The Ever Fiend (Talon Stormbringer Book 1)
Page 1
Table of Contents
Title Page
Map of the Kingdom of Illiandor
Chapter 1 – The White Tower
Chapter 2 – Everland
Chapter 3 – The Shadow Riders
Chapter 4 – The Poison Pond
Chapter 5 – A New Talent
Chapter 6 – The Black Tower
Chapter 7 – An Old Talent
Chapter 8 – The Curse of Power
Acknowledgments
Glossary
About The Author
Other Randy Ellefson Books
Randy Ellefson Music
THE EVER FIEND
Talon Stormbringer
by Randy Ellefson
Copyright © 2016 Randy Ellefson / Llurien Books, an imprint of Evermore Press
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means; electronic or mechanical, including photography, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the author.
This book is a work of fiction. All names, characters, locations, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination, or have been used fictitiously. Any semblance to actual persons living or dead, locales, or events is entirely coincidental and not intended by the author.
Map of the Kingdom of Illiandor
Partial Map of the Kingdom of Illiandor, continent Antaria, on the world of Llurien
http://www.llurien.com/continents/antaria/
Chapter 1 – The White Tower
While most in Talendor slumbered, Talon Stormbringer crept through a hallway dark with flickering shadows, his human ears and eyes alert. He’d already slipped undetected past a jhaikan and a mynx, undeterred by their ferocity and taste for man-flesh. Even the dozen sleeping riven in the courtyard hadn’t given him pause, when even fully armored knights would have turned away. The little monsters were infamous for stirring at the slightest sound and waking to become like a whirling dervish of steel, not unlike what Talon himself could unleash from the sword he gripped in one hand.
Now he heard nothing, not even his own passage, the supple black leather pants and tunic he wore never squeaking as he crept toward the doorway and his prize—the gold figurine of a great bird of prey, said to be magical and worth a fortune. Stories in taverns had piqued his interest but also warned him of the dangers, the greatest of those being the wizard whose white tower he now prowled. Some said Viland Shadowbreaker enjoyed unsavory habits when few were looking, his public persona of benevolent charm masking a dark truth. But men with great secrets often hide things of greater importance than their private sins.
Talon reached the open doorway at the hall’s end and peered in. Four torches cast their light along the walls and he shook his head at the obvious trap. No one would light so many torches for a room that held nothing but a pedestal, upon which sat the figurine, light glinting off its golden curves. A room without a lock much less a door could ensnare only a fool. And each of the earlier dangers had offered an easy way around for a skilled thief like himself. The question was why Viland wanted to capture someone. Talon didn’t intend to find out.
He sheathed his sword, then slipped a light rope from his waist, fashioning a loop on one end. Lassoing wasn’t a skill he had spent much time mastering, but at the fourth attempt he managed to get it around the statue. A gentle tug, and the loop tightened. With a quick jerk he brought the figurine flying through the air to him and deftly caught it. He deposited it into a cloth sack and hefted his sword. With a smirk, he turned back the way he had come.
“Astiana mer,” said the silky, sophisticated voice behind him.
Talon froze more at the magic words than at the realization that a man was there. He tried to turn again but found that he could not. For all his strength, he could neither move his arms nor the powerful muscles of his legs. Like a statue he stood, imposing in his might, with only his steel-gray eyes, smoldering with indignation, casting about for some sign of the cause of his immobility. The breeze from a nearby open window did not stir the golden hair around his broad shoulders, but he could feel the wind on his face and heard it crackle the torches that sent his shadow down the hall. Joining that shadow were two others—one tall, one short—as quiet footsteps approached from behind.
“Don’t worry,” said the man. “It’s temporary. And you can still talk.” When Talon didn’t speak, the wizard sighed and said, “Mer astiana.”
Suddenly freed, Talon squeezed his sword, flexed his limbs, and weighed some options. Quick as he was, no sword could fly faster than words. And while the taller shadow was likely the wizard, he had no idea to whom or what the other shadow belonged, and had to know before launching an attack. Besides, he could hardly assess his foes with his back to them. He slowly turned around, a scowl on his face.
