01 - Valnir’s Bane

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01 - Valnir’s Bane Page 12

by Nathan Long - (ebook by Undead)


  Reiner flinched back involuntarily again, for as the blood touched the rune, the sword suddenly seemed to have a presence. It felt as if some malevolent entity had entered the temple. The warriors fell to their knees and raised their arms in adulation.

  Reiner and the others cringed back from the curtain, grimacing, as the smith gave the blade to the shaman, who held it over his head and showed it to the ring of warriors. They roared their approval.

  “Are we tainted just for seeing that?” asked Franz.

  “It pains a son of Sigmar,” said Hals, “to see a hammer used for so evil a purpose.”

  Ulf raised a hand. “The slaves return.”

  The company backed into the shadows as the two slaves—a man and a woman, they could now see, both skeleton thin—padded back to the curtained door and passed through it. After a moment, they reappeared, dragging the body of the impaled slave behind them and disappeared once again down the dark hallway.

  After waiting a moment, Reiner motioned them forward.

  Franz shivered. “I dread to see what lies at the end of this.”

  Reiner patted the boy’s shoulder. “What in death could be worse than the life these poor souls have suffered in bondage?”

  As they continued down the hall, the reek of death increased. There was more light ahead as well. Faint torchglow shone from two curtained doorways, one on either side of the hall. They reached the left-hand one first and Reiner cautiously peeked in.

  It was an enormous room: not deep, but so long that the two ends were hidden in darkness. A wide doorway on the opposite wall opened directly into the cavern that housed the furnaces, and through it Reiner could see the lines of bucket-toting slaves making their endless rounds. The room itself was filled with rank after rank of poorly-made plank beds, stacked six high and none as wide as Ulf’s shoulders.

  The beds to the left side of the door were empty. Those to the right were full of bony, huddled forms, their elbows, knees and hips raw and bruised from lying on the naked wood. They moaned and coughed and twitched in their fitful slumbers, or worse, moved not at all.

  As Reiner watched, a curious procession came into view between two rows of beds. A Kurgan guard swaggered along, followed by four slaves pushing a flat cart piled with bodies. The Kurgan had a sharp stick, and with it, he prodded the sleeping slaves one by one. Most flinched and cried out. Those that didn’t, the Kurgan jabbed again, harder this time. If a slave still failed to respond, the Kurgan dragged him off his plank and threw him on the cart, then moved on.

  At the end of the row the cart was full and the Kurgan barked an order. Reiner ducked back as the slaves turned the cart toward him, and waved the others back down the hall into the shadows.

  The Kurgan led the slaves out of the barracks and into the door on the opposite side of the hall. After a pause Reiner edged to it, at once compelled by curiosity and terrified at what he might see. The others followed. Reiner looked in, hoping against hope that what he would see would be some kind of embalming chamber or garbage pit. It was not. It was what his nose told him it would be: a kitchen. He pulled back, disgusted, and pushed Franz past the door. “Don’t look, lad. Keep moving.”

  Franz made to protest, but Reiner shoved him roughly down the hall. He and the others slipped past in ones and twos as it was safe, and continued down the hall, shuddering with revulsion at the sights within the kitchen. Reiner wished he could get the smell of meat out of his nose.

  A little further on, Ulf stopped at another open door. “Wait,” he whispered. “In here.”

  He entered the room. The others looked in. Ulf was picking though piles of poorly made picks and shovels that were heaped against the walls along with stacks of pitch-smeared torches, coils of rope, wooden buckets, lengths of chain, sections of iron rail, iron wheels, leather aprons and gloves. All were of poorest quality—made by slaves, for slaves.

  “If we are to travel long underground,” said Ulf as the others entered, “we will want torches and rope, and possibly picks and shovels as well. Everyone should take what they can.”

  “We’re not all built like pack horses, engineer,” said Hals.

  Ulf slung a coil of rope over his shoulder. “We’ve encountered one cave-in already. We may have to dig our way out of another. Then there are the dangers of pitfalls, uncrossable chasms, unscalable cliffs. We may need to widen a passage to get through. Or block a passage to prevent pursuit. And…”

  “All right, Urquart,” said Reiner quickly. “You’ve made your point. We don’t want to give Oskar the fibertygibbits again. Everyone take torches and rope. For the rest you may do as you please.”

