Arc 2: Chapter 12: Silver For The Dead
Oathbreaker: A Dark Fantasy Web Serial
Arc 2: Chapter 12: Silver For The Dead
Vanya returned within an hour with an aged man dressed as a monk, save for the apron and belt of tools he wore over his brown robes. I left him with Emma and Vanya in the young nobleâs bedroom, feeling useless and guilty.
It didnât matter at all that Iâd been defending myself from Emmaâs magic. She was barely more than a child, and Iâd let her goad me into that duel. Iâd been dismissive and surly, knowing it ate at her pride â Iâd dealt with nobles before, and knew what might happen. I hadnât cared. Iâd been so angry at this situation with Nathâs request, upset at what had happened in the Fane with Ser Maxim, andâ¦
And I made excuses. Iâd wanted to take the girl down a peg. Iâd shown off, toyed with her, and made it seem like I did so easily. I couldnât deny Iâd been at least in part malicious, intentionally poking at her pride until sheâd snapped.
I walked outside. A light rain had begun to fall, but the grassy field where Emma and I had sparred still seemed vibrant and bright, as though caught in beams of post-storm sunlight. The grass seemed sharper, almost metallic. Weâd both used a lot of aura, and it lingered in the world, dramatizing it. It would fade before long.
I picked up my cloak from where Iâd discarded it on the grass, then found my axe. I hooked the weapon onto the back of my hauberk, securing it in the iron ring there, then tossed my cloak over one shoulder without putting it on. I sighed, collecting myself, and turned back to the manor.
A figure leaned against the porch, watching me with bright green eyes from beneath the brim of a tricorn.
âYouâre⦠Qoth.â I remembered what Emma had called the coachman.
Qothâs expression remained unreadable, between the cloth bandanna and shady hat. I couldnât even tell if they were a man or woman. They were small, slight, made bulkier by the layered garments and heavy coat.
âYou going to take umbrage with me for hurting your lady?â I asked, more resigned than challenging.
âNah.â Qothâs light, slightly muffled voice seemed oddly chipper. âGood show, though. Havenât seen Emma that angry in a while.â Their green eyes sparkled with interest, and perhaps a bit of mirth.
Discomforted by the strange servant, I decided to change the subject. âWhy doesnât Lord Brenner have any guards here?â I asked.
Qoth shrugged, folding their arms. âHe tried. Emma knew he was more interested in keeping eyes on her than keeping her safe. She played up the Devil Child angle, and soon enough none of the locals would come near this place, even the lordâs men-at-arms. He sends knights sometimes, has more patrols in this area, but he got the message eventually. Even that physiker Vanya brought is only here because he owes her a favor. Honestly, if not for Vanya, weâd be living a lot harder out in this back country. Womanâs a lot more capable than she looks.â
Remembering my brief conversation with the maidservant, I didnât doubt it. âAnd whatâs Brennerâs interest in the young lady?â I asked. âOrphaned scion of a dead House⦠whatâs his angle?â
Qoth, as I might have expected, just shrugged. Iâd mostly asked the question just to ask it, not expecting the coach driver to have any knowledge or interest in politics.
The physik emerged a while later, looking nervous and a touch angry. âThe girl will live,â he told me. âBut sheâs lost much blood. Iâd keep her abed for the next week. Change her bandages regularly, and use the antiseptic I left in her room. Sheâs resting now.â His expression became stern. âAnd, by the love of the Heir, use practice swords when youâre sparring. Of all the irresponsibleâ¦â
With that, the physik departed in haste, grumbling and casting wary looks back over his shoulder. My own neck still bled too. He hadnât even so much as blinked at it, in his hurry to leave. Qoth glanced at me and lifted their dark eyebrows, as though to say see?
I narrowed my eyes at the chimera handler. âAnd what about you?â
Qoth had produced an apple from their coat. They rubbed it on their sleeve, inspected it critically, then tucked it back under one arm without lowering their bandanna to take a bite. âWhat about me?â
âFor one thing, what are you?â
Qoth went still.