A black-robed, balding man stood beside the empty pedestal, a reassuring smile on his swarthy face. Perhaps he was a Marulan from across the Antaran Sea. But Marulans were thought to be mostly savages, their skins as black as their deeds, and not wizards with an air of sophistication and opulence. The man did not have an accent that Talon could hear. The long face, nose, and limbs matched what Talon had heard from stories. The dark eyes of Viland Shadowbreaker observed him coolly.
Beside Viland stood a karelia, all four and a half feet of him covered in dusky black plate armor, the sigil of a flaming sword emblazoned on his chest. Black hair swept back into a tight ponytail and pointed ears accentuated the impression of efficient speed, which drew Talon’s eyes to the sheathed, curved sword at the karelia’s hip. For a pleasant species, he seemed uncommonly sinister, the delicate features at odds with the cocky menace upon them. The translucent lorenia lines, which all karelia were born with, streaked across his cheeks as if fleeing the blue eyes toward his jugular. That the lines faintly glowed blue told Talon that something supernatural was still at play here, or he would have been unable to see the lines from five paces away.
“You are brave to release your hold on me,” Talon said, testing Viland’s grasp of the situation.
“No games, warrior. You were smart enough to use that lasso, and you’re smart enough to know I can kill you long before you reach me.”
No kerr shit, thought Talon approvingly. He had little patience for fools. “So what now?”
“You’ve passed my test and—”
Talon cocked an eyebrow and interrupted, “How is being caught a success?”
“That figurine is naught but a lure to test the bravery of those with ambition. Few will attempt the perils to reach it.”
The swordsman shrugged. “Your perils weren’t that perilous.”
“Indeed. I don’t need heroes, just uncommon men. You’ll do nicely.”
Talon’s eyes narrowed in annoyance. He didn’t care for being someone’s pawn. That he had fallen into a trap, despite knowing it existed, also grated on his nerves. “For what?”
Viland raised a hand, palm outward. “In a moment. I am no threat to you. I give you my word that, if you refuse my offer, I will blank your memory of this night and drop you on a ship bound for Llorus, rather than kill you.”
“Sounds like a lot of trouble.”
“It’s less trouble dragging a living body from my home than a dead one. And I assume you’d prefer not being killed, not seeing the Solon Judge for theft. I would rather avoid attention. Besides, I am not a murderer. Now, if you’ll accept my offer?”
“Let’s hear it.”
From his pocket, the wizard pulled a small vial of brightly glowing, silver liquid that cast dancing shadows around the room. “This is silver elixir, one of the most
potent substances on Llurien. I need more. You will get it for me.”
Talon suspected the dangers of doing so were far worse than losing his memory, but he’d never heard of the stuff and wasn’t sure he wanted to know what people did with it. “From where?”
“The Ever Pathways.”
Talon snorted. “They don’t exist. I may be young but I don’t believe in children’s tales.”
“Yes, you are young. Eighteen winters?”
“Not even that,” Talon replied. His size and bearing had often inspired assumptions that he was a man already. If that meant making his own way and being no stranger to the finer delights of women, he qualified.
“Maybe that accounts for your bravery. You’ll have need of it. I assure you, Everland is real.”
“And so is the Ever Fiend?” Talon laughed. “I conquered my fear of him at three.”
The karelia now spoke up, condescension clear despite the almost child-like pitch of his voice. “Your fear will return if you catch sight of him.”
Seeing that Talon was unimpressed, and unconvinced, the wizard said, “Being prepared means knowing the truth. Lies and illusion raise your risk of failure. I don’t want more damned souls wandering the Ever Pathways. They’re an obstacle to my designs.”
