‘What ye are, son of
mine, is a disappointment.’
Benyar looked down at his plate full
of half-picked pork-ribs and honey glaze. As ever, Ermoldulus, the Gnomish
servant, had surpassed himself. But tonight, Benyar was not hungry. Moodily, he
pushed aside a cold boiled potato with his fork and picked a morsel of meat out
of his long, black beard and tossed it away. It landed on the shadowy,
stone-flagged floor of the great hall and was immediately forgotten. From the
shadows that clad all sides of the long, rectangular room, the stone statues of
his many ancestors glared out at him with gem-cut eyes. Weapons in their marble
hands and displeasure upon their features, their death-idols peered disappointedly
at the house-clan sitting to dinner before them.
‘I
don’t see wha’s so bad ‘bout it,’ the young Dwarf man said through his dark
beard. ‘People are stronger together: look at us Dwarf-folk and the Gnomes –
we’d be lost without ‘em.’
From the far end of the long, low
table, his father rose from his great stone seat. Thored Volostag was tall for
a Dwarf, some four-and-a-half feet from the ground and broad of chest and
shoulder. His iron-grey beard covered the dark blue doublet he wore, and the great
mass of traditional Dwarf plaits, golden rings, and beaded braids fell to his
round, wide waist – though it did not hide the displeasure on the old Dwarf’s
weathered and scarred face.
It was to the largest of those scars
the old Dwarf now pointed – a long, white mark scoring diagonally across his
face from his right eyebrow brow to bottom-left jaw. ‘Do you know how I got
this?’ he snarled. The fury in his voice echoed around the large stone room,
dimly lit by the candles upon the tables and the huge roaring hearth behind
where Thane Thored Volostag sat at the table’s head.
Of
course I bloody know, Benyar thought to himself, you tell the damn story at every opportunity you get. From where he
was sitting half-way down the long table, Benyar let out a low sigh and glanced
across the table to where his mother, Amelie, sat opposite him. Her coal-black
hair was tied in a bun almost as large as her head, all bundled up behind her
crown. There was sympathy and exhaustion in her chestnut-brown eyes, though no
words came from her round lips. Dropping her gaze from her son and shaking her
head in resignation, she continued to eat from her plate.
Benyar turned to his young twin
sisters, sitting on the side of the table between his mother and where his
father sat at its head. Neither Berra nor Derra offered him any form of
salvation in the cheeky, fresh-faced glances and giggles they shot him. Benyar
gritted his teeth behind his chest-length, dark beard and looked between the
identical young Dwarf-girls, with their identical plaits, braids, and
dark-brown eyes. Still, neither of them offered him any support and instead
continued to snigger, covering their mouths with their small hands. They’re giggling at Nanna Therrin’s statue –
as always.
Benyar’s attention was wrenched from
his sisters and back to his imposing father by the sound of the old Dwarf’s
boot kicking the long table. ‘We’d ‘eard word from the northern mines tha’
there’d been a sightin’ o’ the Old Enemy,’ his father began.
Oh,
here we go, Benyar thought and rolled his eyes. He dropped his gaze back to
his plate and pulled a small strip of pork from one of the ribs before him. At every Stone-forsaken opportunity. With
a long sigh, Benyar tossed his silver knife and fork onto the finely-crafted
plate before him and made as big of a show of looking everywhere but at his
father as he could. The great, studded iron chandelier above his head with its
many dripping candles helped illuminate the long hall in which they sat, and it
was thrice as interesting as the story he was about to be told for the
thousandth time. Even the two-dozen or so house-clan statues that lined the
edge of the grandiose hall seemed to sigh as a draft of warm air blew through
the room.
‘Your
Stone-blessed uncle, myself, and three other strong lads went to see if there
was any validity in these claims,’ Thored continued. ‘We arrived at the
northern mines an’ found ‘alf the workers there already dead. Yet
low-an’-behold, there, standin’ over the bodies, was a goblin raidin’-party –
and a stone troll.’
Benyar
sighed and rolled his eyes again, still casting his gaze about the room and
resting his chin in his hands in a much-exaggerated show of disinterest. ‘So
you, Uncle Garr, an’ yer lads all charged without waitin’ fer reinforcements in
yer hunt fer glory. Everyone was slaughtered in the melee, includin’ Uncle Garr
– would’ve loved to ‘ave met ‘im, by the way, sounds like a top character,’ he
said passively, eyeing one of the many family weapon-heirlooms that were hung
about the long hall. I always liked
Grandma’s sword. Mind, I’d prefer a pot o’ ‘er miserable, cold ol’ gruel over
this wretched tale.
Benyar’s
father’s face grew dark with anger behind its great grey beard. ‘How dare ye?’ Thane
Thored hissed through his yellow teeth. He slammed a fist onto the long, dark
mahogany table, making the whole thing quake and the light reflected upon its
fine, polished surface twitch and dance.
Benyar
pulled his eyes away from the great, wide tapestry depicting his house-clan
tree that hung behind where his mother sat, face in hands and muttering to
herself. ‘Yet it was ye,’ Benyar said as he rose to his feet and leapt onto the
table, sending a decanter of mead spinning towards where his two sisters sat –
they squealed excitedly and laughed at Benyar’s antics. ‘It was ye who, wit’
yer great axe in one ‘and an’ yer fallen brother’s shield in the other, slew
the great stone troll – the hideous rock avatar, the amalgamation of malformed mountain-made-flesh,’
he cried loud, thrusting with an invisible weapon, much to his younger
sibling’s mirth. ‘An’ ye hacked its head from its shoulders an’ brought it ‘ome
to Ma, who gave ye permission to mount the hideous thing on the mantle.’ Benyar
raised a large finger and pointed to where the fire roared in the wide hearth
behind where his father sat. On the great wall above it was the huge, stone
skull of the hideous troll. ‘Why Ma ever let ye put tha’ there is beyond me. By
my ancestors, it’s hideous.’
His
twin sisters giggled together until their father shot them a dark, nasty look.
‘See?’ the old Dwarf hissed. ‘Ye’ve not an ounce o’ respect for the past. This is why ye want to try and make
allies o’ the pissin’ Vidorians, and o’ those so-called Free Esdarian jellies!
Yer uncle died to defend ‘is ‘ome
from outsiders – yet ye want to welcome them wit’ open arms? This house-clan
has always defended the Halfling-folk
o’ the Syladras Mountains from tha’ which lies above and blelow – yer nae a Volostag,
yer nae a Dwarf! Yer a disgrace to yer family name!’
Benyar
shook his head sadly and leapt back into the thick, sturdy wooden chair on
which he had sat. ‘If ye say so, Pa,’ he said with a shrug. ‘An’, in my
opinion, it’s antiquated ol’ fossils like ye that are holdin’ back the Halfling
people – think o’ how easily we’d crush the goblins an’ their hordes o’
monsters if we ‘ad a unit o’ Vidorian soldiers to assist us!’
‘Tha’s
quite enough,’ Benyar’s mother finally spoke in a strong, cold voice that
cracked across the hall. Amelie Volostag pushed back her chair and rose to her
feet – she was of average height and stature for a Dwarf woman, but her face
was cold and collected. Like diamonds amongst dirt, her pale green eyes
glittered dangerously through the half-light of the room. ‘I’ll no’ ‘ave you
two bickerin’ and arguin’ like a pair o’ old ladies,’ she snapped. She turned
and glared down the table towards her husband. ‘Thored, ye’re the house-clan
patriarch, fer Stone’s sake, not some moody, babblin’ storyteller. An’ Benyar,’
she said, narrowing her eyes as she stared across the table at her son, ‘yer
our eldest son. Act like it.’
With
her words ringing about the Volostag house-clan’s hall, those assembled fell to
quiet. For a few moments, no-one spoke, and only the gentle clatter of cutlery
upon plates was heard. Then, a shuffling sound came from the back of the room
and a fifth, well-dressed figure appeared. He was short – below four-feet in
height – and had a large, round head. The hair upon his scalp was greying and
receding, and his torso and legs seemed too small for his head. The high,
quizzical brow and a long, hooked nose upon which balanced a small pair of
spectacles gave him a near-scholarly appearance, though the tidy apron across
his front told a different story. The small fellow had ears that were as large
as his deft hands, and he carried himself with a sense of duty-won respect.
‘Is
all well?’ the small, smartly-dressed figure said.
‘Yes,
Ermoldulus,’ Thored said from the head of the table in his deep, gravelly
voice. ‘We need no more food, though if ye could bring another decanter of
mead-…’
‘Ye’re
a wise Gnome, Ermoldulus,’ Benyar interrupted, the young Dwarf turning in his
seat to look at the small man. ‘Do you think the Halfling-folk should seek
allies to the south?’
‘Benyar!’ his mother snapped, hurling
slamming her hand into the table. ‘Will ye just drop it?’
Benyar
gestured to the Gnome-servant with a hand and glared at his mother. ‘No, I want
to know what Ermoldulus thinks. He’s a clever chap, an’ the Gnome-folk don’t
even get to play a major role in the Ironrend Covenant, despite makin’ up ‘alf
the population beneath the Syladras Mountains!’
His
father’s voice echoed from the end of the table: ‘The Ironrend Covenant was
established by King Torunsson I to help the Dwarves
rule – the Gnomes were never involved because, much unlike ye, son o’ mine,
they know when to keep their mouths shut.’
Ermoldulus
blinked his heavily-lidded eyes and glanced from Thored to Benyar, then back
again. ‘T’is not my place, Master Benyar,’ the Gnome said dutifully, before
turning on his heel and quickly retreating into the shadows.
Silence
fell again for a few moments. Eventually, Ermoldulus returned with a decanter
of mead and a cloth for the spillage Benyar had caused. He left the fine silver
vessel on the table and retreated after wiping the table clean and bowing low
to the assembled family.
‘Our
house-clan is on the cusp of being allowed a seat on the Ironrend Covenant – we
could ‘elp rule over our people, or maybe even be kings, Benyar; a Volostag rule the Halflings under the Syladras
Mountains,’ Thane Thored said in a low, threatening voice from the far end of
the table. ‘It’s taken me decades to get the Volostag house-clan where it is,
an’ ye’re goin’ to drag us back into the dirt if you keep ravin’ on about ‘ow
we need Humans to help us wit’ our affairs.’ He took a swig of whatever
alcoholic beverage was in his large, steel tankard and slammed it down on the
table. ‘You’ll destroy us with these views o’ yours. Thanks be to the Great
Creator I ‘ave a second son – my first is no Dwarf.’
Part
of Benyar wished his father’s words would hurt him, but they could not – at
least if they had stung, it would have meant that he cared for the relationship
he had lost. Instead, Benyar found himself simply wishing his father would
disappear. Tomorrow, his younger brother, Gorgrim, would return from the Pits
draped in heroism and glory. He would tell tales of the goblins he had slain,
of the Dwarf-warriors he had rescued, and of the adventures he had been on down
in the deepest, darkest depths of the Syladras Mountains.
Benyar
knew exactly what would happen: his father would praise his name and lift him
high, calling him his ‘true heir’ before taking delivery of the huge amount of
ancient, lost treasure Gorgrim would doubtlessly bring back with him. Thane
Rhodd Steelshatter, patriarch of the Steelshatter house-clan and one of eleven
High Councilmen in the Ironrend Covenant, would then appear – it had to be him,
Benyar knew his father had orchestrated a deal with Thane Rhodd.
Thane
Thored would bow to Thane Rhodd and gift him gold and jewels from some dark,
shadowy corner of the Pits. Then, as
everyone was cheering and celebrating Gorgrim’ victory, King Boragsson II,
himself a member of the Steelshatter house-clan and father of Thane Rhodd,
would arrive in a great fanfare and uplift Benyar’s father to the position of
High Councilman as reward for the Volostag house-clan’s service to the
Syladrian Halflings.
King
Boragsson II would take Thane Thored, his eldest son Benyar, and the
glory-draped Gorgrim into the High Chamber where they would make oaths upon the
High Seat – all were necessary, for it was not just Thored being sworn-in, it
was also the heirs who would one day take his place. Once complete, though, it
would be Thane Thored Volostag who then became the twelfth councillor to the
king, and would ensure his family joined the list of most noble households from
which kings and queens could be elected – and Benyar would be his direct heir. And
in that moment of familial glory, Thane Thored would look at his eldest son,
Benyar, and he would curl his lip and shake his head. And Benyar would not
care.
If father became king, the
Halfling-folk of the Syladras Mountains would be doomed, Benyar thought. His father’s
antiquated views on how Halfling life should be – separate, aloof to the
problems of the Upper World, and wasted on pointless quests for glory against
monsters in the Pits – would drive his people to ruin. Benyar knew, however,
that if his brother Gorgrim returned from the Pits with so much as a whiff of
glory upon him, his father’s place upon the Ironrend Covenant was secured –
such was the agreement between Thane Thored and Thane Rhodd.