I maintained eye contact, more certain the longer I trained my golden eyes on the servantâs own. âYouâre not human,â I said. âOr at least, not entirely. Your aura has a strange sense to it, and you keep slipping away from my vision when Iâm not focusing on you, like a shadow.â
Qoth spread their hands out wide, the black sleeves of their coat flaring out like crow wings. âThen what do you think I am, Oâ Knight?â
I studied the figure another long moment, trying to see through the glamour I sensed about them. âYouâre Emmaâs familiar,â I said at last, certain of it even as I said the words. âSome kind of Briar faerie.â
Qoth studied me perhaps half a minute, saying nothing, green eyes intense. Then, with slow deliberation, they took off their tricorn and lowered their mask. Black hair cascaded down, and sharp green teeth flashed in a too-wide grin â not from a human face, but an elongated muzzle. I thought at first that a green jewel had been embedded into the creatureâs forehead, but as it blinked at me I understood it to be a large, inhuman eye. Pointed ears poked from the mane of dark hair as it fell into place.
The coachman dipped into an elaborate, courtly bow. His arms had become longer, his legs more bowed. His voice changed when he spoke next, becoming refined, losing some of that lowborn human dialect heâd been feigning. âQoth of the Green Eye. At your service, Oâ Alder Knight.â
I lifted my chin. âYouâre one of Nathâs.â
The Briar elf chittered. The sound had a disturbingly insectile quality. âFor now, I belong to the girl. I am her eyes, her ears, and her fangs if need be. As you said â I am her familiar. Every self-respecting warlock has one, or didnât you know?â
I shrugged. âI admit, itâs not a tradition Iâve much experience in.â
âYes,â Qoth said dryly. âI imagine you busied yourself hunting them, mostly.â
I studied the Briarfae a moment longer. âDoes Emma know who I am?â I asked. âWhat I am?â
Qoth shook his too-large head. âNath did not reveal aught of your identity to the child. Secrets of that sort have power, Ser Knight, and are not given lightly.â
No doubt Nath would leverage that indulgence against me, eventually. Snorting, I turned away.
âWhere are you going?â Qoth asked, seeing me don my cloak.
I rolled my shoulders, wincing as I pulled at the cut on my neck. It had already scabbed, and would turn into little more than scar tissue in an hour or two â I may not have been able to heal others anymore, but my own fast healing still worked well enough. âIâm not going to sit around waiting for this revenant to make its move,â I said. âIf its activity is concentrated in this fief, then I should be able to find signs of it.â
âWill you join Lord Huntingâs hunt?â Qoth asked, giggling at the wordplay.
I considered the idea. I didnât have any faith that a provincial lord and his entourage could track down a living curse on their own, but heâd had the knight-exorcist. Ser Kross might have a few tricks up his sleeve.
âMaybe,â I said. âBut Iâd like to learn what I can on my own for now.â
âAnd if we are attacked here?â Qoth asked, twisting his head to one side.
âEmma said the revenant hasnât ever attacked her directly.â I folded my arms, thinking. âCourse, that doesnât mean it wonâtâ¦â
I wish I had a priest. A proper cleric could ward the manor, keep even the most potent of spirits from intruding. Every home in Urn is protected by ancient tradition, and few Things of Darkness, either fey or fell, can overcome the powers worked into the very land itself.
But those magics had become less reliable since the Fall. For a moment, indecision caught me. My instincts told me to go on the offensive, but my knightly training told me to protect the girl, guard the hearth.
âShe should be safe enough behind a threshold,â I said at last, hardening my resolve. Not a knight anymore, I reminded myself. âIâll return by morning.â
Qoth inclined his elfin head, once again donning his tricorn and mask. âAs you wish. Good hunting, Oâ Headsman.â
***
I walked through a field of graves. Red bled across the sky, revealed by the scattering rainclouds. Far to the south, lightning still flickered across the horizon. The air had turned damp and cool, forming a low-clinging mist I suspected would only thicken as night fell.