He spoke words of magic and stretched out one hand toward Talon as if to grasp his forehead from afar. Talon took one step back before the room disappeared and his mind’s eye filled with visions. A dark landscape with stormy clouds and eerie light. A black tower precariously perched beside the crumbling edge of an enormous crevasse, the bottom of which could not be seen for the mist rising from its depths. Stunted trees with bone white trunks beside a pool of shining liquid. Shadowy figures furtively moving just out of sight. And a robed, hooded figure that suddenly appeared between them, sending them fleeing with shrieks of terror.
The visions stopped and Talon realized he now stood with his sword raised, though neither wizard nor karelia seemed unsettled by that. The karelia’s lorenia lines glowed brighter than before but began fading as he watched. Talon lowered the blade and asked, “How do I know that these visions are not an illusion?”
Viland replied, “Once you enter the paths, you will see.”
Realizing he would get no further, Talon asked, “And what do I get out of this, aside from keeping my memories?” Nothing of great importance had happened recently and he could’ve lived without the memories, but allowing a wizard to tamper with his mind didn’t sit well with him. That Viland had already done so without his permission strengthened Talon’s resolve to prevent it from happening again.
“Anything you find on the Everway is yours to keep,” said Viland, watching Talon’s eyes drop to the vial, “but you may not take some of the elixir for yourself.”
“What’s to stop me?”
“It can only be contained in vials made from Ever Sand, and you will return the ones I give you. And then there’s my sorelia.” He nodded at the karelia beside him and any trace of amusement fell from Talon’s face.
The sorelian race, though physically identical to the karelian species to which it belongs, is malevolent where the karelia are benevolent. Sorelia use the supernatural skills granted by the gods for dark purposes. They keep to themselves apart from the rest of Llurien, holed up in the Sorelian Forest not too far north of Talendor. Talon had never seen a sorelia before, at least that he knew of. Perhaps the sneer should’ve made him realize.
That Viland had a sorelia working with him suggested that the stories of his nefarious living were true. Sending a sorelia into the Ever Pathways could only bring evil on the world. Maybe Talon needed to ensure that this mission failed and that he escaped with his life. There was no telling what this wizard would do with the silver elixir once he had it. Having his memory wiped now almost seemed like the better alternative, but then Viland would just get another man for the job. Talon didn’t want someone with far fewer scruples than himself helping these two. He might’ve been a thief of late, but he only stole from those who could afford to lose what he took. That reminded him of something.
“You want me to risk my life,” Talon began, “for the chance to find discarded baubles on the Pathways?”
“A bauble here is a prize there,” Viland answered smoothly. “Anything magical left inside for too long becomes enhanced.”
Talon’s eyes narrowed. “The place is chaos, the rumors say, as is everything from there.”
The sorelia grinned without humor. “He is smarter than he looks,” he said. “Indeed, warrior, Everland is chaos. Do not put on any armor or clothing found inside or you might never remove it. Weapons, however, are often advantageous, albeit hard to predict. Still, the danger is to the one struck, not to the wielder.”
“I don’t need the help.”
“Suit yourself. He’s Nyborian,” the sorelia remarked to Viland, referring to Talon’s hometown a week’s ride northeast. “The accent is subtle, but I hear the influence of the wagon peoples of Lorne to the east.”
Talon pursed his lips. He didn’t like anyone knowing too much about him, though little could come of that. The wizard seemed to feel the same way, having shrugged indifferently until he noticed the claw on a leather cord around Talon’s neck. Then he perked up and remarked in surprise, “Talon Stormbringer. I should’ve recognized you sooner. I’m delighted. Your reputation precedes you.”
“As does yours, Viland Shadowbreaker.”
Talon had hoped to keep his name to himself, refusing to give it to anyone on arriving in Talendor, twin to the kingdom’s capital, Illiandor, across Arcyndl Bay. Someone had seen the jhaikan claw from the beast who’d killed his parents around his neck, and called him Talon. The name had stuck, but he should’ve dropped the surname. Too late now. He had no family left in Nybor, and the brotherhood of knights to which his father had belonged didn’t need to know about the dishonor he had brought upon his father by stealing for a living. Hopefully they’d never find out.