Benyar
was aware of the honour involved in being a member of a house-clan upon the
Ironrend Covenant; the thousands-of-years-old organisation assisted the king in
the governance of all things that took place under the Syladras Mountains. The
young Dwarf knew, though, that change was coming. Not normal change for the
Halfling-folk, such as a new golbin threat, or a shift in the Stones. Nor was
it a change that would just affect the Halfling peoples. No, whatever was
coming, was far greater. He could feel it in his bones.
Sick
of his father and his own thoughts, Benyar tossed his fork down and left his
seat without a backwards glance. He heard his mother sigh and his father let
out a huff of amusement, but Benyar
had better things to be doing. He left the dimly-lit stone hall and strove
deeper into his family’s residence. Losing himself in the great stone corridors
of artisan-level craftsmanship, hewn straight into the insides of the mountains
in which the Syladrian Halflings lived, Benyar tried to think of some way to
convince his father that there was power in alliances. Perhaps Gorgrim can help, he thought. Perhaps his experience in the Pits has changed him.
Benyar
doubted it, though. Gorgrim knew he was the house-clan favourite over his elder
brother, though rights of succession still meant that, should Thane Thored die,
Benyar was first in-line to receive his wealth and titles – a fact that made Gorgrim
bitter towards his elder sibling. We
shall see, Benyar thought as he turned a corner and walked past the
life-sized statue of his great-grandfather, Amensus. Flesh of fine white marble
and eyes of intricately-cut gemstones, even in death Amensus Volostag was an
indomitable figure: tall and broad – for a Dwarf, at least – with arms as solid
as tree-trunks and a replica of his mighty hammer in his hands.
Amensus’
statue did not stand with the others in the house-clan hall where Benyar’s
mother, father, and sisters were eating. One-hundred years ago, Amensus had
been involved in a civil dispute, the nature of which every Volostag knew but
never spoke of. Thane Thored’s father had attempted to usurp rule of the
Syladrian Halflings, though his attempts had been thwarted when his plans were
discovered by the Ironrend Covenant.
For the Volostags, all that mattered was that
Amensus had been on the losing side and had been tried for and found guilty of
high treason. As a result, he had been forced to swear upon the Heartstone
itself – a legendary and ancient Dwarf relic – that he would enter the Pits in
search of only the greatest glory: the acclamation of such great glory that
one’s previous crimes were outweighed by the magnanimity of new deeds. For
most, this meant the destruction of a great and legendary monster that would
either lift the Oath of Stone from the criminal and earn them their freedom, or
mete out their punishment in the form of a glorious death in battle.
Benyar’s
grandfather had never returned when he was sent into the Pits. He had taken
with him his great hammer, Lightstorm, the most valuable weapon-heirloom that
the Volostag family had previously possessed. At least a millennia old,
Lightstorm was a weapon shrouded in myth and familial tale – though talk of the
weapon had ceased as soon as it became clear that Amensus Volostag was never
coming back from the Pits. It was not well-to-do for a house-clan on the cusp
of having a seat upon the Ironrend Covenant to speak of past transgressions and
failures.
With
another long, sad sigh, the young Benyar turned and left the statue of the
grandfather he never knew and walked back into the shadowy corridors of his
home. I hope bein’ a high councilman is
worth it, Benyar thought as he wandered into the shadows once again.
*
The under-mountain
metropolis of Khur-Karzana was the beating heart of the Syladrian Halfling way
of life. From the mines came gold, silver, gemstones, copper and iron in great
buckets and barrows. From those deep, dark places the treasures of the
mountains were taken to the High Forges – great coal-powered furnaces from
which came the most beautiful creations one could imagine. Bars of gold and
silver as large and thick as a forearm were piled high onto mule and pony-drawn
carts and wheeled away from the towering furnaces. Others, piled high with
copper, iron and steel, went another way, destined to become enormous hammers,
swords, shields, and every kind of armour that existed. Polished gemstones of
every imaginable colour poured from the mines, polished for the artisan Gnomes
who would cut and fashion them into delicate trinkets worth more than the
finest townhouse.
Then
there were the coins. The many long, wide streets of Khur-Karzana that arched
this way and that through the Syldras Mountains like stone veins were packed
full of Halfling-folk – and where there were people, there was money. Coins the
size of a Dwarf’s palm flowed like golden nectar through the streets,
emblazoned with the bearded face and name of King Boragson II on one side, and
on the other a mighty sword and two crossed axes. The richest Dwarves and
Gnomes were unimaginably wealthy, owning vast quantities of gold that they kept
hidden away in giant vaults. Even those who were poorest had a little to their
names.
Coin
changed hands and business was done in the streets that ran like arteries
through the mountains, as pony-pulled wagons carrying huge boxes and crates of
goods from the forges rattled through the great caverns and caves that made up
Khur-Karzana. Stone buildings on all sides that were hewed out of the very
mountain’s rock squatted low and stoically gazed out over the streets. The
light from their windows, low and golden-glowing, seeped out onto the great
iron brazier-lit cobbles of the cave-streets.
But
everything led to one place. All the gold that came and went, like blood, passed
through a heart. In the greatest natural cavern under the mountain, known as
Kava-Toa, sat the High Chamber. The great stone hall was decked with the
statues of the mightiest warriors and ornamented with thousands of trophies from
only the most heroic battles. It sat on a huge shelf of stone on the far-side
of a river of molten rock, only accessible by a long and wide stone bridge that
was guarded at all times by elite Dwarf guards called the Ironrenders. The
fierce guards wore entire suits of heavy plate armour, fashioned to be dark and
menacing, with covered faces but holes to allow for their beards to hang
through. The High Chamber was where the king and the Ironrend Covenant met to
discuss matters of state, and on normal days, the was empty aside from the Ironrenders
in their heavy armour that watched its great gates and the long, wide bridge.
But today was no normal day.
That
very bridge was packed with Dwarf-folk and many Gnomes. Benyar had counted
around four-hundred of the Halfling-folk. Everyone with as much as a drop of
Volostag blood was present – fifth cousins, thrice-removed aunts and uncles,
even the unpopular Loran-Volostags had turned up for the occasions, though they
stood separately to everyone else in a small group of two-dozen.
‘It’s
nice o’ them to come,’ Benyar’s mother had said when Thane Thored had begun to
grumble. ‘At the very least, they make up numbers a little. An’ don’t you go
kickin’ up a fuss – we’re standin’ in the middle of a crowd o’ your family. Who
knows who’ll hear wha’ ye say.’
Thane
Thored had glared at his wife. ‘I am the ‘ead of the Volostag family. I am house-clan
patriarch and wha’ I say-…’
‘Shut
up, Da,’ Benyar said with a sigh. ‘We could be standin’ ‘ere fer hours yet, an’
you bein’ a miserable sod isn’t gonna make time pass faster.’
‘Benyar!’ his mother hissed. ‘The same
goes for ye! Show your father some bleedin’ respect!’
Thane
Thored glared at his son. ‘Nae respect for your kin; nae respect for your
people’s way o’ life; nae respect fer your position in the house-clan. Ye’re no
Dwarf. Run along to your tall, thin friends down south.’
Benyar
shrugged a shoulder. ‘Still, if ye’d ‘ad some ‘elp from the Vidorians, yer
brother may be standin’ next to ya to celebrate the Volostag victory. Instead,
his bones have returned to the Stone.’ Benyar pulled an unappreciative face and
shook his head. ‘An’ all this nonsense with the Pits. One Vidorian Legion –
even a Garedian army from the Free Kingdoms – an’ this whole farce wit’
monsters and goblins’d be over before ye knew it.’
Thored
glared at his eldest son. ‘An’ ‘ow’d ye know tha’? ‘Ow’d ye know the tall-folk
wouldn’t jus’ pull down our stone halls an’ call us their conquered, like they
do everythin’ else they touch?’
Benyar
glared up at his father, unafraid. ‘Because they’re goin’ to end up ‘ere at
some point anyway. ‘Ow long d’ya think it’ll be before some scout party
stumbles across the Great Gates of Khur-Karzana? Then they’ll come wit’ fire an’ sword.’
‘Enough!’ Amelie hissed and smacked both
Thane Thored and Benyar’s shoulders with the back of her hand. ‘Ye’ll both put
this stupid quarrel to rest this instant.
Benyar, if ye’re so desperate to be a political player, perhaps ye’d be
best tryin’ to ensure your family gets its place in the Ironrend Covenant,
instead o’ causin’ a scene on the High Chamber’s very doorstep!’
Thane
Thored snorted, folding his big arms across his chest and looking away from his
son. ‘Him? A member o’ the Ironrend Covenant? Not on my watch.’
The
entirety of the Volostag house-clan had come out to celebrate Gorgrim’s return
from the Pit – for it was rare anyone ever went into the Pits voluntarily in
the search for glory, and even just one of a group of adventurers returning
would see to it that their names was recorded within the Book of the Stone. The
Halfling-folk crowded both sides of the long bridge to the High Chamber,
stopping a few dozen paces from its great, carved doors which were flanked by
two large groups of dark-armoured Ironrenders. Benyar found himself
uninterested though, beyond finding out whether or not his brother was still
alive. He’ll be fine, he thought to himself. He’s a good swordsman.
Time
ticked on. The molten rock hundreds and hundreds of feet below them continued
to bubble and seethe. Gradually, the crowd grew and grew as more and more the
common folk of Khur-Karzana heard word that someone may be returning from the
Pits. Excitement grew, and soon enough, the entirety of the huge stone bridge
was flooded with several thousand of the Halfling folk. The Dwarf men, all
bearded and braided, muttered and grumbled to one-another through their
magnificent manes of facial hair. A few wore armour and carried magnificent
weapons with them, though most simply wore common shirts and doublets. The
women, some brawnier than the men, chatted and compared tips on hair-plaiting,
cooking, armour-care, and weapon-use. Like the men, a few of them wore their
armour and carried their weapons with them, comparing axe-size and
shield-posture.
The
Gnomes were much quieter. They were tucked in amongst the Dwarves, wide-eyed
and round-faced, with large ears that seemed to hear everything yet repeat none
of it audibly. They whispered, tucking the intricate and delicate tools of
their varied artisan trades into their belts and making quiet conversation with
their friends and kin.
‘By
the Stone, where is tha’ son o’ mine?’ Thane Thored grunted, adjusting his
great sword, Trollbane, where it hung from the leather strap about his broad
chest. Of course he called it Trollbane, Benyar
thought with a disdainful sniff. He went
into the mines once an’ came out again draped in glory ‘cos he ‘eld a single
troll’s ‘ead – no-one even knows if it was him who killed the damn troll, he
was simply the last sod to be left alive. Benyar said nothing, instead
folding his arms across his chest and lazily resting his hand upon pommel of the
fine sword which hung at his waist.
More
time passed, and the mood of the crowd began to change. Though a few merchants
had arrived with great trays of ale and sweetbreads, their wares had done
little to calm the worry that was beginning to set in – particularly amongst
the most immediate Volostags.
‘Where
is brother Gorgrim?’ Berra asked, her long, golden-blonde hair in two
spiralling buns on either side of her head. She pulled on the sleeve of the
flowing green-silk dress that her mother wore.
‘I
thought he was supposed to be ‘ere by now,’ Derra echoed, her bright eyes
looking up at her mother. Like her sister, her hair was in two identical buns
either side of her round head.
Amelie
smiled down at them and took one of each of their hands in either of hers.
‘He’ll be here soon, girls,’ she said. ‘Don’t you both go worryin’ yourselves now.’
Benyar
glanced up at his plate and mail-wearing father beside him. ‘Perhaps he’d be
‘ere sooner if he had some Vid-…’
‘Don’t
you damn-well say it,’ Thane Thored snarled. ‘Tha’s yer brother yer talkin’ about.’
Benyar
glared at his father. ‘An’ if he’s dead, ye can live with the knowledge that if
he’d ‘ad a few brave Humans at his back to ‘elp ‘im on ‘is quest, he might’ve
made it back alive.’
Thane
Thored’s grey-bearded face twisted in wrath. His big hands clenched into heavy
fists and for a moment Benyar thought that he was going to strike him. Then,
from the far end of the long bridge leading to the High Chamber, there came a
yell. ‘He comes!’ a low voice called out. ‘He returns!’
A
great cheer went up from the assembled crowds, and Thane Thored lost interest
in his eldest son. He strode out from where he stood in the crowd and into the
middle of the road to greet his youngest boy, barging into Benyar as he went.
