by Erik Lynd
Rise Of The Soulless
Book Four of the Hand of Perdition
Erik Lynd
Broken Gods Press
Contents
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Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
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Also by Erik Lynd
About the Author
For my family, both old and new.
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1
With a crack like thunder the giant carved rock came loose. Ten men stood around the large stone as it shifted loose with a deep, grinding sound. The laborer turned off the stone saw; its twelve-inch blade spun to a stop and skittered back in case the giant rock decided to roll forward and crush him.
The other men, though well out of the path of the stone, tensed, ready to spring back. It was large, easily capable of killing or maiming anyone in its path.
The men were dressed in work pants and worn shirts, covered in sand and dust. It was hot, even deep underground in the tunnel, and sweat cut rivulets through the dirt and grime caking their faces. They had been working hard for over a year to find this piece of rock. It was their goal, but none of them had been told why. They were the largest and strongest of the men assigned to this excavation and it would be their task to haul the boulder out. The tunnels leading to this room were too small for modern hauling equipment. The men had chains, crowbars, and other manual tools to carefully move this stone up to the surface from deep beneath the Egyptian desert rock and sands. But the surly look on their faces told Max they all knew their main tool would be their muscle and even more hard work in the heat.
The chamber they stood in was large, easily big enough for them all to gather in and still have room to maneuver. The walls were covered with a combination of carved images depicting ancient scenes and the beginnings of the hieroglyphic alphabet Egypt was so famous for. The vast, underground tunnel complex had several similar rooms; the excavation team had discovered them all along the way, but they had no idea what the rooms had been used for, what old purpose they served.
At least Max and his fellow workers had no clue. Perhaps their employers were aware; this seemed likely considering they were paying for this dig. And there was no doubt, it was a large and costly project, the biggest that Max had ever been on, and he had been on a lot. There was good money for a laborer with experience in excavation. There were always professors looking for help digging up this or that.
That was another thing though. His employers were not professors. They did not talk to the help, except when necessary, but Max could tell. They didn’t care about the history or the culture. They tore through the tunnels like they were hunting for treasure.
When they first opened a new room or tunnel they’d come to a screeching halt and the two men, dressed in khaki outfits complete with pocketed vests and high boots like villains from an Indiana Jones movie, would pull the crew back and venture into the room by themselves. More than one worker had been abruptly fired for going into the chamber before being given the okay from their fearless leaders.
But they were the bosses and they paid well. Max and his fellow laborers hung back from each new discovery until given the okay.
When they first opened this new room, the tunnel beyond had partially collapsed and it had taken them a while to clear the way through; they had shut the dig down for almost a week, the longest they had ever paused.
Max and the others didn’t mind though. A week off from working in the hot tunnels below the sands was welcome. Once it was known that this break would be more than a day, that the bosses had found something they needed to study, many of the workers went home for a few days to spend some time with their families. Max, however, had stayed behind with the skeleton crew that supported the bosses and the camp.
Max was not his real name, but one the bosses found easier than his given one. So, he became Max when on the job. He had family: a wife who fit perfectly in his arms and heart and a beautiful little girl who made him laugh with joy every day. They were the reason he lived, the reason he worked as hard as he did. But they were far from here, further than most of his coworkers’ families. And staying meant more money, and more money meant something better for his family, a better life, a better chance. He would do anything for them, even if it meant staying away a little longer so they could all be a little happier when he did return.
If he had known he would never see them again, he would have gone home for one last visit.
Much to the chagrin of the workers who had left, the bosses fired most of the laborers. They were at the end of their search and didn’t need the bulk of their staff any longer. They kept the skeleton crew, and most of that was Max’s group.
The break was over now, the bosses had done… whatever it is they had done alone here in the dark. The room was bare except for the carvings and the massive rock they had just pulled out of the wall. If the bosses had taken anything else out of here, they left no evidence. It was just a large, empty room.
The stone, the one they had detached, was different though, out of place amongst the old gray rock. It was as though all the other carvings were a pale imitation of this one. A masterpiece versus an amateur. It just felt better, more… present. Like it was the only real thing in the room. It made Max uneasy.
The bosses had selected the biggest, strongest of the crew for this work. Max was large and still had the strength of youth. He was only twenty-five, his wife four years younger. A young family, a young life just begun. It would be back breaking work to bring this rock up, but he could take it even if the bosses drove them hard.
