The Legend of Vanx Malic Books I-IV Bundle: To Kill a Witch

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The Legend of Vanx Malic Books I-IV Bundle: To Kill a Witch Page 44

by M. R. Mathias


  “Three Tower Lake,” Chelda stated the obvious. Then she went on to say that the crumbly towers had been there long before her people had settled the mountains.

  A thin trail of wood smoke could be seen at the northern edge of the ice shelf where it met the trees. There were several huts that had been burned or otherwise destroyed, but there were a few people moving about. Without a second glance, Chelda turned them southward and led them around the lake in the opposite direction.

  Chapter Nineteen

  Remember those days of old,

  when nothing could go wrong?

  Now the days are young again.

  Where has my lifetime gone.

  – A Zythian bard’s song

  Aserica Rime’s worried, yet gleeful, cackling suddenly hiccuped into a choking cough when she sensed her own kind among those she was spying on. She backed quickly away from the seeing pool, and the link between her and her mutated griffin child, Sloffon, snapped with an audible, and slightly painful, “pop!”

  Who could it be? And why were they traveling with the barbarian woman? Furthermore, why was she in possession of a Trigon artifact? Where had she gotten such a thing?

  It was alarming, but in a curious sort of way. What wasn’t so curious was the Trigon medallion. She’d felt its presence the very instant the gargan woman had put it on her wrist. After that, she’d had her beast ferret out its location, so she could track them from afar. Only, this night, she felt something else among the group: one of her kind, and that was just plain frightening.

  “Well, Clytun, at least it’s not those Trigon bastards coming to finish our little war.” She spoke more to herself than to the hulking minotaur who stood vigilant guard near the heavy witchwood door of her lookout.

  The dingy, underground room was torchlit and filled with tables strewn with all manner of crystal balls, looking glasses, and other ancient far-seeing devices. The chamber was dominated, though, by a circular pool formed with a knee-high stone retaining wall.

  Witch blood, true witch blood, was the rarest of things. A witch might birth a hundred different offspring, each with its own shape and form, but only one in that hundred had even a chance to be born with the witch blood. And here one was —a mannish warlock even— the sort of bastard that comes along only once or twice a millennia. What was so confusing was that this would-be warlock seemed unaware of what he had the potential to become. He was also of her bloodline. This is what she had sensed in him that startled her so badly, for she knew the only child of hers to be born in a mannish form had sacrificed himself to Nepton’s wrath half a century ago.

  She hobbled over to a mirror and stood before it. Her hair was a gnarled tangle of gray and yellow-white, her face a sad, wrinkled covering hanging loosely over an almost five-hundred-year-old skull filled with knowledge. Her eyes were tiny black orbs, and her teeth brown and as crooked as her nose.

  Normally, she might have taken the time to study her distasteful reflection. Sometimes her ugliness fueled her determination. Seeing herself filled her with hate and jealous rage, but not this day. This day she was too curiously alarmed to need the extra motivation.

  Her reflection shimmered and shifted until it was gone completely, leaving a deep, rolling view of a stormy sea in the glass. In fantastic fashion, the swells and windblown foam all sped in motion to an impossible rate, but they were moving backward. The foam streams blew into the wave tops, and the white caps rolled and faded into the cobalt mass.

  Suddenly, a timber broke the surface. A heartbeat later, half a ship was jutting out of the sea. Beyond it, yellow lightning crackled in strobe-like fashion. Dark, swirling clouds churned and roiled with unnatural speed. The wrath of Nepton was great that night, and seeing it again made Aserica Rime shudder at his godly power.

  A dark-haired man stood tall at the bow spirit, a finely carved giant’s head. Beneath the man, the word Foamfollower was carved in darkly scripted letters. Boats came bobbing up to the deck. They were hauled up to the racks and secured. Men crawled over the sides or shot up head first out of the water until the ship was finally righted.

  Why had it gone down? What —

  Pulling away from the vessel, just above the roaring waves, was a sleek, spade-shaped sea ray.

  It was a giant storm devil. A spater-ray, she reckoned from her lore. It was attracted to the lightning and had leapt, crashing into the Foamfollower’s hull. As the ship traveled the sea backward, eating its own wake, Aserica Rime wondered what one of her sons had done to earn such a pointless ending.