  Everyone did as he asked. Hals, though he had complained the loudest, took a pick and gave a shovel to Pavel. When all had been packed away, they moved on.

  The passage ended fifty paces later in a doorway through which shone the red glow of the main cavern. Reiner and the others eased forward to peer through. The doorway came out just behind the two massive furnaces. The slaves that fed the fires and their overseers were less than three long strides from the door. Reiner could have spat on them. Instead, he looked toward the mine-head, just beyond the furnaces to the right. It was close. A short sprint and they would be within its shadow and away, but that sprint was fraught with dangers.

  At least a dozen Kurgan guards stood between them and the mine head, and there were a hundred within easy call. Reiner frowned. If only there was some way to distract them, to draw the attention of the entire room for the few seconds they needed to dart through unnoticed.

  And just as he thought it, a great, almost musical, crash sounded through the cavern. Every head looked up, Kurgan and slave alike. The crash came again. Reiner craned his neck and saw to the left, a Kurgan beating a cracked gong, hung from a rope, as out of the wide door that led from the sleeping quarters came a procession of slaves staggering under the weight of huge steaming cauldrons they carried on long poles.

  The overseers barked orders to their work parties and motioned them toward the centre of the cavern where the kitchen slaves were setting the cauldrons. There was no need for orders. The slaves downed tools and flocked toward the stew pots like wolves running down a deer, licking their lips and fighting each other to be first in line.

  Pavel turned away, shuddering.

  “Don’t blame them, lad,” said Reiner. “Blame the fiends who drove them to it. Now pull yourselves together. We daren’t miss this chance.”

  The furnaces were deserted. Reiner and the rest darted around the right hand one, taking cover behind its great bulk. They were instantly drenched in sweat from the heat that radiated from it. To their left the cave wall narrowed to the blackness of the mine-head. They crept along it, crouching low.

  Halfway to the hole they ran out of cover. They would have to make the last thirty feet out in the open. Reiner stood on his toes to see where the Kurgan were. All of them seemed fully occupied at the stew pots, the overseers reaching in and stealing the choicer bits of flesh from the slaves. He turned to the men.

  “Ready, lads?”

  Everyone except Oskar nodded.

  “Keep him pointed in the right direction.” Reiner said to Gustaf, then took one last look toward the centre of the cave. “Right,” he said. “Run.”

  The men ran fast and low, Gustaf holding Oskar down by the scruff of the neck. The run lasted only a few seconds, but it seemed an eternity to Reiner, who swore he could feel the eyes of every Kurgan in the cave turning towards him. But as they sprinted into the black mouth of the mine no shouts echoed down the cave, no gongs crashed, no arrows rattled off the rocks around them. They reined to a stop twenty paces into the shadow and looked back. No one was coming after them.

  “We make it, hey?” said Giano, smiling.

  “Aye,” said Pavel dryly. “The first step in a thousand-league journey.”

  “Less of that, pikeman!” growled Reiner, unconsciously mimicking Veirt. “Now come on. I want to be well away from here.”

 
; “As do I,” said Hals.

  They started down the long dark passage, not yet sure enough of their surroundings to light torches. Behind him, Reiner could hear Oskar whimper as the blackness closed in completely around them.

  TWELVE

  There Is No Good Decision Here

  After a half hour of utter darkness and silence it seemed safe to light torches, and all breathed sighs of relief. All except Oskar. The soothing effects of Gustaf’s draught were wearing off and he began to look around uneasily and mutter about, “The weight. The stone. There is no air.”

  “Why ever did you decide to become a soldier, gunner?” grumbled Hals. “Is there nothing you ain’t afraid of?”

  “I never meant to be a soldier,” murmured Oskar, slurring a little. “I was m’lord Gottenstet’s secretary. I wrote his correspondence for him. Read it too. Illiterate, the old fool. But one day…” he sighed and stopped.

  The others waited for him to continue, but he seemed to have forgotten he was talking.