With a nod from the boss they attacked the stone around the detached rock. With sledge hammers and large chisels, they began chipping the rock from around the edges of the target stone. The bosses, worried about damaging their discovery, didn’t allow power tools or any type of explosive. The area they were working at was too small for all of them to get in at once, so they took shifts to maximize time.
Max could see the sudden impatience of the bosses. They had worked the men hard, tearing into this ancient tunnel complex, but they were also methodical, always making sure they had explored every new tunnel or room thoroughly, carefully deciding which direction to move next. As the dig went on however, their frustration started to show. Rooms were checked quickly; some only received cursory review before they moved on to the next one. They were not finding whatever it was they were looking for and the strain was showing.
Now however, they had found it and the excitement translated into even more impatience. The bosses promised triple the money if the crew could get the stone up to the surface in half the time is should have taken.
So Max and his fellow workers tore into the tas
k. Triple money meant an easier few years for his family; he could work a little less and be closer to home. He could be with his wife and play with his daughter. It would be a good life.
The bosses didn’t care about the surrounding stonework, so they smashed the priceless walls, pulling them down and away from their prize. Max wasn’t the only one a little hesitant to destroy such artifacts, it just seemed wrong, but then he thought about the money and his family. That was all it took for him to swing his hammer the hardest.
It took them two days to carve enough of the wall away from the large stone to allow them to wrap their chains around it. One of his fellow workers almost crushed a leg while they chipped away at the ground beneath it. The rock had shifted suddenly. Max darted forward and pulled his colleague back like the man was a rag doll.
Driven by the sense of urgency, the boss supervising the work had charged forward, raging at the man who had almost been permanently maimed.
“You idiot, you could have damaged the sacred stone! It’s more valuable than all our lives put together,” the ridiculously dressed man roared. He screamed for five minutes, spittle flying from his mouth. Max thought that the stress, or whatever was driving this need, was taking its toll on him. It was driving the bosses half mad. “If you had broken it he would have…” The boss suddenly stopped as though realizing he was saying too much.
Max wondered who “he” was and what “he” would have done. Fire them? Sue them? Whatever they planned to do, Max did not like feeling threatened. For the first time he began to wonder if the money was worth it.
They wrapped their heavy chains around the stone, low on the back side. The bosses were insistent the rock not roll. The carvings could not be damaged. Once the chains, wrapped in thick canvas were in place, Max and his fellow laborers took up their spots along the length and heaved.
It was grueling work. They had to strain for every inch. Once they got it away from the wall they would use a small muscle powered lift to ease it into a hand-pulled trailer bed. It would make the transport easier, but to get the stone and trailer through the tunnels they would have to widen some of the narrower areas and shave off some corners near the turns. They had thought about digging straight down from above, but the depth and significantly dense stone underneath the desert sand made that approach impossible.
They had pulled the stone several feet before the cry came from the boss.
“Halt!” he cried. Then he approached the other side of the rock. They stopped, welcoming the rest even if they didn’t understand it.
Max understood it though. He was closest to the stone and could see what had interested the boss. A passageway, half the height of a man, a large hole really, was revealed behind the stone. The darkness inside seemed a thicker black than normal—like the light of their lamps could not fully penetrate it. Cold air, unnaturally cold in this hot tunnel system, brushed up against Max. He shuddered, but not from the sudden chill. It just felt wrong somehow. Nothing came out of the hole, but Max had the sudden, irrational thought that it was filled with monsters.
“Go tell Mr. Smith to come immediately,” the boss said to one of the workers. The man nodded and started off down the tunnel at a fast walk. “Run goddammit,” the boss yelled, his words cracking like a whip. The man sprang forward, running as fast as he could.
“The rest of you take a long break while we investigate.”
Not needing to be told twice, Max and his crew headed up top while the bosses did whatever it was they do in those rooms. Max didn’t care; the job would be done soon and he would be home, flush with money. A few hours later the bosses brought them back down.
“We focus on bringing the stone up,” the boss told them. “Nobody, and I mean nobody is to go into that room beyond the stone. If you do, you will be fired on the spot and we won’t pay you the wages owed. Is that clear?”
There was nodding and grunts of general agreement all around. Max was curious, but not enough to risk setting off the bosses. Over the next few weeks as they struggled to bring the massive stone up to the surface they speculated and told stories. Some thought it was an old burial chamber; that speculation led the more superstitious workers to start warning of ghosts and the consequences of disturbing the dead.
