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The Black Road
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“IT’S THE DEMON’S DOING,”
PALAT SNARLED.
“The demon knows we’re down here.”
In the next instant, a frightening figure surged from beneath the water. Formed of the
rats’ bones, the creature stood eight feet tall, built square and broad-chested as an ape. It
stood on bowed legs that were whitely visible through the murky water. Instead of two
arms, the bone creature possessed four, all longer than the legs. When it closed its hands,
horns formed of ribs and rats’ teeth stuck out of the creature’s fists, rendering them into
morningstars for all intents and purposes. The horns looked sharp-edged, constructed for
slashing as well as stabbing. Small bones, some of them jagged pieces of bone, formed
the demon’s face the creature wore.
“That’s a bone golem,” Taramis said. “Your weapons won’t do it much harm.”
The bone golem’s mouth, created by splintered bones so tightly interwoven they gave
the semblance of mobility, grinned, then opened as the creature spoke in a harsh howl
that sounded like a midnight wind tearing through a graveyard. “Come to your deaths,
fools.”
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This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the
author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales
or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
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THE BLACK
ROAD
ONE
Darrick Lang pulled at the oar and scanned the night-shrouded cliffs overlooking the
Dyre River, hoping he remained out of sight of the pirates they hunted. Of course, he
would only know they’d been discovered after the initial attack, and the pirates weren’t
known for their generosity toward Westmarch navy sailors. Especially ones who were
hunting them pursuant to the King of Westmarch’s standing orders. The possibility of
getting caught wasn’t a pleasant thought.
The longboat sculled against the gentle current, but the prow cut so clean that the water
didn’t slap against the low hull. Sentries posted up on the surrounding cliffs would raise
the alarm if the longboat were seen or heard, and there would be absolute hell to pay for
it. If that happened, Darrick was certain none of them would make it back to Lonesome
Star waiting out in the Gulf of Westmarch. Captain Tollifer, the vessel’s master, was one
of the sharpest naval commanders in all of Westmarch under the king’s command, and
he’d have no problem shipping out if Darrick and his band didn’t return before dawn.
Bending his back and leaning forward, Darrick eased the oar from the water and spoke in
a soft voice. “Easy, boys. Steady on, and we’ll make a go of this. We’ll be in and out
before those damned pirates know we’ve come and gone.”
“If our luck holds,” Mat Hu-Ring whispered beside Darrick.
“I’ll take luck,” Darrick replied. “Never had anything against it, and it seems you’ve
always had plenty to spare.”
“You’ve never been one to go a-courtin’ luck,” Mat said.
“Never,” Darrick agreed, feeling a little cocky in spite of the danger they were facing.
“But I don’t find myself forgetting friends who have it.”
“Is that why you brought me along on this little venture of yours?”
“Aye,” Darrick replied. “And as I got it toted, I saved your life the last time. I’m figuring
you owe me one there.”
Mat grinned in the darkness, and the white of his teeth split his dark face. Like Darrick,
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he wore lampblack to shadow his features and make him more a part of the night. But
where Darrick had reddish hair and bronze skin, Mat had black hair and was nut brown.
“Oh, but you’re up and bound to be pushin’ luck this night, aren’t you, my friend?” Mat
asked.
“The fog is holding.” Darrick nodded at the billowing silver-gray gusts that stayed low
over the river. The wind and the water worked together tonight, and the fog rolled out to
the sea. With the fog in the way, the distance seemed even farther. “Mayhap we can rely
on the weather more than we have to rely on your luck.”
“An’ if ye keep runnin’ yer mouths the way ye are,” old Maldrin snarled in his gruff
voice, “mayhap them guards what ain’t sleepin’ up there will hear ye and let go with
some of them ambushes these damned pirates has got set up. Ye know people talkin’
carries easier over the water than on land.”
“Aye,” Darrick agreed. “An’ I know the sound don’t carry up to them cliffs from here.
They’re a good forty feet above us, they are.”
“Stupid Hillsfar outlander,” Maldrin growled. “Ye’re still wet behind the ears and
runnin’ at the nose for carryin’ out this here kind of work. If’n ye ask me, ol’ Cap’n
Tollifer ain’t quite plump off the bob these days.”
