Harbinger: The Downfall - Book One (14 page)

BOOK: Harbinger: The Downfall - Book One
6.63Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“This place smells different,” came a voice full of gravel and spite as mists rose to fill the unseen magical dome. “It is so much pure and sweet than your other place.”

A dark shape grew within the protective shield. It hunched over, supported on the knuckles of one set of thick arms, as a second set gestured. An ape-like head with stunted bull horns sniffed the air. Course, dark hair covered the being. The sickly sweet smell of molasses and sulfur permeated the air.

“Titusian,” Rogen boomed, “I called upon you for information, not your thoughts on my abode. I do not think pleasantries are necessary.”

“But it is so… soft, compared to the dry rocks and stones of your last place,” Titusian said as he reached for a bleating lamb and tore its head off, and lapped at the spouting blood. Ripping its body from the leather strap that held it in place, the demon threw the spasming body against the magical shield. The protective circle lit up, sparks and lights radiating outward.

“Must you test my barrier every time?” Rogen sighed.

“Of course, I know you’ll make a mistake one day,” the demon said as it scooped up the body and began feeding on the soft underbelly of the animal.

“I need to know of the Troöds,” Rogen said with a shrug. “They hide underground and do not interact with others as most societies do. But I have heard whispers of demons being summoned. What can you tell me of this?”

“You cannot do this thing you seek to do.” Titusian growled and spat a gob of tendon at the barrier. The meaty excrement flashed as it hit the magical wall and slid down to the ground. “You must see that, little man.”

“Which thing do you speak of?” Rogen asked, crossing his arms and keeping his impatience in check. The Rokairn knew the games otherworldly beings played, trying to twist answers and get into your head. “Do you mean finding what the Troöds intend?”

“I mean trying to fix this world. You like everything in order, and want everything to move like a machine’s dance.” The monster leaned towards Rogen, putting his weight on his knuckles and the skull of the sacrifice in his hand. The bone dome cracked, and brains gushed across the floor with a noise similar to pulling a boot from the mud. “You can’t save them, Rokairn. These people have brought this on to themselves.”

“Save them from what? What is it the Troöds want to do?”

“The same thing that any of the natives of this world want, to take control and enslave everyone else. The same goal you have, isn’t it?”

The demon loomed towards the edge of his energy cage, leering at his host and captor. Rogen cocked his head, then uncrossing his arms enough to tap a lip with one finger, he asked another question.

“Interesting that you use the term ‘native’. Are Troöds originally from this plane of reality? A yes or no answer will do, as is binding in the covenant, you shall do.”

The beast roared and launched itself at the wall, rebounding in a flash that left the visitor flat on its hairy hunched back.

“Yes or no. Or would you prefer I revoke our agreement because you broke the terms?”

“No,” Titusian growled as he pulled himself upright again.

“Are they attempting to summon demons to help them?”

“Yes.”

“We are done here, take your price and begone from here. I know not if I will bother summoning you again.”

 

 

 

That night Cite dined with the officers in the Captain’s quarters. The room was small and everything was nailed down so it would not shift if the seas were rough. It was pleasant meal with light conversation and a fair amount of laughter. Tildan, Maurence, Cite, and Dawn all sat around the table afterwards talking.

“So how does a woman become captain of a ship anyway?” Cite asked as laughter trailed off after the off color story Tildan had just finished. The room got quiet. Cite looked around and the three men would not meet his eyes.

“I’m sorry, I didn’t realize,” Cite began, and then stumbled over the words. “Please, forgive me, I meant no offense, forget I asked.” He tried to smooth over his verbal blunder.

“No, it’s all right,” said the Captain. Tildan looked at her with sympathetic eyes but said nothing. “This was my father’s ship. I inherited it upon his death. My uncle and the crew accepted me and have remained loyal to me, even when I made my mistakes.”

“Ha! Mistakes. She doesn’t make mistakes, Cite,” Tildan boomed in his deep voice that redoubled in volume as it bounced off the close walls of the cabin. “She has been sailing for more than twenty years now. You could call her a sailor before you could call her a woman.”

“My thanks, Uncle. I am sure he wanted that mental picture,” Dawn said with a touch of sarcasm as Tildan laughed and slapped Maurence on the shoulder.

