The Immortal Mystic (Book 5)

BOOK: The Immortal Mystic (Book 5)
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The Immortal Mystic

 

By

 

Sam Ferguson

 

 

 

This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this book are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

 

The Immortal Mystic

 

Copyright © 2015 by Sam Ferguson

 

All Rights Reserved

For Attila, Linda, and Mate

CHAPTER ONE

 

 

The frigid air coursed around her skin as she slowly, deliberately moved through the darkened forest. Only the sound of crickets and the fluttering of bat’s wings dared to break the night’s silence. Her eyes scanned the bushes below and the branches above. She almost smiled when she spied a faint, red glow near the base of an old elm tree. She tiptoed close, but not so close as to trigger the magical ward. She set her bow down behind her and rubbed her hands together before holding her left palm out toward the ward. She could feel waves of heat pulsing out against her skin. To the uninitiated, it would have been imperceptible, a trap that would have melted the flesh and sinew of any trespasser in the blink of an eye. For her, it was merely a mild annoyance.

Her lips moved and the dispelling words rolled out in a whisper, crashing against the waves of heat and dispersing them until the ward itself fell apart. The red glow faded away, leaving an unobstructed path to the grove beyond.

She rose to her feet, scooping her bow up in her left hand and continued on her way. She found and dispelled three more such wards, each not unlike the first. The grove was close now. The wall of trees surrounding the grove were thick, so thick and close that she almost could not see through them. When she reached them she lighted upon a low hanging branch, twirled around it silently and launched upward as an acrobat might do. Upon reaching the top of the tree she peered down into the grove. She saw not but a large stone in the center, with a pair of wolves circling it endlessly.

Her fingers pulled an arrow from her quiver and notched it. This was no ordinary arrow. The tip was made of fine glass, and the golden mixture inside swirled and glowed like cat’s eyes in the darkness. She pulled the string back and took aim. She let the arrow loose and the shaft flew straight and true, sending a sharp whistle through the air. The two wolves jerked away from their path around the boulder and their ears went flat against their skulls. The arrow slammed into the stone and a great flare of light exploded out and around the grove. The wolves yipped and scurried away with singed fur smoldering on their tails and backs.

She dropped from the tree, scimitar out and pointed down. She drove the blade through the wolf that broke her fall, then released her blade and somersaulted forward, effortlessly stringing another arrow as she came up. A flash of yellow fangs from the far end of the grove marked her target. She released her arrow and an instant later the second wolf crashed to the ground in a dead heap. She reached back and snatched her scimitar, dropping her bow and advancing toward the still burning flames upon the boulder. Only, there was no longer a boulder there. In its place stood a modest cabin of wood.

“Fiend!” a voice cried out from within the golden flames. “What have I to do with you?” The flames died down, fully revealing a cabin made of black logs and old, cracked shingles upon the roof. There were no windows, only a single door crisscrossed with iron plates. The door opened and a silver mist rolled out. “Enter if you dare, child of the shadow.”

She didn’t hesitate. Rushing forward she swept her left hand before her. A thick, knotty root broke through the ground before the cabin and extended into the building. Heavy thuds were followed by shattering clay and porcelain. She leapt atop the root and rode it above the silvery mist, stabbing down at a serpentine figure lunging up at her. The figure hissed and the mist rolled away.

The inside of the cabin was even darker than the forest. It seemed no light whatsoever made it into the dwelling. There was only a formidable, invasive cold. For others, it may have been overwhelming, or even crippling, but not so for her. She was born in such darkness, and raised in it. The shadow was to her as sunlight to a spring flower. It only heightened her senses and embraced her lovingly.

A heavy kettle sailed toward her. She ducked under it and dismounted from the ever extending root. The kettle flew on for many seconds before crashing into a wall. She looked around, taking in the space of the dwelling. As she had expected, the interior was much larger than the exterior shell would have hinted at. It appeared as large as any manor might be, with stairways and doors leading to other rooms beyond the grand entrance she found herself in. Behind her was an overturned washstand with shattered bits of a porcelain bowl all around on the floor. Clay figurines were broken in half amidst the porcelain shards.

“Admiring my home, are we?” a taunting voice called out.

She reached into her pocket and pulled a small satchel out. She knelt low and unclasped the flap so that two small, black lizards with red stripes upon their backs emerged. They flicked their tiny tongues and looked up to her. She whispered a spell and in an instant they grew larger than the wolves she had just slain. She flicked her eyes to the stairs, and the lizards sped off. Neither of them made any sound.

“Perhaps you are rethinking your quest?” the voice called out again. “I have survived in these orcish lands for many decades. Many have come before you, but none have ever so much as seen my face before meeting their death.”

She rose to her feet and silently made her way to a nearby door. As she reached out for the handle she paused. A warm, pulsing heat emanated from the metal. She backpedaled and knelt behind a large armoire. Then, she motioned with her hands at the handle. The root sprouted an offshoot that creaked and popped as it expanded and writhed around the metal. Not a second after it pulled, the entire door shattered in a shower of flame and lightning. There had been a ward on the opposite side. The offshoot withered away, but the main root continued to snake through the house. Within seconds offshoots sprouted at every door, and around every corner. Explosions and tremors rocked the entire dwelling.