Benyar felt his fist tighten around the hilt of his blade and he gritted his
teeth to try and control some of his anger. That
fat prick, he thought darkly, screwing his eyes closed and taking a deep
breath. One day I’ll-…
Someone
whacked his elbow and he opened his eyes. He spun and glared into the furious
eyes of his mother, who still held one and of each of his twin sisters in one
of hers. Eyes brimming with fury, she pursed her lips together and shook her
head at him. ‘You,’ she mouthed, ‘you…’
Benyar
dropped his gaze, suddenly ashamed. It’s
not worth it, he told himself. The house-clan
is all; don’t wreck everythin’ over grudges. Benyar’s hand fell from the
hilt of his sword, and he looked back towards the road to see a lone Dwarf
walking across the bridge towards his father. Fighting for a better view,
Benyar pushed his way to the edge of the crowd and leaned out, gazing down the
length of the long stone structure.
His
brother had left with a dozen other Dwarves; some of the hardiest, bravest and
talented fighters that Syladrian Dwarves had to offer had gone with him. Yet
now, only one of them returned. Suddenly afraid for his brother, Benyar
strained his eyes to get a better look. The lone Dwarf making his way across
the bridge towards the High Chamber was strong-armed and short-bearded. The
dark hair that fell from his face was not enough to hide the cuts, bruises, and
fresh scars that criss-crossed his flesh. His platemail hauberk seemed too big
for him: it hung loosely around his broad shoulders and was tatty at the arms,
covered in many puncture-holes and tears. There was a huge dent in his helmet,
and the back of it had cracked opened, allowing for a cascade of his long,
jet-black hair to fall out.
The
Dwarf was holding something in his battered and cut hands. He staggered
forwards, clearly wounded and exhausted, clutching his charge in both of his
fists. Word quickly began to flutter through the crowd. ‘He’s found something,’
people were saying. ‘He’s recovered a great relic, a treasure of old. It must
be priceless – it’s all he’s carrying.’
Benyar
leaned out further from the crowd, just as the lone Dwarf reached where Thane
Thored was standing. The crowd fell silent as the lone Dwarf in his battered
armour fell to his knees and held the item in his hands up to Benyar’s father.
‘Gorgrim,’
Thored said in a short breath. ‘My son, what has ‘appened?’ He placed his hands
on his son’s battered and sagging shoulders.
The
battered Gorgrim raised his eyes and held up the object in his hands. ‘We spent
three weeks searchin’ the Pits,’ Gorgrim began. His voice was not as Benyar
remembered it – it had been strong and boisterous, full of life and always
quick to laugh. Now, it sounded hollow and there was an echo to it – the
far-off quake of too many memories.
‘We
went deeper an’ deeper,’ Gorgrim continued, ‘fightin’ hordes o’ goblins without
any problem. But-…’
‘Now
is not the time,’ Thane Thored said and placed his hands on each of his
youngest son’s sullen, sagging cheeks. ‘We shall remember the dead an’
commemorate ‘em accordingly. But this is a good day – for you have returned! Now
is the time for celebration! Tell me, son, what is that in your hands? What
‘ave ye brought me?’
From
the sidelines, Benyar could see the exhaustion in Gorgrim’s weary face.
‘Father,’ he said in a fatigued, thirst-strapped voice, ‘I bring ye yer
father’s hammer.’ He lifted his hands up, presenting a warhammer of shimmering,
folded steel. Wrought about a strong and sturdy haft and emblazoned in
glittering gold with a great star, Benyar looked at the warhammer with his
mouth wide in awe. All across the bridge to the High Chamber, silence fell as
whispers spread of just what had been found.
‘Father,’
Gorgrim said in a choked, weary voice, ‘I bright ye Lightstorm.’
Thane
Thored looked down at the hammer presented to him by his youngest son. For a
few moments, he said nothing. Benyar could see on his face that he was unhappy.
He wanted gold an’ riches, the eldest
son thought. He wanted a way to buy into
the Ironrend Covenant – and a hammer doesn’t give ‘im that. More
importantly, though, it was a reminder – a symbol of the dishonour that once
befell the Volostag family.
Slowly,
Thane Thored took the hammer from his son and held it aloft in both hands.
‘This is a great day!’ he cried loud, though Benyar could hear the uncertainty
in his voice. ‘My son has returned, and he has brought a great house-clan
heirloom back from the Pits with him! The dead died gloriously, and their
heroism shall no-doubt earn them a place in the Book of Stone!’
A
great cheer went up from those assembled, and people began to chant the
Volostag house-clan name. Hands clapped and feet stamped, and the great cavern
in which the Halfling-folk of the Syladras Mountains had communed began to
shake. But Benyar could hear a few folk crying. The other house-clans are here, he thought with a sigh. Some dozen went in, yet only one comes back.
Then,
just as the cheering was reaching its climax, the great doors to the High
Chamber opened. Whilst the roar of great cogs and gears twisting and turning
echoed through the enormous cavern of Kava-Toa, the Ironrenders guarding the
great doors stepped aside in perfect formation. From the vast space within,
stepped two figures – both of whom Benyar recognised. The smaller of the two
men and the youngest of the pair was Thane Rhodd Steelshatter: imposing,
dark-featured, with mahogany-brown hair and a great beard spilling out from
beneath the winged ceremonial steel helmet he wore. Beside him was his father,
King Boragsson II – resplendent in glorious years and dark blue and
gold-trimmed armour. His silver-white beard had not thinned, neither had the
hair from his head; his features promised experience and wisdom, and his dark
green eyes glinted with cunning and calculation. He carried at his hip
Thundersoul, a sword held by the Steelshatter family since before the Eons began
– it was as much a right to office as the huge golden crown upon his head.
The
entire assembled crowd fell to their knees before their king as two-dozen
Ironrenders poured out from the High Chamber behind their king. Benyar followed
suit, dropping to a knee. Before him, the procession continued as he had
expected it would: his father and younger brother also kneeled until the king
bade them to stand. Any moment they’ll
call me, Benyar thought. I’ll be made
to swear upon the High Seat to be true to the Ironrend Covenant. Benyar
understood the importance, and knew that one day he would have to step up and
take his place amongst the Halfling nobility when his father died. Maybe then I’ll ‘ave a chance to undo some
o’ the havoc he’ll doubtlessly sow.
‘Thane
Thored Volostag,’ King Boragsson II said in a deep, booming voice. ‘Ye an’ yer
son, Gorgrim, come before your king and the Ironrend Covenant draped in glory.
For it ‘as been many a year since a Halfling has returned from the Pits with
such a prestigious treasure.’
The
king paused and cast his eye out across the assembled crowds. For a moment, the
kneeling Halflings held their breath as they looked up at their king, proud and
glittering. They all knew what should come next, that the Ironrend Covenant
should gain its twelfth house-clan representative. Benyar knew it, his mother
and sisters knew it, the Gnomes and other Dwarves crowding the bridge knew it.
‘I
thank you for your heroism and bravery,’ King Boragsson II said to Gorgrim with
a nod of his head. ‘You shall be well-rewarded for your heroism.’
Benyar
watched as Thane Rhodd Steelshatter stepped closer to his father. ‘The High
Seat is ready for their oaths, my king, should you-…’
The
king raised a hand. ‘No,’ he said slowly and quietly, shaking his head. ‘Maybe
one day, but not today.’
Benyar
watched as his father quickly staggered to his feet. ‘Wha’s this?’ he said. ‘My
son and I are ready, we-…’
King
Boragsson II shook his head. ‘I know wha’ my son promised ye. He was a fool.
Your family shall not be uplifted into the Ironrend Covenant this day.’
There
was a collective gasp from the on-looking Halflings, followed by murmurs and
whispers as words of rumour and speculation flew from lips to the ears of
others. Benyar’s eyes widened in surprise, and beside him he heard his mother
gasp in shock. His twin sisters broke into a torrent of questions: ‘What’s
going on, Mother?’ and ‘I don’t understand, what’s happening?’
Benyar
was about to step from the crowd and approach his brother and father to see if
he could be of any assistance when, quite suddenly, King Boragsson II looked
him dead in the eye. His gaze was as sharp and piercing as the legendary sword
at his hip, and his face was as cold as the white of his beard. ‘Your house-clan
is not fit to be upon the Ironrend
Covenant,’ he said in a threatening hiss. Without another word, he turned and
marched back into the High Chamber, his cohort of Ironrenders with him.
Thane
Rhodd looked desperately from the fast-retreating figure of the king to Thane
Thored before eventually breaking into a jog to catch up with his father. Benyar
watched as the figures disappeared back into the dark space within the wide,
low building. He could see pillars and more statues through the gloom. With a
great boom, the doors to the High Chamber
slammed shut, and the Volotstag house-clan, along with the hundreds of other
Halflings present, were left in a stunned silence.
For
a moment, no-one moved or spoke. It had seemed so certain to all present;
surely Gorgrim Volostag’s return from the Pits provided all the glory and
excuse one needed to be uplifted into the Ironrend Covenant? So few ever went
down to the Pits voluntarily, and even fewer ever came back – particularly with
a long-lost family heirloom. But Benyar had a terrible feeling he knew why his
family’s passage into true Halfling greatness had been denied: the look on King
Boragsson’s face had been one of utter distaste – and it had been directed
straight at him.
He’s heard, Benyar thought nervously, glancing
at his boots. Around him, he could hear whispers: people were talking, tongues
were wagging and ears were listening. ‘I just ‘eard ‘im talkin’ to ‘is mother,’
one voice was saying, ‘an’ he was sayin’ ‘ow we should go lookin’ fer ‘elp from
Men an’ Elves.’
‘Pah!’
a Gnomish voice said in reply, shrill and firm. ‘Us? Need help? Never!’
Benyar
swallowed, playing with a long black plait in his beard. He glanced around
himself, suddenly aware that there were eyes upon him. People were whispering.
People were talking. He’s ‘eard that I
think we should look for allies, Benyar thought frantically, swallowing a
nervous lump in his throat. An’ now he’s
denied us passage. That must be it. That must-…
Benyar’s
brother and father stood where they had before the king, right before the doors
to Thane Thored’s great goal: the High Chamber. Those doors were tightly
closed, perhaps to the Volostag house-clans forever, and once again a row of
Ironrenders had arranged themselves in front of the high, heavy structure to
block any attempt at entry. Thane Thored had turned, though. His eyes were
no-longer on the doors to the High Chamber. Now, they were fixed on his eldest
son. Cold and brimming with fury, for a few moments Thane Thored said nothing.
Beside him, Gorgrim looked heartbroken. His eyes were wide with sorrow and his
posture had fallen. He looked like a carcass in his ruined armour and clothing,
propped up on sticks and lashed together with string.
Thane
Thored approached Benyar, holding Lightstorm in his hands. As soon as he stood
before Benyar, he thrust the heavy steel hammer into the hands of his eldest
son. Finally, the patriarch of the Volostag house-clan opened his mouth and
spoke: ‘A fitting weapon for ye. Just like my father ye’ve heaped shame upon us
all,’ he said with a wide sweep of his arm at the crowds around him. ‘Ye’ve
humiliated us. Your ploughin’ opinions on so-called allies ‘ave left us with none.’
‘Father,
this is no’ what I wanted,’ Benyar cried. ‘I jus’ thought tha’-…’
‘Ye
thought what, hm?’ Thane Thored
snarled at Benyar. ‘Ye thought tha’ spoutin’ off about how the Halfling-folk so
desperately need outsiders to help us
would see us carried to the High Chamber atop Dwarf-shoulders?’
From
nowhere, Benyar’s mother appeared. ‘Thored, tha’s enough,’ she said sternly.
‘Not now, not ever. This can be fixed.’
‘Fixed?’ Thored yelled, startling some of
the Halflings still close by. ‘This cannae be fixed! King Boragsson will no’ admit us into the Ironrend Covenant
for as long as he is a part o’ this
family!’ The Volostag house-clan patriarch jabbed a finger into Benyar’s chest.
‘Everythin’ I’ve worked for me entire life has just been brought to
ruin about me because my weak son needs to be friends with the tall folk!’
Amelie
said nothing. Instead, she took Berra and Derra by the hands and led them away
with nothing more than a reproachful glare at her husband. Benyar felt crushed.
She agrees, he thought, gazing at the
floor. She agrees wit’ Father.
Gorgrim
appeared at his father’s side, eyes ringed with great grey bags. His face was
blank and his eyes faraway. He seemed to have aged three decades since Benyar
last saw him. His face was weathered and there was blood dried around his
nostrils and at the corner of his mouth. He looked at Benyar – or rather looked
straight through him.
‘I’m
sorry, Gorgrim,’ Benyar said quietly.
‘Don’t,’
Gorgrim said in a low whisper, his eyes flitting away from Benyar’s face. ‘Just
don’t. My friends died to try an’ bring this family a few ounces o’ glory. A
dozen good men lie dead in the Pits – for nothin’.’
‘Gorgrim…’
‘Don’t.’
