Zavant

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by Black Library


  The Templar felt a searing pain in his head from his bro­ken skull. He felt the blood flowing freely down his face. He felt the stabbing pains in his side and innards where broken ribs pressed into punctured organs, and, terrifyingly, he felt nothing at all from his shattered and useless legs. Grimly, methodically, he began to search around in the darkness for his sword, using what little dim light still emanated from the open doorway above.

  His hand closed on the pommel of the weapon, just as the door slammed shut, and darkness, shocking and complete, swallowed him up. For a moment, the only sound that

  existed in the world was the shallow, laboured breathing from rib-punctured lungs. And then, from out of the dark­ness around him came the other sounds.

  Hungry bestial growls; an eager, monstrous shuffling. The sounds of inhuman monstrosity. Abominations, closing in on him from all sides.

  The Templar prepared to meet them, managing to agonis­ingly haul himself up, determined to die with his sword in his hand and a prayer to Sigmar on his lips.

  Safely back in his room, the servant of the Ruinous Powers wept with pain, rivulets of blood running down his sides from the scourge marks on his back. The gibbering, insane thing behind him - that hateful monstrous twin-thing - kept giggling to itself. The harder the monk chastised them both with the leather-bound bundle of nettles and thorn branches, the more it giggled and snickered to itself.

  He knew that the master was displeased with them, and he knew that it was his monstrous companion, not he, who had made the mistake. It was he who had prepared the secret plague-gift without the master's knowledge or permission, and so it was he who had brought this strange investigator from Altdorf to the remote monastery, together with his escort of holy warriors.

  The thing behind him giggled even more at the mention of the Templars, and what the two of them had already done to one tonight. The deed had done much to placate the mas­ter's anger, and, just as importantly, it had given the hungry ones below their first taste of human flesh. Judging by the enthusiastic feeding sounds the monk and his grotesque other could hear coming from the other side of the safely locked door, they had greatly enjoyed the unexpected treat.

  If the master's designs went according to plan, they would soon have the opportunity to taste a great deal more.

  Yes. Soon, the monk promised himself, flaying away the skin of his back, drawing another vile bout of giggling from the thing there with him.

  Soon his torment would be at an end. Just a few more tasks to accomplish, and finally he would be released from his service to find the promised oblivion that was all his damned soul now craved.

  Five

  Vido shivered, and wrapped his cloak tighter around him. The morning sun was a faint smear in the sky, obscured by the low, vaguely ominous ceiling of dark cloud that seemed to hang perpetually over the monastery.

  It was also raining, of course.

  Vido shivered again, and thought idly of his homeland, which he had departed long ago and vowed never to return to again. Dull the Moot might be, but at least it was gener­ally warm and sunny, its fertile meadows and rolling, low hills so unlike the rest of the damp, misty and dark, forest- shrouded landscape of these northern environs of the Empire. Nor, he reminded himself with an inward grimace, were marauding packs of foul Chaos beast-creatures or strange, sinister goings-on in ancient, crumbling-stoned monasteries much of a feature of daily life in the Moot.

  They were standing in a gulley at the foot of the monastery rock, in an area which Vido had originally taken to be an overgrown and neglected herb or kitchen garden, aban­doned, like so much else at Alt Krantzstein, to the vagaries of

  wild nature. On closer inspection, the curious stones planted sporadically across the ground turned out not to be rocks or pieces of fallen masonry from the walls above, but were in fact ancient and vegetation-covered grave markers. With a shock, Vido had realised that he and his master were stand­ing in the midst of the monastery's graveyard.

  Konniger was down on his hands and knees, scrambling about amongst the gravestones, uncovering and reading names and dates from the time-worn inscriptions. 'Pontranius Glantz, librarian of this blessed place, taken by the Black Plague in the Year of the Lord Sigmar 1966. No, that won't do at all... wait, what's this? Wilhelm Keitel, holy brother, died of sickness 2478. Much more promising, don't you think, Vido?'

