Arc 2: Chapter 18: Scion
Oathbreaker: A Dark Fantasy Web Serial
Arc 2: Chapter 18: Scion
When the binding had been complete, I collapsed to one knee. My vision swam, split, tilted â I had to suppress the urge to vomit.
Lost too much damn blood.
I felt a strong hand grasp me under one arm. Kross. He helped lift me, and after a short time I managed to get the world back in one piece. A silence followed as we stared at the gnarled oak, and the black-armored warrior fused to its trunk.
âThatâ¦â The knight-exorcist stared in wonder at the tree, breaking the quiet. âWhat is that?â
âMalison Oak,â I said, wincing as I made the mistake of flexing the fingers of my right hand. âThe elves use them in their sanctuaries to trap curses. This one was restructured into a weapon, given a binding rite.â
âA dark thing,â Kross noted.
Before I could answer, a furious yell drew my attention. I realized the rest of the battle had ended as well â Iâd almost forgotten there had been a small war around us. When heâd fallen into dormancy, Orleyâs hellhounds and infernal steed had melted into tar, which pooled in evil, hissing little puddles here and there.
Nearly half of Brenner Huntingâs retinue had been slaughtered before Iâd managed to subdue the Scorchknight. More were wounded. The mauled, burned corpses of soldiers and war chimera still smoked where they lay. Others had been badly wounded, some mortally, and their cries mixed with a fresh batch of falling snow. A terrible blow to the fiefdomâs martial strength.
My eyes went to Lord Hunting himself. Brenner dismounted his kynedeer in a rush, all but sprinting to the body of his fallen son. I cannot describe the look on his face â a fatherâs grief. That says enough. He dropped to his knees, heedless of his armor, and let out an almost animal sound as he stared at the face of his son. I could not see it from a distance, still helmed as it was, but the boy was too still. Orleyâs spear remained embedded in his chest, just below the throat.
I could have saved him. Iâd been close enough to attack Orley in that moment. Only, it would have stalled my binding, and possibly lost us the battle.
Possibly. I clenched my jaw and brushed Kross off. âIâm fine,â I told him. I looked for Emma, and found her staring at Brenner and Hendry rather than at her defeated foe. She took a hesitant step forward, swallowed, then started marching toward them.
I followed, but didnât reach them before what I suspected might happen next came to pass.
Brenner saw Emma approaching and stood, looming to his full towering height. The expression on his face⦠it went beyond anger.
âYou,â he growled, voice low as the thunder of a distant hurricane. âYou brought this on us.â
Emma stopped mid-step. âI didnâtââ
âYou little witch.â Brenner began to stride towards her. His ursine visage and antlered helm gave him a grim aspect, the overcast sky and snowfall framing his wrath. âYour parents came to me as beggars, and I gave you sanctuary, a place at my table, even offered to make you mine own family. Was it not enough? Is it true after all, that you Carreons are all devils?â
Emmaâs face twisted with emotion. She seemed at a loss for words, finding them only with great effort. âI didnât ask for any of this!â
âYou wanted this, didnât you?â Brennerâs voice had grown hollow. His eyes glazed, as though he didnât truly see the young woman in front of him. âThe Rider hasnât ever touched you. Even now, when you were within his reach, you donât have so much as a scratch. He is your creature, isnât he? And that manâ¦â his eyes went to me, and to the gnarled tree at my back. He bared his teeth. âHe is no Glorysworn, just a warlock you brought to help leash your pet.â
Emma hissed in frustration, losing hold on some of her own anger. âThat is insane!â
He pointed a trembling finger at the girl. âYouâ you are a blight on my house.â
âI never asked to be bound to it!â She nearly shouted, taking a step forward.