Silence fell between the three Volostag men
for a few moments. Eventually, Thane Thored put his hand on the
exhausted-looking Gorgrim’s shoulder and began to walk away from Benyar. Just
as he was leaving, he turned and looked over his shoulder at Benyar. ‘Ye are no
son of mine,’ he said in a low, dark voice, before barging his way through the
departing crowds and back towards the rest of the metropolis of Khur-Karzana. Gorgrim
shot Benyar a deeply wounded look before disappearing after his father.
Benyar
stood alone on the bridge that led to the High Chamber for a long time,
Lightstorm, his grandfather’s hammer and the symbol of his shame, heavy in his
hands. The rest of the crowd had long-since left, and, aside for the Ironrenders
who stood as still as the Stone itself, he was alone. He wanted to be able to
cast his ideas on alliances aside and grovel at the feet of his father, to beg
for forgiveness, and to weep his regret before his brother, but he could not.
The Syladrian Halflings had been too successful for too long: there was gold
everywhere, there had been for centuries; goblin incursions were at an all-time
low; wealth ran through Khur-Karzana like water down a deep, wide river. It
made most complacent, for men like his father thought that the occasional foray
against goblins was enough to constitute a continuation of house-clan honour.
Benyar, however, was worried. Things were quiet. Too quiet.
As
he gazed at the stone of the Syladras Mountains arching away above him, Benyar
found no way to reconcile his beliefs with the love of his family. Maybe it was
Dwarven pride that stopped him, but he could not bring himself to seek out his father
and apologise. He could not stand before a man so opposed to what he believed
in and pretend he was sorry for his opinions. He would not do it.
Heavy
of heart, Benyar turned and began to make his way back across the great stone
bridge. ‘By the Stone,’ he said to himself in a whisper, ‘wha’ ‘ave I done to
myself? Wha’ am I to do?’
*
Benyar had returned
home long after the rest of his family, late into the night. Of course, he had
no idea it was night-time. The city of Khur-Karzana never slept, and was
constantly lit by torches and fat braziers belching coal-light. The air was
always alive with the roar of industry: the hissing rumble of the forges, the clang-clanging of anvils, the cries and
laughter of a thousand voices. Halfling-folk under the mountains slept when
they needed to, not at night like the Men and Elves of the Upper World.
Those he had passed had all steered
well clear of his path. Hands had shot to mouths, Dwarf-women had whispered to
the folk they walked with, whilst the Dwarf-men had glared at Benyar
unappreciatively. ‘We don’t need the tall-folk,’ Benyar heard one
gruff-looking, one-eyed Dwarf snarl as he passed. ‘They spend all their lives
up there in the empty air – their heads are full o’ nothin’!’
Has
the entire city heard? Benyar thought as he went, his cheeks reddening in
humiliation beneath his dark beard. He knew well he could no-longer stay in
Khur-Karzana – maybe not even in one of the smaller settlements under the
Syladras Mountains. He could hear names following him already: ‘Craven,’ one
voice said. ‘It’s a grand job ‘is brother is nae a coward.’
Benyar feared he would have to leave
the Syladras Mountains altogether. Amongst the Syladrians, it was rare for a
Dwarf or Gnome ever left their mountains to journey into the Upper World, and
those that did were never welcome to return – unless given express permission
by the king or another member of the Ironrend Covenant. Benyar had heard
stories and rumours, though, that in other Dwarf-kingdoms it was becoming
increasingly less taboo.
As he stood outside the grand home
in which he had grown up, Benyar felt only cold. The low, wide windows held no
warming, promising glow of welcome, and the great wooden door was firmly
sealed. The very mountain-stone into which the large home was carved, with its
wide, flat walls and hefty support-columns, seemed to frown at him. Gripped
with shame and heartbreak, Benyar sighed and slowly ascended the short flight
of three stairs to the front of the house. I
need to leave, he thought as he went. I’ll
just grab a few o’ my things an’ I’ll leave the Syladras Mountains forever.
I’ll make a new like wit’ the Tall Folk, away from ‘ere, from pryin’ eyes an’
whisperin’ tongues. Away from my brother and father. He placed his hand on
the heavy wood of the door and pushed.
It did not move. They’ve locked me out, Benyar thought,
his eyes and mouth wide with shock. How
dare they! This is as much my ‘ome as it is theirs! He raised a fist and
banged heavily on the door, aware that those Halflings passing in the street
behind him were staring. Everyone’s
starin’. Everyone knows. Oh, the shame of it.
No-one came. Not even Ermoldulus came
to open the door for Benyar. For a few minutes, he stood, staring at the door
in disbelief. Benyar thought about taking his grandfather’s hammer and smashing
the door down – but he knew that causing such an aggressive scene in the
streets would draw the attention of the guard. He really ‘as disowned me, Benyar thought to himself, suddenly
overcome with shock and sorrow. He sank down to his knees, staring at the door
in disbelief. His spirit was gone – he suddenly felt empty. Who am I if I’m nae a Volostag? he
thought, completely at a loss.
Then, fire burned in his belly.
Quickly, Benyar scrambled to his feet and looked around, glancing up at the
walls, windows and support-columns that made up the house front. This is a test, he thought to himself as
he grabbed onto the lowest windowsill. He tucked his grandfather’s heavy hammer
into the belt he wore. It was too large and hung awkwardly, catching the back
of his knees at one end and beating his upper-back with the other. This is tha’ lousy ol’ Stone-forsaken prick
o’ a father’s trial. He wants to see if I’ll give up. He wants to watch me
fail. I ‘ave to get inside an’ prove I ain’t goin’ down without a fight!
Benyar heaved himself up, climbing
higher and higher up the front of his home, aware that Halflings in the street
behind him were stopping to watch what he was doing. He wants to humiliate me in front o’ all these people – may the Stone
swallow ‘im! Once I’ve left the mountains, I’ll never see ‘em again. He wants
me to come in weepin’ and beggin’, but I won’t. I’ll stand tall an’ proud before
‘im, a true Volostag-…
Benyar heaved himself up onto the
next small ledge in the face of the stone house and suddenly became aware of
raised voices from within. One was definitely his father’s, but the other was
too quiet to properly make out. People in the street below were stopping and
pointing up at him, calling out remarks and making it all the more difficult
for him to hear what was going on. ‘Perhaps he thinks that if he climbs high
enough, he’ll escape the mountain and be able to find his tall friends,’ Benyar
heard a high-pitched Gnomish voice say. A chorus of low chuckles drifted up to
him.
Gritting his teeth, Benyar pulled
himself up onto the ledge of the largest window in the front of his home. The
window itself was an inch or so taller than he was, and was large and square,
lined with criss-crossing lead that formed a diamond-shape pattern upon the
glass. His grandfather’s hammer weighed heavily upon his back and for a moment
he thought he would topple backwards and fall into the street. He managed to
reach out and grab the windowpane before he fell, and peered in through the
glass.
Benyar eyed the scene through the
single-glazed, leaded window. He pressed his face against the glass to better
see the inside, for the criss-crossing lead lining upon the window distorted
what was going on inside. Clearly, though, Benyar could identify the two
figures: one was his father, Thane Thored; the other was his brother, Gorgrim.
They stood in the wide and long chamber in which the thane and his wife slept.
It was a grand room, with carved-wood bookcases up against the wall, and a
deep, wide bed at the far end. A great many hunting trophies and animal skulls
from forays against the goblins and hunts in the depths of the mines were
decked upon the walls, and dead, empty eye-sockets stared down at the two
quarrelling Dwarf men below.
Benyar knew that his arguing family
members could not see him, for they were both standing in a corner of the room
close to where the wide bed was. Gorgrim was still in his battered armour and
had his sword at his hip, though Thane Thored had changed into a dark brown
doublet and some heavy, leather trousers. Both men were yelling at one-another,
and Benyar pressed himself against the glass of the window to try and hear.
Below, the Halfings in the street were watching him, though most seemed to have
lost interest and had wandered off, back about their own business.
‘This is as much your own fault as
Benyar’s!’ Thane Thored roared at his younger son. ‘Ye were supposed to come
back wit’ gold! Wit’ jewels! Instead, ye brought back tha’ accursed weapon and
reminded the entirity of Khur-Karzana, the Ironrend Covenant, and the ploughin’
king ‘imself that we’ve ‘ad a Stonesworn in our family!’
‘There was nothin’ down there!’ Gorgrim yelled back, taking off his ruined
helmet and hurling it across the bedroom. ‘Skeletons and shadows – no gold, no
jewels, nothin’.’
‘If there was nothin’ down there,
then wha’ killed yer comrades, hm?’ Thane Thored growled, folding his arms
across his big chest.
Benyar watched as Gorgrim turned
away and placed both his hands on a low writing-desk beside the bed. For a
moment, he said nothing, but Benyar could see him fiddling with the quills,
letter-opening knives, and sheets of parchment left there.
Eventually, he spoke. ‘We travelled
down into the Pits for two weeks, hammerin’ the goblins, trolls, and whatever
other nonsense we found. Then, we ‘appened across this dark passageway tha’
didn’t show on any o’ the maps. It looked ancient though, far older than
anythin’ else in the Pits. Thinkin’ it was a chance at long-lost and forsaken
treasure, we all ‘eaded down there an’ into the dark.’
Gorgrim
paused for a moment, biting his lip nervously. ‘Then things started to ‘appen,’
he said in a voice so quiet that Benyar almost couldn’t hear. The eldest
Volostag son pressed himself harder against the glass to try and make out what
was being said. ‘Bylar started ‘avin’ nightmares, and could say nowt but
“they’re comin’” when he was wakin’. Then we ‘appened across this ancient cache
of ol’-lookin’ weapons. Most of ‘em were too dusty an’ useless, but there was
this one sword tha’ we gave to Yldr as ‘is ‘ammer ‘ad shattered on the ‘ead of
a particularly large cavern-warg.’
‘Then
wha’?’ Thane Thored demanded.
Benyar
watched as Gorgrim lifted his exhausted eyes to his father. ‘Then, he began to
lose ‘is mind as well. Said the weapon was tellin’ ‘im to do things, makin’ ‘im
think dark thoughts. We awoke one night to find ‘im hackin’ apart Esmelda.’
Benyar’s
eyes widened as he listened at the window, and he saw his father step back away
from his son in shock. Gorgrim continued. ‘Then, on the thirtieth day, figures
appeared. I don’t know wha’ they were,’ he said quietly. ‘Shadowy Men, I think
– I couldn’t be sure. They fell upon us from the darkness and tore us apart. I
was the only one who managed to get away.’
There
was a moment of silence from inside the room. Eventually, Thane Thored spoke.
‘An’ yet ye ran from ‘em? From these Men-like creatures instead o’ standin’ an’
fightin’ ‘em?’
Gorgrim
whirled, his fists locked. ‘Wha’ was I to do?’ he yelled. ‘Die? They were too
strong! They were too good!’
‘Pah!’
Thored snorted. ‘Ye sound like tha’ stutterin’ fool Benyar. Men-like creatures?
Stronger than us Dwarves? ‘Ave ye gone mad?’
‘They
slaughtered us all!’ Gorgrim cried.
‘They butchered us like animals!’
‘Then
you should’ve fought ‘arder!’ Thane
Thored roared at his son. ‘Because all you managed to drag back from the Pits
was tha’ festerin’ hammer, and because o’ Benyar flappin’ on about ‘ow we need
the Vidorian Empire an’ the soldiers o’ the Free Kingdoms to ‘elp us with all
our deeds, the Volostag house-clan are honourless.
We will never be upon the
Ironrend Covenant, and I will never be
king!’
There
was a flash of shining steel. Benyar watched in horror as Gorgrim opened his
fist – in his right hand he held one of the long, devilishly sharp
letter-openers from the writing desk. Benyar threw all his weight into the
window and it shattered. He fell into the room, landing heavily upon the broken
glass and the stones beyond. He looked up – too late – to see his father lying
on the stone floor beside him. His eyes were wide and surprised and his mouth
hung open. The long, iron-grey hair about his head was slowly being stained
dark red by the blood pumping from the wound to his temple – in which the
small, steel letter-opener was buried.
Benyar
staggered to his feet and looked at his brother, who was standing over his
father’s body with wide eyes and a face twisted in anger. His fists were
clenched and held before him as if he were about to punch someone, and his
chest rose and fell heavily as he took shallow, fast breaths. ‘Gorgrim,’ Benyar
said in a whisper, ‘wha’ ‘ave ye done?’
Gorgrim
looked up, and for a moment he looked as if he were about to collapse – his
eyes seemed to glaze with tears, and his face twitched with, what Benyar
thought, was sorrow. ‘I’m sorry, Ben,’ he said quietly. ‘I’m so sorry.’
