[Lost Mark 01] - Marked for Death
Page 1
EBERRON
Marked for Death
Lost Mark - 01
Matt Forbeck
(An Undead Scan v1.0)
For my hero, Ann.
Special thanks to Mark Sehestedt, Peter Archer, Christopher Perkins, and Keith Baker
Chapter
1
“Boss!”
Kandler snapped awake and grabbed the hand on his shoulder. Head still half in his dreams, he looked up. Bright wolf-yellow eyes set wide across a dark face stared back at him over a large, flat nose. Thick black fur clung to the figure’s forearms and lower legs, and a coarse mane fell across his shoulders. Long sideburns nearly covered his pointed ears, and sharp teeth bared at Kandler’s sudden movement.
“Damn it, Burch!” Kandler said. “Don’t do that.”
“We got a body on the east ridge,” Burch said. He pulled his hand from Kandler’s grasp and stepped back into a crouch.
Late as it was—or was it early? Kandler wondered—Burch was fully dressed. He wore a short tunic of rough, steely links over a wool shirt and leggings the color of long-dead coals. A long knife rode his hip, and a crossbow lay slung across his back, next to a full quiver. His feet were bare, exposing the dark, clawlike nails on his toes, which matched those on his thin fingers.
“You sleep too deep,” Burch said.
“That’s why I keep you around.” Kandler groaned as he swept a hand through his brown, wavy hair. He kept it cropped short, not because of the few strands of gray that were starting to show but out of pragmatism. Sitting up, he felt far older than his thirty-five years. The ghosts of his old war wounds tugged at his back. He rubbed his eyes with a hilt-callused hand. “What time is it?” he asked.
“Two hours past midnight. Sun-up in three. Temmah’s up there with the body, waiting.”
Kandler sighed. “Esprë still sleeping?”
Burch nodded, the light from the everbright lantern in his hand glinting in his wide, yellow eyes. “No nightmares tonight. Norra’s my next stop.”
“Tell her it’s an emergency.”
Burch put the lantern on the windowsill next to Kandler’s bed and loped out of the room. He closed the front door to the little house behind him as he left.
By the time Burch came back with Norra, Kandler was dressed in clean clothes, standing in his house’s main room and buckling on his long sword. It was curved and sharp as a sliver of the moon, but the scabbard was simple worn leather.
Burch didn’t knock before leading the girl inside. Still dressed in her nightclothes, Norra stifled a yawn as she entered and pulled her dark hair back from her pale face, exposing her soft, brown eyes.
“What’s the matter?” Norra whispered with a frown, worry furrowing her brow. “Is someone else missing?”
Kandler picked up the lantern from his dining table and looked down at the girl. “That’s what I need to find out. Can you stay with Esprë?”
“Of course,” Norra said. “I’ll just crawl into bed next to her. She won’t miss you till morning.”
Kandler nodded his thanks, grabbed his cloak from its hook beside the door, then stepped out into the night, Burch dogging his heels. Using the hand signals they’d employed together during the Last War, Kandler motioned for the shifter to lead the way.
Burch sprang ahead, ranging back and forth across the path toward the eastern rim of the deep crater in which the little town of Mardakine lay. He moved with an easy gait and grace that betrayed his race’s heritage. Although dozens of generations or more separated the shifters from the werebeasts from which they descended, the animal in them was impossible to deny.
The night sky, starkly clear, formed an unbroken dome from one towering wall of the crater to the other. Stars twinkled overhead—distant, silent, and cold—and among them, watching like a court of indifferent judges, nine of the moons sat in their places in the night sky. Stars and moons were so bright that the Rings of Siberys seemed no more than a glow dusting the southern sky.
Kandler wrapped his cloak about him to ward off the chill. Mardakine slept undisturbed but for the walking pair. The air smelled faintly of the woodsmoke escaping from the chimneys of the houses that Kandler and Burch passed as they trudged along the lane toward the crater’s eastern rim. Burning wood reminded Kandler of one of the many stenches of the battlefield—the cooking pit, the campfire, the sentries’ torch, or the funeral pyre. Best not to think of that now.
