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The Good Guys Chronicles Box Set

Page 46

by Eric Ugland


  That’s when something I could only surmise had once been a human face smooshed up against the glass. A milky eye darted around, and the remains of a mouth made some sort of attempt at talking. At least, that’s the only thing I could imagine it was doing. It took everything I had to not throw up. By the sound of liquid hitting the floor next to me, it seemed Skeld hadn’t managed holding it together.

  “Whaaaaaatttt doooooo yooooou neeeeeeeed?” a warbling voice issued forth from the glass cabinet, sounding almost like it came from a hidden speaker nearby.

  “Uh,” I said, speaking to Philomon but unable to take my eyes from the monstrosity before me, “what in the actual fuck am I looking at?”

  “Neontes,” Philomon replied matter-of-factly. “Neontes, say hello.”

  The milky eye focused in on me, and a “hello” came through. The mouth did not move.

  “Hi Neontes,” I managed to get out. “Are you, I mean, is he okay?”

  Neontes, for his part, ducked back into the dark purple liquid, the pink swirling around for a moment before disappearing as well. Then he returned, slamming his nasty torso against the glass case, causing the whole cabinet to rock on the wheels a little. His torso showed the ruined remains of a what I could only guess was a monster attack of some kind, because it straight-up looked like something massive had taken a chunk out of the man’s body. Another slam against the glass, and the cabinet started to tilt.

  “Giles,” snapped Philomon, “pay attention.”

  Giles jumped into gear, grabbing the cabinet and stabilizing it.

  “Neontes,” Philomon said, his voice soft and slithery, making my skin crawl, “should you break that cabinet, I will only bill you for the repair. So be a dear and just do your job.”

  The face reappeared, the single eye glaring at Philomon. But Philomon just winked and lifted his drink in a toast. The remains of Neontes’ mouth seemed to open in a scream, and he disappeared back into the purple.

  “Ask your questions of the remains,” Philomon said to me. “His ability to be coherent is sadly limited these days.”

  I had no idea what to make of that, but I was intensely curious about this whole situation, and my mind was running a thousand miles an hour.

  “The dungeon under the prison, does it exist?” I asked.

  “Yes,” Neontes replied in his warbling watery noise like voice.

  “And you can get to this dungeon from the Osterstadt prison?”

  “Yes.”

  “Are you lying to me?”

  Silence. So that could be a yes, could be a no.

  “Where does the dungeon exit?” I asked.

  “Emerald Sea.”

  “You have been to the dungeon?”

  “I have.”

  “And you got out alive?”

  Silence.

  “Really?” Philomon asked, incredulous. “He is obviously dead.”

  “I mean, he’s talking, right—”

  “Necromancy,” Ragnar breathed.

  “Yeah,” I replied, “I guess that’s a bit obvious now that you’ve pointed it out. Neontes, where is the entrance to the dungeon?”

  “In the jay-ull…” Neontes warbled. It was difficult to make out exactly what he was saying.

  “Where in the jail?” I pressed.

  A bunch of words came out. Well, things like words. Noises that could be words, but nothing triggered my languages skill, so he was quite literally just making noises. Finally, he uttered the phrase: “The under-mind.”

  And then there was silence.

  “And that is the show,” Philomon said to the room at large. “Free entertainment, how generous I am. I hope you all choose to at least buy an extra drink tonight.”

  I looked around to see that everyone had gathered closer to watch Neontes and I talk. There was a bit of chattering, and some money changing hands. But just as quickly as they had come over, the patrons returned to their tables and their drinks.

  Giles closed up the cabinet and began rolling it away.

  “Uh…” I stammered, sounding about as intelligent as Neontes, “The Under Mine? Is there a mine in the prison? Like a work force thing?”

  “You would have to ask Neontes that, but I am afraid he’s a bit done for now. Should you wish to come back and chat with him again, that can be arranged. For a price.”

