Exile (Bloodforge Book 1) Read online




  Exile

  Bloodforge I

  By

  Tom Stacey

  Copyright 2014 Tom Stacey

  All rights reserved. This book may not be reproduced in any form, whole or part, without consent from the author.

  Cover art by Mr Canifu

  Maps by Neishka

  Daegermund

  Veria and the Heartlands

  Table of Contents

  Prologue

  I

  II

  III

  IV

  V

  VI

  VII

  VIII

  IX

  X

  XI

  XII

  XIII

  XIV

  XV

  XVI

  XVII

  XVIII

  XIX

  XX

  XXI

  XXII

  XXIII

  XXIV

  XXV

  XXVI

  XXVII

  XXVIII

  XXIX

  XXX

  XXXI

  Epilogue

  PROLOGUE

  The Year 1256 of the Common Watch

  “Slow down, Loster! You’re climbing too fast!” Barde’s reedy voice carried up to the small boy as he dug his toe into a narrow crevice, skinning the top of his foot through the boot. Loster was a confident climber but he had never been this far up, despite having lived in the shadow of the Widowpeak all of his eleven years.

  “Los!” The rest of Barde’s protest was lost to the wind, bouncing off of the pitiless rock face and tumbling backwards into the howling elemental maelstrom that plucked at Loster’s clothing. His fine tunic of dark blue satin was ripped at the hip and his leggings bore enough stains and small tears to render them rags.

  None of that mattered now.

  This far from the ground, the Great Hall of his father was a god’s dollhouse. If he’d had the courage to look down, Los would have been able to blot it out with only his thumb.

  “Mother is going to beat us if we’re home late again.” Barde hauled himself up until he was just beneath his brother. As the elder by several years his arms were stronger, but he was also heavier and therefore less nimble. “If we start back down now we might be able to make it.” He did not need to mention what their father would do if they did not.

  Loster ignored the hopeful tone. “Just a little bit further, then we can start back.” He grinned to himself. “Of course if you’re scared…”

  “I’m not! You’re the baby here.” Barde clambered up alongside Loster. “Come on, let’s keep going.” As he moved off, Loster couldn’t help but grin. Nevertheless, he caught the hastily concealed edge of fear in his older brother’s voice — it pierced his sense of calm like a broken bone. There were other signs too: the telltale tremble of his legs and arms, the whiteness of his knuckles as his fingers gripped handholds with the strength of a drowning man. Loster frowned. Maybe he was pushing too hard. His brother was only here to look after him anyway. Barde didn’t share Loster’s interest in exploration, unless it involved exploring some of the prettier girls in the village. The small climber suddenly realised how selfish and childish he was being. What if he got Barde killed?

  “Hey, I think I found a ledge,” Barde grunted and disappeared from sight only to reappear headfirst a moment later. “Come on, I’ll give you a hand.”

  Loster smiled. Mother could wait.

  He wedged his boot into a nook, scuffing the soft leather and gripping his brother’s clammy hand. Barde heaved and dragged him up over the lip of the ledge, further ripping his fine clothing. He didn’t care. Up here he was untouchable, far away from his mother’s scolding and his father’s hard stares and harder hands. Loster glanced sidelong at his brother. Barde was much bigger than him: broad in the shoulders, long in the limbs. He was the confident one, calm in the knowledge that his father’s status as Lord of Elk was enough to shield him from most of the evils that the world had to offer, even if it could not shield him from his father. Yet now Barde sat clutching his legs to his chest, well away from the edge. To Loster it seemed that his brother had shrunk in stature.

  He stood and walked along the edge as if it were a line on the ground. He had seen a few of the travelling troupes perform a similar feat with a length of rope and two tall wooden beams. The act had spectators cooing and screaming with fear whenever one of the high walkers feigned imbalance. Loster wondered what reaction his high walk would get — surely nobody could boast about having performed at such a height?

  He stepped back on to stable ground and sat next to his brother. Barde was breathing deeply and looking at the ruin of his boots. It had taken courage for him to climb up this high and Loster respected that — indeed, he was not exactly fearless himself. If anything he saw himself as the victim of a self-imposed pressure. Whenever an opportunity arose to do something that others would call daring or dangerous, Loster’s head filled with a hushed but insistent voice, urging him on. The voice had been with him for as long as he could remember and the only way to quiet it — the only way to find peace — was to give in. He wasn’t brave or even reckless. He was the opposite. He was weak.

  “Do you think we’re the first people to climb this high?” Barde asked, his eyes scanning a horizon limned in bright cloud.

  “I don’t know,” said Loster. “We’re probably not as far up as we think we are.” He craned his neck to view the rest of the mountain that towered into the heavens.

  Barde blew the air from his lungs noisily. “It’s far enough for me. Jaym said I should know my limits and this is mine.” Loster rolled his eyes. Barde had begun lessons with the family’s weapons master three weeks earlier on his fourteenth birthday.

  He was still in awe of the grizzled old bastard and often quoted him, no matter how banal or ridiculous the statement.

