Read Blade Of The Vampire King (Book 4) Online

Authors: Lucas Thorn

Tags: #world of warcraft, #vampires, #trolls, #r.a. salvatore, #thieves guild, #guilds, #warlock, #heroic fantasy, #warhammer, #joe abercrombie, #david dalglish, #wizard, #d&d, #mage, #assassin, #necromancer, #brent weeks, #undead, #neverwinter nights, #fantasy, #elves, #michael moorcock, #sword and sorcery, #epic fantasy, #warcraft, #dungeons and dragons, #grimdark, #druss, #thief guild, #game of thrones, #george rr martin, #david gemmell, #robert jordan, #elf, #axe

Blade Of The Vampire King (Book 4) (28 page)

BOOK: Blade Of The Vampire King (Book 4)
11.48Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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“Off with his head.”

CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

 

“We're getting close,” Hemlock croaked, leaning against the wall. Sweat dribbled from his brow, but his eyes glittered with intensity. “I can feel it. And everything's different now.”

The elf finished cleaning
A Flaw in the Glass
and nodded. Accepted his words, because she could feel it, too. Something about the structure of the Keep was changing.

Not the kind of change which was obvious, but one which was nearly imperceptible. Something about the way the shadows seemed frozen in place. How the walls hummed with energy.

Each step sent a thrill up her feet. As though electricity was crawling in waves beneath the floor.

She didn't know what it was that kept her feeling bunched up and poised to strike.

Knew only that the necromancer was right.

Melganaderna was rummaging quickly through the Grey Jackets' discarded packs. Taking their food. Transferring as much as she could to her pack. It was an optimistic act, the elf thought. Clearly the young axewoman expected to survive long enough to eat it.

Echoing the woman's optimism, the elf's stomach growled.

Chukshene hugged his grimoire tight, a look of serenity on his face.

No, not serenity. Comfort. Like a man who'd come home to a warm hearth after spending years trapped in a raging storm.

The elf looked all three over, then turned to the only exit from the room. Jerked her head in the direction of the stairs descending further into the depths. “Reckon it's this way?”

“Yes.” The necromancer grimaced as he pushed away from the wall. Staggered a few steps before being caught by Melganaderna's concerned arm. “We have to move fast. But be careful! I don't know what to expect. We're being led, we all realise that. But I'm not sure if it's her, or the Keep which is leading us. Or even if there really is a difference between the two. This place is practically spewing insanity.”

“You ready, Chukshene?” The elf clenched her jaw.

The warlock grinned, thumb bookmarking a page of his grimoire. “I'm good.”

“Matter of opinion,” Nysta snorted.

“I'll be fast, then,” he said, grin widening. “Will that make you happier?”

The elf spat wetly on the floor and moved toward the wide staircase. “Suit me fine if fast-casting gets fashionable.”

As she made the first stair, the elf wondered what had happened to Willem. And if there were any more Grey Jackets still alive. She didn't think there were too many left, if any.

But Willem would be a problem.

She could feel it. The way he'd moved, though twisted by his obvious scars, spoke of a deadly efficiency she could appreciate.

But how deadly?

And why hadn't he come running when Hyrax was screaming?

The elf touched the freshest strip of cloth to be woven into her hair, and scowled. She didn't like surprises. Especially the kind of surprises which might get her killed.

So she kept
A Flaw in the Glass
in one fist, and
The Sins of Xune
in the other. Ready for anything. The smaller blade's edge was jagged and scarred, promising only pain.

She motioned to Chukshene to keep his glowing yellow orb at her back, out of her eyes, and led the way.

The staircase wound down seemingly without end. Each step hewn into the rocky earth.

The going was tough. Made tougher by the fact they couldn't go too fast because the stairs were littered with bones and discarded weapons. Old bones. Old weapons. Relics of a war which had been fought within the Keep when two gods came to kill a being they not only hated, but also feared.

Hidden in the shadows cast by the glowing orb's sickly light, slick puddles of black slime had already sent Chukshene tumbling down a few stairs before crashing into an old corpse.

His curses ripped through the silence and the bones clamoured to get away from him, skittering down the stairs like dice.

The noise made the elf scowl, but she said nothing to him.

Didn't need to.

His reddening cheeks understood everything she might have said, and accepted her fury. He nodded, letting Melganaderna help him to his feet. Smiled reluctantly as Hemlock patted him on the shoulder.