  “Does he have anything else worth telling me?”

  “That is also something you would need to ask Neontes.”

  “What’s his story, anyway?”

  “Neontes? The man borrowed an immense sum from me, knowing he was going to prison. He did not think to pay me back. His corpse was found in the Sea. I bought it and brought him back so that he might pay me back the money he stole.”

  “Do you charge for shows or something?”

  “I do. Some pay for the curiosity. Some pay to ask questions. You, I have allowed access for free this time so you might know a little more about what you are up against.”

  “So there’s a mine in the jail.”

  “Not that I know of. But I make a point of not knowing anything about that horrid place.”

  “Uh, okay,” I said. “How do we get into the prison?”

  “That has been arranged. Your bag please.”

  I took the unfillable knapsack, my most valuable possession, technically all my possessions, and I set it on the table.

  “You must actually let go of it, you know?” Philomon said.

  This was a stupid idea. But I did it.

  His hand dangled above it, and I saw bright runes float down out of his ring, settling onto the bag.

  “Oooh, very nice, indeed,” Philomon said with just enough of a wink to make me feel terrible about everything that had so far transpired. “If you will kindly go upstairs and wait outside, someone will be along shortly.”

  “And the bag?”

  “It will be with you again—”

  I felt someone grab my shoulder. Giles pulled me to my feet, and then gave a pretty solid attempt at making me move. Thing was, I wasn’t interested in being handled, so I stood my ground. Giles frowned, making the sort of face I’d seen plenty of times where the dude who’d built his life being the strongest and the biggest met someone who was stronger. It was a confusion, mixed with anger. Giles tried harder, and I just smiled at him, not moving.

  “Hey—” he started, and I could see him moving quickly towards violence.

  I put my hand in my pocket, and I pulled out the favor coin. I flipped it onto the table.

  “Let’s just put this back into play,” I said. “As a favor, make sure all my stuff gets back to me. And tell your mook to keep his paws to himself.”

  Philomon’s smile slowly crept up. “Dear boy, I am hurt. We have entered into an agreement, a quest. We are connected. Do you really think I might do something so base as to steal from you the thing you require to complete the quest?”

  He flipped the coin back up at me, and I caught it from the air.

  “Though some of us may traffic in the darkness, there is yet honor amongst us. I will give you a piece of advice,” Philomon said, pulling a small book from his pocket and setting it on the table. “When you have an object of this value, this rarity, you must learn to hide it better. Especially amongst unscrupulous types.”

  I picked up the book.

  Goodness, you have found the spell-book: Conceal Truth

  Without hesitation I slipped the book open and gave it a look. The pages whipped back and forth, a light seemed to shoot into my eyes, and then that delicious and horrible pain took over as my brain was rewired to make room for a spell.

  Look at that, you’ve learned the spell: Conceal Truth (lvl 1)

  Conceal Truth allows you to alter what others are able to read about you and your objects. At higher levels, you can conceal more. At level one, you are able to conceal certain details of your possessions.

  “You are a daring man,” Philomon said. “Taking in magic like that while in public. I daresay I look for
ward to seeing what you do in the future. Now begone.”

  Chapter 106

  My hirð and I left with little fanfare, walking up the stairs, through the fake bar, and out into the streets. A cold wind blew off the Emerald Sea, west to east. The intoxicating scent of pine and wilderness was overwhelming. The sounds of the city were muted, and I had an intense feeling of being isolated despite the urban setting.

  The otters perked up and immediately started scanning the area. They’d heard something.

  I picked it up a second later. The jingle-jangle of armor. Of armors. Boots tromping on the stone roads.

  Across the square, a group of guards came marching in quickstep. They were fully armed and armored, all bearing the sigils of the city. The city guard.

  “That was quick,” I said.

  “Too quick,” came Skeld’s reply. I could see him tighten his grip on his spear.

  “No,” I snapped. “Arms down. We’re not here to fight.”

