Eldrick stooped and peered into the cavernous hole yawning at the base of the fallen cypress. Murky water swirled around his boot tops and Eldrick shifted his weight to keep from sinking into the mud and filling his boots with reeking sludge.
“And this is where the creature sleeps?” He asked, turning to his companions.
Brune stood two hands away, too close for Eldrick’s taste. The portly man eyed the worn footman’s hammer hanging at Eldrick’s side like a rabid dog watching a man with a stick.
“This is the hell-spawn’s lair.” Brune replied with the cool assurance of the ignorant. His filthy face was streaked with sweat and his sagging jowls flapped as he muttered a protective chant under his breath and traced the warding sign in the air. Neloc, Brune’s cohort, a sinewy fellow all bones and mottled skin, mimed the warding sign and licked his cracked lips staring with barely restrained lust at the silver rings flashing on Eldrick’s fingers. Under ordinary circumstances Eldrick would not have ventured into the depths of the Blackwater with such guides, but these were not ordinary circumstances. If what these men claimed was true he would have enough coin to buy a new horse and maybe a little left over for some new boots. Eldrick glanced back at the dirty men and smiled. He could nearly smell the murder on them.
Eldrick stepped up into the mouth of the tunnel, muttered an incantation and peered down into the darkness. His eyes, once blind in the blackness of the burrow, now shone with an internal light and myriad colors painted his vision. The cool earth of the burrow was dark, blue-black like the winter sky on a cloudy night. A finger length of yellow alerted him to a lizard creeping among the lair’s ceiling roots searching for a meal. Hand sized spots of red scurried toward him as he continued his descent into the burrow. The marsh rats squealed a warning at his approach but made no move to flee, standing their ground before the invading titan.
Eldrick turned at Brune’s whisper from the mouth of the burrow. Eldrick could see his jowls flapping as he spoke. “Sir, sir, don’t be a fool. You’ll be killed.”
“And your valuables will be out of my reach,” Eldrick muttered sardonically under his breath.
Brune, of course, had been wrong earlier. Eldrick knew he was not in the creature’s lair. He was traveling down a little used side entrance that might very well be a dead end. Eldrick frowned at the double meaning of “dead end” and continued deeper down the burrow ignoring the marsh rats behind him celebrating their bravery with a chorus of squeaks and squeals. The burrow leveled out into a fetid smelling tunnel festooned with roots and painted with the vibrating yellow dots of millions of insects. A narrow stream of murky water trickled down the center. It was no more than three feet across but Eldrick had no desire to test its depth. In the northern jungles he had seen men swallowed whole in sinks no wider than the gurgling stream.
After a hundred or so yards the tunnel opened up into a wide, flooded, cavern. Eldrick crouched in the darkness and exhaled slowly. He had reached the lair. The fetid smell was strong here and Eldrick knew it would get stronger as he proceeded. Blue-black filled his vision and he was relieved that no color tinged his vision. In a lair color usually meant a quick and painful death. Quick if you were lucky.
Eldrick straightened and pulled his hammer from its rawhide hanger. Gripping it by the pommel he plunged the hammer’s wide head into the dark water before him feeling for solid ground before continuing forward in the murk. Testing the ground made his exploration noisier than he would have liked but stealth would be of little use to him if he drowned at the bottom of a black pit in the depths of a light forsaken swamp. Twice he nearly fell headlong into a hole but the hammer’s warning saved him and he was able to pull back before plunging in.
Minutes passed, an hour, and the ground began to rise. Swamp water became spongy moss; moss became tightly packed soil until he was standing on solid ground. Eldrick sat and pulled his boots from his feet, dumping what sounded like gallons of rank smelling water from the travel stained leather. A blob of yellow plopped from his left boot and hopped, croaking, away. As he moved to stand his hand brushed against something hard and sharp. He pulled his hand back quickly and with a little alarm. No light shone from the space where the sharp object lay and in the inky blackness of the lair Eldrick could not make out even a shadow.
He stood carefully and snapped his fingers, mumbling an incantation all the while. Silvery brightness arched between his fingertips. Not a flame of fire or a globe of light, but a sliver spark, like a lightning bolt blazing between his thumb and forefinger. Eldrick held his hand high and looked about. He was at the crest of a low hill, an island in a sea of still, brown, water. Bones lay scattered across the hill, strewn about like the forgotten toys of some ghoulish child.
Eldrick crouched and examined the skeleton nearest him. The arms were missing, lost somewhere among the heaps, but the rest of the skeleton was in good repair. The skull, crushed on the left side, reported the probable cause of death. Eldrick turned the skull over in one hand and scratched a week’s growth of beard with the other. After a moment he gently replaced the skull and inhaled deeply. Nothing fit. The bones were for the most part unbroken, there were no tooth marks or stress fractures. Eldrick stood and turned in a slow circle. There weren’t even any paw prints. He inhaled again. And the air, the air was all wrong. The odor was old and stale, not the pungent musk of a recently used lair.
Fire flared to life before Eldrick.
“Kill him quick, but don’t harm the goods.” Brune’s fleshy face looked devilish in the flickering torchlight.
Neloc stood a little to the left side of Brune waving his torch and licking his scabby lips eagerly. “Let’s have some fun with him first.”
A third figure, his face shadowed in the cowl of his cloak, stood behind the other two cradling something in his hands. “Be careful now boys this one’s a Free Caster for sure and true or I’m a Red Street whore.”