“An’ there you have it then, Ship’s Mate Maldrin,” Darrick said. “No one bloody asked
you.”
A couple of the other men aboard the longboat laughed at the old mate’s expense.
Although Maldrin had a reputation as a fierce sailor and warrior, the younger men on the
crew considered him somewhat of a mother hen and a worrywart.
The first mate was a short man but possessed shoulders almost an ax handle’s length
across. He kept his gray-streaked beard cropped close. A horseshoe-shaped bald spot left
him smooth on top but with plenty of hair on the sides and in back that he tied in a queue.
Moisture from the river and the fog glistened on the tarred breeches and soaked the dark
shirt.
Darrick and the other men in the longboat were clad in similar fashion. All of them had
wrapped their blades in spare bits of sailcloth to keep the moonshine and water from
them. The Dyre River was fresh water, not the corrosive salt of the Gulf of Westmarch,
but a sailor’s practices in the King’s Royal Navy were hard to put aside.
“Insolent pup,” Maldrin muttered.
“Ah, and you love me for it even as you decry it, Maldrin,” Darrick said. “If you think
you’re miserable company now, just think about how you’d have been if I’d up and
bloody left you on board Lonesome Star.I’m telling you, man, I don’t see you up for a
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night of hand-wringing. Truly I don’t. And this is the thanks I get for sparing you that.”
“This isn’t going to be as easy as ye seem to want to believe,” Maldrin said.
“And what’s to worry about, Maldrin? A few pirates?” Darrick shipped his oar, watchful
that the longboat crew still moved together, then eased it back into the water and drew
again. The longboat surged through the river water, making good time. They’d spotted
the small campfire of the first sentry a quarter-mile back. The port they were looking for
wasn’t much farther ahead.
“These aren’t just any pirates,” Maldrin replied.
“No,” Darrick said, “I have to agree with you. These here pirates, now these are the ones
that Cap’n Tollifer sent us to fetch up some trouble with. After orders like them, I won’t
have you thinking I’d just settle for any pirates.”
“Nor me,” Mat put in. “I’ve proven myself right choosy when it comes to fighting the
likes of pirates.”
A few of the other men agreed, and they shared a slight laugh.
No one, Darrick noted, mentioned anything of the boy the pirates had kidnapped. Since
the boy’s body hadn’t been recovered at the site of the earlier attack, everyone believed
he was being held for ransom. Despite the need to let off steam before their insertion into
the pirates’ stronghold, thinking of the boy was sobering.
Maldrin only shook his head and turned his attention to his own oar. “Ach, an’ ye’re a
proper pain in the arse, Darrick Lang. Before all that’s of the Light and holy, I’d swear to
that. But if’n there’s a man aboard Cap’n Tollifer’s ship what can pull this off, I figure
it’s gotta be you.”
“I’d doff my hat to you, Maldrin,” Darrick said, touched. “If I were wearing one, that is.”
“Just keep wearin’ the head it would fit on if ye were,” Maldrin growled.
“Indeed,” Darrick said. “I intend to.” He took a fresh grip on his oar. “Pull, then, boys,
while the river is steady and the fog stays with us.” As he gazed up at the mountains, he
knew that some savage part of him relished thoughts of the coming battle.
The pirates wouldn’t give the boy back for free. And Captain Tollifer, on behalf of
Westmarch’s king, was demanding a blood price as well.
“Damned fog,” Raithen said, then swore with heartfelt emotion.
The pirate captain’s vehemence drew Buyard Cholik from his reverie. The old priest
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blinked past the fatigue that held him in thrall and glanced at the burly man who stood
limned in the torchlight coming from the suite of rooms inside the building. “What is the
matter, Captain Raithen?”
Raithen stood like a mountain at the stone balcony railing of the building that overlooked
the alabaster and columned ruins of the small port city where they’d been encamped for
months. He pulled at the goatee covering his massive chin and absently touched the cruel
scar on the right corner of his mouth that gave him a cold leer.