  Vido was barely listening. Idly, he wondered if he was sup­posed to be writing any of this down. Konniger had a truly prodigious memory, but occasionally he required Vido to make notes of his observations while he went about his inscrutable business. Tense and irritable after a generally sleepless night - halflings seemed to require more sleep than their larger human cousins - Vido's surly mood was little improved by their present surroundings. He had a traditional Old Worlder's dread of cemeteries and graveyards, and it was a matter of considerable and troubling frustration to him that so many of Konniger's adventures and investigations seemed to lead, at some point or another, to such places.

  And now here they were again, grubbing about in some ancient, rain-soaked boneyard where Konniger was bound to uncover something which would lead to more gruesome and grisly events. Vido shivered again, although this time it was not the cold which troubled him.

  'Brother Robel, called to Sigmar's side 2482. Ah, now we're getting somewhere, Vido,' continued Konniger, clearly on the track of something that only he was yet able to discern. He redoubled his efforts, checking gravestone after gravestone, using a metal spatula to clear away dirt, grime and moss to reveal the inscriptions hidden underneath. Vido watched, confused, as he was bombarded with a bewildering array of names, dates, and occasional causes of death.

  'Waluth Haller, taken by the pestilence 2483... Brother Kagenack, abbot of this place, died of sickness 2491. We are get­

  ting closer, are we not, Vido? Brother Goellecke, resting in blessed repose 2495... Brother Boddenberg, 2488... Brother Weinert, 2500... Brother-Codicier Riedesser, 2495... Brother Sommerfeldt 2495... Novice-Brother Stahlberg, 2497. Striking, is it not, Vido? What then are we to make of all this?'

  That many of them have died of some kind of plague or sickness?' ventured Vido, joining his master at last in his study of the inscriptions.

  'That much is obvious,' responded Konniger. 'As I have already explained, Alt Krantzstein and the area around it has a long and infamous history of plague and pestilence, and the monastery was founded here to re-sanctify this remote, if blighted, corner of the Empire. No, Vido, look again at the inscriptions, and pay particular attention to the dates upon them.'

  Vido was about to bend down and look more closely, but before he could do so he caught sight of the dark-cloaked fig­ure of a monk limping hurriedly down the slippery gulley path towards where he and Konniger stood. At first, Vido presumed that the man was limping as a result of some self- inflicted flagellant injury, but, as he drew closer, he saw that the man was apparently club-footed. His right leg was hid­den inside his long cassock but it was clearly twisted in some way and dragged heavily on the ground as the man moved.

  The monk stopped before them, and bowed nervously. 'Herr Konniger,' he said, breathing heavily after an appar­ently laboured journey. 'Brother Himerius awaits you in the vestry of the library. He is most anxious to discuss the rea­sons for your mission here, and to offer any assistance that may be in his power to grant.'

  Konniger bowed in acknowledgement. 'Tell the hon­ourable brother that we are on our way, and that I look forward to enlightening him further.'

  The man bowed again and hurried off with the message. Konniger and Vido followed him at a more stately pace. Vido looked questioningly up at Konniger.

  'Master? The dates on the gravestones?'

  'Indeed,' nodded Konniger. 'It is now the year of our Lord Sigmar 2517, and yet the most recent date to be found on any of those stones is 2500, an observation further borne out by the neglected state of the burial area, and the fact that the

  ground is undisturbed. N
o fresh graves have evidentiy been dug there for some number of years.'

  Konniger looked at Vido, seeing the look of confusion on his manservant's face. 'I look forward even more to our meeting with the honourable Brother Himerius, Vido. Perhaps he will be able to tell us when and how the Order of the Holy Three came upon the secret of eternal life, since, according to the evidence in this graveyard, not one monk has died here in the last seventeen years. A most remarkable feat,' added Konniger archly, 'considering the troublingly high mortality rate amongst the brethren here in the years preceding the turn of the century.'

  These are serious matters, Herr Konniger. You have proof of what you seem to be accusing us of here?'

  They were in a small, private scriptorium chamber within the library. Brother Himerius sat facing them at the scribe's desk. Himerius had a touch of the palsy - Vido had noticed a hint of it the previous night, when the monk had so sin­gularly welcomed them to the monastery — but now the symptoms were quite apparent. Himerius's hands shook vol­ubly while he talked.