Benyar
shook his head and took a step back towards the window. ‘Why?’ he said in a
breath. ‘He was an ol’ fool, but-…’ Words failed Benyar and he held a hand out
to Gorgrim, gesturing between him and the corpse of their father.
‘I’m
sorry,’ Gorgrim said. ‘Really, I am.’
Suddenly,
the youngest Volostag son leapt forwards and grabbed hold of Benyar’s hand in
both of his own. Benyar looked down at Gorgrim’s bloody hands, and now his own
blood-smeared fist. ‘Gorgrim, no…’ he said in a breath.
‘Murderer!’
Gorgrim cried, shoving Benyar as hard as he could in the chest. ‘You killed
him! You killed Father!’
Benyar
tried to draw his sword but Gorgrim was too fast. Blow after blow rained down
on his head and face, and soon the young Dwarf was staggering around the room,
doing the best he could to keep his head protected by lifting his hands to
cover his face. Gorgrim kept yelling all the while: ‘Murderer! Killer! Traitor!
Treason! Treason!’
And
then he was back at the shattered window. Before he could help himself, Benyar
found himself gripping at the frame, trying not to let Gorgrim push him out. He
could hear cries from the street below – the crowd that had watched him clamber
up the face of his home and break through the window were now crying out for
the guards and watching what was taking place some twenty feet up the face of
the Volostag residence. ‘I knew ‘ee was a bad-‘un!’ someone was yelling from
below. ‘I knew it, I told ye!’
Glancing
over his shoulder, only now did Benyar truly appreciate the dizzying drop down
onto the cavern-street below. There were some thirty Halflings there,
Dwarf-folk and Gnomes, all watching what was going on. ‘Gorgrim, please,’
Benyar choked as his brother placed both his hands on his chest and began to
force him out of the window. ‘Please, don’t do this.’
The
crowd below gasped and shrieked as Benyar began to slip, too dazed and weary to
fight off his furious brother. He gripped the broken window-frame with all his
might, broken glass cutting his palms and the backs of his legs as he was
pushed further and further back. He could hear footsteps on the stairs, heavy
and fast – his mother, for Ermoldulus glided silently everywhere. If I can jus’ ‘ang on a little longer…
‘I’m
sorry, brother,’ Gorgrim said in a whisper. Benyar looked into his brother’s
dark eyes, ringed with great grey spheres. His black beard was frizzy and wiry,
flecked with blood and tatty, as if it had been pulled out in places. His face
had changed – there was a tightness in it he had never seen before. There was a
twitch in his eye, and line at the corner of his mouth. He’s insane, Benyar thought. He’s
lost his mind in the Pits.
A
shard of glass snapped and buried itself deep into Benyar’s hand. He cried out
and instinctively let go of the frame. In that moment, Gorgrim pushed into
Benyar’s chest with all his might. Benyar felt himself slip and desperately
tried to grab back onto the window frame, but it was too late. Before he could
even cry out, he was falling. He could feel the warm air of Khur-Karzana
whipping past him as he plunged downwards. Gorgrim,
ye bastard, Benyar thought as he fell. Ye
mad bastard.
He
crashed into the street, and the world went cold.
*
Benyar had always
wondered what it was like inside the High Chamber. He had dreamed of being able
to walk around the great, wide space and look at the detail wrought into the
great, high pillars and many gold-plated statues of kings that could stand between
them. He had wondered where the Covenant sat – at benches or a table? On
individual seats or on a large, amphitheatre-like pew?
There were fewer statues than he had
imagines in the great, wide, circular space, though around the edge of the room
there was a ring of carved columns. The walls were decorated in a fashion he
had expected: a great carved mural depicting the story of the Ironrend
Covenant, from King Borag Ironrend leading the other clans to the Syladras
Mountains some two-thousand years ago, up to the establishment of the Covenant
itself under his son, King Boragsson I. The rest of the available space upon
the circular walls was filled in with dramatic pictures telling of old tales –
wars with Elves, Dwarves slaying dragons and so-on. Benyar had been surprised
to see a little of the wall was even given over to Gnomish feats of heroism. He
recognised Gifu, the she-Gnome of legend who had ridden a mule into battle alone
against one-thousand goblins.
‘The charges laid against you are as
follows:’ Thane Barras Stoneshaper said, reading from the small scroll before
him, ‘breaking an’ entry into the home of the Volostag house-clan, and the
murder of Thane Thored Volostag, as well as the spread of treasonous talk
throughout city of Khur-Karzana. ‘Ave ye any last words to say in your
defence?’
An hour before, Benyar had been
dragged from his cell in the Durhzal Dungeons, stripped to the waist and
barefoot, then made to march through the streets in chains. He had been pelted
with rotted fruit, stones, even copper coins, as everyone had made an effort to
shame and humiliate the man convicted of the murder of one of the Syladrian
Halflings’ best-known thanes.
He had been escorted into the High
Chamber and made to kneel before King Boragsson II and the Ironrend Covenant.
The king, who sat in an enormous throne of stone and gold, the back of which
reached twenty feet into the air and was inscribed with the words ‘Whoever
shall sit here, may the weight of the Stone keep him forever humble,’ had not
said a word throughout Benyar’s brief trial. However, the eleven other
individuals sat either side of him on smaller stone seats had brought forth
countless witnesses.
The
house-clan patriarchs who had seats upon the Ironrend Covenant had plucked from
the streets every single person who had been outside the Volostag residence
that fateful night. Dwarf men and women, as well as a few Gnomes, had all
testified as to how they had seen him break into the home of the man who had
disowned him before the High Chamber the previous day.
‘He
seemed furious,’ one old Dwarf with a patchy beard and balding head had said.
‘Muttering and cursing t’ ‘imself as ‘ee went. All covered in weapons, too.
Seems clear ‘nuff t’ me wha’ ‘ee were plannin’.’
‘Smashed
the window in with his fists, he did,’ a young Dwarf-woman with a short, boyish
haircut said. ‘My Nancee and I saw it all from the street. If we’d known that he
was plannin’ to do ‘is father one, we’d’a clambered up there and tossed ‘im
down from the window ourselves!’
Benyar
felt like the entire world’s enemy. He knelt at the foot of the throne in the
circular chamber for hours whilst the golden flames thrown up by the huge, deep
fire pit in the middle of the room spat eerie shadows out across the walls.
Dozens of people came, called him a murderer, and left again. Even Gorgrim had
appeared. He had shown no remorse and had lied through his teeth, calling
Benyar a crazed, bitter psychopath and describing the attack he had committed
as if it were all Benyar’s doing. When he had tried to protest his younger
brother’s words, Benyar had been punched in the mouth by the surly Ironrender
standing beside him.
‘I
ask you again, Benyar, have ye anything to say in your defence?’
‘I
didn’t do it,’ he said in a low whisper. ‘It was Gorgrim.’
The
patriarchs who made up the Ironrend Covenant and the king himself all sighed
and rolled their eyes. ‘Very well,’ Thane Stoneshaper said with a roll of his
dark eyes and a pat of his long beard, ‘King Boragsson II and the Ironrend
Covenant understand that is what took place yesterday night: bitter following
your father’s disownment of you and the recognition you would never sit upon
the Ironrend Covenant or inherit your father’s titles, you returned to the
Volostag family residence – where ye were no-longer welcome. When this was made
clear to ye, ye decided to try an’ break into the building. This ye did by
climbin’ the face o’ the home an’ breakin’ the window tha’ led into yer
father’s quarters. Ye found ‘im there, alone and upset followin’ an argument
he’d just ‘ad with ‘is son and heir, Thane Gorgrim Volostag. Ye seized yer
opportunity an’ stabbed ‘im with a letter-opener.
‘When
Gorgrim, who ‘ad stormed out the room to get away from ‘is father, ‘eard the
upset, he re-entered an’ found ye standin’ o’er the body o’ the late Thane
Thored Volostag. The two of ye fought after ye made to attack Thane Gorgrim, as
ye were jealous of ‘is success down in the Pits, an’ Gorgrim managed to throw
ye out the very window through which ye entered,’ Thane Stoneshaper concluded. ‘I’ll
ask ye one final time – how d’ya plead?’
Broken,
Benyar shook his head. ‘Not guilty,’ he said. ‘I never liked Da, but I’d never
hurt the man. Never.’
‘Aye,
so ‘is mother said,’ Thane Gorr Magmapael called from where he sat beside King
Boragsson II. The short, fat Dwarf with a large ginger beard and a heavy brow
had sharp, glinting eyes that saw everything and exploited all details – he was
the only member of the Covenant who had spoken a word in Benyar’s favour. ‘Ye
cannae discount tha’, ‘is mother knows ‘im better than any o’ us. Wha’ if Gorgrim’s
lyin’?’
‘Yet
we’ve ‘eard she did not arrive until after Benyar had been tossed from the
window by Thane Volostag,’ Thane Neyti Norren, a frightening-faced,
silver-haired Dwarf-woman with arms like ancient tree-trunk snarled. ‘We cannae
simply use ‘er assumption tha’
Benyar’s innocent when all the signs point to his guilt.’
‘Come,
Gorr,’ Thane Brach Antillus said from beneath his staggeringly enormous blonde
beard, ‘ye ‘ave to admit tha’ the simple weight o’ testimony against the
defendant is enough to prove ‘is guilt. Besides – why would Gorgrim murder ‘is
own father? Folk saw ‘em together jus’ a few hours before, right outside these
doors!’
Thane
Magmapael sighed and fell silent, shaking his head in disagreement. ‘I don’t
like it,’ he said. ‘Somethin’ is fishy ‘bout all this.’
In
the pause that followed, Benyar became resigned to his fate. One-hundred years in the Durhzal Dungeons, he
thought. Tha’ or it’ll be the axe. Benyar
was unsure which he would prefer. At
least there’s a small chance o’ escape from Durhzal.
‘I’ve
‘eard enough,’ King Boragsson’s voice rocked the chamber, rumbling and
powerful. The silence seemed to get quieter in the wake of the powerful Dwarf’s
booming echo of speech. Benyar lifted his eyes to look at the resplendent
Dwarf, with his thick white beard and enormous golden crown of office. ‘I am
ready to pass judgement ‘avin’ listened to the advice of the Ironrend
Covenant.’
The
wrinkled, balding Gnomish scribe sitting just behind the king’s throne, so deep
in shadow Benyar had not seen him, rose to his feet and passed the king a long
roll of parchment – the proceedings from the trial. King Boragsson II barely so
much as glanced at the Man-sized piece of parchment before handing it back to
the scribe. He fixed his cold, hard gaze on Benyar and spoke again: ‘Benyar,
formerly o’ the Volostag house-clan, disowned son o’ the late Thane Thored Thored
Volostag an’ ‘is wife, Lady Amelie, an’ former brother of Thane Gorgrim
Volostag; I find ye guilty on account of all the crimes ye ‘ave committed. In
the five-hundred and ninety-ninth year o’ the Bright Epoch of the Dwarf and
Gnome-folk, on the day your brother, Gorgrim, returned from the Pits – the
first soul to do so in many years – out of anger and jealously, ye murdered
your father, Thane Thored.
‘Bitter
that ye had been disowned for your beliefs – that the Halfling-folk should seek
the ‘elp of Men in their battles with the goblins of the Below, itself
treasonous and slanderous talk – ye struck out against the man who ‘ad formerly
been yer father an’ killed ‘im. Ye were caught in the act by your brother,
Thane Gorgrim, who fought ye off and drove ye from the Volostag house-clan
home.’
There
was a pause again as King Boragsson II eyed Benyar up and down. Beside him,
Thane Gorr Magmapael shook his large, ginger-haired head slowly and played with
the cuff of his expensive red robe. The rest of the Ironrend Covenant gazed at
Benyar down the lengths of their noses, waiting for the king to pass sentence
upon Benyar.
At
last, the king spoke again. ‘This feud that ‘as led to the death of a famed and
well-loved thane was brought about through jealousy an’ spite. I think it only
fittin’ that we see whether or nae ye are ‘alf the Dwarf that Thane Gorgrim
is.’ Boragsson glared down from where he stood before his throne. Benyar
dropped his dark-haired and bearded head, looking at the intricately mosaicked
floor.
For
a moment, there was complete silence. Only the far-off rumble of the river of
molten rock flowing beneath the High Chamber filled the air, as all those
present looked at one another, waiting with bated breath to see what the king
would say next. Then, King Boragsson stepped forwards and stood as straight and
proud as he could, his white beard gleaming and shining in the brazier-light.
‘Bring forth the Heartstone!’ the king
yelled at the top of his lungs.
Benyar
felt the colour drain from his face and for a few moments he thought his heart
had stopped beating. In silent shock he knelt, stipped to the wait in the
middle of the High Chamber, staring wide-eyed at the king. ‘My king, ye cannae
mean to-…’
‘Silence,’
King Boragsson II commanded. ‘This is your punishment.’