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Shades curled through that mist, murmuring unintelligibly. I ignored them, scanning the rows for what I sought. I strode through one of the many free-standing graveyards scattered across the countryside. This one had no church, only a small shrine. The shrineâs auremark had been stolen. I almost pitied the thief whoâd done that, and wondered just how desperate someone had to be to risk the wrath of the dead for some blessed gold.
Perhaps I wasnât one to talk, considering I was willing to risk their wrath for a bit of information.
I found what I sought soon enough. At the center of the graveyard, as in all such throughout Urn, there stood a single well. Mottled statuary carved into the shape of two saints beckoned me forward with ivy-wrapped fingers. My eyes were drawn also to the images of winged seraphs worked into the outer walls of the well.
When had it become strange, to see the larger-than-life Onsolain rendered so small in art? Iâd thought nothing of it, once.
I circled the well once, reaching out with my magical senses. I felt no apparent danger or corruption. I felt very little at all, save from the rising fog where ghosts watched with half-formed faces. Peeking down, I sniffed. Dry.
Well, Iâd have to hope it would suit my purpose. I fished around at my belt and produced a single large, gleaming silver coin. I held it up, letting the last rays of the sinking sun glint off its contours. On one face a drowsy skull had been etched into the metal, and on the other a circle of runes. Aloud I began to murmur, my voice becoming a rhythmic, lulling monotone.
âBy pacts of old I ask a boon, so hear me, Yeâ Dead.â
âI ask that yeâ return now, from the umbral lands where yeâ make thy bed.â
âI offer this as payment, a coin of silver from the moon.â
âMay it guide you through the shadows, and may the Gates reopen soon.â
Not quite the sacred rite a priest might use, but it felt more true to me. I took a deep breath, then tossed the gleaming coin of azsilver into the well. I spread my hands out, letting my cloak unfold like a pair of ruddy wings. âI seek your council, shades of Draubard. Accept my gift and return to the lands of the living.â
Silver is precious to the Dead. I didnât hear the coin strike the wellâs bottom. I waited a long moment, eyes half closed, then shivered as a chill wind swept through the grave rows, stirring my cloak.
âI have not heard that rhyme in many years. Not since I was a girl.â
Without opening my eyes I said, âmy mother taught it to me when I was a boy. Itâs one of the few things I still remember about her.â
âThen you know the pain of losing a mother.â
I lifted my eyes to the figure who now stood on the other side of the well. She seemed half formed of the mist, standing out from it only by her stillness. I couldnât see much of her â she wore a funeral gown, all spider-silk white, a nearly transparent shawl hanging down over her face. In death-gray hands she held a farmerâs scythe, its haft dramatically curved, the blade badly rusted.
âI know you,â I said to the ghost. âYouâre the Lady of Strekke. Emery Planterâs wife.â
The shrouded head inclined slightly in acknowledgement.
âYou returned to the Underworld?â I asked her.
âAfter you murdered my husband, the cave elves came to take us back down into the depths.â The Lady of Strekkeâs dry hands crackled as she tightened her grip on the macabre tool. The mist boiled around her, writhing with strange, disturbing shapes, and her voice emanated from the surrounding mist as a hollow whisper. âYou left my son without his mother. Without his father. Now my lord-husbandâs spirit wanders adrift through the hinterlands of this world, denied the honored place in the Lands Below owed to him as a lord of Urn.
âYour husband went Recusant,â I said, shifting back a step. The hairs on the back of my neck were standing on end, and the air felt very cold. âHe wouldnât have had sanctuary in Draubard no matter how he died.â
âBut we would have had time.â The ghostâs voice became a teeth-aching hiss, a dire wind that froze my blood. âWe would have been able to prepare my child for the woes of this world, to make him strong. Now he sits alone on a cold throne, devoid of those who love him. You did this to us.â
Iâd made a mistake. This was no ordinary shade, no Underworld saint offering wise council in return for my offer of silver. Iâd known the restless dead were drawn to me, lured by the consecrated fire in me, but Iâd hoped I could perform a simple communion rite without too much risk.