  It wasn't just the effects of palsy, Vido supposed. He had always thought himself a fairly shrewd judge of character, and his time with Konniger had only heightened those skills. There was an extra tremor in the movement of Himerius's hand, Vido fancied, and a tremor in his voice. It was fear, he thought. Himerius was nervous, and trying to conceal some­thing from them.

  With Himerius were two other monks, both of them standing behind him and staring sternly across at Konniger. One was Brother-Codicier Kree, the monastery's chief librar­ian. He was a small, withered-looking man, surprisingly young to have risen to such an important position within the Church, but already showing the early signs of advanced age. His head was entirely hairless, and his skin had a curi­ous and unpleasant shrunken and prematurely wrinkled look to it.

  Vido had seen this strange patina effect once or twice before, on the skin of fierce Kislev and Norscan mercenar­ies, whose faces had felt the chill, flesh-shrivelling kiss of

  frostbite or exposure to the deathly and unforgiving cold of the Old World's most inhospitable northern latitudes.

  Why it should also appear here on the face of a man who had presumably spent most of his life within the cloistered confines of a monastery of the Church of Sigmar was a ques­tion which Vido was unable to immediately answer.

  The other monk had been introduced to them as Brother Rynok, the monastery's chief cellarer, responsible for the organisation and supply of the monastery's kitchen and stores.

  Many monasteries had extensive agricultural holdings where they grew their own crops and raised their own cattle in quantities to virtually make them self-sufficient, any excess surplus being sold off and the profit added to the monastery's own coffers. In this way, many monasteries had amassed considerable wealth, Vido knew, and in such places the brother cellarer was an important and influential figure, controlling the monastery's finances and much of its daily secular business. It was not unknown for wayward cel­larers to be partial to a little light-fingered pilfering or extra-mural use of the monastery's often considerable sur­plus assets.

  This, however, was evidently not the case at Alt Krantzstein. Rynok was tall and gaunt, his morose expression and sickly pallor doing little to suggest that he enjoyed living off the fat of the land of the monastery's neglected agricultural hold­ings. Indeed, many of the monks had a pinched, starved look to them, probably due as much to flagellant-inspired self- starvation as to a shortage of food supplies in the monastery. Vido suspected that, unlike some Sigmarite holy orders, the pious brethren of the Order of the Holy Three were not unduly troubled by the temptations of the sin of gluttony.

  Alt Krantzstein. 'Old Sickstone,' thought Vido, looking across at the three monks and thinking how much the truth of that strange name seemed to be written across the face and bodies of the inhabitants of this remote and blighted place.

  Both Kree and Rynok stared across at Konniger from behind the abbot; Kree with quite blatant hostility, Rynok with morose indifference. Together, the two of them were, Vido decided, a perfect precis of the welcome that he and his master had so far received here at the monastery.

  'There was an outbreak of contagion of the Unholy Powers within the very walls of the great cathedral fortress in Altdorf,' said Konniger, looking calmly across the desk at Himerius. 'At the command of the Office of the Grand Theogonist, I have been conducting an investigation into the source of the contagion. I am satisfied that I have traced the source back to here, to Alt Krantzstein.'

  'And, as I said, these are serious matters you speak of. You have proof of these allegations?' replied Himerius, the tremors in his palsy-shaking hand increasing.

  'Of course,' said Konniger, gesturing to Vido. The halfling nervously stepped forward, holding up the sealed casket he was carrying. Konniger took the box from him, and Vido stepped back smartly, glad to be rid of the box and the vile thing it contained.

  The contagion was carried within the body of one Brother Vallus, whom the good Brother Kree here may remember.' Kree scowled in unwelcome surprise at the mention of his name, his frosty and hostile stare intensifying as the sage- detective continued talking. Vallus was a master scribe at the cathedral, and ventured rarely, if ever, outside its environs. If he did not come into contact with a contagion outside the cathedral, then it seems most likely that the contagion was instead transmitted to him. A likely hypothesis, yes? But the question then is, of course, how was this accomplished?'

  Konniger laid the box down on the desk before the abbot and reached into his robes, drawing out a pair of fine calfskin leather gloves, which he then carefully donned.

