stumbled through the woods, and they called out to me. The ones Iâd killed.
They grew from the trees like cancerous fruit. Some sprouted from hanging branches, others clustered in tumorous masses from the trunks themselves. Some rose up from the ground with bulging eyes and gnashing teeth.
The heads my axe had taken filled the sickened forest. They whispered, laughed, shouted as my unsteady feet navigated the tangled undergrowth. They snapped at the hem of my red cloak, sobbed, begged.
âWhere are you going?â They mocked.
Iâd lost something. My eyes searched the tangled trees. Beyond them, I could see a light. It was pale and cold, featureless, and everywhere. Any way I turned, the light spilled like a moonâs blood. Even still, wherever I walked, the shadows pooled deep.
âThis is all there is!â The heads told me, glee and despair intermingling in their joined voices.
Can't be, I thought. Only, I couldn't see anything else.
From a low branch, a wizened face turned and opened rheumy eyes. The distant light caught on the golden circlet on his brow, outlining its woven design.
âI served the gods too,â Leonis Chancer told me. Blood dripped beneath his chin, falling from a viscous, nearly solid mass hanging down like a beard. âDo they love you more than I, you think?â
I spun away from the ghastly face, searching, searchingâ¦
What had I lost?
From the hollow of a crooked tree, a face emerged like a squeezing worm. Flesh strained against the edges of the hole, wrinkled and bruised. Bristled hair popped out, gray and filthy. Between the once proud mutton chops, yellow teeth flashed.
âWe all had something we were fighting for,â said Emery Planter, the Earl of Strekke. âI sought to protect my family from the degradations of this tired order. Do you think about my son still? The one you orphaned?â
âLeave me be,â I growled.
A shadow flitted between two trees. My eyes tracked it, looking for where it would reemerge. It didnât, but I felt certain⦠I didnât know what I felt certain of, but anywhere was better than here, with these ghoulish faces. I began to move toward it, trudging through the bleeding woods.
âThe light isnât that way!â Emery laughed at my back.
âHe fears the light,â Leonis said conspiratorially. âIt reveals ugly truths.â
âWill it burn him to ash, you think?â This came from a man in an iron crown studded with green jewels, a king. His fiery hair had turned gray, his skin sallow. He rose from roots in the ground, like a foul pumpkin.
âDo you remember how you dreamed of fighting me on the battlefield?â Rhan Harrower asked me with a crooked grin like a wound in his sunken features. âWhat would that proud young man think of you now, Alken Hewer?â
âHeâd probably have picked another name!â Emery cackled.
The entire forest quivered with cruel laughter. In the distance, a dark shape passed from one cover to the next. It watched me in turn. I could feel its eyes, like a tether on my soul.
But the Dead wouldn't be ignored.
"Bloody Al," Leonis scoffed. "Headsman. Blackbough. First Sword. What handsome titles you've gained!"
"If only they all knew what a simpering puppy you are," Rhan sneered.
âYouâre all dead,â I hissed. âYou were all monsters.â
âBut you didnât kill us for what we did,â said a young, sweet voice.
My bones turned to ice at the sound. I turned, despite every instinct in me screaming not to. From within the tangled limbs of a skeletal tree, like a fly caught at the center of a web, the pale face of a girl no older than fourteen stared at me with shadowed eyes. Her once fair hair had turned white in death.
âYou killed us because you were told it would lead to your redemption,â the child said. âYou felt no hatred for us, sought no righteous justice. We were simply the enemy your masters pointed at.â
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I stumbled back from her, baring my teeth. âYou were skinning children, Irene. You were binding their souls to your dolls. Someone had to put you down.â
The mad countess smiled serenely at me. âYou remember my name? Oh, Iâm flattered.â
âWhy would he care about dead children?â Emery asked the rest of the woods. âHe didnât mind much when that blood drunk whore admitted she used to eat them.â
âGuess all he needs to forgive someone is a pair of breasts and pretty legs,â Irene giggled.
âShut up,â I said.
âCertainly has a type, doesnât he?â A once handsome nobleman said from within a bush with leaves that oozed black pus. It leaked from his eyes too, and dribbled from his mouth when he spoke.
âLikes them well used,â Irene agreed.
âShut up.â
âWhores will attract whores,â Bishop Leonis said with a scornful sneer. âHe even had that hell strumpet in his thoughts while he was pounding the bloodsucker.â
âOh, you know his old flame was absolutely filthy.â
âYou think that does it for him? Knowing how unclean they are?â
âStop.â
âDoesnât matter to a dog what heâs humping!ân/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
Some of the heads began to bark like hounds. I spun around, trying to find the moving shadow again. Where was it? What was it?