She remained still, waiting for all of the traps to spring.

“Clever,” a voice echoed through the dwelling. A deep, purple light emanated from the floorboards, starting in the back of the room and advancing toward the door. A column of light and smoke shot up, severing the root and sending an electrical bolt running along the extended limb, scorching and killing every inch of it.

The entrance then sealed itself. A wall of slab rose up from the floor, shutting off the outside world, and all escape routes.

The column of purple light shrouded itself in a cloud of silver and then a figure stepped out. “You have done well in the darkness,” he said. “Now let us see how you fare in the light.” He clapped his hands and in a moment the entire dwelling was bathed in bright, hot light as if the sun sat in the high arches of the vaulted ceiling above them. A crystal chandelier crackled and popped with flame and lightning.

She stepped out from behind the armoire and smiled at him.

His long, pale features turned into a frown as his grey eyes fell upon her. The bushy, white brows knitted together and his head cocked to the side. “You?”

“Who else would it be?” she replied.

“But why would you turn against me? I am one of the council members.”

She stepped toward him, smiling wryly as she dragged a finger along the nearby brass bannister. The scimitar in her left hand twirled and she winked. Her right hand dove into a small bag and came up with an empty vial made of obsidian.

“You seek my power?” he asked. His features turned hard and he narrowed his eyes on her. He raised his hand and snapped his fingers. In response there was a commotion from the upper chambers. Four-legged animals came running toward the stairs. “You are foolish,” he said. He smiled wickedly and pointed to the stairs.

She didn’t bother to turn her head. Instead, she kept a close watch on him. A moment later his self-assured smile melted away and an open-mouthed gasp took its place. She didn’t have to glance up. She knew that he now saw her charmadors.

“Did my father ever tell you why we Sierri’Tai kept charmadors?” she asked. “They have a tremendous ability to sniff out demons. Better than that, they have an uncanny ability to slay all but the most powerful of them. They are immune to most spells used by demons, and no matter how fast an imp or clever a demon may be, the charmador is always one step ahead.”

The man shook his head in unbelief. “I thought charmadors extinct.”

“No, my dear Tyraleks, they are not. They simply dwell so deep within the abysmal caves below the surface of Terramyr that most mortals dare not seek them out. One must go nearly to the Netherworld to find them, for that is where they were born of lava and shadow, and that is where they learned to hunt the demons seeking to enter Terramyr from the abyss. They are fierce guardians of this world.”

Tyraleks closed his mouth and his upper lip curled into a snarl. “You shall not take me, Salarion.” He lunged forward, empowered by magic that gave him strength beyond what his fragile, aged body ever could.

Salarion dodged to the left, speaking a counter spell as she moved. A great bolt of lightning slammed into a shield she created around herself. Tyraleks plowed through the base of the stairs, igniting the wood and sending shards flying out around him.

The pair of charmadors leapt down the remaining steps and jumped to the bottom, narrowly escaping the flaming shards of wood.

Next the chandelier fell from the ceiling, coming to life and using its chains as tendrils to strike out at them. Salarion followed Tyraleks while the charmadors tangled with the enchanted chandelier. She knew she had to reach Tyraleks before the shadowfiend could create an escape tunnel. She raced through the wreckage, leaping over fallen beams and ducking under jagged pieces of stone and wood that hung precariously from the ceiling. A force emerged from the side and barreled into her. She shrugged it off, knowing it was nothing more than a spell designed to slow her down. She reached around her back and pulled her bolas out. She took aim, watching the shadows and the purple glow around her target. She threw the bolas and then whispered another incantation.

At that moment, one of the charmadors raced by her with such blinding speed that her clothing and hair blew to the side. A moment later a terrible shriek erupted and the whole of the house shook and trembled.

Salarion raced toward her prey, wary not to let her guard down. A ball of fire erupted around her charmador, but the lizard held fast, with Tyraleks’ left leg caught in its mouth. The shadowfiend howled and roared. His fingers grew into sharp, long talons and his teeth grew into sick, wicked fangs. He tore at the charmador, ripping the lizard’s flesh along its neck. The lizard whipped its massive tail into Tyraleks’ face, shattering the shadowfiend’s jaw and knocking him back.

Salarion was there a moment later. Her scimitar chopped down, severing Tyraleks’ left arm at the elbow. Next she stabbed through Tyraleks’ right shoulder and pinned him to the ground. She noticed that her bolas had caught him around the thighs, just above the knees.

“What did you do to me?” Tyraleks snarled. “I can’t finish my transformation!”

Salarion smiled. “I put a special poison in the hooks along the bolas. That poison is seeping into your blood even now. Aside from that, my charmador has you in his mouth. He is literally neutralizing your spells as you think of them.”

Tyraleks groaned and snarled. As he squirmed, his fangs and talons reverted to human features. His lower jaw now hung loose where it had broken, and even in all of his rage, Tyraleks could no longer form words.

Salarion bent down and put the obsidian vial out next to Tyraleks’ head. “Now, do hold still. This is going to hurt.”

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