“Who found it?” Kandler asked as they left the easternmost of the houses behind.
“Pradak and Rissa.”
“Mardak’s son?”
“And Rislinto’s daughter.”
“The rumors were true, I see.”
“Two frightened youngsters,” Burch said, “came out to watch the sky and kiss. Found a body instead.”
“Who is it?” Kandler had put off the question long enough.
At first Burch remained silent, but after a few dozen paces he said, “Not far now.”
The land grew steeper as the pair moved forward. Burch hung closer to the ground and switched naturally from walking on two feet to climbing on all fours. Kandler followed his friend’s example a few minutes later when crater floor became a leaning wall. There was a switchback trail a few hundred yards to the south, but it would be slower and wouldn’t let out at the right place.
“Where are Pradak and Rissa?”
“Temmah sent them home. They looked too scared to ever kiss again.”
Kandler laughed. “You underestimate two sixteen-year-olds.”
“Maybe.” Burch shrugged.
As they reached the crest of the crater’s ridge, Kandler looked beyond and grimaced. A wall of menacing gray wisps reached thick, swirling tendrils out over the ridge in a perpetual attempt to swallow the crater whole, town and all. This was the edge of the Mournland, a place where not even death rested peacefully. The wall of dead-gray mist towered over Kandler and Burch as they approached it. It stood more than a mile high and stretched north as far as the eye could see. To the south, it disappeared around the eastern edge of distant Point Mountain, the last of the Seawall Mountain chain that ran from the Thunder Sea at the southern shore of the continent of Khorvaire, right up to within a hard day’s ride of Mardakine. Craning his neck, Kandler could see the first hint of dawn stabbing its way over the Mournland’s permanent shroud.
“You wanna wait for daylight?” Burch asked, his broad nose twitching as he sniffed at the air. His lip curled into a hesitant snarl.
“It’s only one body, right?” Kandler paused a moment. “Right?”
“One body.” Burch nodded. “In many places.”
Kandler breathed a soft curse. “That’s something new. Where’s the head?”
Burch pointed off to his left and right.
Kandler swallowed. “Show me the face—or the biggest part of it.”
Burch bounced forward along the crater’s crest, his shorter legs moving fast to keep ahead of Kandler’s pace. When he reached a scrappy bush squatting just on the crater’s inside edge, he stopped and pointed to something lying beneath it.
Kandler knelt and shone the lantern on the thing. A pair of dead eyes stared back at him, the blue orbs frozen in their final moment of terror. The back of the head was missing, but the face was mostly intact. The skin was tanned and wrinkled. A small scar ran across the left eyebrow. Smile lines still stretched at the corners of the mouth.
“Shawda,” Kandler said. He closed her eyes, wincing at their cold stiffness. After a long moment, he turned to Burch. “Where’s Temmah?”
“With her chest. Pradak and Rissa found that part first.” Burch pointed further north along the ridge, and K
andler motioned for him to take the lead once again.
Kandler heard the dwarf before he saw him. As Kandler and Burch approached, they found the stout, squat Temmah sitting on a flat-topped rock and weeping into wadded fistfuls of his long, blond beard. Kandler smelled fresh vomit, along with scent of meat. He came up behind Temmah and put a hand on his shoulder. The dwarf stood and looked up at Kandler and Burch with his red-rimmed, crystal-blue eyes.
“We finally found her,” the dwarf said, his voice thick with grief.
“Good work,” Kandler said, patting Temmah on the back.
“She’s dead, Kandler. Dead.”
“I know.”
Temmah used the end of his beard to dry his face. He shook his head as his wide cheeks flushed with shame. “I saw plenty of death in the War.”
“That was in battle.”
Temmah nodded. “This… this is nothing like that.” He steeled himself as he wiped his eyes again, then he pointed to a spot a dozen yards away. “The young ones found her over there,” he said. “Some of her anyhow.”