âSo you would see us all slain to free yourself!?â Brenner finally stopped his own advance, towering over the young Carreon. âWretched, stupid child. We are your only allies.â
âIn that,â Emma said coldly. âYou are mistaken, my lord.â
Brennerâs face darkened even further, and I saw his fingers tighten on the warhammer he held. Before things could go further, and before Emmaâs temper had her revealing more than she should, I stepped forward. âLady Emma didnât kill your son, my lord. She is as much a victim in all of this as he was.â
That, I felt certain, was true. Emma might have the potential for brutality, the instinct for it â Iâd seen as much in how she fought â but she hadnât taken any lives, innocent or otherwise. She hadnât been part of her ancestorsâ atrocities, and I refused to believe her blood made her liable for them.
Brenner wheeled on me, and for a moment I thought heâd swing. I had no weapon to defend myself other than my dagger, and I somehow suspected that wouldnât be of much use.
âMY SON IS DEAD!â he roared.
The surviving knights had begun to gather around us. The archers and lesser soldiers, too, whoâd joined the battle from the village once theyâd caught up. Though their numbers had been gutted, there were plenty enough to slaughter me and Emma if things came to violence.
I was so tired of things moving to violence. Still, I wouldnât let them hurt the girl. I squared my jaw and held the noblemanâs gaze.
âPerhaps not.â
All our eyes turned to Ser Renuart Kross. While the argument had been in full swing, heâd moved over to Hendryâs fallen form and knelt. Kross almost blended with the falling snow and ash in his dull armor and gray cloak. He held out a hand, palm hovering over the young lordâs face as though feeling for warmth, or breath.
I saw hope flicker in Brennerâs eyes. âHeâs alive?â He spoke in almost a whisper.
âHe hasnât yet been claimed by death, not fully.â Krossâs flinty eyes narrowed. âI will do what I can.â He closed his eyes and began to murmur under his breath. Again, I had the sensation of great wings unfurling into the world. Their touch against my aura was bitterly cold, far more so than the chill of the premature winter, and I shivered.
We all watched, no one daring to break the sudden silence. Brenner had completely forgotten his rage, staring at the kneeling paladin with almost child-like hope, and more than a little fear. I saw several of the men-at-arms murmur prayers under their breath.
Finally, without drama, Kross lifted his eyes to Brenner. âI haveâ¦â he seemed to search for words. âPlaced him in stasis. He will need a physik. Understand, my lord, he is dead â I only trapped his spirit in him. Either we must revive him using mortal means, or I will have to perform a rite of exorcism, lest he become undead.â
I noticed that an icy sheen had formed over the young man, making him seem slightly blue, like a frozen corpse.
âYou are a preost,â Brenner said, again adopting his commanding baritone. âYou are authorized to use sacred necromancy. Revive him!â
Ser Kross only shook his head, his expression passive. âI am not permitted such rites, and those are only used for communion in any case. He needs a proper healer. I believe you have a clericon, back at Antlerhall?â
I saw Brennerâs impatience, his fear, urging him to brashness. He mastered himself and nodded. âYes.â He turned and began barking orders.
Emma stared in silence as Brennerâs men worked, securing the body. Others began to find their mounts, or take saddle if theyâd lost theirs in the fighting. I moved to stand at her side.
âIs it done?â She asked, voice hoarse. âIs Jon Orley dead?â
âHe died a century ago,â I said honestly. âAs for right nowâ¦â I sighed. âWeâre safe, for a while. And weâre all hurt. We should go with them to Brennerâs hall, get ourselves treated by a real healer and get some rest.â
Her eyes went to my mutilated hand, and she winced. âI didnât want any of this,â she said again, almost desperate.
âI know,â I said. âWeâre alive. Time to take the next step.â
After sheâd gone to find her mount, I turned to find Ser Kross staring at the tree.
âHow long will that hold him?â He asked.
I followed his eyes. âNot long,â I admitted. âItâs supposed to feed on the blood of its victim to keep the binding powered, but Orley is undead â no blood, least none it can use. Not to mention that heâs goring strong.â I rubbed at the stubble on my jaw with my left hand, wincing again as I pulled at the burns â my entire palm had blistered raw from grabbing the Scorchknightâs weapon. Did I really have to go and injure both my hands?