  The ship leaned as it tacked up and over more slowly rolling swells through much more favorable weather. The sun rose and fell, and then rose and fell again. Other smaller storms came and went. She was prepared to watch all of her child’s life as it peeled away from his death in her reflecting glass, but she didn’t need to watch long, for the ship had found a port—Flotsam, she thought—on the Isle of Zyth. A golden-haired Zythian woman backed swiftly down the docks to the ship. She turned and waved and pushed a painful-looking tear into her eye. The ship moved to the dock then. Captain Saint Elm skipped backward up a plank and almost fell into the woman’s embrace.

  With a wave of her hand, Aserica Rime slowed, and then stopped, the image in the mirror.

  She studied the Zythian girl—no, she was a woman. She had to remind herself of the long lives with which the gods had cursed all of the races of Zwar.

  Her finger traced the woman’s belly, and it all became clear. She shuddered again, for the odds of birthing a blooded warlock through a generation gap were astronomical at best. But the odds of that child being half-Zythian were impossible. Only divine intervention could have managed to keep such a conflicted and powerful child alive. Such intervention meant that this trained Zythian warlock had a destiny, and most likely unimaginable power.

  He was coming for her. He would try to steal her knowledge, take her life, and then assume her place.

  It wouldn’t do. It just wouldn’t do.

  “Calm yourself,” the minotaur said. “You are trembling and aglow with your emotion.”

  She took in a deep breath and closed her eyes, letting the frozen image on her mirror start forward again. She turned away before her slowly forming reflection could remind her of her rotted body, but not before recognizing the glimmer of fear in her dark eyes.

  “Go fetch me a sacrifice, Clytun,” she ordered. “Bring her to the Altar of Pain. I must seek our master in this. Divine hands have played a part in this thing’s survival. And I have a feeling that our stygian lord will relish thwarting them.”

  Later, in a different sort of chamber, in the heights of one of Rimehold’s towers, the Hoar Witch slid a razor-sharp blade slowly across a pixie girl’s stomach. The young Spritan screamed, but the sound was muffled by the little wad of dirty linen shoved in her mouth. Her wrists were bound by silver chains that were anchored in the crimson-stained block of ice upon which she lay. Her glittery blue eyes were wide open with fear, and her body was convulsing wildly. Her wings were a ruin, one fouled and bent completely, the other a bloody mess of parchment-thin tissue. She looked like she wanted to die, and she was begging the Lords of Fae to grant her that single boon with all the will she had left in her.

  From above, the moonlight transferred down through the crystalline structure, illuminating the rest of the palace in a jaundiced glow. Aur’s moon itself was mostly hidden by her heavy lid.

  Aserica Rime poured a dollop of liquid on the pixie’s new wound and cackled with glee when the stuff started to corrode. Just as the pixie was on the brink of losing consciousness, she convulsed violently.

  The dark one himself played a part in granting the fairy girl’s quick death after that. He had been enjoying the torture from afar, through the Hoar Witch’s senses, and when her thoughts had drifted from the task at hand to the half-Zythian warlock, he commanded her in such a way as to push her anger and fear to the brink.

  Aserica Rime plunged the dagger deep into the pixie’s he
art, sending her soul-shadow speeding away from the evil place. Clytun sank into the corner and crouched there.

  “He ordered me to take in and teach the warlock.” She spat, and for the first time felt her own uncertainty. “The bastard thing is coming here to seek out its heritage. The dark one says we must kill off its companions. I can tell, as clearly as I can smell the dead fae’s stench, that either I or the man-witch will die in the process.”

  She shook her head and let out a slow sigh. “It seems that the dark one is trying to replace me, and this will never do.”

  “You don’t need him,” Clytun said. “You are a power unto yourself. You have crossed the dark one’s designs before.”

  “He was not pleased with us then, Clytun, I assure you.” A plan was already forming in her wicked mind.

  “Maybe not,” the minotaur admitted. “But driving away the Trigon was unavoidable. It had come down to us or them.”

  “Unavoidable it was, Clytun.” She nodded. “Unavoidable it was.”