  “One day, what?” asked Pavel, annoyed.

  “Eh?” said Oskar. “Oh… yes. Well, one day I was with m’lord as he was surveying some land he owned. He wanted to build a, a hunting lodge I think it was. And while the surveyor was using his plumb line and his measuring sticks to calculate distances and heights, I was guessing, and coming right almost to the foot. I picked out far away things that the surveyor needed his spyglass to make out. ‘Sigmar’s lightning, lad,’ says Gottenstet. ‘Y’ve the making of a fine mortar man.’ And nothing would do but he must send me to the Artillery School at Nuln. Me! A scholar! I tried to tell him that though my eyes might be strong, my insides were weak, but he would have none of it.” He shrugged. “Of course I didn’t help matters by coming out top of my class. I liked the work: making the sightings, calling out the degrees, but on the field…” He shivered and hugged his shoulders. “Did you ever see the fire from the sky? The thing with the mouths.” He looked around him suddenly as if waking up, his eyes widening as he took in the close stone walls, the low ceiling. “The weight,” he murmured. “Sigmar, save us, the weight. Can’t breathe.”

  Reiner grimaced, uncomfortable. “Gustaf, give him another sip, will you?”

  The corridor sank deeper and deeper into the mountains. Occasionally corridors branched off to the left and right, iron rails gleaming away into the shadows. Some were barricaded off and the party could see evidence of cave-ins behind them, but there was no confusion on which way to go. The deep tracks of the cannon’s wheels always pointed the way.

  A while later the iron rails began to sing, and soon after came a metallic rumbling. The company doused their torches and ducked into a side tunnel. After a moment a train of carts rolled by, full of ore, each pushed by a team of shackled slaves, their eyes dull. A Kurgan overseer reclined in the first cart, a lantern at his side.

  Franz cursed under his breath once they’d passed. “So many of them, and one of him. Couldn’t they strangle him? Dump him down a shaft?”

  “And then?” asked Reiner.

  The boy grunted with frustration, but couldn’t answer.

  As the train’s rumble faded, it revealed nearer sounds: the thud and chunk of picks biting into rock, the crack of whips, the barking of hounds. They stepped back into the main corridor and looked forward. A faint light picked out distant sections of wall, the glint of rails.

  Reiner looked at the cannon’s wheel tracks, running straight ahead and sighed. “It looks as if the warband marched beyond the work party. We will have to take side corridors around them and hope we can find the tracks on the other side. Keep the torches dark. We’ll travel by the lantern only.”

  They continued forward in the main tunnel until the reflected light became bright enough for them to be able to see each other’s faces, then began hunting for cross corridors. The sounds of mining came mostly from the left of the main tunnel, so they edged right, taking thinner tunnels and winding crawl-ways.

  After a time they found a promising corridor that paralleled the main corridor. It was nearly as wide and had rails running down the centre. These seemed both newer and cruder than the rails they had followed from the ironworks. The sounds of mining reached them only as echoes here, and came more from their left than from in front of them. Reiner began to feel almost hopeful. As long as they could find a way back to the main tunnel from here, there was a good chance they would pass the work party without incident.

  But just as he thought it, the rails began to ring and rattle. There were carts coming. Reiner groaned. “Speak of evil…”

  There was a small side tunnel up ahead. Reiner pointed to it. “In there. It has no rails.” They hurried into it. It ended after thirty paces in a round, dug-out area with no other exit—a dead end.

  “Right,” said Reiner. “We’ll wait here until they pass.”

  The echoing rumble of wheels grew suddenly louder, and the torch glow much brighter, as if the approaching carts had turned a corner. The men faced back to the wide corridor, hands on their weapons. Giano shuttered his lantern and hid it behind him. As they watched, a procession of four heavily loaded carts passed by their hiding place. A Kurgan guard followed the carts, torch in one hand and a huge hound on a leash snuffling along at his side.

  The Kurgan walked on, kicking pebbles, but the hound stopped, sniffing at the mouth of the tunnel. The Kurgan tugged on his leash, but the hound refused to move.

