The Necromancer's Nephew Read online




  The Necromancer’s Nephew

  By Andrew Hunter

  Copyright 2012 Andrew Hunter, "

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  Discover other works by Andrew Hunter at Freemancer.com

  Chapter One

  Brenhaven was the most wonderful place in the world to grow up, until the Chadiri burned it to ash.

  The guardsmen stood the wall, singing the old songs, defying the booming chant of the Chadirian war-priests massed beyond the river. The townsfolk waited and prayed to a hundred different gods in as many tongues. Merchants, artists, dancers, poets, stonecutters, farmers, bakers, all of them free men. They would not kneel. They would not surrender to the dark will of Malleatus, the Chadiri blood god, and his red-armored priests. This was the place where freedom would make its stand.

  Beyond the walls, the Chadiri chanted their hymns of hate, and their dark spell closed upon the last free city like a red fist. When all the fountains cracked and spilled, the people of Brenhaven stood and shouted their defiance. When the walls began to bleed, the people stood and called upon the memories of heroes long dead. When the gabled roofs crumbled beneath the first catapult stones, the people stood and cursed the foul god’s name. When the yard-long arrows of the Chadiri war machines rained down, and each man saw friend and brother fall slain beside him, the people stood.

  Then the dragon came, and they could stand no more.

  Garrett cried when Father and Mother loaded him onto the handcart and pushed out into the panicked crowd. Why didn't they wait for Grahm? Garrett's brother was still at the wall.

  Father hadn't wanted Grahm to join the Guard, but he was sixteen, and old enough to make his own mistakes. It would be six more years before Garrett was allowed to do anything fun.

  Garrett tried to stand up and see what the people were running from. The sky above the rooftops glowed an ugly red. The scent of wood smoke filled the air. Father shoved him down between the stacked loaves of bread that filled the cart. The boy yelped as the hard corner of a coin box jabbed into his elbow. Father and Mother were shouting to each other, but Garrett could no longer hear them above the noise of the crowd that pressed ever closer. The cart jostled and bumped. Men cursed and women screamed, children were crying all around. Garrett had never been so afraid. He huddled in the bottom of the cart and covered his ears with his hands. He didn't want to hear anymore.

  The cart’s wheels thumped over the smooth cobblestones, stopping often as people crowded and pushed into the street ahead of them. The air grew hotter, and the crowd more desperate by the moment.

  The cart overturned when they tried to cross the river south of town. Too many people jammed onto the narrow bridge. The wooden railings strained and splintered, spilling people over the sides into the Little River that separated Brenhaven from the southern farmlands. Garrett fell too. He saw his mother's hand outstretched, but the screaming mass of refugees swept her away as they poured across the last bridge. Falling loaves of bread spun slowly against the angry sky as he fell, and then the cold water hit him.

  Garrett coughed up river water, spitting and gasping as he surfaced. The bridge seemed so far away now. The river had him, and others like him. Some splashed and tried to scream for help, their mouths filling with water. Garrett remembered what Grahm had taught him. Never swim against the current. Swimming perpendicular to the flow of the river, he at last reached the muddy bank, exhausted, near the town wall a quarter of a mile downriver.

  The wall jutted out into the river at that point. The dark shadow of a square tower stood with its base submerged in the green water. The brown stones of the wall were very old, stacked high, but roughly, much narrower at the top than at the base. Grahm had taught Garrett to climb as well as to swim, and Grahm was still somewhere inside those walls.

  Garrett's hands were rubbed raw by the time he pulled himself over the top of the wall. He rested a moment on the planks of the narrow walkway that ran the length of the curtain wall between the square towers at either end. No guards manned the wall. They must all be away at the north wall to fight the Chadiri. Rising wearily to his feet, Garrett looked to the north and watched Brenhaven burn.

  Great black columns of smoke rose from the houses and markets of the town, and yellow flames licked at the sooty pall that hung over the city. Dark shapes tumbled from the sky, dragging swirling trails through the haze, catapult stones that landed with muffled booms amid Brenhaven's ruins.