There was no warning save the twang of a bow string as the hooded man fired his crossbow. The heavy bolt took Eldrick in the shoulder, tearing straight through just beneath the joint. The force of the blow threw him backwards with a rattling crash as he collapsed into a pile of mismatched bones. Pain seared his shoulder like a hot iron and Eldrick fought hard to focus on the men running toward him. He could hear the click, click, click of the heavy crossbow as the hooded man readied the weapon for another shot.
Eldrick climbed to one knee clutching his badly bleeding shoulder with a grimy hand. Neloc was two steps away, a long, hooked knife held stiffly in his crooked fingers, a look of expectant ecstasy twisting his mottled face. Brune was a step behind, torch in hand, moving his bulk with impressive speed. Glowing runes spun in Eldrick’s head, words written at the beginning of time by the All and Only, the true names of the primordial elements spoken at their creation. He called and the Primal Spark obeyed. It filled him, using his body as a conduit, and exploded outward devouring the living creatures surrounding it, burning their life force away like dry grass in a wildfire.
Thunder boomed in Eldrick’s ears. A thousand lightning bolts flashed in the near darkness, blinding him. He was falling, falling into blackness darker than any night, darker than the shadow less pit of the lair. Blackness swallowed him.
II.
Eldrick awoke to agony. Throbbing pain pulsed in his left shoulder. It felt like a hundred scorpions with firebrand tails were stinging him with every heartbeat. He groaned and rolled to his side unsure if he was blind or dead or if it was simply to dark to see. The air stank of charred bones and burnt flesh and he remembered. Bone splinters poked holes in his linen shirt as he rolled to his hands and knees adding fly bites to the scorpion stings in his shoulder.
He crawled forward like a snail crossing a garden path, groping in the darkness, sliding his hands along pitted stone and through the carpet of clinking bones. Finally, he found was he was looking for. The stench of burnt flesh threatened to overwhelm him as he lifted the torch from its resting place; lodged securely in the scorched fingers of his would be murderer. By the strength of the smell Eldrick guessed it was Brune’s body he had found.
It took Eldrick nearly an hour to light the torch. His body had been drained by the magic and even producing a single spark felt like trying to swim across the Shattered Sea in stone shoes. Finally, the torch sputtered to life and Eldrick took in the grisly scene surrounding him. His assailants lay unrecognizable from the collection of scorched and broken skeletons that littered the ground except that charred bits of flesh still hung from their blackened bones. Skin and clothes had been burnt to fine ash and the gray dust swirled in the air as Eldrick shuffled along beside the corpses searching for anything of value.
The spark had cauterized his wound and though the gash still throbbed with every step he would not bleed to death. The hooded man’s crossbow seemed none the worse for wear so Eldrick lifted it into the air by its carrying strap and slung it over his good shoulder. The bolts, however, had spilled when the man fell or else been burnt to cinders by the blast and Eldrick had no desire to go sifting through the skeletons again.
His assailants must have found a quicker way down into the lair, probably through the main entrance, and waited for him. How many others had they taken with the promise of wealth at the bottom of the dark pit? Eldrick looked around at the scattered skeletons and shivered. If the hooded man’s aim had been better he would have joined the ghastly horde littering the stone island.
Eldrick raised the torch high and walked off the island, using his hammer as a crutch, and turned toward where he hoped the main entrance would be. He silently cursed himself for believing the dead murderers. There was no dragon here. And by the looks of things there hadn’t been one in years, maybe decades. Images of what he could have purchased with just a pair of old dragon scales flashed through his mind and vanished like the smoke from his torch. Perhaps he could sell the crossbow. After only a brief appraisal he thought it was dwarven made, master craftsmanship, top coin.
New thoughts of wealth formed in Eldrick’s mind but were suddenly banished by the mineral glint of metal from behind a screen of long-reaching roots. He had just cleared the water and was walking up a wide tunnel, twice as wide as the one he had entered in, when he saw the stone. His heart leapt and he hobbled as quickly as he could manage over to the root-wall. It took some effort to clear the roots away but after a dull knife and aching right arm he was able to see the Binding Stone clearly.
It had sunk many feet into the soft soil of the tunnel and only the very top now lay exposed above ground. Eldrick nearly danced with excitement as he jammed the torch handle into the dirt and drew a sheet of parchment and nub of charcoal from the satchel hanging at this side. Holding the parchment taught against the stone he drew the charcoal rapidly across the parchment and the runes beneath creating a copy of the ancient letters. He recognized the runes from other stones he had studied in the North, but the order of the letters was new to him. He nearly giggled with delight as he finished tracing the runes. Perhaps he was seeing something that no one had seen since the dawn of time. What mysteries would these runes hold? Carefully he rolled the parchment and gently slid it into his wax coated scroll case. He dare not try to decipher it now. He was far too weak to attempt even another light spark let alone some long lost incantation from ancient times.
Moonlight bathed the Blackwater in silver radiance when Eldrick emerged from the tunnel. He was on the edge of a wide, shallow, lake. Billions of frogs croaked love songs into the night air filling the swamp with sounds of life. On the horizon the lights of Fenmen's Roost twinkled faintly like earthbound stars. Eldrick sighed, shifted the heavy crossbow on his back and winced at the burning pain the sudden movement incited. It was going to be a long walk home.