Then rubbed at his ribs which still hadn't healed from the beatings he'd suffered at the hands of his Grey Jacket guards.

“It's not far now,” Hemlock said, voice soft.

“She knows we're coming.” The words, blurted from the warlock's mouth, weren't a question. Just a statement of fear.

“Yes. Yes she does.”

“Then why isn't she laughing at us? Why isn't she cursing us?” Melganaderna's fists were tight around the long handle of the battleaxe as she spoke the question which had been nagging the elf. “Why this fucking silent treatment?”

“I don't know. I don't think she expected us to get this far.” He looked at the walls. Frowned. “In a way, this place is her prison. I don't think she can move around in it like she wants. Like I said, I'm hoping the Keep is leading us to her. If I'm right, then she's just as scared as we are.”

“You sound sorry for her.”

“I don't know about that,” Hemlock said. “Maybe I am. She's been here on her own for so long. Maybe Rule was right to kill her kind. Maybe she was evil. But the two gods killed her family and then left her trapped in here rather than kill her. They left her crazed with grief. That sounds more than a little bit personal to me. Imagine crawling around here for hundreds of years? Knowing in a thousand years, you'd still be haunting the Keep's belly? And knowing it hates you. No wonder she's so insane.”

“I'm still letting Nysta kill her,” Chukshene muttered.

This time Melganaderna said nothing. A light furrowing of her brow was all that she revealed of her own thoughts.

“It's strange,” Hemlock said after the silence had stretched for some time. “But none of this looks real. The walls. The ground. Everything.”

Chukshene rubbed at a few scrapes on his palm from where he'd snatched at the rocky stairs to stop from tumbling down the stairs. “Oh, it's real, Hemlock. Trust me. If you like, I can push you down and you can see for yourself.”

The elf scratched at the back of her neck, where the feeling of slithering insects made her skin crawl. Her violet eyes thinned at the necromancer's fumbled thoughts. But, unlike the warlock, she didn't sneer at him.

She couldn't, because she knew what he was feeling.

She was feeling it herself. She couldn't stop thinking that if she ran ahead as fast as she could, she'd find the stairs were creating themselves just around the corner.

And if she ran back up the stairs, would the rooms still be there? Would she really find their own tracks in the dust?

She tried to shake the feeling that the Keep was unfolding itself.

Tried to shake the feeling it was watching her.

But couldn't, because the buzzing sensation in her feet had reached her belly, and the worms which sometimes squirreled through her body felt like they were on the move again.

Sliding around her ribs.

Spine.

Shoulders.

She tightened the thin line of her lips and kept moving.

Then, just when she was beginning to feel they were doomed to keep travelling the bone-littered staircase forever, they came to a door. Wooden, with dull metal ribs and a series of raking scars which had splintered the face, but not broken through. Scorch marks seared the edges.

One of the hinges had popped free.

But it was still solid.

The elf pushed on it, but the door remained firm. Barred from the other side.

She clicked her tongue in frustration before seating herself on the step in front of it and scowling. Motioned the warlock forward. “Open it, 'lock.”

He raised an eyebrow, but said nothing. Instead moved forward.

Glanced at Hemlock, who shrugged.

Sighed.

Then pressed his fingers against the heavy wood.

Feeling it out.

Closed his eyes.

The biting stink of magic made the elf look away. Into the fathomless orbs of an ork's skull. A slim line of black slime drooled from its left eye socket. Wormed between its shattered teeth and had pooled beneath its pale jaw.

Its grinning expression drove her to lift a boot before driving her heel through its forehead.

Crunched it against the wall with a shocked splinter of bone and a moist splash of slime.

“Fuck you,” she muttered to the crushed bone fragments, ignoring the surprised looks from the others.

Chukshene gave a shake of his head and returned to the door.

“It's not magic,” he said. Ran his fingers through his greasy hair. “But it's heavy. Maybe I've got something in here which will open it...”

But Melganaderna bared her teeth and firmly moved him aside. “Get out of the way.”

“But-”

“Out of my way,” she said, voice tight.

He moved, giving her room to swing.

Torment
thundered into the wood, the immense weight of it chopping easily through the metal bracing. Splinters of wood and metal exploded outward, flicking against the wall as the battleaxe ignored the barrier. Unchecked, the crescent blade kept going until it buried itself almost halfway into the granite earth.
 

And stuck fast.