From
the shadows came four Ironrenders. The heavy metal boots about their feet
clanked upon the stone as they crossed towards Benyar. Between them, upon a
great golden plinth, they held a huge, dark hunk of black obsidian. It was the
size of a Dwarf, and had been left uncut and undecorated. Its edges glinted
translucent purple in the light thrown up by the huge fire pit behind Benyar;
shadowy, dark and ominous.
‘This
stone was found in the middle o’ this cavern when it was dug out two-thousand
years ago, back in the First Epoch, and ‘as forever since been known as the
Heartstone,’ King Boragsson II said from where he stood by his throne. ‘It is
what we Halflings are: strong, enduring, tempered, yet beautiful and powerful.
Place your hand upon it, Benyar the Outcast.’
The
huge lump of black stone was placed down before Benyar by the four Ironrenders.
With tears in his eyes, Benyar reached forward with his shackled hands and
placed them both upon the warm surface of the dark, glass-like rock.
‘Repeat after me,’ King Boragsson II
said. ‘I am Benyar, and I ‘ave wronged my people.’
Benyar swallowed. His lips trembled
and his tongue felt heavy in his mouth. ‘I am Benyar,’ he said in little more
than a whisper, ‘and I ‘ave wronged my people.’
‘With this oath I aim to set right,
through glory, what harm I ‘ave done to the Halflings,’ King Boragsson
continued as soon as Benyar finished.
‘Through this oath I aim to set
right, through glory, what harm I ‘ave done to the Halflings.’
‘Never will I return…’
‘Never…’ Benyar choked back a sob.
‘Never will I return…’
‘Unless I bear a glory for my people
tha’ is greater in magnitude than the crimes I committed against them, taken
from the darkest, most foul places in the Stone itself.’
Tears
pouring down his face and hands trembling, Benyar continued. ‘Unless I bear a
glory for my people tha’ is greater in magnitude than the crimes I committed
against them, taken from the darkest, most foul places in the Stone itself.’
‘By
the Heartstone, my life is forfeit. From this day until the day I return, I am
dead. May the Stone take my remains,’ King Boragsson II continued, unfazed and
undaunted by Benyar’s tears.
‘By the Heartstone,’ Benyar said through
wracking sobs, ‘my life is forfeit. From this day until the day I return, I am
dead. May the Stone take my remains.’
King
Boragsson II raised his noble head and its weighty crown high and looked down
upon Benyar. ‘I am Stonesworn,’ he said.
Benyar
clamped his eyes and mouth shut for a few moments, taking several quick,
shallow breaths as he tried to control himself. He could feel every single
person in the High Chamber waiting for him to speak, waiting for him to condemn
himself to death. He could feel the ice-cold gaze of the king upon him, and the
unwelcoming eyes of the Ironrend Covenant boring into him.
He
had no choice. He had to say it. He would only make it worse for himself if he
protested or fought back. They might just
kill me now, he thought as he screwed his eyes shut even harder. They may just save whatever monsters are
lurkin’ down there in the Pits the job.
But
then Benyar thought of his younger brother. He thought of the betrayal that had
led him here. No, Benyar told
himself. I will do this, an’ then I will
return. An’ when I do, I’ll prove it was Gorgrim who did this. I’ll show them
all ‘ow wrong they were-…
‘Benyar,’
the king’s stern voice broke into his thoughts. ‘Say the last line now.’
Benyar
looked up and straight into King Boragsson’s eyes. Blinking the way the last of
his tears, he let his anger and hate boil inside of him until he was gripping
the obsidian hard enough to turn his large knuckles white. He ground his teeth
together and clenched his jaw, readying himself to say the final line of his
oath.
‘I
am Stonesworn.’
*
Benyar had only ever
stood upon the precipice of the Pits once before in his life. To get to the
Pits, one had to walk towards the Great Mines, the source of all the Syladrian
Halflings’ wealth, and then turn south. A long walk through an old, abandoned
mineshaft would lead the intrepid adventurer out into a wide cavern with a huge
natural lake of greenish water in the middle of it. Yet, on the far side of the
water, known as the Lake of Tears, was the entrance to the Pits.
‘They called it the Lake of Tears
because, so the legend says, the families of those who died in the Pits all
gathered here and wept,’ Benyar remembered Ermoldulus telling him. ‘So many
were lost, and such was their grief that their tears became this great lake.’
At the time, Benyar had only nodded.
His eyes had been fixed on the entrance to the Pits itself. The enormous
cave-like maw leered out of the dark rock, hissing as drafts of wind blew up
from the maze of tunnels and caverns below. Benyar had watched and waited with
his entire house-clan only weeks ago as Gorgrim and his dozen companions had
walked past the huge, fang-like stalactites and stalagmites that guarded the
Pits’ entrance into the wide, downward-spiralling cave.
‘Wha’ ‘appened down there?’ he had
asked the old Gnomish servant as he watched his brother’s figure disappear into
the gloom. He had seemed so young then – fresh-faced and with a pride-puffed
chest. He had hoisted his sword in his hands and turned to wave to his house-clan
before vanishing into the shadows.
Ermoldulus had blinked his large,
heavy lidded eyes and, with great care, had glanced at the figures around him.
Dropping his voice to ensure no-one could properly hear, the Gnome had then
turned to Benyar. ‘The Pits were mines, originally. The oldest, deepest, and
those most used by the Halflings of the First and Dark Epochs. They were soon
stripped or their resources, but it became traditional for miners to be sent
deeper into the Pits. There were terrible cave-collapses, mutinies, and
thousands of Dwarf-folk simply got lost in the shadows and never returned.
No-one who came out was ever the same again.
‘Yet
the episode that the Pits are best known for happened in the one-hundred and
fiftieth year of the Dark Epoch. The son of King Torunsson II, Thane Udgarr,
travelled into the Pits on a whim by himself. Days later, he returned – raving
and babbling, driven mad by the shadows. No-one could make sense of a word he
said, and within a week he was found dead in his house-clan home; he had opened
his wrists and his throat with his father’s sword. In grief, King Torunsson II,
of Rockhammer house-clan, closed the Pits to all but the Stonesworn and those
with the express consent of the Ironrend Covenant. But to this day no-one knows
for sure what’s down there,’ the old Gnome had said.
‘Some
of the stories say that the Pits all lead to a great goblin city. Others claim
that your darkest fears come alive, made manifest in the gloom.’ Ermoldulus had
quickly stopped and shaken his head. ‘Myth and rumour – they are simply a
dangerous place. Your brother is a strong, level-headed young fellow. He shall
return.’
On the day he entered, Benyar had
been alone. No-one had come to watch him set off on his journey down into
darkness – only the half-dozen Ironrenders who had escorted him cross-city from
the Durhzal Dungeons. They had used a small wooden boat to cross the Lake of
Tears and approach the entrance to the Pits, where twenty Dwarf warriors
guarded the great stone maw at all times – as much to keep the Stonesworn in as
to keep the monsters and whatever else lay in the Below from getting out.
Just before he had entered the
terrifying cave-entrance, the captain of the Dwarf men who had escorted him
produced a familiar-looking weapon. ‘Your brother sends this,’ he had said from
under his full-faced helmet, his waist-length grey beard bouncing. From behind
the thick cloak he wore, the captain had produced Lightstorm, the weapon that Thane
Gorgrim had retrieved from the Pits himself. ‘I’ve no idea why ‘ee’s so keen to
get rid o’ it again. Tha’, or maybe he feels bad for tossin’ yer treacherous
arse out the window.’
Benyar had said nothing as he took
the hammer. It was either meant as a gesture of remorse, genuinely intended to
help him on his way, or a reminder of the shame he had brought his family as
its second Stonesworn son. Damn ye, Gorgrim,
he had thought with a sigh as he had eyed the gold-plated sun etched onto
the side of the weapon. May the Great
Creator ‘imself unmake your very bones.
He
had his own sword at his hip, hanging from a long, cross-body leather belt he
wore covered in pouches he had filled full of essentials: a tiny tinderbox, a
whetstone, a small knife, and as much food as he could cram into the gaps
in-between. He also wore his own chainmail hauberk, reinforced at the chest,
legs and shoulders with heavy plate-forged armour. He wore a humble helmet – a
small, open-faced pot-helmet with two large goat-horns protruding from either
temple. I’ll be fine against a few dozen
goblins, he thought to himself, but
no’ anythin’ larger.
He had entered the Pits what felt
like forever ago. For what seemed like weeks, Benyar had wandered through the
darkness, sucking moisture from stalagmites and chewing on tough, dry
cave-fungus for sustenance. He had encountered nothing, only far-off whispers
and echoing scuffles that taunted and lingered upon his mind like a millipede
crawling through his brain.
Everything was pitch-black. For
hours upon hours, he stumbled blindly forwards. Ever-downwards, and
ever-frightened Benyar scraped this way and that with his hands and he fumbled
for guidance. He heard bones snap and crumble beneath his feet – Dwarf, Gnome,
goblin or other, he could not tell, for the mineshafts he scrambled down were
so dark. In the eternal gloom, every sound he made seemed ten-thousand times
louder. Benyar was certain that at any moment an entire army of pale-skinned,
slit-nosed goblins would descend upon him, shrieking and bawling as they waved
pillaged Dwarf-weapons and crude iron implements of death about their heads.
Eventually,
after what felt like aeons in the dark, his eyes began to accustom to the
gloom. Or ‘as it simply got lighter? I
cannae tell. Shapes became distinguishable: more sharp stalactites and
stalagmites reaching up and down towards him. He was long out of the Dwarf-made
cave-system, that much was certain. Benyar had walked much further than he had
first thought, and every inch of it had been done with his grandfather’s hammer
in his hands.
He
stopped for rest a few times, never sure where he was, nor if it was safe. The
shadows flickered and moved, slithering this way and that across rocky cavern
walls and behind the great piles of boulders and mounds of rock that littered
the hundreds of miles of natural caverns. Every shimmer in the shadows sent
waves of fear pulsing through Benyar’s mind, and dozens of times he came to his
senses cowering behind something – a low rock, a fat pillar of rock-wall, the
bones of a long-forgotten Dwarf. I am a
Volostag. I am a warrior.
As
Benyar staggered ever-downwards in his quest for redemption and glory, time
became his mortal enemy – trying to keep track of it was like trying to catch
mist. He would walk, rest, and wake, each one to shadow and darkness. The
ever-shifting shades of black and perpetual deep-dark of the Pits slowly became
his only friend – the only thing he could count on. It was always there, and,
just as it concealed the bones of thousands of dead creatures, it also
concealed him. Not like time, Benyar
caught himself thinking. Time will betray
you. Shadows are security.
His voice was horrid, so for a while
he stopped using it. With every trip and stumble, Benyar found himself crying
out – his empty, hollow voice bounced about the long, looping entrails of stone
he was lost within. He sounded as if he had already died and been forced to
return as some terrible form of shade or spectre, sent back to forever haunt
the long, dark caverns and caves of the Pits. I could have died, Benyar thought as he stopped and ran his hands
over the shadowy bones of a thousand-year-old Dwarf. These could be my bones. The bones of a Volostag. The bones of a
warrior.
After an unknown length of time
spent staggering through the darkness, Benyar had given up on all hope of ever
seeing Khur-Karzana again. He had eaten all the food he had brought with him,
though he had found a musty old leather pack which he had filled with every
kind of cave mould and moss he had come across. He had also happened across a
half-full wineskin, so ancient and aged that its taste was rancid, but numbed
the ever-present terror that plagued his head. That had quickly vanished, though
for one night he had not been plagued by awful nightmares. He had awoken hours
later with a hammering headache. At least
I’m alive, he had thought as he had risen, shaky and scared. I am still a Volostag. I am still a
warrior. I’m not a corpse, not yet.
Something he had noticed during his
voyage into the Pits was that the deeper he went, the brighter the caverns seem
to become. Once or twice, he passed huge lakes of molten rock, bubbling and
rumbling quietly to themselves, casting aside Benyar’s shadow-friends and
revealing the cold, hard solitude of the endless cave-system he was trapped in.
The light showed him misery; it reminded Benyar of his failures, of where he
was, of what he had done wrong.
‘Lightstorm,’ he said as he rested
in the far-off corner of some long-forgotten cave. ‘What a stupid name. Ye give
no light, an’ light is for the foolish. Light shows everyone what ye’ve done
wrong, it shows everyone who ye’ve let down, it shows-…’ Benyar caught himself
babbling and bit his tongue.
Don’t go mad. I am a Volostag. I am
a warrior.