Unlawfully taken from Royal Road, this story should be reported if seen on Amazon.
âHow long?â Kross repeated.
âFew days at most,â I said quietly.
âThen we will need to find another solution.â Kross folded his arms over his breastplate. âThis only buys us time.â
I nodded, then frowned as I looked at the knight-exorcist, realizing something.
âWhat?â Kross asked, noticing my look.
âYour arm,â I said, nodding to his right arm. âIt isnât broken anymore.â
Kross was silent a moment, then shrugged. âMy companion healed it during the fight. I only stayed back because I saw your warning, and didnât want to approach and spoil your spell.â
It made sense. Still, I remembered when heâd healed Emmaâs arms â those injuries had been less immediately grievous than a cracked bone, and it had exhausted him. He seemed hardly winded now.
âWe should get moving,â I said, ignoring it. âI donât want to leave Emma alone too long with his lordship, in case he commits to blaming her for all of this.â
âOf course.â Kross dipped into a shallow bow. âI will recommend Lord Brenner leave some guards here to keep an eye on our treebound friend, just in case.â
I nodded, having been about to make the same suggestion. For now, I needed a healer. Useful as my preternatural vitality could be, I literally had holes in me.
âTo Antlerhall, then.â
***
The Hunting castle had originally been a mead hall, belonging to one of the clan-fiefdoms whoâd populated much of Urn before the great exodus from the West. Over generations it had been steadily converted into a proper castle incorporating both Edaean and native style.
The original structure remained, an enormous longhouse atop a tall hill, fashioned of wood and stone with a steep, tiered roof and pillared entry heavily decorated in bronze reliefs, every inch of stone carved with scenes of the old inhabitantsâ history. However, high bastion towers had been added, and a forecastle at the hillâs base. The end result was something out of time, both ancient and new, both melding in a strange, impossible elegance.
Much like House Hunting itself, with its fey steeds and spear-and-bow wielding hunter knights.
I didnât see much of Brenner after we arrived. A great scurry followed our battered retinueâs arrival at the keep, with servants and soldiers everywhere. I tried to stay out of the way, and to keep Emma in my sights. However, she slipped away from me during the chaos, taken off by some servants to be tended to.
I gave her privacy. Though, I worried about what Brenner might do in his grief and suspicion.
Eventually, a physiker looked at my injuries and I was fed. My hand throbbed with pain. It would take days for those wounds to close, weeks for them to fully heal, even with my magic. I wouldnât be able to fight until I had the hand back, even with a replacement weapon.
Iâd have to hope I wouldnât need to.
I was allowed to sleep in the feast hall, and I took that as a good sign. In old traditions, allowing guests to sleep under the lordâs own roof, in his place of merriment, is held as a great honor. It didnât give me much privacy though, and I doubted that to be an accident. More than a few from the battle at Orcswell saw me summon the Malison Oak, and I received many wary, distrustful glances. Perhaps they might have been grateful Iâd ended the fight, but my association with Lady Emma poisoned their trust.
Servants took my cloak and armor to be cleaned, and I found a shadowed spot along one of the hallâs walls to get some rest. Exhausted, my mind still churned with the days events and sleep didnât come quickly. Theyâd lit a fire in the hall, to stave off the premature cold.
I realized soon enough I couldnât sleep, and went for a walk. I wandered the winding corridors of the keep. Eventually, perhaps by coincidence, I found a doorway leading into a spacious chamber lit by a constellation of candles, with many alcoves and an open central floor dominated by a basin.
A chapel.
Perhaps on a whim, I went inside. The room wasnât over large, and mostly empty. A private space for prayer, no doubt, used by the lord and his guests. I saw only one figure seated on one of the circle of pews set along the edges of the central dais.