Kandler leaned over and whispered to Temmah, “If I wasn’t the town’s justicar, I wouldn’t be here either, my friend. It’s a matter of duty.”
Temmah grimaced. “Duty,” he said. The word wrapped oddly around his tongue, but he held on to it tight.
Kandler patted Temmah on the back again and then walked over to the spot, Burch right behind him. Temmah stayed behind and sat back down on the rock to collect himself.
The rising sun turned the morning sky as gray as the mists of the Mournland towering over them. Almost it seemed the entire world could be a part of the Mournland and the two friends would be condemned to wander through its endless mists forever. Kandler shuddered and looked down.
A large portion of a female human’s torso lay on the ground before him. It was on its front, still wrapped in what was left of a bloodstained blouse and a sliced-up cloak. Kandler motioned for Burch to turn it over.
The chest had been split open like an overripe melon. The contents were still there, but as the torso turned over, they spilled out. They were as gray as the dawn’s light.
Kandler heard Temmah coming up behind him. “Some animal just tore her apart,” the dwarf said. As he did, he shivered and looked over his shoulder at the swirling mists.
“I don’t think so,” Kandler said as he knelt down over the body. He pointed at the severed neck. “The cut is too clean. This was done with a blade.”
Burch crouched down across from Kandler, his knees spread wide as he stared at the body. “What are you saying, boss? None of the other bodies had a mark on them.”
Kandler hunched down to examine the torso closer. “This cut is spotless. The others are too. Blades that sharp don’t wander around by themselves.
“A Darguul raiding party maybe?”
“Goblins don’t have anything like this. Orcs neither.”
“Think someone in Mardakine did it?”
Kandler rubbed the day’s growth on his chin. “I doubt it. There’s only one blade in town that could make such a cut”—he gripped the pommel of the sword hanging from his hip—“and I’m wearing it.”
“Maybe something out of the Mournland?” Burch said.
Kandler felt the ground under the torso. “Probably. It’s a long way to another town from here.”
“Uh, Kandler?” Temmah cleared his throat and looked sidelong at Burch. “Could it have been a warforged? Rumors say they’ve been rallying around this so-called ‘Lord of Blades’. Perhaps this is their work.”
Kandler shook his head. “I suppose it could be, but the warforged don’t tear a body to pieces like this. It’s something else. Something different.”
He stood up and looked around. The cloudless expanse above and to the west filled with a hint of blue. It was going to be a warm day.
“How far apart is she spread?” Kandler asked.
“I… um, I haven’t found all of her yet,” Temmah said, “but there’s at least a fifty-yard split between her head and her… well, I found a thigh over there.”
“Have you found any blood?”
Temmah paused. “Now that you mention it, no. I mean, I hadn’t thought about it. You would think there would be plenty of blood from someone killed like that.”
Kandler nodded. “She wasn’t killed here. She was dead before she got here.”
“Why?” asked Burch.
Kandler stared into the shifter’s wide, yellow eyes. “That I don’t know,” he said, “but I aim to find out.”
Chapter
2
Kandler, Burch, and Temmah set to gathering Shawda’s remains. They picked through the scattered ground cover, hunting for the dull flash of a piece of gray skin against the crater’s darker floor. Whenever one found a piece, he alerted the others and then reverently carried the part back to them.
Kandler had taken off his cloak to use as a litter, and the trio laid the pieces gingerly atop the thick wool, reassembling Shawda like a macabre puzzle made of flesh. As they worked, the growing light made the job easier. Soon, they had collected most of the body.
After they found all they could, Kandler carefully wrapped the bits up in his cloak and led the others down from the crater’s rim and back into Mardakine. By this time, the sun had cleared the mist and was climbing into the sky, burning the dew from the grayish-green grass that grew in patches all around the town but nowhere else in the crater.
As the three walked into town, Temmah cleared his throat, his voice still hoarse from his tears. “Kandler?”
“Yes?”
“Who will tell her?”