“Remember when she first had her woman’s week?” Tildan said, his voice seeming to yell even when he was not. Maurence’s wide smile showed many white teeth as he let out a rough braying laugh, surprising Cite who had never heard the man make any noise.

“That is enough, Uncle. I am sure I can recite more embarrassing tales of your escapades than you can of mine.”

“Go ahead, I don’t care,” Tildan said, but quieted anyway. The whole room was silent for a minute as everyone searched for a new topic.

“How long have you been Captain of the Lady Luck?” Cite asked, as he picked at the roasted pheasant on his plate.

“Hm, about five years now,” she hesitated, “since my father was… since my father died.”

“Well, I am sorry to hear about your father,” Cite said, more to fill the silence than to comfort Dawn.

Dawn sighed and Cite felt a surge of anger, fear, and hate. He looked at her with wide eyes, worried that he had offended her again.

“I didn’t mean to upset you,” he said, as he held up a hand in apology. She shook her head.

“It’s not you. Just drop it. I think dinner is finished. Perhaps some fresh air would be best for everyone.” She stood and tossed her napkin on the table.

Cite looked at Tildan and Maurence as Dawn turned, went into her private cabin, and shut the door. Maurence the mute shook his head and put a hand on Cite’s arm.

“Don’t worry, Cite,” said Tildan as he smiled to lighten the mood, “you didn’t do anything wrong. It has been rough for her, that’s all. Let’s go up on deck, I think the smoking lamp is lit.”

The three left the cabin. Once topside Tildan produced dark wrapped cigars and passed them out. Cite looked at the tobacco stick and then back at the men and tried to imitate their movements.

They cut the tip off the butt of their cigars then lit them from the candle in the smoking lamp.

“Don’t inhale the smoke,” Tildan warned with a grin and Maurence let out his odd braying laugh again. “Did I ever tell you how I met Maurence?”

Cite shook his head, as he puffed on the cigar, the smoking lamp held to the tip. He squinted as smoke thickened from his efforts. When the tip glowed red, he leaned back out of the cloud of grey that had formed around his head to gasp a breath.

“The Lady’s Luck had taken a long haul, all the way to Durgan’s Keep. It was a load of shuglak ivory - from the herds in the northern plains - tobacco, and other odds and ends.”

Maurence made a gesture to his head, extending his hand along his neck and shoulder, and then shook his head.

“Yes, I was getting to that,” Tildan said.  “It was before Dawn was Captain; she was just a girl at the time. Her father ran a good ship, clean and honest. We didn’t pirate back in those days. My brother wouldn’t ever rob another, even someone who deserved it. Anyhow, we were in Durgan’s Keep. You know the city?”

“I have heard of it, but not too much. Once met a man who claimed to make magic wands that was from there. He even said he had visited the Nine Towers of Magic, where they train wizards and mages.”

“Right, so you don’t know anything about it,” Tildan laughed. “This city is like no other. It’s way out east, and was built by a Rokairn and some of his friends that made their money by bounty and fortune hunting. This was their retirement project. They went to the wilds, and built a city. Not a village or town, but an armed fortress. It’s an amazing place, very frontier, but with all the luxuries of real civilization. It is because of Durgan’s Keep – named for the Rokairn – that commerce and trade exist in the east at all. Only other thing out there before it was ruins and Seawall City, and they are constantly at war with the women warrior tribes off the coast.

“Well, I had been carousing, something I no longer do…”

Maurence laughed and rolled his eyes.

“Something I don’t do very often anymore, is that better Maurence?” The mute nodded, and Tildan continued, “I had just left the Weighty Wench, famous for full figured women, not the stick figured girls that most places tout. A man like me needs a woman with meat that can handle a man like me.”

Maurence pantomimed a huge body around his skinny one, puffing out his cheeks and holding arms in a circle in front of his belly, and then leaned back, looking at Tildan and drawing on his cigar.

“I am not fat!” Tildan objected, “I am solid and well built. Anyway, I went to see the carnival that was visiting the city. I saw a bear-wrestling contest. I thought they probably had some old toothless thing that had seen better days. Now, I am a bold man, and a brave man, and I knew I could take a bear.”