  Chapter Twenty

  Her name was Copper Sally and she worked out in the alley,

  and she was always ready for a go.

  The Captain brought her to his cabin, and like a dog his tail was wagging,

  until he saw she had a bigger pole.

  – a sailor song

  Vanx and his companions didn’t venture any closer to the lake but instead skirted around it on the lip of the valley’s southern rim. The island was in sight the bulk of the day, and Vanx’s curiosity kept wandering to the towers and who might have built them. He would have enjoyed exploring them, if he weren’t being pulled elsewhere by some insistent feeling. In fact, he marked the island in his mind as a place he would visit, if and when he made it out of Rimehold alive.

  They put the lake behind them and the terrain became steeper, rockier, and far more slippery. Every one of them was forced to concentrate on the loose, treacherous path that Chelda chose for them. The big gargan girl was looking for a suitable place to stop for the night, when Poops exploded into a ferocious warning bark that set Vanx’s spine on fire and caused Xavian to gasp out loud.

  Weapons came up quickly, for Vanx and Chelda had been carrying their bows strung and ready in hopes of killing something fresh for their supper. The crossbow Brody had aimed at the woods wasn’t so much for game, though. The ever-prepared man had been sleeping with the weapon loaded and in reach since they’d left the ramma rabble.

  Xavian positioned himself behind Vanx, and Vanx heard him quietly mouthing the words to a spell.

  Gallarael unshouldered her backpack. She moved like an animal: quick, deliberate, and sure. Vanx hoped she didn’t shift forms prematurely. It might only be a group of hunters that had spooked Poops. But if it was the Shangelak, or another threat, he hoped she was ready to change and help defend them.

  Poops darted toward a thick tangle of piled scree at the edge of a line of pine trees. Vanx could smell the dog’s alarm. He could feel Poops’s irritation in his own goose-pimpled skin. Poops barked again, then lunged into the tangle. Over Poops’s savage growling came a steady flurry of heavy, crashing footfalls. It was perfectly clear to Vanx’s ears, but whatever was making the sound was receding swiftly down the slope, not drawing nearer to them.

  The deep crack of a tree limb breaking was followed by the shrill screech of an owl.

  “Whatever it was, it bolted away,” he told them.

  “I hope we’re not sleeping here,” said Xavian. “I will hike until the moon is high and hold my tongue the whole way to avoid whatever that might have been.”

  “’Might have been that Shagenlak Chelda’s folks told us about.” Brody’s tone was serious.

  “It’s Shangelak,” Chelda snapped. Then to Xavian she said, “You couldn’t hold your complaining for even a hundred paces on the easier stretches, wizard.” She forced a nervous grin. “But I doubt it was the same thing that attacked an entire village and a full hunting party. It was probably a bull elk or a young bear, unless the changeling beast is afraid of dogs.”

  Poops had a sheepish look about him when he eased back and stood by Vanx’s side. Since he had no tail to wag, his whole rear end wiggled back and forth.

  “It’s all right, Poops.” Vanx knelt and gave the dog’s ears a good scratch. “Being roused over naught is better than being caught off guard, every time.”

  “Agreed,” Brody said as he eased over and gave the heavily bundled dog a pat on the back.

  “We’ve got to make a camp soon,” Chelda said. “I suppose the wizard is right. So, we should push on and get out of this area, just in case.”

  “Please,” Xavian said from where he was helping Gallarael get her pack straps situated back on her shoulders.

  No more than a thousand paces around the bending path, chance, and the darkening sky, dictated their resting place for the night. An uncovered notch in a rock face they came upon looked like it had been used as a camp a few times before. Though it offered no great protection from the snow, its open side faced the trees, which fell sharply away. The immediate area was relatively level and clear of debris, and furthermore, there was no deep, dark, spider-concealing crack at the back.

  Brody used what little light was left to them and trooped bravely down into the trees. He scrounged up a good bit of deadfall, and soon a real fire was roaring. The flames reflected off of the ice and the granite walls around them, lighting the nook well. It gave them the impression, at least, that they were safe from all of the flame-fearing beasts of the wild.