More time passed. Benyar staggered
ever downwards into the Below. At some point, he was vaguely aware of happening
across something alive. Was it a Dwarf? A time-lost Gnome? A goblin? He could
neither see it nor hear it, but whatever it was, he killed it. It broke under
his hammer like a pot dropped from a roof onto a cobbled road. I am a Volostag. I am a warrior, he
thought as he felt the skull of whatever it was shatter under his hammer. ‘The
shadows hid me,’ Benyar hissed to himself as he kicked at whatever it was he
had killed. Without so much as glancing at it, he continued forwards.
More
time passed – Benyar knew not how much. Time’s
always passin’ me. It never stops to ‘elp. It never stops to give directions.
It’s always goin’, always in a hurry. The shadows are always there. The shadows
are friend, Benyar thought as he sat down heavily on some darkness-shrouded
rock. He held his grandfather’s hammer in his hands, twirling the heavy weapon
between his hands as he did so. He could not put it down – putting it down made
him feel weak, made him feel unsafe.
‘Grandfather
wouldn’t mind if I renamed ye, I’m sure,’ Benyar said as he sat in the shadows
of another long-forgotten cave. The shadows twitched and shifted across the
low, dark walls. From somewhere came the quiet drip-drip of water into a pool. ‘Lightstorm – there’s no light ‘ere, how can
there ever be a storm?’ Benyar said and laughed at his own piece of deduction.
He continued to twirl the weapon in his hands for a few more moments before
pausing to think. ‘Wha’ about…’ Benyar paused to think, running his fingers
through his messy beard. The plaits and braids had long come loose and frizzy,
and most of the rings and beads had fallen out. ‘I’ll call ye Shadow’s Tempest
– there’s plenty o’ shadows for ye.’
Pleased
with himself, Benyar looked at the hammer. ‘There, now ye can take yer power
from the shadow – ye can summons storms to crush my enemies, ye can-…’
Stop.
Benyar
blinked. ‘Who’s there?’ he said, getting to his feet and holding Shadow’s
Tempest in his hands. ‘Show yourself, ye coward!’
You’re losin’ your mind, Benyar.
Get a grip. I am a Volostag. I am a warrior.
‘I
am shadow,’ Benyar hissed into the darkness. ‘Anything that was before is from
Up. Everything from Up is treacherous. Everything.’
Not everything-…
‘Father.
Brother.’
Listen to yourself, ye’re losing yer
mind! Just stop and think for a moment – ye’ve a job to do: find some treasure,
kill something big, you can do it! Take it back to the king an’ ye’ll be free
from this nightmare. You can drive out the shadows an-…
‘There
is nothin’ down here!’ Benyar leapt
to his feet and screamed at the cavern. ‘I’ve been walking for weeks an’ weeks!
I’ve killed one wee lil’ thing – wha’ even was tha’? A goblin? It doesn’t
matter – there’s nothin’ ‘ere! Only the drip-drip of the water and the groan of
time.’ Benyar began to claw at his ears until he felt blood on his fingers.
‘The Stone itself is talkin’! It’s callin’ me a failure! It’s-…’
The stone can’t talk. Ye know tha’.
Benyar
suddenly froze. There was a scuffle – something somewhere moved. ‘Did ye ‘ear
tha’?’ he whispered.
Of course I heard it – I’m ye, ye
prick! We are Volostag! We are warrior!
Benyar
froze, his maddened mouth and eyes wide. He held his breath, and there it was
again! The shadows were revealing it to him – through their inky black bodies,
noise came. Far-off feet, something walking, someone moving. No – some things moving.
Look, there.
Benyar
spun about. Behind him, the long, low cavern he was in continued, gradually narrowing
to a tight passageway. It just large enough to swing an axe in, and was framed
with a faint, flickering orange light. From the shadows within came the hiss of
whispering, dark voices.
Glory, Benyar thought. Maybe it’s a goblin raidin’-party, bound for
the mines. If we jus’ follow ‘em an’ kill ‘em in sight o’ all the miners and
guards, we’ll surely have our oath lifted-…
‘The
light,’ he whispered. ‘The light cannot be
here, it cannot exist here!’
What? Stop.
Benyar
began to walk forwards, hoisting his hammer in his hands. ‘Shadow’s Tempest
will extinguish the hideous light in a storm o’ darkness!’
You must stop! You don’t know wha’s
down there!
Ignoring
himself, Benyar stumbled forwards. He began to growl and snarl as he ran
through the darkness. The shadows about him amplified his voice – he sounded
ferocious, like some terrible cave-beast of old, slavering and snarling at the
scent of flesh. ‘We’ll slay ‘em all,’ he hissed, ‘we’ll slay ‘em all for the
Great Shadow.’
He
dived into the narrowing passageway and stumbled forwards, the light about him
growing stronger and stronger. Soon, he could hear individual voices –
high-pitched, hoarse, and grating. They spoke in a tongue Benyar could not
recognise, and their words were a hostile hiss upon the ears. Shuffling
footsteps accompanied the foreign words – the gentle rattle of half-disturbed
stones caused by light, bare feet. ‘Ye
cannae be here,’ Benyar heard himself growl. ‘Ye cannae bring the hated light
before the Great Shadow.’
Then
the light was there, bright and terrible. About it stood twenty pale creatures,
Gnome-sized and spindle-limbed. They had large, jet-black eyes and mouths full
of horrid, razor-sharp teeth that hissed and spat like the terrible flame they
carried with them. Their nostrils were slits in their hideous, marred faces,
from which long tendrils of snot hung. Mismatched bits of armour covered
various parts of their bodies. Some wore crude, dented iron about their horrid,
pallid-coloured and near-bald heads and chests – bent breastplates pillaged
from the corpses of ancient Dwarf and Gnome warriors. Others had opted for
wrapping moulding pieces of dark cloth about their faces and bodies, covering
their sharp, uneven ears and thin, insipid frames.
‘Goblin
scum! Sacrifices for the Great Shadow!’ Benyar yelled as loud as he could as he
sprinted forwards, the rocks under his feet never tripping him. The shadows hold ‘em. The Great Shadow keeps
me safe. The goblins began to shriek furiously when Benyar burst from his
side-passage with a bone-chilling roar. Temporarily blinded by the glare of the
torch, Benyar sightlessly charged into the fray of goblins, blindly swinging
his hammer with overzealous force.
For
the first few seconds, he only had the sense of sound and the weight of his
hammer to guide him. He felt bones crumble and heard fang-filled mouths scream
as Shadow’s Tempest bludgeoned its way through the many goblins. He heard them
screech and scream in terror, and even felt a few weak blows from their
ineffective weapons bounce off his helmet. ‘The Great Shadow reclaim ye!’ he cried.
‘Take ye back to the darkness! Take ye back to the Great Shadow!’
Listen to yourself!
‘Death!
Shadows take ye all!’ Benyar roared. Slowly, as he continued to whirl and flail
amongst the party of goblins, his vision returned to him. He had smashed the head
clean from the shoulders of the torch-bearing goblin, and the fiery brand it
held had fallen to the floor. By the time he could see clearly, over half the
goblins were dead. Their pallid, broken bodies littered the narrow passageway.
Their crude and stolen armours were broken, wrapped about their bony bodies in
a mangle of poorly-forged iron and pilfered steel.
The
last few goblins began to panic and flee, tossing their weak weapons aside and
disappearing into the shadows. ‘Deeper no!’ they cried in the Dwarf-tongue as
they ran. ‘Deeper no! Deeper no!’
‘Shadows
take ye!’ Benyar cried, continuing to swing and flail his hammer this way and
that, even though the goblins were long gone. He felt the heavy hammer split
rock and shatter boulders as he continued to flail, lost in a blind, senseless
fury. He screamed and howled, his voice taking on a haunting, eerie echo in the
long, dark tunnels. His own roars and yells drowned out the screeches of the
last few remaining goblins. ‘Sacrifices to the Great Shadow! Sacrifice!
Sacrifice!’
Stop!
Suddenly
he was falling. The stones under his feet slipped and he tumbled, landing hard
against the rock. His hammer flew from his hand and he bashed his head
painfully upon a loose boulder. Stunned, Benyar lay in the half-light thrown up
by the lone, guttering torch and gazed up into the shadows that shrouded the
roof of the passage above him.
Taking
long, slow breaths, Benyar slowly came to his senses. I am a Volostag. I am a warrior. He looked around him at the
carnage he had wrought. The weak light of the single torch touched upon the
broken faces and shattered bodies of the dozen or-so goblins he had slain. They
lay about him in a bloody arc of twisted iron and rent flesh, their greyish innards
oozing over the cold, hard ground of the long, downwards-spiralling stone
passage.
Slowly,
Benyar rolled onto his knees and let out a long, low moan. ‘Wha’s ‘appenin’ to
me?’ he said in a whisper. His eyes fell to his blood-drenched hands, then down
to the floor – slick with red ichor. The savagery of his attack came back to
him, the unprecedented fury with which he had savaged the goblins. He had not
even known they were goblins when he had attacked – but he knew he had done so
for the Great Shadow.
‘The
Great Shadow…’ Benyar’s whimper trailed off and he slumped forwards, suddenly
wracked with sobs. ‘I’m going to die down here,’ he whispered, clutching at the
bloody stones. ‘By the Great Creator, I’m goin’ to die down ‘ere. Arganon,
preserve your child of Stone!’
Misery
washed over Benyar. The spaces in his mind which had been held by his now-retreating
lunacy filled with sorrow. Wracked with terrible grief and self-pity, Benyar
fell to the floor once more. He felt thick goblin blood soak his mail and tunic
underneath, wetting his thick, scraggly beard and slathering across his face.
‘I’m goin’ to die,’ he whispered. ‘I’m goin’-…’
Look up.
Benyar
slowly raised his head from where he lay. The last remnants of the torchlight
that lit the narrow cave-passageway illuminated something before him. The faint
glow from the burning brand danced upon well-forged silver, glinted over
details, inscriptions and carvings. ‘By the Stone,’ Benyar breathed, ‘wha’ is
this?’
He
scrambled to his feet and practically threw himself upon the object. It was
heavy in his hands, and his fingers felt the familiar, reassuring texture of
hard, well-cut wood. Lifting his charge, Benyar stumbled to where the gradually
failing torch had been dropped and placed the object down beside it. When the
last of the light touched what he held, he could not believe his eyes.
The
chest was sublime in its beauty. Each edge and corner was wrought with silver
and gemstones – vibrant purple amethysts and glittering green emeralds shone up
at him. There was a large lock and latch upon the front of the hefty chest, set
into the hard, near-black wood that made up the rest of the container. It was
incredibly ornate in its design and beyond any level of craftsmanship Benyar
had ever seen. It was not Dwarven in origin, nor was it Gnomish, for there was
a level of intricacy in the detail that was beyond any Halfling craftsman that
Benyar had ever seen or heard of.
As
he admired the lock on the chest, a flicker of the light drew his eyes to the
pattern wrought between the lid and the trunk of the heavy container. The
silver had been wrought to look like terrible, sharp fangs, and between those
fangs were hundreds upon hundreds of tiny figures, made to look as if they were
being crushed by the chest’s horrendous silver jaws.
Think of what could be within! Benyar found himself thinking.
Hands scrabbling, he tried to heave the chest open, but the lock would not
give. He tried again, but still it remained sealed. With a grunt, Benyar placed
the chest aside and found where he had dropped his hammer. What was I calling it? he thought as he felt the reassuring weight
of the bloody weapon in his hand. Shadow’s
Edge? Shadow’s Tempest? He shook his head, appalled by his own
weak-mindedness, and lifted the hammer high over his head.
Benyar
brought the weapon down onto the chest with all his might. He heard a great,
loud crack that sent a juddering
reverberation up his arms. The chest had not broken – his heavy blow had not
even chipped the wood, nor dented the silver at the chest’s edges. The hammer
suddenly became very light in his hands, and as Benyar lifted it to strike
again, he realised it had snapped clean in two. ‘No!’ he cried, looking about
desperately. ‘No, it cannae be!’
The
head of the hammer had snapped clean off the haft and lay a few paces away in
the shadows. With a dozen Dwarven curse-words, Benyar hurled the haft of the
hammer aside and seized hold of the chest with both hands. He picked it up and
cast it against the stone wall, yet the chest seemed to be completely
impervious to his efforts. ‘Open, damn ye!’ he cried. ‘Open, an’ I may be able
to leave this accursed place! Open!’
Calm,
he heard himself think. The goblins
brought it up from further down the passage. Go down there an’ see if ye can
find a key. If not, take it back to the surface – the king an’ the Ironrend
Covenant will be impressed ye’ve found a magical chest.
‘Yes,’ Benyar took a few deep,
steadying breaths. He grabbed the goblin party’s dropped torch – as weak as its
light was – and hoisted the chest up under his left arm. ‘I can do this,’ he
said. ‘I can do this. I can go home.’ He set off down the passage which the
goblins had come from. As he went, he could feel his sword in its sheath
tapping against his leg with every pace he took. I can do this. I am a Volostag. I am a warrior.