  Loster looked around their perch. A few loose stones, just enough room for a grown man to lie down without his feet dangling over the abyss. He walked up to the smooth stone wall and pressed his hands against it. It was cool despite the sun beating down. Even that brightest of torches could not warm the Widowpeak. He made to turn around and stopped. A groove ran down the centre of the rock face, about a finger’s width across, disappearing into the floor between his feet.

  “Barde, come look at this.” Loster ran a hand down the groove, freeing dust and dirt. Barde appeared at his side, lips parted slightly.

  “What is it?” he said.

  “I don’t know but we could pry it open. Give me your dirk.” Barde took a quick step back and clutched at the prized dagger tucked in his belt. As a man of fighting age, he had been gifted it by none other than his father, albeit grudgingly. It was a lovely thing with a jewelled hilt and a blade of steel so bright that it shone blue.

  “No, it’s mine. Father said I must look after it.” The older boy turned his body away from Loster to forestall any attempts at snatching the dirk from its oiled sheath, though Loster suspected that it was also to hide his fear. Gaston Malix’s rage was a dreadful thing. Almost as bad as his affection.

  Loster held out his hands. “Oh, come on. It’s a knife. You butter your bread with one.”

  “That’s not the point. This is a proper knife, used for fighting Veria’s enemies. Not spreading butter.” He scowled. “You’re just jealous.”

  Loster’s hands dropped to his side. He stifled a grin as an idea leapt to mind. “What if this leads to the tomb of some great king?” He waved a hand at the seam in the rock.

  “Up here? Not likely,” scoffed Barde.

  “Why not? Aifayne said that there used to be a great city on this mountain. That’s what the ruins at Stackstone are all about.”
<
br />   “That old dustfart?” Barde snorted, yet nevertheless elbowed past his brother. He ran a finger down the gap in the rock face and turned back to Loster. “Give me your tunic.”

  “Huh?”

  “If there is treasure inside then we have to go and claim it, but I’m not damaging my knife. In case there’s a dragon.”

  “A dragon?” Loster raised an eyebrow.

  Barde flushed red. “Yes. You never know. You were the one who said we were the first up here.”

  “I said I didn’t know.”

  “Just give me your tunic.” Loster looked down at his soiled and tattered satin tunic. He sighed and slipped it off, passing it to Barde and shivering as the cruel wind nipped at his naked chest. The older boy grabbed the hem and wrapped it around his dirk before turning back to the rock face. With a grunt of effort he rammed the blade into the groove up to the hilt and began to saw it back and forth.

  Nothing happened.

  “It’s no use,” said Barde, and slipped the knife from its tunic cover too quickly, slicing the blade into the ball of his thumb. “Gods,” he cursed. A ruby droplet of blood fell from his hand and sparkled as it splashed on to the ground. There was a loud crack like bone splitting, and a great door opened in the rock, swinging outwards and threatening to sweep the boys from the ledge. Barde leapt back, knocking into his brother and sending them both tumbling over the edge.

  Loster’s hand shot out and grabbed a fistful of rough stone. Glancing to his right he saw Barde doing likewise, terror etched on his features. A shadow passed overhead as the great rock door passed above them, locking into position with a deep boom. Dust showered down on the boys and then all was silence.

  “Are you okay?” Barde had remembered his courage and resumed his role as the older brother.

  Loster smiled. “I’m fine. Did you drop your knife?”

  Barde cursed again. His prized dirk was somewhere below, probably beyond recovery. Loster hauled himself back up to the ledge and froze as Barde scrambled up beside him, sucking his thumb to stem the flow of blood.

  The door had revealed a long corridor angled down into the heart of the mountain, and its passage had gouged away a thick layer of dirt and dust, laying bare a quarter circle of mosaic underneath. The hundreds of tiny tiles were chipped and faded, but Loster could just about see a dark figure picked out in once-black and was-red. The figure’s hands were raised towards a vibrant sun in a sky of azure brilliance.

  “What is it?” Barde asked, his dagger forgotten. “It doesn’t look like the king of a great city.”

  “That’s because it isn’t.” Loster looked at Barde. “I’m not sure, but I think that’s… Him.”

  “Who? Who’s ‘Him?’” Barde knelt and wiped more dust from the floor, revealing a line of strange runic script. Barde sat back on his haunches and frowned. Loster swallowed hard and instinctively moved behind his brother. Barde looked over his shoulder at him. “Well, what does it say?” he asked.

  “It’s Old Verian, I think,” Loster recognised the strange shapes from his studies with Aifayne, “but…”

  “But what?”

  Loster raised his hand to his mouth, absently chewing his grimy thumbnail. “Well that word.” He pointed at a jagged symbol. “I’m not supposed to say it out loud.”

  “What do you mean?"

  “I mean the writing, the man in the picture. It’s Him.”

  Barde blinked. “Not the Black God?”