  A monstrous shadow passed through the cloud, moving fast toward the west. Garrett thought he glimpsed the sweep of a vast, featherless wing through the smoke. Then came a sound like a mountain falling down, the roar of the dragon.

  Garrett's knees gave way beneath him. His breath came fast and shallow, his eyes wide. He watched the air shimmer above the spires of the Temple at Westgate. The tile roof glowed a dull red in the invisible heat of the dragon's breath. Stones cracked. Walls crumbled. Flames danced. The shadow wheeled and swept away, not even pausing to watch as the last sanctum of the Peacebringers fell before the war god's wrath.

  Garrett mastered his trembling limbs once again as the dragon fear passed. He scrambled down a wooden ladder to the comforting darkness of the streets. The southern end of town remained untouched by fire. A moment later, he recognized where he was. He had wandered and explored Brenhaven's every lane and alleyway in his brother's shadow. He could find his way home.

  Grahm would be headed home now too. Surely the north wall had fallen, and Grahm would be looking for his family. They should have waited for him at the bakery, so he would know where to find them. At least he would find Garrett there waiting for him when he arrived. Garrett ran faster as ashes fluttered down from the roiling sky, embers stinging his cheeks. He had to get home before Grahm got there.

  Garrett turned up Market Street to find his path blocked by the collapse of the corner theater. Dust swirled above the heap of broken stone and splintered beams of the old playhouse. Garrett's breath caught at the sight of a girl's face looking up at him from the rubble, dead white, with sad, empty eyes. He had to laugh a second later when he realized it was only a mask, scattered among the broken marionettes and torn costumes. The hot wind caught at a scrap of red silk and whipped it away beyond the rooftops.

  The sky rumbled again with the sound of the dragon's wrath. Garrett ran toward the open door of a nearby shop where he had sometimes played with Martin, the cobbler's son.

  He felt his way through the shadows of the abandoned shop, hoping that he remembered correctly. At the back of the shop, he found a little door opening into a narrow covered alleyway. It ran behind all the shops along that side of Market Street. A dim red glow lit the far end of the alley, in the direction of Garrett's home.

  Heat blasted Garrett's face as he stepped from the alley. For a moment, he thought he must be lost. Nothing looked familiar at first. Then he recognized the steaming pool of cracked marble that was the old fountain where he'd sailed many paper boats. The smoldering row of wooden crates along the wall had been brightly painted flower boxes this morning. The blazing skeleton of burning timbers had been his father's bakery, and, above it, poised for one last moment, the blackened frame of the little window of the little room above the stairs. Then the frame folded in on itself, and the only home he had ever known disappeared in a swirl of sparks.

  Garrett's emotions caught up with him at last, and he fell to his knees beside the broken fountain. Everything and everyone was gone, and there was no one there to tell him what to do.

  Long he lay there, weeping, his sobs lost amidst the din of crackling fires and crumbling masonry.

  "Hey, are you all right?"

  Garrett started at the sound of the voice, looking up hopefully. "Grahm?"

&n
bsp; Only it wasn't his brother at all. It wasn't even human. The strange creature that had spoken to him seemed altogether dog-like, covered with dirty gray fur with long, pointed ears and eyes that shined red in the firelight. It stood on its hind legs in a stooped imitation of a man and nearly as tall, but its clawed hands and massive forearms were wrapped around what looked to be a dead body bound tightly in yellowed strips of linen.

  Garrett felt that he would have been frightened out of his wits except for the comical tilt of the dog-thing's head and the non-threatening manner with which it regarded him.

  "Are you a Chadiri?" Garrett asked.

  The creature barked a short, manic laugh, "Hardly! I'm trying to get away from those guys."

  "What are you then?" Garrett asked.

  "I'm a ghoul," The creature said with a grin, its mouth wide and full of sharp teeth, "but don't worry. I only eat dead people. Speaking of which... wanna give me a hand with this?"

  Garrett eyed the body in the ghoul's arms. "What's that?"

  "Sabaial Mak Thul," the ghoul answered proudly, "the first lord of Brenhaven. He's always been a little too well guarded to get at. Well, until today, that is, but he's mine now!"

  "And you're going to eat him?" Garrett asked, feeling a little sick.