  Reiner’s shoulders tensed. “Go,” he whispered under his breath. “Go. Go!”

  The Kurgan stopped and cursed the hound, jerking its leash. The hound snarled at him, then began barking down the corridor.

  “Sigmar curse you, heathen,” muttered Hals. “Beat that cur. Make him heel.”

  But the Kurgan had decided that the hound was on to something and came forward warily, the hound still barking and straining at his leash.

  Reiner and the rest backed out of sight into the round chamber. “Better kill ’em quick,” whispered Reiner, drawing his sword. “But no guns, or they’ll all be down on us.”

  The others armed themselves.

  “We should draw ’em in,” said Hals. “Get ’em from all sides.”

  “Good idea,” said Reiner. “Franz, you’re the bait.”

  “What?” said Franz, confused.

  Reiner shoved the boy hard between the shoulder blades. He stumbled out of cover and froze like a rabbit, staring up the tunnel at the advancing Kurgan in wide-eyed terror. The Kurgan roared a challenge and ran forward, dropping the hound’s leash and drawing a hand axe.

  The hound bounded forward, baying savagely. Franz scurried for the back wall. “You bastard!” he shrieked at Reiner. “You dirty bastard!”

  Pavel stuck his spear out across the opening at ankle height as the Kurgan and the hound charged in. The beast leapt it easily, but the norther fell flat on his face and Hals, Giano and Reiner stuck him with their spears and swords. Ulf swung his maul at the hound and knocked it sideways as it lunged at Franz.

  The monster landed, snarling, and spun to meet this new threat. Ulf raised his hammer as it leapt, and jammed the haft between its gaping jaws, stopping its fangs from reaching his neck, but the beast was so massive it knocked the big man flat and began raking at him with its claws.

  The Kurgan surged up, screaming fury and bleeding from three grievous wounds. Reiner was afraid they had another iron-skinned berserker on their hands, but fortunately, though as big as a bull, the guard was no chosen champion, only a ranker, stuck in the mines guarding slaves while others won glory on the fields of honour. Reiner chopped halfway through his windpipe and he died on his knees, breathing his last through his neck.

  The hound was another matter. Franz and Oskar were slashing at it with their swords, but their blows couldn’t penetrate the beast’s matted coat. Ulf, on his back under the monster, was forcing its head back with the haft of his maul, but his straining arms were being shredded by its claws.

  Reiner ran forward with Hals and Pavel. Gian
o dropped his sword and unslung his crossbow, drawing a bolt from his quiver. Gustaf kept out of the way, as usual.

  Reiner slashed at the hound’s back legs, severing its left hamstring. It howled and turned, but fell as it put weight on its dead leg. Pavel and Hals gored it in the side with their spears. Still it fought, twisting so savagely that Pavel’s spear was wrenched out of his fever-weakened hands and cracked Hals in the forehead. The hound lunged for the dazed pikeman, but Ulf, freed of its weight, clubbed it with all his might, square on its spinal ridge. It dropped flat, its legs splayed. Giano stepped forward and fired his crossbow point blank. The bolt pinned the monster’s head to the ground. It died in a spreading pool of blood.

  “Nice work, lads,” said Reiner. “Ulf, are you badly hurt? Hals?”

  “Just a little swimmy, captain,” said Hals. “It’ll pass.”

  “I’ve had worse,” said Ulf, grimacing as he examined his lacerated biceps. “But not by much.”

  “Just coming,” said Gustaf. He began opening his kit.

  Reiner looked toward the corridor, listening for reinforcements, and froze, heart thudding, as he saw half a dozen faces looking back at him. The slaves were peering anxiously down the tunnel at them. Reiner had forgotten all about them.

  “What do we do about that lot?” asked Hals, joining him.

  Pavel looked up. “Poor devils.”

  “We must free them!” said Franz. “Bring them with us.”

  “You crazy, boy,” said Giano. “They slow us down. We no make it.”

  “But we can’t leave ’em here,” said Pavel. “The Kurgan’d kill ’em sure.”

  Ulf grunted as Gustaf cleaned his wounds. “The Kurgan will kill them regardless, whether now or later.”

 

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