He asked the wizard, “If you need someone brave, why not send your pet jhaikan from the courtyard?”
“It’s not real, for one,” Viland replied, “but the Ever Fiend has a special hatred for jhaikan and that would invite trouble.”
“As if this whole mission doesn’t.”
The legendary Ever Pathways could transport people from one place on Llurien to another in days instead of weeks, but few travelers made it out alive, and those who did had often gone insane. The karelia had eventually invented the Moon Gates to use the Ever Pathways at such speeds that one could traverse Llurien in an instant and bypass the dangers, but some still used Everland and the Ever Gates, such as the wizard standing before Talon now, black eyes glittering with forbidden knowledge.
Viland smiled. “The riven were also an illusion, but the mynx was not and will accompany you.”
Talon raised an eyebrow, unsure the large feline could handle the terrors of Everland. “Battle trained?”
“Yes. Few animals have the courage to enter the pathways, but this one is unique. Noren here is his master.” Viland nodded at the sorelia, who smirked.
Taking an animal, however tested, into a land of chaos didn’t seem smart, but he had killed a rabid jaegar once and didn’t doubt he could do the same to this mynx if it got out of control.
“You accept?” Viland asked, his eyes gleaming with firelight.
Talon sighed. “When do we leave?”
Chapter 2 – Everland
An hour later, Talon stood in the wide courtyard, the limestone wall he had climbed earlier surrounding him. Beyond that stood the few towers and homes tall enough to look down on him, though he couldn’t see them now. To keep prying eyes away, the wizard had summoned a thick mist that hung above their heads, a breeze from the nearby Antaran Sea tugging at it. The cover wouldn’t last long. On the stones around them were a wagon, empty crates, bulging sacks, and whatever mundane items Viland needed to run his home.
A stand of Siaran oaks and white Talana trees fil
led one corner, leaves trembling. Viland had assured him that the entrance to the Ever Pathways stood hidden behind them, invisible until it was opened. Only a spell could reveal the presence of a closed entrance. Karelia, who saw all manner of things few others could or would want to see, could even see one without trying to.
The sorelia, Noren, stood dressed as before, seemingly unmindful of the enormous sable mynx lying at his diminutive feet. Dark green patches dotted the cat’s fur, visible only where it wasn’t covered by plate armor on its back and sides. The half-green, half-black face, with a straight line down the center, made the maneless feline look distinctive. So did its unusual size—nearly as big as a horse—that indicated it was a male. Talon knew he would have to mind his tongue around the cat, who would accompany them, for once bonded to a master, a mynx was fiercely loyal. Noren wouldn’t have to issue a command for the mynx to kill Talon; the mynx might do it on its own if Talon spoke crossly to the sorelia. And if Noren died in there, the cat could become trouble.
The others accompanying them were less impressive. One seemed to be an ordinary swordsman save for the cockiness in his stance and eyes, as if he wanted to dare Talon to swordplay but had thought better of it for the latter’s size. Beside him and looking regal in gray plate mail stood a knight whose dour expression suggested little interest in this affair. His haunted eyes lingered instead on a dark-haired woman, who wore black leather and two short swords at her hips. She stood with more confidence than the knight or the swordsman. Surpassing them all in nonchalance was a male kryll, a species known for their mastery of physical combat, whether by hand or with weapons. He lounged catlike against the wall, a jhaikan-staff resting in the crook of his arm. Six of them, plus the cat, would enter Everland.
Talon knew nothing about them except that none were Ever Walkers–a group of individuals who voluntarily walked the Ever Pathways to seek fortune. He’d asked Viland about this only to be informed that Ever Walkers had been banned in the Kingdom of Illiandor and were hard to come by as a result. Besides, the wizard preferred not relying on people with an allegiance to someone other than himself, even if the Ever Walkers were more qualified for the risks involved. Not for the first time, Talon wondered what had happened to the man he was likely replacing.