  "Oh no!" the ghoul said, "Not that I haven't thought about it, but, once they get this old, the taste of 'em's gone off. And, anyway, these things are worth an awful lot of fresh meat to those who know how to use 'em. I'll cut you in on the profits if you help me get him back to the burrow."

  Garrett rose, a bit shakily, and moved toward the ghoul and his grim burden. Not much of what the creature had said made any sense, but he had to do something. The boy stooped and lifted the linen-wrapped ankles of the dead lord of Brenhaven, grunting at the weight.

  "Heavy, yeah?" the ghoul grinned, "They used to sew a bag of gold inside 'em before they planted 'em. Weird custom, right? Well, gold's useful too where we're going."

  "Where are we going?" Garrett asked as they struggled down the broad lane, swinging wide to avoid a collapsed roof that had fallen across the way.

  "Oh," the ghoul said, "I just need you to help me get this guy to the bone yard, after that, me and my kind are clearin' out for Marrowvyn. We can bust him open, and I'll give you some of the gold when we get to the yard, if you like."

  "Oh, thanks," Garrett answered, not really knowing what else to say.

  "What's your name, anyway?"

  "Garrett."

  "Thanks for your help, Garrett. Most humans wouldn't, you know."

  "Yeah."

  "My name's Warren, by the way," the ghoul said, looking down to mind his shaggy feet as he backed over a pile of old clothes.

  As Garrett started to speak again, the ground shook with a tremendous boom. Buildings on either side of the lane in front of them collapsed as the dragon landed in the street ahead. Warren's head seemed to turn toward the sound with impossible slowness, and Garrett's eyes locked on the enormous beast. The dragon's eyes flared with golden heat, its scales the color of stained silver. Its black jaws opened like the door of an oven. The air shimmered.

  Garrett threw his body full against the startled ghoul, toppling him backwards off the rag heap even as the dragon's breath washed over them. The shock of superheated air hurled their bodies through the thin lattice frontispiece of a flower shop. Garrett slammed hard against the counting table, breaking wood and bone. The pain of the heat seared his flesh, unthinkable, unbearable. Then there was only a dull throb of things broken and burnt, and a sound like pebbles rattling down a clay drainpipe, the dragon's rasping breath.

  Garrett looked up through puffy, swollen eyelids toward the shop's entryway. The black-scaled head of the dragon moved past the shattered doorway, not bothering to look inside. Garrett watched as the beast passed by. Across the dragon's back, astride an ornately carved saddle sat a huge man, clad in red armor. The rider's horned helm swung toward the shop as he passed. From the shadow of his visor, two cold blue eyes fell upon the boy, and Garrett's labored breath faltered. Then the man was gone, and the black tail of the Chadiri dragon coiled and lashed away the storefront, bringing the roof down atop the boy.

  ****

  Voices.

  Garrett woke to the sound of voices and a terrible coldness in his body.

  "What in the hell were you thinking, boy?" spoke a rough, unfamiliar voice.

  "I had him dad! I had him in my arms! Mak Thul himself!"

  "Where is he now?" spoke a third voice, cool and dispassionate.

  "Cremated." Warren answered.

  "You almost were too, you idiot!"

  Garrett tried to move. Shooting pain. He moaned.

  "What's that?"

  Sounds of breaking wood. More pain. A dim light, the glow of dying fires.

  "Hey!" Warren exclaimed, "He's still alive!"

  "Just a boy." The calm voice belonged to a tall figure in a dark purple robe. The robe's hood concealed his face, but the man's gnarled hands, clutching an iron skull-topped staff, seemed human.

  "Looks like he got the worst of it." The rough voice was that of a massive, patchy-haired ghoul who casually tossed aside the wreckage of the shop's roof as though it weighed nothing.

  "His name's Garrett," Warren said, kneeling beside him, "He was helping me."

  "Leave him be, boy," the old ghoul said, shaking his head, "He's done."

  "He saved my life dad!"

  "He's not one of us!" the old ghoul barked, "We don't have time."

  As Warren and his father argued, the robed man knelt beside Garrett, his face unreadable beneath the shadow of his hood.