Just then, they turned a corner in the lane. The town’s main square lay directly ahead of them. A crowd already milled about there. A shout went up as someone saw the three approaching.
“Me,” Kandler said.
He heard the dwarf sigh with relief, but the sound caught in Temmah’s throat as he saw the people gathered before them.
“How could they already know?” Temmah asked.
“Pradak and Rissa,” Burch said as he bounded along at Kandler’s side. “They’ve been back here for hours.”
The trio continued on in silence. Kandler saw faces peeking out of windows and open doors, the people too frightened to ask what he cradled in his arms and too curious to look away. As he walked on, some of the watchers left their houses and fell into step behind him. By the time he reached the main square, the people of Mardakine surrounded him.
Pradak and Rissa and their parents stood in the center of the square, the rest of the town arranged around them. Pradak’s father Mardak, a tall, hard man with a face like a hawk, stepped forward as Kandler neared. “Justicar, is what my son tells me true?” he asked.
Kandler raised the bundle in his arms just a hair. It seemed heavier than before. “We have a body.”
The rest of the color drained from Mardak’s already pallid face as he looked down at the too-small bundle. “Who?” he asked.
Kandler looked around at the crowd. “I’d rather not say here.”
“Justicar,” Mardak said, a tremble in his voice, “we have lost a dozen souls in the past two weeks. These good people have waited long enough for an answer. As founder of this town I order you to give it to them.”
Kandler stared back at Mardak, as impassive as the shifter beside him. Temmah whimpered softly, once, and then fell silent.
“Now,” Mardak said.
“Don’t you think—”
“Now!”
“It’s Shawda!” Temmah blurted. He began to weep again and buried his face in his beard.
A wail erupted from the rear of the crowd. The people parted, revealing Norra, who had collapsed to her knees, her face buried in her hands. Kandler’s stepdaughter Esprë, a slim girl with long, blonde hair and pointed ears, stepped forward and wrapped her arms around Norra to comfort her.
Kandler nearly dropped his bundle to run over and comfort the girls. Instead, he looked to Burch. The shifter, b
arely taller than Esprë, bounded over and took the girl’s hand. Others leaped to Norra’s aid. Nearly mad with despair, she thrashed and hurled herself about, and her wails followed Kandler all the way to the Mardak’s house.
“Had I known…” Mardak said to Kandler, then trailed off. He turned away from the bundle in Kandler’s hands to address the crowd. His voice shook as he spoke.
“I will hold conference with Justicar Kandler,” Mardak said. “I hope to have a plan before nightfall. Until then, go back to your lives.”
“For as long as you can,” Kandler heard Temmah murmur.
The crowd dispersed, and the people walked away with their heads held low. Many of them wept. Those holding Norra carried her to her home.
Burch signaled that he would take Esprë home and wait with her. Kandler nodded his approval.
“Shall we?” Mardak asked.
Kandler led the way, Shawda’s remains still wrapped tightly in his cloak. Mardak followed close on his heels, with Rislinto—a burly man with a bushy, red beard and a blacksmith’s arms—right behind. Temmah lagged along at the end, rubbing his eyes as he trotted to keep up.
When they arrived at Mardak’s house, Kandler waited for Mardak to open the door. “You wish to bring the body into my house?” the older man asked, his hand on the door’s handle.
“You’d rather I unwrap her out here?”
Mardak hesitated a moment more, then opened the door.
Inside, Kandler strode over to the dining room table and lay his burden down. He unwrapped the cloak and arranged the pieces of Shawda’s body on the table.
“Do you have to do this here?” Mardak asked, wrinkling his nose.
“Your children are grown,” Kandler replied. “Your boy has already seen her—at least one part—and my table isn’t nearly big enough.”
“But my wife—”
“Doesn’t have a problem with it,” a feminine voice from the other room finished. “We must do everything we can to help catch the villain behind this.” The men looked at each other for a moment before Priscinta continued. “But I hope you’ll forgive me if I don’t bother to come in for a look.”