  “We are here to be arrested,” Ragnar said, dropping his spear and leaning up against the wall.

  The three of us watched the guards come across the square until they were about fifteen or so feet away, at which point they stopped, and leveled their pikes at our faces.

  “Montana Coggeshall?” the leader asked, loud and proud.

  “Yeah,” I replied. “But wouldn’t it be embarrassing if I wasn’t?”

  She was a little confused by my response. “You are Montana Coggeshall?”

  “He is Lord Montana Coggeshall, Duke of Coggeshall,” Ragnar shot back, coming to standing and bearing his teeth at the guards.

  “Apologies for forgoing your whole title, my lord,” she said with more than a hint of sarcasm, “but I have the warrant for your arrest, and you will come with me.”

  I lifted my hands and showed my palms. “No need for weapons. We will come peacefully.”

  The city soldiers looked to their leader, who looked at me. I think she saw I had nothing on my person. No blade at my side. No bag on my back. Just a few small pouches tied to my belt. Finally, she nodded, and the pikes slowly went up.

  Again I offered up my wrists, ready to receive some manacles. The leader nodded to one of her underlings, and there were soon chains on me. The guy who snapped the manacles around my arms stepped back quickly, as if he was afraid I might attack him. I didn’t. I mean, obviously.

  The Lutra were allowed to remain free, and walked beside me. We were marched through the city, north until we hit the main road, then going east a goodly distance before turning back south, back towards the poor side of town. No one was awake — at least, that’s what it seemed like to me. Outside of a few main streets, there weren’t even many street lights going. Just a whole lot of dark corners. Every once in a while we’d pass a tavern, and if anyone was outside, they’d make a quick jump back inside and away from the guards. The mountains loomed ahead, tall, imposing, a slash of absolute darkness in the otherwise star-filled sky.

  The road dead-ended directly into a large wooden door plonked in a massive, unpleasant building. There were no windows I could see. Just sheer stone, somewhere north of a hundred feet tall. It was the ultimate example of brutalist architecture. As that thought popped into my head, I stopped walking. Where the fuck had I learned about brutalist architecture?

  The guards came to a stop directly in front of the door, and the leader slammed her fist against it. Three pounds.

  A small door within the larger door opened up, light spilling out and silhouetting a figure. Someone who wasn’t big.

  “Dropping off or picking up?” the figure asked the guards.

  “Dropping off,” the leader replied.

  “Just a minute,” the gate figure said, then shut the door.

  We all stood in silence together. It started to feel awkward.

  “Do this thing a lot?” I asked to the man next to me.

  He seemed shocked I had spoken to him. He just turned away, pretending he hadn’t heard me.

  “You could at least be civil,” I said.

  “They have orders not to speak to you,” the leader said. “The Empire wants to know what you know. If you were to tell one of these men or women anything, then they would garner Empire interest. Perhaps enough even to make the Empire come and collect them in the middle of the night to disappear into this hellhole for the rest of their lives. So, please do not speak to them.”

  I was super-tempted to start blabbing about all sorts of things that sounded like important secrets, but then I realized that these cats were just doing their job. And, for the most part, they’d been total professionals about it.

  So, back to awkward silence.

  A moment later, the door opened again, and a tall, thin man in long grey robes came out. His hair reached nearly down to his elbows. As he moved forward, all the city guards backed off. He walked right up to me. His breath fetid, his teeth a horror show, and his nails so long and black they’d easily pass as talons. He grabbed my arm, and I felt an intense fire spread over me.

  My indicium stretched out across me, and the man’s eyes seemed to light up, even though my skin was covered.

  “Nobility,” the man said, almost breathless with excitement. “Oh how I look forward to having you in my possession. What I can do to you, I am so very excited. It is like a holiday for me. You can go now, officers. Thank you.”

  The lead guard nodded, and the city guard marched away into the night.