“The fog. Makes it damned hard to see the river.” The pale moonlight glinted against the
black chainmail Raithen wore over a dark green shirt. The ship’s captain was always
sartorially perfect, even this early in the morning. Or this late at night, Cholik amended,
for he didn’t know which was the case for the pirate chieftain. Raithen’s black breeches
were tucked with neat precision into his rolled-top boots. “And I still think maybe we
didn’t get away so clean from the last bit of business we did.”
“The fog also makes navigating the river risky,” Cholik said.
“Maybe to you, but for a man used to the wiles and ways of the sea,” Raithen said, “that
river down there would offer smooth sailing.” He pulled at his beard as he looked down
at the sea again, then nodded. “If it was me, I’d make a run at us tonight.”
“You’re a superstitious man,” Cholik said, and couldn’t help putting some disdain in his
words. He wrapped his arms around himself. Unlike Raithen, Cholik was thin to the point
of emaciation. The night’s unexpected chill predicting the onset of the coming winter
months had caught him off-guard and ill prepared. He no longer had the captain’s young
years to tide him over, either. The wind, now that he noticed it, cut through his black and
scarlet robes.
Raithen glanced back at Cholik, his expression souring as if he were prepared to take
offense at the assessment.
“Don’t bother to argue,” Cholik ordered. “I’ve seen the tendency in you. I don’t hold it
against you, trust me. But I choose to believe in things that offer me stronger solace than
superstition.”
A scowl twisted Raithen’s face. His own dislike and distrust concerning what Cholik’s
acolytes did in the lower regions of the town they’d found buried beneath the abandoned
port city were well known. The site was far to the north of Westmarch, well out of the
king’s easy reach. As desolate as the place was, Cholik would have thought thepirate
captain would be pleased about the location. But the priest had forgotten the civilized
amenities the pirates had available to them at the various ports that didn’t know who they
were—or didn’t care because their gold and silver spent just as quickly as anyone else’s.
Still, the drinking and debauchery the pirates were accustomed to were impossible where
they now camped.
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“None of your guards has sounded an alarm,” Cholik went on. “And I assume all have
checked in.”
“They’ve checked in,” Raithen agreed. “But I’m certain that I spotted another ship’s sails
riding our tailwind when we sailed up into the river this afternoon.”
“You should have investigated further.”
“I did.” Raithen scowled. “I did, and I didn’t find anything.”
“There. You see? There’s nothing to worry about.”
Raithen shot Cholik a knowing glance. “Worrying about things is part of what you pay
me all that gold for.”
“Worrying me, however, isn’t.”
Despite his grim mood, a small smile twisted Raithen’s lips. “For a priest of Zakarum
Church, which professes a way of gentleness, you’ve got an unkind way about your
words.”
“Only when the effect is deserved.”
Folding his arms across his massive chest, Raithen leaned back against the balcony and
chuckled. “You do intrigue me, Cholik. When we became acquainted all those months
ago and you told me what you wanted to do, I thought you were a madman.”
“A legend of a city buried beneath another city isn’t madness,” Cholik said. However,
the things he’d had to do to secure the sacred and almost forgotten texts of Dumal
Lunnash, a Vizjerei wizard who had witnessed the death of Jere Harash thousands of
years ago, had almost driven him there.
Thousands of years ago, Jere Harash had been a young Vizjerei acolyte who had
discovered the power to command the spirits of the dead. The young boy had claimed the
insight was given to him through a dream. There was no doubting the new abilities Jere
Harash mustered, and his power became a thing of legend. The boy perfected the process
whereby the wizards drained the energy of the dead, making anyone who used it more
powerful than anything that had gone on before. As a result of this new knowledge, the
Vizjerei—one of the three primary clans in the world thousands of years ago—had
become known as the Spirit Clans.
Dumal Lunnash had been a historian and one of the men to have survived Jere Harash’s
last attempt to master the spirit world completely. Upon the young man’s attaining the
trance state necessary to transfer the energy to the spells he wove, a spirit had taken
control of his body and gone on a killing rampage. Later, the Vizjerei had learned that the
spirits they called on and unwittingly unleashed into the world were demons from the
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Burning Hells.