Nothing could ever be goring simple.
âYou are bound by the laws of the dead,â I said, letting my voice grow cold as hers. âYouâve accepted my offer of silver. I have questions, which you will answer. Once weâre done here, you will return to the Underworld.â
A chuckle dry as desert graves escaped the dead noblewomanâs lips. âYou need not convince me, Headsman.â
I swallowed. I knew better than to let her get to me â my fear could make her stronger. The silver Iâd offered and this conversation made her dangerous enough. It was the same as inviting her past a homeâs threshold, or letting her sit at my campfire. That invitation empowered the Dead. Iâd just have to hope the rites and laws that bound her kind still held strong enough to keep me safe through a brief conversation.
That order had once been ironclad. Nowadays⦠I kept my guard up, just in case.
âThere is a dark spirit at large in this land,â I said, once Iâd settled my nerves. âI want to know what the Dead can tell me about it.â
âThere are many dark spirits in this land,â the Lady of Strekke intoned, almost gleefully.
I let some steel creep into my voice, along with a bit of magic. âYou know of whom I speak. The Burnt Rider, the one who haunts the bloodline of House Carreon. What does Draubard know of him?â
The ghost flinched at the touch of the aura in my voice. âYou speak of the Heir of House Orley.â She paused a while, growing very still. Then, whisper-quiet she said, âyes, the Dead know of him, though we do not claim him.â
I frowned. âWhat do you mean by that?â
âYou will see.â
Clenching my jaw in frustration, I decided to let that comment go for the time being. The ghostly noble could keep me talking in circles without ever gaining anything of real use, and I suspected her of being fully willing to engage in malicious compliance. âFine,â I growled. âTell me more about this revenant. Who is he? Who was he?â
The ghostâs chortle echoed in the fog, making it seem as though a congregation of shades mocked me. âYou do not even know the sins committed by the family you defend! Oh, what a rich hypocrisy. You ruin my House for our blasphemies, and defend another despite theirs. Do you not see the cracks in the foundation you seek to uphold, Oâ Headsman?â
Iâd had enough of the ghostâs poison. âSpeak,â I ordered.
The laughter died, and the spirit seemed to drift further away from me. She hugged her farmerâs scythe close, as though for comfort. âVery well. I will tell you a tale, then, so you may know your folly.â
âOnce, in the Westvales, there were two great families. The mightiest, the most feared, was the High House of Carreon. They were called the Shrikes. For their penchant for impalement, you see?â
I said nothing, remembering the phantasmal spears Emma had conjured and her fell name for them. Perhaps she hadnât been the one to name that inherited magic.
âThe second power in the west were the lords of House Orley,â the Lady of Strekke continued. âHalf the lesser houses swore to Carreon, half to Orley. For many generations, they were in balance⦠yet they warred incessant. The hatred between those families ran deep as red seas.â
âA blood feud,â I said. âDamn.â
âDamned indeed,â the ghost hissed. âAnd dark was the end of that sanguine tale. It came to pass that a proposal for peace was arranged. A bond to end the feud, and bring the two powers of the Westvales together. A union of blood and dynasties.â
A cold that had nothing to do with the ghostly mist began to creep through me. Trepidation. I had a feeling I wouldnât like where this tale traveled. âA marriage,â I whispered.