It had burning eyes, like twin candle flames.
âDo you think they heard the sounds you made all the way up in heaven, paladin?â A half severed skull with a bloodshot eye hissed at me.
âThey were certainly loud enough!â A dead knight cackled from where he hung by a twisted branch like a noose. I hadnât taken his head properly, but severed him from shoulder to rib. I could still make out the mark of aureflame along the cut where Iâd hewn right through his armor.
The head of a Recusant magus impaled on a tall root like a pike let out a lewd moan, her brow furrowing as her cracked lips pursed in mimed pleasure.
âOh, Alken! Oh, Alken! Donât stop, donât stop!â
Others began to make similar noises, until the woods filled with grunts and cries, the dead shouting like rutting beasts. The sound mingled with the laughter and the barking, the shouting and the weeping, echoing until it became a near physical pressure in the air.
âTHIS IS THE MAN WHO KILLED US!â Rhan bellowed, spittle flying from his lips.
âSHUT UP!â
I poured my aura into that desperate scream. Golden flames spilled from my lips, the flash brief and bright in the darkness.
And the dead went silent. I stood there, enshrouded in my blood-drenched cloak. Sweat dripped from my face, ragged breaths from my lungs. The world suddenly reeled and I fell, barely managed to catch myself on my hands.
I knelt there in the dark, surrounded by the accusing eyes of the madmen and warmongers Iâd executed.
âWhy didnât you try to save me?â Irene hissed from above, her colorless eyes full of hate. âLike you did that Carreon bitch?â
I caught a glint in the putrid undergrowth. I reached for it, languid and dull, the motion more impulse than intent.
âYou have no one but us,â Emery told me, his tone reasonable. âYou are all alone.â
âThatâs not true,â I muttered, lifting my closed fist.
âAll the whore wants from you is your blood,â Leonis spat. âShe has no love for you, no true affection. She is just a desperate leech.â
âA beast warming herself by a fire,â Rhan hissed.
âThe Carreon will betray you,â Irene sang. âShe will sell herself to your enemies and become strong, all your hopes discarded in her wake.â
âRosanna Silvering will use and discard you as ruthlessly as the Choir will,â the nobleman who bled black pus said with a cackle.
âIf her pet wizard doesnât do it first,â the skull crooned.
âAnd you will be left with us,â Rhan growled, his broken teeth bared in a rictus grin. âWhen all this is over, these are the seeds youâve sown. Behold your garden!â
I looked down at my closed fist, took a steadying breath, and opened my fingers. In the palm of my hand, a union of smooth black stone and ivory rested. My ring.
âIt would be best if you ended things, my child.â Leonis Chancerâs dry lips formed a fatherly smile. âSpare the world more pain. Are these trees not full enough?â
I glanced up at the forest. There were plenty of empty branches. My eyes went back down to the ring. My hands were covered in blood, so I moved cautiously as I took it between the forefinger and thumb of my left hand. I slipped it onto my right hand, in its usual place on the first finger.
It slipped off. My hands were too slick with blood. The ring tumbled to the ground. I dove for it, letting out a curse. It had fallen into the tangle of sick weeds and roots. I reached into themâ
And jerked my hand away at a flash of pain. Something had bit me. Within the thorny roots, rotted teeth grinned. I heard a gulp.
Gone. The realization wasnât unlike having a cut artery. Little pain, but lethal all the same.
âNo escape,â Irene whispered to me in a sweet, soothing voice. Her web of branches creaked as her pale face lowered down. âBest just end things, Alken Hewer. Youâve been a ghost for over ten years now.â
âItâs the honorable thing to do,â King Rhan told me sternly. âChin up, son. Far better warriors have fallen on their own swords.â
The forest murmured around me, voices pitched between encouragement and bitter invective. The boughs quivered, not with wind but with the discontent of the dead.
My ring was gone. I had no defense from these unquiet shades. They would haunt me to death or insanity, whichever came first.
Perhaps it would be easier ifâ
Once again, something moved through the trees. My gaze went to it.
âBest not,â Emery warned. âThere are far worse things than us in these woods, Headsman.â
What was it? My eyes narrowed, trying to find it again. I stood, once again beginning my stumbling trek through the trees.
âYouâll regret it!â The heads wailed.
I ignored them, and kept moving toward the furtive shadow. It watched me with eyes of flame, a guide far dimmer than the distant silver glow, yet somehow far more intense. It led me deeper into the tangled forest, away from the light.