As a chronicler of the times and the auguries of the Vizjerei, Dumal Lunnash had largely
been overlooked, but his texts had led Cholik through a macabre and twisted trail that had
ended in the desolation of the forgotten city on the Dyre River.
“No,” Raithen said. “Legends like that are everywhere. I’ve even followed a few of them
myself, but I’ve never seen one come true.”
“Then I’m surprised that you came at all,” Cholik said. This was a conversation they’d
been avoiding for months, and he was surprised to find it coming out now. But only in a
way. From the signs they’d been finding the last week, while Raithen had been away
plundering and pillaging, or whatever it was that Raithen’s pirates did while they were
away, Cholik had known they were close to discovering the dead city’s most important
secret.
“It was your gold,” Raithen admitted. “That was what turned the trick for me. Now,
since I’ve returned again, I’ve seen the progress your people are making.”
A bitter sweetness filled Cholik. Although he was glad to be vindicated in the pirate
captain’s eyes, the priest also knew that Raithen had already started thinking about the
possibility of treasure. Perhaps in his uninformed zeal, he or his men might even damage
what Cholik and his acolytes were there to get.
“When do you think you’ll find what you’re looking for?” Raithen asked.
“Soon,” Cholik replied.
The big pirate shrugged. “It might help me to have some idea. If we were followed today
. . .”
“If you were followed today,” Cholik snapped, “then it would be all your fault.”
Raithen gave Cholik a wolfish grin. “Would it, then?”
“You are wanted by the Westmarch Navy,” Cholik said, “for crimes against the king.
You’ll be hanged if they find you, swung from the gallows in Diamond Quarter.”
“Like a common thief?” Raithen arched an eyebrow. “Aye, maybe I’ll be swinging at the
end of a gallows like a loose sail at the end of a yardarm, but don’t you think the king
would have a special punishment meted out to a priest of the Zakarum Church who had
betrayed his confidence and had been telling the pirates what ships carry the king’s gold
through the Gulf of Westmarch and through the Great Ocean?”
Raithen’s remarks stung Cholik. The Archangel Yaerius had coaxed a young ascetic
named Akarat into founding a religion devoted to the Light. And for a time, Zakarum
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Church had been exactly that, but it had changed over the years and through the wars.
Few mortals, only those within the inner circles of the Zakarum Church, knew that the
church had been subverted by demons and now followed a dark, mostly hidden evil
through their inquisitions. The Zakarum Church was also tied into Westmarch and
Tristram, the power behind the power of the kings. By revealing the treasure ships’
passage, Cholik had also enabled the pirates to steal from the Zakarum Church. The
priests of the church were even more vengeful than the king.
Turning from the bigger man, Cholik paced on the balcony in an effort to warm himself
against the night’s chill .I knew it would come to this at some point ,he told himself. This
was to be expected .He let out a long, deliberate breath, letting Raithen think for a time
that he’d gotten the better of him. Over his years as a priest, Cholik had found that men
often made even more egregious mistakes when they’d been praised for their intelligence
or their power.
Cholik knew what real power was. It was the reason he’d come there to Tauruk’s Port to
find long-buried Ransim, which had died during the Sin War that had lasted centuries as
Chaos had quietly but violently warred with the Light. That war had been long ago and
played out in the east, before Westmarch had become civilized or powerful. Many cities
and towns had been buried during those times. Most of them, though, had been shorn of
their valuables. But Ransim had been hidden from the bulk of the Sin War. Even though
the general populace knew nothing of the Sin War except that battles were fought—
though not because the demons and the Light warred—they’d known nothing of Ransim.
The port city had been an enigma, something that shouldn’t have existed. But some of the
eastern mages had chosen that place to work and hide in, and they’d left secrets behind.
Dumal Lunnash’s texts had been the only source Cholik had found regarding Ransim’s
whereabouts, and even that book had led only to an arduous task of gathering information
about the location that was hidden in carefully constructed lies and half-truths.
“What do you want to know, captain?” Cholik asked.
“What you’re seeking here,” Raithen replied with no hesitation.