  Gallarael helped Xavian boil some mash meal and added bits of dried venison they’d gotten from the gargans. The fare was plain but warm and filling. Everyone was pleased when Vanx offered to make one of the last pots of kaffee that they had left.

  Above, the cloudy sky opened up to reveal a bright, star-spattered sheet of blue-black wonder. Looking out from their niche, they could easily see over the treetops. The sharp, jagged majesty of the Bitterpeaks was aglow with silvery moonlight. It all sparkled like some crystal fairytale landscape. It seemed to Vanx as if they were near the top of an alien world, for what color the moon stole from his vision, it gave back with breathtaking shimmers and sparkles. Only the occasional hoot of an owl, with the frequent, whistling call of some distant beast, could be heard over the popping pinewood fire.

  In a reverent whisper, Chelda broke the silence, and for once her voice held none of its haughty, pride-filled disdain.

  “When we reach Great Vale tomorrow, the reception might not be all that warm,” she started hesitantly. “We will be treated well, but my father and I parted in a very bad way. He’d wanted a son and raised me as such.”

  That she was having trouble finding her words was plain, but when Gallarael slid in beside her and gave her a sisterly hug, it seemed to ease her anxiety.

  “When it came time to be a woman,” Chelda went on, “I held onto the masculine ways he taught me. He blamed my choices for my mother’s failing health, and when she passed on, he swore that I had broken her heart.”

  “Oh, Chelda.” Gallarael squeezed her closer. “That’s horrible.”

  “You know you didn’t,” was all Vanx could think to say. His own mother had died. He couldn’t imagine feeling responsible for her death.

  “No, no. She did die of a broken heart.” Chelda’s voice was barely audible now and thick with emotion. “My father broke it when he didn’t accept me for who I am. My mother loved me, I’ve no doubt. I guess all mothers love their daughters, but mine held no judgment. He and I have never forgiven each other, is all.” She hid her face in her hands then.

  When no one spoke for a long time, she added, in a tone a bit closer to her normal voice, “I just wanted you to know what to expect.”

  “So we will be there on the morrow, then?” Xavian tried to change the direction of the conversation.

  Chelda nodded. “If this upthrust of rock wasn’t behind us, we would be able to see the ridge of the Great Vale Rim. We might be all day getting
there, but by nightfall, for whatever it’s worth, I’ll be home.”

  The night watches were uneventful, save for Vanx’s. He couldn’t sleep well, so he relieved Brody and Xavian not long after they’d relieved Chelda and Gallarael. They objected at first, but Vanx insisted, and the two weary men found their tent.

  Vanx let the fire burn low and put it behind him so that he could see out over the landscape without the flames’ glare agitating his vision. Poops lay down at his side and worried the bone Vanx had been carrying for him. For a long time, the two of them sat and enjoyed the splendor of the night.

  Sometime later, the underlying sound around them suddenly hushed. Vanx and Poops both noticed it immediately, but after standing down the slope, even moving about to get a better viewing angle into the trees, Vanx saw and heard nothing that gave him pause.

  It was as he was moving back into the firelight that Poops let out a long, low growl and sent a tendril of warning through him.

  Glancing quickly at the dog, he saw that Poops was looking skyward. He craned his neck and saw immediately what had gotten Poops’s hackles up. It wasn’t a definite shape circling high over them, but it was a dark, shadowy thing that blotted out the stars as it soared on the wind. It moved like a circling hawk but was far larger. Just how large was impossible to judge at the moment, though.

  Vanx left the camp to get himself completely away from the fire’s glow. He didn’t go far. He would never leave his companions unguarded, but he went far enough that his eyes began to pick up details of the thing soaring soundlessly overhead.

  To his best recollection of creature lore, it was some sort of griffin, only it wasn’t a winged lion with an eagle’s head. Its body looked feline, though, like a large, well-muscled mountain cat. Its head seemed wolfish, with a long snout and laid back pointed ears that could have been horns. Its wings were thin, for Vanx could sometimes make out the stars through their membranes. He decided its hide was probably gray scales, with a sheen that allowed it to blend with the clouds or the snow. He guessed it to be a little larger than a full-grown haulkatten and most likely the same creature that had been terrorizing the gargans.

 

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