Emma stared at the basin with unfocused eyes, her hands clasped together more from nerves than for prayer. Her eyes were shadowed with lack of sleep. She wore new clothes â the servants had taken her martial ensemble same as they had mine. Theyâd given her a white shift and green dress. It was the first time Iâd seen her in traditional womanâs clothes. It made her look less haughty, less severe. Sheâd done her dark hair into a lazy braid.
She was too young for all of this. Then again, Iâd been too young to go to war. Had I really been her age when Iâd started on this path?
âStop that.â
I blinked, not realizing sheâd been watching me out of the corner of her eye. âStop what?â
She didnât scowl or scoff, only met my eyes steadily. âThat way you look at me. Like Iâm some mirror showing you all your own mistakes. Youâre not my father. For one thing, youâre too young to be.â
I sat down on the bench next to hers, so the narrow gap between the two pews separated us. Little more than an armâs length. âHow old do you think I am?â
I could tell the question surprised her, by her silence. âI donât know⦠thirty at most?â
I inhaled a long breath. âAnd Iâll look this young for another thirty, probably. You shouldnât judge anything with just your eyes â thereâs too much phantasm in the world, my lady.â
âYouâre just like Nath,â Emma said bitterly. âAlways talking in riddles.â This time, she did scoff.
It was the first time sheâd named the demigoddess without an honorific. The day must have truly shaken her.
Instead of distracting her from her woes with argument, as sheâd probably wanted, I decided to cut to the meat of the matter. âHowâs Hendry?â
Emma drew in a sharp breath. I didnât push, letting her gather her thoughts, consult her own emotions. I knew how tangled they must be.
âLord Brenner called in a physiker from one of the villages â the same who treated me. He and the castle clericon managed to revive Hendry, but heâs in critical condition. They donât know if heâll last the night, much less the week. Ser Kross is with them, doing what he can, but it was a mortal injury. Even Art is not full-proof against death.â
I heard her dress rustle as she shifted. âOrleyâs fire turned some of his bones to iron. They say itâs a curse, and that itâs spreading.â
The wound in my own shoulder still burned. My own magic would counteract any curse which might have been in that infernal weapon, but even still I shifted with discomfort at the idea. âDamn.â
Emma fell quiet again, and when she spoke her voice had become brittle. âDid I do this? Is Brenner right?â Her mouth compressed into a thin line. âAm I wicked?â
I turned my eyes to the basin, tracing the lines of scripture etched into its stone. âYour lineage doesnât define you.â
âThatâs chimera shit, and you know it.â She drew in a shuddering breath, some anger flickering through the grief. âIt defines everything. Even the afterlives hate me for what my family did in the past, and⦠and I know, donât you understand? I know Iâm not⦠not right.â
I frowned. âWhat are you talking about?â
Emmaâs words began to come out faster, in a rush, as though sheâd been holding them in so long theyâd become an unbearable pressure inside her. âI hated him. Hendry. Heâs been in love with me since we were children, but even then I knew what Brenner wanted, why he kept me around even after my parents died and he didnât have them in his debt anymore. You understand, donât you?â
I nodded slowly. âHe wants you to marry his son, doesnât he?â
âFor my bloodline,â Emma confirmed, almost seething. âFor my familyâs magic. A Blood Art in his descendants would finally give him the treasure he needs to become the leader of a High House, and Brenner is a proud man, obsessed with legacy.â
Though Iâd already begun to suspect it, confirmation of the fact still unsettled me. It malformed Emmaâs situation from that of a tragic ward, protected by a stern but responsible guardian, into something very much like a prisoner.
âNot being in love with the man youâre being coerced into marrying doesnât make you evil,â I said firmly.
âItâs not just that.â Emma huffed in frustration. âIâm angry all the time. It pleases me to be cruel, and I have dreamsâ¦â she winced. âI have dark dreams, of blood and fire, and they excite me⦠and because she is still inside me.â
Emmaâs voice had changed, becoming more weary, full of resignation and resentment. âAll of them are. All of House Carreon, in that great phalanx of bloody pikes that are my inheritance.â Her eyes slid past me to the wall. âMy grandmother, before she died, told me what we did to Jon Orley, why he hates us⦠and why he will never forgive us. She told me why he hounds us.â She shut her eyes, the muscles in her face tightening. âShe told me of my ancestorsâ sins.â
And she began to talk of the past.