âSo common among my kind,â the Lady of Strekke said, her voice becoming pondering. âSuch a simple proposal, but mutual enmity had kept either side from extending that olive branch. The Carreon patriarch of the time offered his eldest daughter, then a young woman, to be wed to the young heir of House Orley, at the time an accomplished warrior despite his youth. The Orleys were House Carreonâs equal in the arts of war, shrewd in diplomacy, blessed in allies. The lordâs heir was well loved, by the commonfolk and lesser houses sworn to his family alike.â
A ghoulish smile scarred the dead face I could just barely see through the dead womanâs veil. âBut the Orleys had one weakness the Carreon lord was all too happy to take advantage of. A sense of honor. Orley valued the old ways, the ancient customs of the Edaean Kings of old. Offers of marriage are sacred, and would have joined both houses as one. They had every reason to believe the offer to be genuine.â
âThe two families, and many of their vassal Low Houses, came together at the fortress monastery of Tol for the ceremony. The marriage took place. Then, on her wedding night, the Carreon bride slit the Orley heirâs throat in their marriage bed. That same night, traitors hidden among House Orleyâs vassals and allies made their move even as the Carreon armies mobilized. They massacred their rival. They besieged and dismantled their castles. House Orley was destroyed, down to the last babe, the last maidservant, and displayed along the roads of the Westvales on pikes.â
The Lady of Strekke bowed her head, again cradling the enormous scythe. âDonât you see? That is Emma Carreonâs legacy. That is the abomination you protect.â
âItâs a dark tale,â I agreed. âBut this happened a long time ago. Emmaâs not responsible for her ancestorsâ crimes.â
âWrong,â the ghost hissed. âThe land remembers. The Dead do not forget. The scion of House Carreon carries her familiesâ sins in her blood even as she carries their magic. The Carreons trespassed against the sanctity of the Heir of Heavenâs own laws, and all that bloodline will pay the price. He will come for her, and drag her soul into the flames. Just as you too are bound for the Fire for your own blasphemy.â
I squeezed my left eye shut as a flare of pain went through the four long grooves carved there from temple to cheek. I held a hand to them, gritting my teeth against the pain.
âYes!â The Lady of Strekke seemed to grow larger within the swirl of mist, rising to seven feet, eight, stretching into something out of nightmare. âThe Dead know of your sins as well, Alken Hewer, Knight of the Alder Table! We know of your blasphemous lust, of the role you played in the burning of Seydis. We know of the evil you courted, the betrayal you allowed to pass!â
âI didnât know.â I stumbled, still clutching at my burning eye. The lie tasted like ash on my tongue. âI didnât know.â
I didnât reply to the ghost, didnât care what she thought of me. I heard the echo of Ser Maximâs own pitiful wails in my own voice, when heâd succumbed to the golden ghosts in his thoughts. The same ones who haunted me.
Images flashed through my mind, burning as sharply as my scars in that moment. My captains encircling the Archonâs fallen form, their own blades in his back. Gilded towers burning, hundreds of voices screaming, cackling demons glutting themselves on death. A womanâs face â a strangerâs face â caught between grief and fury.
A sword in my hand, covered in smoking blood. I hadnât held a sword since that day.
âYou cannot lie to the dead.â The ghost continued to grow, her features distorting. The scythe had become a crooked guillotine in her skeletal hands. âThere will be no redemption for you, oathbreaker, no peace! We will haunt you to the ends of Existence. I will never forgive you for murdering my husband, for orphaning my son!â
I fought through the visions, bringing myself back to the graveyard. âYou canât touch me,â I told the ghost. âThe Law of Draubardââ
âDoes not hold me!â The Lady of Strekke cackled. She resembled nothing human anymore. âI escaped the clutches of the drow! And I did not accept your silver.â
My eyes caught a gleaming shape on the withered grass. My azsilver coin.
The noblewomanâs ghost rose above me, towering, wispy veil turned into a tattered crown of writhing mist about a stretched, ghoulish face. The rusted blade she held in her hand was as transparent as her, but it gleamed with od â its edge would cut true. Lesser ghosts boiled in the mist, murmuring, pressing in on me in the dozens.
âI am Lorena Starling,â the ghost boomed. âAnd I will have my revenge, Headsman.â