“If it’s gold and jewels, you mean?” Cholik asked.
“When I think of treasure,” Raithen said, “those are the things that I spend most of my
time thinking about and wishing for.”
Amazed at how small-minded the man was, Cholik shook his head. Wealth was only a
small thing to hope for, but power—power was the true reward the priest lusted for.
“What?” Raithen argued. “You’re too good to hope for gold and jewels? For a man who
betrays his king’s coffers, you have some strange ideas.”
“Material power is a very transitory thing,” Cholik said. “It is of finite measure. Often
gone before you know it.”
[...]... the distance Men’s raucous voices, the voices of pirates and not the trained acolytes Cholik had handpicked over the years, called out to one another in casual disdain They talked of women and spending the gold they’d fought for that day, unaware of the power that lay buried under the city Only Raithen was becoming more curious about what they sought The other pirates were satisfied with the gold they... ended the tunnel Men worked on the edges of the massive door, standing on ladders to reach the top at least twenty feet tall Hammers and chisels banged against the rock, and the sound echoed in the tunnel and the chamber beyond Other men shoveled refuse into wheelbarrows and trundled them to the dumpsites at the front of the tunnel The torchlight flickered over the massive door, and it inscribed the. .. on the others down there Before they can make it up, we can nip ondown to the bonfire and warn Captain Raithen they’s coming.” Darrick filed the name away During his years as part of the Westmarch Navy, he’d heard of Raithen In fact, Captain Tollifer had said that the Captain’s Table, the quarterly meeting of chosen ships’ captains in Westmarch, had suggested Raithen as a possible candidate for the. .. city ruins, proving that he wasn’t the old, doddering fool Raithen had believed him to be The pirate captain reached for the long-necked bottle of wine on the small stand by the bed Gold and silver weren’t the only things he and his crew had taken from the ships they’d raided Taking the cork from the bottle, Raithen took a long pull of the dark red wine inside It burned the back of his throat and damn... times together could have been spent much better.” He breathed in, inhaling the sweet fragrance of the perfume he’d given her from the latest spoils, then demanded that she wear to bed He also smelled the coppery odor of blood Both scents were intoxicating The door to the room broke open Raithen prepared for the worst, spinning and placing the corpse between himself and the doorway He slipped the knife... practitioners of the Arts, but few did more than dabble in them Most people believed necromancy often linked the users to the demons such as Diablo, Baal, and Mephisto, collectively called the Prime Evils However, necromancers from the cult of Rathma in the eastern jungles fought for the balance between the Light and the Burning Hells They were warriors pure of heart even though most feared and hated them The first... him and leave him in the darkness with the rats, Nullat extended the torch Cholik gripped the torch, steadying it with his hand He whispered words of prayer, then breathed on the torch His breath blew through the torch and became a wave of flame that blasted across the piles of stones and debris like a blacksmith’s furnace as he turned his head from one side to the other across the line of rats Crying... they might even be beneath the level of the Dyre River The constant chill of the underground area and the condensation on the stone walls further lent to that assumption Only a few moments later, after branching off into the newest group of tunnels that had been made through Ransim’s remains, Cholik spotted the intense glare created by the torches and campfires the excavation team had established The. .. died as they worked there, and Cholik’s only lament was that it took Captain Raithen so long to find replacements Cholik passed through the main support chamber where the men slept He followed Nullat’s lead into one of the new tunnels, skirting the piles of debris that fronted the entrance and the first third of the tunnel The old priest passed the confusion with scant notice, his eyes drawn to the massive... scraped across the stone riverbed, taking away the margin for success by steady inches The water and the sound of the current muted the noise Then the anchor stopped and the rope jerked taut in Tomas’s hands Catching the rope in his callused palms, the sailor squeezed tight The longboat stopped but continued to bob on the river current Darrick glanced at the riverbank a little more than six feet away . together tonight, and the fog rolled out to
the sea. With the fog in the way, the distance seemed even farther. “Mayhap we can rely
on the weather more than we. riverbed, taking away the margin for success by
steady inches. The water and the sound of the current muted the noise. Then the anchor
stopped and the rope jerked
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