  “Are these your pets?” the man said, looking from Ragnar to Skeld. “How cute. Perhaps I will let you keep them for the night. Skin them tomorrow at your first indiscretion. I find many are more willing to chat honestly when their pets are threatened, even over their own lives.”

  I gritted my teeth, really wanting to see if I had the strength to tear through the manacles. Then maybe see if I could rip this asshole’s teeth out of his head and beat him to death with his jawbones.

  “Oooh,” the man said, pulling on the chain and leading me in, “you are tempted to hurt me, I think. Keep that anger inside. There is much yet to come.”

  Despite the other ideas bouncing around in my skull, I knew the best course of action was compliance while waiting for my opportunity to make a run for it. So instead of violently tearing the man’s eyeballs from his sockets and making a bolo tie out of them, I merely kept alert and watched everything, looking for any weakness I might exploit.

  The other side of the door was a well-lit courtyard, larger than I expected. A few wagons, a horse stable, a smithy set-up in the corner with men and women still working the forge despite the late hour, sparks flying into the night sky like tiny meteors. There was a single door at ground level on the far side from where I’d entered, and windows farther up. Some lights were on, but most of the rooms were dark. A small walkway rimmed the courtyard, about twenty feet above ground level, where archers stood watching me. Arrows nocked.

  The robed man led me away from the door, which confused me until I realized the dark spot we were headed to wasn’t just a shadow. It was door. A flat door, like that for a tornado shelter or a root cellar. As we got closer, it started to lift up. Light flared out, and I saw a set of stairs.

  We went underground. I had no way of knowing how long it would be before I saw the sky again.

  Chapter 107

  At the base of the stairs, an armored man sat behind a desk. He looked up, saw the grey robe, and made a quick note in a large book.

  “Cell 212, S,” the guard said.

  “No,” Grey Robe countered. “I want something, more... unpleasant.”

  The guard sighed, and flipped through his book. “Cell 642?”

  Grey Robe thought a moment, then nodded.

  The guard made another mark in the book.

  “Proceed,” the guard said.

  Another armed and armored man looked me and the Lutra over, then opened a door and stood to the side.

  Grey Robe pulled me in.

  “They will not speak to you,” Grey Robe said. �
�No one will. They all know of the new duke. The one who wears a beard. The one who had taken land not meant for him. I am the only one who will speak to you. Unless your pets talk. Do they talk?”

  “Mutes,” I said.

  “How unfortunate.”

  Grey Robe grabbed the chain connecting my manacles and pulled me along.

  I quickly lost my sense of direction in the maze of hallways. All the walls, floors, and ceilings were made of dark stone. All the doors looked identical. Large, uniform candles were placed at regular intervals. Suddenly, Grey Robe reached out and opened a random door, revealing a staircase. We marched down. More hallways, more dark stone. Everything perfectly designed to make it impossible to remember where you were. To incite confusion and consternation. It was working. For the most part.

  There was, however, one thing they didn’t seem to really count on, and that was the ability to read. I had little to do as we walked, considering that someone was leading me along, basically determining my every step for me. So I spent that time scrutinizing everything I could. And right above the doors, I started to notice small numbers carved right where the ceiling joined the wall. Super easy to miss. But once you see it, like Tom Cruise’s smile being out of place by a single tooth, you couldn’t ever overlook it again.

  Finally, Grey Robe opened another door, this one to a cell. It wasn’t small — I’ve certainly spent nights in worse ones — but it was impressively oppressive. Twenty feet tall, thick chunky stone, a small hole in one corner, some old straw in the opposite. There were several spots on the walls where someone could be chained, as well as extra chains hanging down from the ceiling. He shoved me in, leaving the manacles in place, and ushered the two Lutra in after me.

  “I will come for you when I decide morning is,” Grey Robe said. “Sleep well one last time. And know that if you choose to give me what it is I need, then I will be merciful.”

  “You want to just ask now? Maybe it’s something I don’t even want.”

 

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