Maurence held his fist up to his mouth, thumb and pinky extended, and threw his head back like he was drinking.

“Ok, and I had been imbibing.”

              The mute made the same gesture again, wobbling as he did, almost falling off the barrel he was sitting on.

              “Alright, I drank a lot that night,” Tildan smiled at his friend, and pulled on his cigar. Cite looked between the two, and shook his head.

              “Will you let me tell the story and quit interrupting?” Tildan glared at his friend. Maurence held up his hands in supplication.

“I paid my gold, and when I entered the ring they opened the gate. The crowd, which was ten feet up above the pit, cheered and roared. I thought they were cheering for me; after all, I was an impressive figure of a man, if I do say so myself. But, they were cheering for the bear. The largest, fiercest beast I had ever seen lumbered out of its cage. It rose up on its hind legs, and it must have been three meters tall if it was a centimeter! It roared, and all I could see is its foam-flecked jowls vibrating. I ran. Well, I tried to run. I ran in circles around that pit, scrambling at the walls as that monster chased me. I didn’t know it then, I wasn’t paying attention to anything except the bear, but the crowd was laughing its ass off. Bastards.

“When I realized I wasn’t getting up I turned to face the beast. It took my measure, staring at me like I was a toy to play with. But that look to me said it was hungry, and I was a tasty treat. I ran towards it with a roar, and it knocked me aside like I was a child having a tantrum. I knew I was done for, but damned if I was going to go out without a fight.

“One thing I didn’t realize is that earlier that night, while in my cups at the carnival, I had interrupted a group of young toughs that was about to rough up a certain dark skinned dummy who couldn’t speak. It seems that I passed a small alley with about a dozen,” Maurence held up five fingers, “whatever, there was a lot of them. A bunch of kids about the beat the crap out of some skinny kid who couldn’t talk. I just don’t like bullies, so apparently I waded in and whooped the asses of the bastards. I do remember them running away, bruised and limping, and some kid with scraggly hair – yup, Maurence used to have curly hair all over his head, it stood almost a hand span above his tiny little head – running up and grunting and moaning at me. I pushed him away and told him to get a haircut.

“Well, right as that bear was coming in to take me out, that same skinny kid leapt in the pit, and stood in front of me, a knife in each hand. And these weren’t impressive pig stickers. He had two tiny little whittling knives better suited to attacking a plate of steamed carrots than a bear. But wow, did he know how to use them! He threw one into each paw of the bear, then had two more waiting as he crouched in front of me. I did what any brave and impressive giant would do… I leapt up and ran for the wall. I don’t know how I jumped high enough, but I caught the ankle of two of the carnies watching, and pulled myself up into the crowd, pulling them into the pit as I did. When I turned to look, that kid was in the air, coming towards me. I grabbed his wrist and pulled him up also.

“We ran after that, a whole troupe of those carnival bastards chasing us. We ran for hours.”

Maurence brayed again, and flashed fifteen fingers.

“Well, it felt like hours. But Maurence apparently worked for the carnival, but followed me back to the Lady’s Luck since he couldn’t go back to there. I vouched for him, and we have been best of friends since then. He even got that haircut I recommended.”

Tildan raised a flask to Maurence, took a deep drink, and passed it to his friend who returned his salute.

Rogen’s arrival was announced a short while later, as he clumped up the gangplank with his heavy boots. The men waved him over. Tildan held out another cigar for the newcomer. Rogen accepted it with a grateful nod. With practiced ease, he drew an odd contraption from one of his many pouches. It looked like a mini guillotine about the size of a child’s hand. He set it on the railing and lifting the small wooden handle that raised the blade; he placed the cigar’s butt through the waiting hole and pushed down on the handle, severing the end of the cigar in a clean cut. Tildan and Maurence were impressed and took turns looking over the wonderful little cutter.

BOOK: Harbinger: The Downfall - Book One
6.63Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Second Chances by Nicole Andrews Moore
HUNTER by Blanc, Cordelia
Photographic by K. D. Lovgren
Sundered by Shannon Mayer
Heatwave by Jamie Denton
Mother and Me by Julian Padowicz
Bake Me a Murder by Carole Fowkes
Missing: Presumed Dead by James Hawkins