A few sparks shot out of the wounded ground. Bounced twice and were extinguished.

Melganaderna's brow furrowed at sight of the sparks, but when nothing else happened, she released the handle and used a steel-clad boot to send the shattered doors crashing inward. A few loose planks let out a groan as they swung loose, dangling by their last nails.

The young axewoman grinned at the warlock, then spat on her hands before snatching the handle of the massive battleaxe and jerking it free of the stone with a grunt.

“Well,” Chukshene coughed. “That's one way to do it, I guess. Not very subtle. Sure, it was so loud it probably woke the dead who weren't already awake, but it worked. I'll give you that.”

Nysta pushed herself from the stair. Snapped a smirk at at him. “You can go home now, 'lock. Reckon I don't need you anymore.”

“Very funny,” he said. Then skipped to catch up to her. Stopped himself from reaching out to pluck at her sleeve as he waved the glowing yellow orb of light forward down the winding tunnel. “Wait, Nysta. Not too fast. By the look on Hemlock's face, we're getting close. So let's take it easy. We don't want to jump into another pile of shit, do we? Fast, but not too fast, yeah?”

She nodded. An absent nod. Because she could feel the Vampire Queen's presence, though she couldn't say how.

The crawling sensation slithered around her spine and shoulders. Slowly reaching down her arms. Legs.

Threading her guts.

Gul'Se was close.

So engrossed in the sensations flooding her body, the elf didn't notice for a moment that the tunnel had exited into a massive cavernous room. Not until Chukshene let out a thin whistle through his teeth.

Then she looked up.

And saw the high roof. The pillars as wide as small houses, spearing upward into a misty darkness which peered back down at them like the pupil of a sleeping god.

Bodies littered the ground.

Skeletons draped in mould and desiccated flesh. Discarded and broken weapons. Armour torn and mangled. Shredded banners, and mounds upon mounds of skulls piled almost neatly throughout the carnage.

The gelatinous yellow orb probed forward, limping into the gloom.

Revealing more and more signs of a battle the elf could scarcely comprehend. The sheer number of dead was overwhelming. There had to be tens of thousands of dead. The dry stink of death and decay still lingered, coating the air in its greasy scent.

“You know what? I think I want to puke,” Chukshene said casually.

Hemlock's coat brushed against the elf as he stepped up beside her. Shook his head at the sight. “So much death.”

The elf nodded, eyes drawn to the back of the massive hall. “Plenty more where that came from.”

A twinkle of blue light teased their eyes from the far end. Small. Like a frozen candle blooming in the dark. The glint of hunger within a predator's cold stare.

“Umm,” the warlock edged back a little. “Nysta? Is that what I think it is?”

The elf stepped forward, rolling her shoulders and spinning
A Flaw in the Glass
between her fingers. The enchanted blade flared wicked in the dark, drinking the shadows. She held the knife loose, but turned her wrists, flexing the muscles in her forearm.

Stretched her neck. Felt the squirrel of worms as they drilled through her flesh and wriggled excitedly against her bones.

Because, she realised with the calm which comes from acceptance, that's where they really were.

It wasn't insects crawling across her flesh.

No flies skated across her skin. No spiders lost themselves inside her clothes.

It was darkness. The pure cursed darkness from the Cage. And it was inside her. Swimming in her blood. In her muscle.

Churning her emotions.

Fuelling her hatred. Pulling hard on the string of her rage to let loose arrows of violence.

Driving her forward into the dark when she should be turning back and fleeing toward the light. Toward the safety outside Urak's Keep. Outside the mountain.

Her mouth twisted into a cruel smile.

“Fuck you,” she whispered to the darkness inside. As though thrilled to be acknowledged, the worms slid outward. Finding her muscle. Tightening it. Coiling around bone. A shiver of mute excitement teased her mind.

And the elf strode forward, feeling Melganaderna at her back.

Heard the young axewoman heft the titanic battleaxe called
Torment
. The low hum of the axe's enchantment as it detected the presence of something it craved to kill.

The walls shuddered, dragging the shadows slowly from the room. Winding them in like a fisherman's nets to further reveal a field of absolute despair.

Even more bones. An endless sea of pale littered with the dull shine of broken iron armour and weapons. And a clear path, once walked by gods, driven through the heart of it all. Leading to the shrouded throne which loomed in the distance.

BOOK: Blade Of The Vampire King (Book 4)
11.48Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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