  His audience watched his every move with morbid interest, listening as he talked throughout the whole intricate proce­dure:

  'Checking the scriptorium inventory, I saw that the unfor­tunate Brother Vallus had been working on a compendium of herbal lore, and had recently been in receipt of a number of books on that subject which were sent to him from this monastery.'

  'Brother Kree, is this true?' asked Himerius.

  'I seem to remember receiving a request from the cathedral scriptorium,' admitted Kree, glaring icily at Konniger. 'It is the policy of the cathedral scribes to make copies of works in their own style rather than accept the copied work of our

  own scribes, so the required volumes were duly collected and sent to Altdorf via the regular monthly messenger.'

  'Quite so,' agreed Konniger, amicably. The contents of Brother Vallus's chamber were destroyed as is right in all cases of Chaos contamination, but, through entreaties to the Office of the Grand Theogonist, I was able to briefly search amongst its contents as they were put to the torch. And what I found was this...'

  He flipped open the lid of the casket, reached in, and, with his gloved fingers, carefully lifted out a torn page of parch­ment. The three brethren leaned forward to inspect it. It was illuminated with carefully hand-drawn letters and illustra­tions of herbs and plant leaves, clearly the work of a patient and talented monkish scribe. One whole edge of the parch­ment was smeared with a strange residue, dirt perhaps, or something else...

  'You recognise it?' he asked Brother Kree. No answer was forthcoming. 'No? It's a page from your monastery's copy of Root and Herbal Remedies and Toxins of the Ostland and Ostermark Provinces. I have a lesser copy myself, although regretfully not as complete or as finely rendered as this ver­sion. From what I have ascertained, this was the text Vallus was working on when he succumbed to the contaminating touch of Chaos.'

  Konniger ran a gloved finger down the discoloured margin of the page. 'Look at this strange mark on the page. What do you suppose it to be?'

  'Dirt, water damage or some kind of ash? You yourself said that you rescued the page from the fire,' ventured Himerius.

  That's what I thought at first, before I subjected the parch­ment to certain alchemical procedures.'

  'And what did you discover it to be?' asked Himerius, the nervous, testy edge in his voice clearly evident.
/>   'The residue of some kind of unguent containing minute but distinct traces of the substance known as warpstone,' answered Konniger.

  The effect of his words was instantaneous. Himerius recoiled as if the parchment in Konniger's hand had been transformed into a live and poisonous serpent. The two monks behind him similarly backed hurriedly away from Konniger and the object he was holding. Kree mumbled to

  himself in prayer and made the protective sign of the ham­mer across himself.

  'Are you insane, man!' hissed Himerius, staring at Konniger and the parchment in horror. You brought that accursed stuff here, into a place consecrated to the sacred glory of Lord Sigmar?'

  'I have merely brought it back to where I believe it origi­nated from,' answered Konniger calmly. 'As to its dreadftil effects of physical transmutation, I assure you that you are perfectly safe. Unless, of course, like poor Brother Vallus, you spend considerable time in unwitting contact with the stuff. He must have absorbed it into his body through the skin of his fingertips as he spent long hours studying the book, con­stantly touching the surface of its pages as he leafed through it to familiarise himself with it before he got down to the arduous business of faithfully copying and transcribing its contents. Of course, since the margins of the pages he was touching had been carefully prepared with an unguent paste containing elements of warpstone, he was never to know that in carrying out his faithful duty to Sigmar he was in fact damning his body and soul with the taint of Chaos.'

  This is monstrous, Konniger,' breathed Himerius. You stand there and accuse us... accuse this sacred monastery of-'

  'Let me tell you what is monstrous, Brother Himerius,' bel­lowed Konniger, slamming his gloved hand down on the desk, making the startled abbot jump. The physical muta­tions I saw on that poor man's body could indeed be described as monstrous. The agonies he must have endured as he sought to purge himself of the taint through the most painful and protracted death imaginable I would also deem to be monstrous. And the deliberate attempt to pollute the seat of the Holy Church with the corrupted taint of Chaos I would not hesitate to call not merely monstrous, but utterly diabolic in nature.'

 

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