“No good will come of this,” Jon, the closest thing Max had to a friend on this dig, said one day. “There is something in that tunnel. All the other rooms, no problem; that one though, that is where the dead reside.”
Max said nothing, but noted that despite his misgivings, Jon stayed for the money, so he must not be that concerned.
Then the accidents started.
They had the stone about halfway to the surface, cutting corners and widening passageways, when there was a partial collapse of a tunnel. While they chipped away at a corner, rounding it so the trailer could turn the ninety degrees, Max heard a deep rumbling. It was hard to hear over the noise of their work, but he recognized it immediately.
“The tunnel! The tunnel!” he cried, but there was nothing they could do. The ceiling behind the sacred stone—fortunately, the bosses said since the accident didn’t slow them down—sloughed to one side. The wall sagged and the stone in the wall fell in a rush. A man, bringing up the rear had just enough time to look surprised, eyes widening in horrible realization as the stones in the ceiling came crashing down on his head.
The rubble covered only half his body, but it was enough. His head had been caved in by a large stone. His body moved in thrashes and jerks as nerves still fired off, but by the time they had fully dug him out he had stilled.
This sobered the workers. Max and his team had been focused on getting the job done, getting home quickly. Now they knew the cost of haste. But even as they resolved to be more careful and to plan the removal of the stone more carefully, the bosses drove them harder.
A few days later, when Max and others refused to work at the boss’s hectic pace, the carrots were joined by the stick. If they didn’t work twice as fast they wouldn’t get their pay. They’d be forced to go home without their last paycheck.
This motivated most of them. Max was reluctant but what choice did he have? He couldn’t walk away at this point.
After Jon was killed though, the men with the guns showed up.
A slip of the power chiseler. It skidded from the rock surface of a corner they were removing and straight into Jon’s head. He had been bent over carving away at the base to “save time” when it happened. It had hit a harder than normal portion of the rock and skittered to the side and the man operating the chisel lost his grip as it slid from his hands. He had clawed after it, only catching hold as it plowed into Jon’s head. The man could only watch in horror as his own weight drove the machine forward into Jon’s skull, chiseling through flesh and bone.
Later the man said that he had been tired, probably shouldn’t have been using that tool at all. But it didn’t matter, Jon was dead. This time Max and his fellow laborers told the bosses to go fuck themselves. It was unsafe. They would finish the job in a safe way and they wanted the money they were owed now.
Max had been the one to step up and make the demands, but the team was on his side. The bosses tried to argue back, explaining that they had a timeline, a budget and these things could not be helped. Accidents happen.
Max and his team held firm. They would do this at their own pace and they would get paid.
The bosses realized they would not win this argument with the threat of withholding pay. Eventually they just nodded and told everyone to take a day off. Take some time to remove Jon’s body and rest. They would start fresh in the morning.
Despite the death of two of their numbers, the workers relaxed. Max felt a little better, the bosses had listen.
The next morning the men with the guns had shown up.
Max woke to a commotion outside his tent. The sounds of men yelling and confusion pulled him from dreams of being in his wife’s arms. He woke slowly; based on the light in the tent it was early, but after dawn.
More yells made him throw the cover of his sleeping bag back and start to put on his pants and shoes. This did not sound good.
More yells, louder. Then a deafening crack from just outside his tent. It sounded like a rifle. He had heard many rifle reports growing up, but it had been a long time. It sent chills down his spine. There was only one reason to have gunfire out here in the middle of nowhere.
He finished putting on his pants and shoes quickly. A part of him didn’t want to leave the tent, but he knew he had to. The canvas would not protect him for long. He carefully poked his head out of the front flap.
The bosses were there, standing in the middle of the camp and surrounding them were a handful of armed soldiers. They wore combat fatigues and carried assault rifles. Hardened faces surveyed the workers as they staggered from the tents. Max doubted they were real soldiers, despite the organized look. Most likely some kind of private security team. Guns for hire. And knowing the bosses, probably not too concerned with getting blood on their hands.
They herded the laborers to the center of the camp as they emerged from their tents. Those who hesitated got a rifle butt to the gut. Anybody who put up an actual fight got a rifle butt to the jaw.
Max was jerked from the tent and shoved toward the center of the camp. He didn’t fight, they were out gunned. Silently he cursed himself. He should have seen this coming. He had ignored the warning signs.