  "Tinjin," the old ghoul called, "will you talk some sense into the boy? The Chadiri'll be here sooner than later."

  Garrett tried to speak, but only a faint wheezing sound came out. The hooded man looked down at him in silence. At last he pulled back his hood to reveal the gaunt features of an old man, his face lined by years of sorrow and horror, his hair thin and pale. Yet in his eyes burned still a warmth and humor undiminished by time.

  "Bargas," the man said, "it is not our birth that make us who we are, but the choices we make. This boy has cast his lot with the keepers of the dead. He comes with us."

  Chapter Two

  The streets of Wythr twisted like a fine network of veins between the high granite walls of the ancient city. The lifeblood of commerce pumped through its narrow lanes and alleys, bringing riches and refugees from the farthest reaches of the realm. Wythr, tomb-city of sorcerer kings, belonged to the priestesses of Mauravant. The sisterhood of the dead goddess ruled the gray city with ruthless efficiency and suffered no troublemakers, creating a haven of cruel safety against the chaos of the war-ravaged world outside its walls.

  Never was the sun seen in Wythr. The city lay in the hollow between the mountains and the sea at the northwestern corner of gods-cursed Gloar. Even at mid-day with the sun high above the jagged peaks of the eastern range, no bright beam could penetrate the gray cloak of perpetual haze in which slumbering Mount Padras wrapped itself. Though it might trouble a human like Garrett, who had not seen the sun at all in the three years since his arrival, in Wythr there were other folk whom this grim and eternal gloom suited quite well.

  Business thrived in the shadows for troll trappers, naga apothecaries, and horned satyrs who looked up from their ebony carvings with glowing eyes to watch the human boy pass. Garrett pulled his hood a bit lower and walked a little faster. He did not fear these creatures now as much as he once had, but rather the coming of night, and with it the city curfew. Those who wished to see another dawn did not linger in the streets of Wythr after Evenchime.

  Garrett turned down a short alleyway lined with gloomy little shops, their windows filled with loathsome curios and frightful reagents, useful for only the darkest of magic. He paused at the door of the endmost shop. Its broad window glowed with the golden warmth of a hundred luminous creatures. Fairies and their kin, captured in the wild southern forests, were b
ound with magic inside tiny silver cages. Such bright and beautiful pets demanded a high price in the twilight city and brought great wealth to those who could catch them. Very few creatures could catch a fairy, and one of these was a vampire.

  Garrett cleared his throat and brushed the wrinkles from his purple robe. His gloved hand trembled a little on the handle of the door, as it always did. The boy marshaled his courage and opened the door. The tinkling doorbells drew the attention of the girl inside the shop.

  She turned and greeted him with a smile brighter than any fairy's wing, the vampire girl, slender and tall, pale and perfect. She dropped with silent grace from a ladder that rolled upon a track the length of the shelf-lined back wall. Her long dark hair framed her sad-sweet eyes, spilling down to the shoulders of her gray linen coveralls. "Hi, Garrett!" she said.

  "Hi, Marla!" Garrett smiled, immensely pleased that his voice had not cracked this time.

  "Your uncle's package arrived this morning," she said, "We've got it in the back." She swung open the waist-high gate that led behind the shop's counter and motioned for Garrett to follow her. He did so without hesitation.

  Marla's long fingers drew back a heavy curtain, painted with swirling runes, and Garrett stepped through. His shoulder brushed against hers as he moved past.

  "Good evening, Garrett," Marla's mother greeted him as he entered the back room of the pet store.

  "Good evening, Mrs. Veranu," Garrett said.

  "How's your uncle these days?" she asked, pulling a largish paper-wrapped bundle down from a shelf. As with most vampires that Garrett had met, he could hazard no guess at her age. Taller than Marla, but of a similar slim build, she looked no older than a woman in her mid twenties. Her short, sandy brown hair added to her youthful appearance. Her amber eyes flashed with an impish gleam, undimmed by her ghostly complexion. Nevertheless, her lips remained hidden behind a red silk scarf coiled around her neck, a colorful accessory that contrasted sharply with her somber gray clothing in the style favored by the vampires of the city.