***
âYou already know,â she began, âthat my family was at war with House Orley for many generations. Itâs said they warred even before the Exodus, when they were still Edaean families, and not Urnic. The ambushes, counter-plays, betrayals, and shifting alliances around that conflict are the stuff of legend in the Westvales. That was, until my great-grandmotherâs time. Oh, we still feuded during those days, but this was well after the House Wars. At the time, the heir of House Orley, Lord Jon, was still young⦠as was the heiress of the Carreons.â
âEvery great house in Urn has its epithet. House Dance are the Wasps, House Wake the Mourners, and so on. You already know my family are sometimes called the Shrikes. You know what the Orleys were called?â
She waited, and I realized the question wasnât rhetorical. When I shook my head, a sickly smile formed on Emmaâs lips. âThe Companions. They were among the first to swear to the God-Queen, if you believe the stories, and follow her over the mountains into this land. Stalwart, honorable, beloved by their allies⦠true heroes, all around.â
She didnât quite hide the note of skepticism she laced those words with.
âWhatever the case, the Carreons ruled through fear and draconian tradition, and the Orleys through trust and honor. Both families boasted great warriors, but neither could overcome the other. Eventually this locked us into a stalemate â large wars became untenable, but there was always some bloodshed every few years, mostly instigated by my own house.â
âThat is, until a chance meeting occurred. Jon Orley was riding in the forests beyond his familyâs land, hunting a wyrmblighted whoâd come down from the Fences, and came upon Astraea Carreon.â
âI am certain you can guess what happens next. By all accounts, my great-grandmother was a great beauty, and still a young woman at the time. Jon wanted to marry her, and she, it seemed, returned his feelings. The Orleys believed it an avenue to peace, to mending old wounds and building bridges between themselves and their ancient enemy. More of the nobles got involved, and even many commonfolk, who made it a game to help the two indulge in their secret trysts. Soon enough it became quite the to-do⦠a great romance, a meeting of true love that would end war and bring about an age of peace in the Westvales, perhaps even a shining new kingdom.â
Knowing already where the tale ended from my conversation with the ghost of Lorena Starling, I felt a sick pit form in my stomach. I didnât interrupt, however, letting Emma bring her dark tale to a close.
âJon Orley, though young, was the apple of his lord fatherâs eye, his heir and champion both. And, though she had many older brothers, Lady Astraea was the eldest daughter of her own house. My family is matrilineal â our Art manifests more easily and more powerfully in the women of our line. Lord Jon and Lady Astraea would have been the future rulers of their families, and their joining would have ended many woes.â
Emmaâs eyes narrowed to near slits, though I could still see their pale brown color very vividly in the poor lighting. The sacred candles cast shifting shadows over her features, forming a crawling mask of intermixing light and dark.
âThe lords and ladies of all houses, both Orley and Carreon, and all their vassals, met and approved the match. The celebrations were grand. The matriarch of House Carreon shared cups with the ruling Lord Orley, and hatchets were buried. Then, on their wedding night, Jon and Astraea made love one final time.â
Emma closed her eyes, drawing in a shuddering breath. âThen she killed him. My great-grandmother slit her husbandâs throat, cut out his heart, and had her guards display him on a spike from the castle walls. That same night, House Orley fell. They call it the Feast of Shrikes in my home country to this day.â
She fell silent, and I was taken aback for a moment by the abrupt end to the tale. The realization had come well before it had ended, but even still I grasped for confirmation. âWait, Emma, are you trying to tell me thatââ
âYes.â Emmaâs lips formed a terrible smile. âIâm not just a Carreon. My great-grandfather is Jon Orley, the very monster we fought at Orcswell today.â