Down he went again into the twisting
and winding network of narrow tunnels that led deeper and deeper underneath the
Syladras Mountains, torch thrust before him. In truth, Benyar had no idea where
he was. He had no clue if he was even under the Syladras Mountains anymore – he
could have walked a thousand miles north, south, east, or west, and he would
have no way of knowing.
The deeper he went, the more the
shadows and gloom seemed to press in around him. Gripping his torch as if it
were the only thing keeping him alive, Benyar strode onwards and deeper. He
passed more ancient skeletons on his downwards-bound journey, though for a time
they became infrequent and far-between. Some seemed to glare at him as he crept
past, the faint light of his torch offending their cold, sightless faces.
Shadows retreated into their eye-sockets before springing out again to swathe
again in darkness what areas had been lit by Benyar’s torch as he passed.
They whispered to him as he went,
asking him to put his torch down and to re-join them in the blackness. Benyar
felt cold, ethereal fingers on his face, his brow, and the back of his neck.
Each one made him cry out in alarm and stumble forwards faster, slipping and
tripping on spikes of stone and shards of rock as he scrambled ever deeper into
the Pits. ‘Don’t go mad,’ he whispered to himself as he went, ‘don’t go mad. I
am a Volostag. I am a warrior.’
You’re
going mad.
Benyar ignored the icy sweat on his
brow and the doubt gnawing at his mind as he went. Am I mad already? He thought. Was
I mad? Have I always been? Would I even know? He swallowed and pitched
ever-deeper into the dizzying dark. ‘Don’t go mad. Don’t go mad.’
And then there was light. Quite
suddenly, as Benyar rounded a narrow corner in the endless spider-web of cave
systems, he saw a glow coming from the far end of the dark and rough passageway.
It was not a warming yellow, nor did it flicker and dance like torchlight, but
it was light nonetheless. It was a low light; an eerie, dark purple in hue.
With nowhere to go but forwards, Benyar continued to walk. Slowly, he edged
forwards inch by inch. With his torch thrust before him like a sword and the
invincible chest under his arm, Benyar tried to avoid the hissing shadows
around him. ‘Focus on your feet,’ he whispered to himself. ‘Don’t trip. Don’t
fall. Don’t listen to the shadows.’
They
can hear you think.
Benyar swallowed and stopped for a
moment, screwing his eyes shut and trying to keep the thoughts out – they sounded like his own, but they felt like someone else’s. He tried to
think of home, but when he did he saw only blackness. He tried to picture his
mother and his sisters, but when their faces came to him their eyes were
nothing but pits in which only shadows swirled and seethed. ‘Shadows can’t move
and talk,’ he told himself as he fell to his knees, eyes still screwed shut.
‘Shadows can’t-…they can’t-…’
But when he opened his eyes again,
the dark walls of the underground passageway were swirling and shifting. Like
liquid smoke, the shadows about him slithered and hissed as they glided over
each other and around Benyar. With a cry, the young, terrified Dwarf hauled
himself to his feet and started forwards at a run. He cast his torch aside and
surrender to the shadows about him in a last-ditch effort to reach the far-off,
purple haze of light. He felt the darkness tug at his frame as he ran, pulling
at his beard and scratching at his eyes. Benyar pulled his sword from its
sheath and slashed wildly this way and that, but to no avail.
Phantom
fingers pulled at his body, but insane determination drove Benyar forwards.
Quite suddenly, he felt the space around him change: no-longer was he walking
over loose and uneven rock. There was solid, flat stone underneath his feet,
and the walls either side of him evened out and flattened. The mysterious
purple light from the end of the corridor was now much nearer, and illuminated
an obviously crafted space: the walls were of great chiselled and smoothed
slabs, as was the floor. Benyar could see the shadows creeping about in the
cracks between the huge tiles, and he felt his stomach turn.
With
the last of his energy, he ran towards the light. He could see it clearly ahead
of him: there was a tall, narrow archway at the end of the long passageway,
carved into the rock. Similarly to the chest under Benyar’s arm, it was
decorated with hundreds of tiny figures, all writhing and screaming as if in
great pain. As Benyar stepped into the light, the terrible hiss of the shadows
ceased, and for a few moments everything was calm.
He
stood still, glancing about him. The shadows seemed not to dare touch the dark
purple light, and their scratching claws left him be. A great weight seemed to
lift from his mind and for the first time in what felt like aeons, Benyar was
himself. I’m not goin’ mad, he
thought as he clutched the chest he had found under one arm, and his sword in
his free hand. I’m not goin’ mad. I am a
Volostag. I am a warrior.
‘Yes,
you are.’
The
voice seemed to come from everywhere and nowhere. The words were already in
Benyar’s head before they were at his ears, and the great rumble of sound that
rocked his consciousness drove him to the floor. His sword fell from his hands
and the chest slipped from under his arm as he slumped to his knees and clamped
his hands over his ears – little good did it do, for the colossal echo was in
his mind. ‘No!’ he cried. ‘No! I am Benyar! I am not mad, I am-…’
Benyar’s
words trailed off as he lifted his gaze and looked beyond the archway which he
had slumped down before. There was a tall, rectangular room beyond. The walls
were like the archway: frozen hands and faces reached out from the very stone,
contorted as if in agony, as if scrabbling desperately for aid in the moment
that they were turned to rock. Every hand and face was directed towards the
centre of the small, square chamber, where a single stone seat four times the
size of a regular chair was.
But
it was the thing in that chair from which the purple light seemed to emanate.
Now it moved, great tendrils of gloom once again distorted everything,
slithering and curling through the low purple light. The being from which the
darkness emanated was enormous – twice as large as a Man and wrought entirely
of shadow. Two jet-black horns coiled around a face made only of blackness in
which two burning red eyes were set, whilst the rest of its colossal frame
swirled and shifted with the darkness it seemed to control.
‘The
Great Shadow,’ Benyar whispered through trembling lips. As he raised his gaze,
for a fraction moment he locked eyes with the terrifying creature. A million
images flashed through his mind – in a moment he saw the rise and fall of a
hundred-thousand empires, the birth and destruction of kingdoms, and more blood
than he could ever imagine. Tides and rivers of red ran across unknown lands,
getting ever deeper and deeper. Soldiers drank from it, then they themselves
drowned. Fire, water, earth, air, the stone, the stars all came and went, yet
the tides of blood rose and rose. A great red ocean that got higher and higher,
swallowing everything, consuming the mountains, drowning the entire world.
With
a shriek, Benyar tore his eyes away from those terrible red flames set in the
shadow’s face. He lay on his back, staring up at the far-off ceiling above his
head. ‘No,’ he said in a babble. ‘No, no, no, no, no.’
The
shadow spoke again – if the aura that washed over Benyar’s mind could be called
speaking. ‘Such a rudimentary creature,’ the great rumble of voice said. ‘So
fragile. You writhe and wriggle like the worms that shall devour your carcass.
You alight upon my existence like a particle of dust on the wind. You are
nothing, and shall neither be remembered nor cared for.’
Benyar
lay on his back, tears pouring from his eyes. His whole body shook and quaked
with a mindless horror like nothing he had ever imagined. ‘Ye’re no’ ‘ere,’ he
whispered through his dry, cracked lips. ‘Ye’re no’ real.’
The shadow’s laugh tore the world
apart. Benyar watched helplessly as the stone arms and faces reaching from the
walls about him began to scream and writhe, grabbing and pulling at the air. ‘I
am as real as your terror,’ the voice came again, turning the remnants of
reality to dust with its magnitude. ‘I am as real as the insanity that crawls
and gnaws its way through your limited mind like maggots burrowing into a
corpse.’
One of the stone hands grabbed
Benyar by his hair. He screamed as he felt himself dragged backwards.
Desperately, he tried to find something to grasp onto, but the floor was
smooth. Another hand gripped him around his chin, then two got hold of his
shoulders. The young Dwarf screamed in horror as he felt dozens of stone fingers
claw at his flesh. He was dragged up against the wall and held there. Stone
hands forced his head to look towards that terrible seat of rock and the
shadow-being upon it. Benyar directed his eyes away, looking at everything else
in the room, for anything was better than the thing in the stone seat.
‘What…what are ye…?’ Benyar managed
to splutter.
The great shadow-being in the seat
seemed to shift a little. For a moment, it was everywhere and nowhere – in the
seat, on all the walls, inside Benyar’s mind. ‘You could not even comprehend
what I am,’ the aura-voice cracked through Benyar’s shattered world. ‘I exist.
I have done for longer than you could ever imagine, and I will do forever more
– even though I am but a fragment.’
‘Please,’ Benyar said, ‘I jus’ want
to go home. I jus’ want-… I jus’…’
There was a flash and suddenly
Benyar was no-longer in the chamber. It was as if the walls and floor had
vanished to reveal a bird’s-eye view of Khur-Karzana, though invisible arms
still clung to him. Benyar could see the High Chamber, the bridge, his own
house, and hundreds of Syladrian Halflings upon the streets.
The
great shadow-creature was still there, sitting in his seat which seemed to
float hundreds of feet above the city. ‘Your people,’ it seemed to say. Benyar
became aware that somehow the shadow was looking at everything. Its fiery red
gaze was upon every single Syladrian Halfling at once, and each only for a
glance. Yet in that glance, the shadow seemed to learn everything. His
malicious red eyes flashed in keyholes, through windows, and around cracks in
doors as it saw everything and everyone.
‘So
short-lived – mere twitches in the movement of the great cosmic eye,’ the
shadow-being said. ‘Each and every one; basic, undeveloped. You creatures are
nothing. You mean nothing.’
Benyar
looked away, though the stone hands about him jerked his head around again,
forcing him to look down upon the world under the Syladras Mountains. I am a Volostag. I am a warrior. Benyar
clamped his eyes shut and filled his mind with the thought. I am a Volostag. I am a warrior. I am a
Volostag. I am a warrior.
You are nothing and you mean
nothing.
Benyar
let out a cry and fell. He was back in the terrible chamber, face-down on the
stone floor. The hands and faces in the walls had stilled, and no-more was he
being clutched at and pulled around by things that should not move. He tried to
stagger to his feet and run, but his whole form felt as if it were being pinned
down by a huge weight. I’m going mad, Benyar
thought as he clutched at his face. I’m
losin’ my mind.
You’ve already lost it.
‘No!’
Benyar cried. ‘I am Volostag! I am a warrior! I can’t-… I have to get out! I
must open the chest an’ take it to the king, I-…’
Again
came the laugh that rocked the world. The shadow-being leaned forwards from its
seat, its ethereal, horned head and burning red eyes mere inches from Benyar’s
tear and sweat-soaked face. ‘Then open it,’ it said in its voice that defied
all reality. ‘Pick it up and try the lock.’
Benyar
scrambled to his knees and looked for the chest. He found it here he had
dropped it by the archway to the haunting room of purple light and shadows.
Wearily, and moaning in terror and pain as he went, he crawled to the chest and
took it in his hands. No more did it feel heavy – instead, it was impossibly
light. He could feel the shadow in its chair looking at him; those burning eyes
were both hot and cold upon his form, reading his every thought and every
memory.
Open it, a voice said in Benyar’s mind. Open it.
Hands
trembling uncontrollably, Benyar placed his fingers on the lid of the chest. He
could feel something inside it, something moving, something alive. A ka-thump, ka-thump of a heartbeat
pulsated through the wood and silver of the chest and into his palm. Gently,
gripped by fear and sheer lunacy, Benyar pushed the lid backwards.
Shadows
and screams poured from the chest. Benyar hurled the container aside and shrieked
in fear. The great tendrils of smoke-like darkness came for him, pouring into
his mouth, his eyes, his ears and chest. It stifled his breath and blinded him,
tightening his throat and sending his whole body into a fitting spasm.
With
one final moan, Benyar pitched backwards again, lying upon the stone. The
terrible, all-consuming laugh came once more, making the whole world shake.
Benyar felt his very soul quake as the great force rocked his reality. As he
fell, his helmet with its battered goat horns rolled from his head as more and
more of the darkness forced its way into his body. Paralysed by maddening fear,
Benyar lay still as shadow took over his world. I’ve gone mad, he thought. I’ve
gone mad.
Benyar
plunged downwards as the world around him fell away. He could see nothing –
only shadows and utter darkness. He could feel rock whizzing past him as the
world grew colder and colder. Still the shadows were locked to him, pouring
into him. He was the host upon which the inky parasite was feasting, draining
from him everything he had: his memory, his hopes, his fears, his very life and
soul. I’ve gone mad, he found himself
thinking again. By the Great Creator ‘imself,
I’ve lost my mind,
The
final thing Benyar knew before total darkness took him was a last, mocking
thought. No, it said to his warped
and shattered mind. No, you haven’t.
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