  Loster gasped. “Ssssh. What if He hears?” This adventure had been his idea but he was beginning to like it less and less. None of the stories that haunted his slumber were more chilling than the horror tales of the Unnamed. Loster had overheard His true name once but knew it was not to be uttered aloud. Not unless you were one of his thralls from the Temple Deep or were spinning the cruellest of curses.

  “Don’t be a baby. He can’t hear us."

  “He’s always listening. That’s what gods do.” Loster could feel the cold without his tunic and had lost his appetite for this particular excursion. “We should get back. Mother will be worried.” He knelt and pulled on his soiled and torn shirt.

  Barde knotted his brow. “Well what about my dirk?” he asked, cocking his head.

  “What about it?”

  “I’m not going home without it.” Barde folded his arms across his chest.

  “But it went down there," Loster said. He gestured at the emptiness behind him. “We have to go down there to get it anyway."

  “Not if there’s a better one.” Barde jerked a thumb at the portal into the mountain.

  To Loster it looked like the maw of some fell beast waiting to swallow the two small boys. “We don’t know what’s in there…”

  “Afraid are we? That makes sense at your age.”

  Loster scowled. The challenging voice in his head was strangely silent on this matter. Instead it seemed that his older brother had taken its place.

  “I’m not afraid, I just…” he paused. “It’s that.” He pointed at the mosaic. “We don’t know what it means.”

  “So let’s find out,” said Barde.

  They stepped through the doorway into the Widowpeak, though both took care to walk around the dark figure on the floor.

  The stairs were covered in a fine dust, thick and cloying. Barde had scraped away a pile with his foot near the entrance, uncovering black marble underneath. He led the way with Loster a few paces behind, half crouched and ready to spring away at the first sign of danger. Overhead, several beams of sunlight criss-crossed the passageway, providing just enough illumination to see by.

  “There must be channels cut into the rock. Mirrors or something,” said Barde. Loster nodded and then realised that his brother couldn’t see him. He gave him a gentle shove in the back to keep moving.

  As they went deeper, the light from the entrance faded, yet Loster became aware of a bluish glow that fought the gloom back into the corners. The air grew warmer, and Loster's nostrils tingled with a musty, unpleasant smell. Once, perhaps, this tunnel had been lit by rows of torches; he could see the rusted hoops clinging hopefully to the walls at regular intervals. The walls themselves were smooth stone, broken every now and again by a half-column that cast the stone on either side into shadow.

  The stairs ended abruptly, giving way to an uneven floor, ankle high in sand and fine dust. At one point, Loster lost his footing on a loose chip of stone, falling backwards in an explosion of powder. When he came up he was covered from head to toe, as if he had been the victim of a flour ambush. Barde laughed and then stopped as his mirth caused a weird and eerie echo.

  As they made their way along, Loster carved an L into the wall every now and again, using a small stick of chalky rock he had found on the floor. His childhood had been full of stories of would-be heroes getting lost in forests and underground labyrinths. He would not be caught out. Eventually their path opened up into a wide passage. Corridors fed off from the main hall-like passage they were in, yet they dared not stray too far, almost by silent agreement.

  Barde spoke, his voice a whisper. “What is this place?”

  Loster looked around before he replied, listening for he knew not what. “Whatever it is, I don’t think anybody knows it’s here.” He took a few steps beyond Barde and peered into the gloom. The hall seemed to stretch on for a fair distance before ending in an arched doorway set in a painted fresco. “Where do you think it leads?” asked Loster.

  Barde swallowed. “We just have to keep going. We must be far down by now. Maybe there’s a way out.”

  “Through there?” Loster gestured at the distant archway.

  “Let’s go and look. I don’t want to be down here much longer. Not when it’s dark.” Loster looked at him quizzically. “Darker, then.”

  They set off, slowing as they approached the fresco. At the top sat the same symbol they had seen outside, with more strange script above it. Below stood a hundred mournful figures, arms emaciated and outstretched towards the black entrance of the a
rchway. On either side of that daunting shadow sat two great eyes, red and full of malice. The sun had never seen these depths, never locked its gaze with that baleful stare. As a result, the fresco still held its colours, vibrant even in the blue-grey half light.

  A cold hand ran its way down Loster’s spine as he fought back dread. There was no doubt now. This was a temple of the Unnamed, the domain of the Black God, Father of Woe, Reaper of Souls, Despair itself. None other than a holy black thrall saw the inside of a Temple Deep, yet here they stood, before the entrance to one abandoned for ages unknown, right at the heart of the Widowpeak.

  “We should turn back,” Barde whispered as though afraid of the sound of his own voice.

  Every fibre of Loster’s soul wanted to agree, wanted to run headlong in the opposite direction with terror nipping at his heels, yet he could not. For a voice had spoken up at the back of his mind.

  “Foolish child,” it said, “light and dark cannot harm you. There is nobody here. Think how they’ll laugh at you when you tell them you ran from an old painting.”

  “No, Barde. We can’t. Not now.” His voice was steady despite the fear gnawing at him.

  “What are you talking about? That’s a Temple Deep. We’re—"

  “This whole place is a temple. We already crossed the boundary line when we entered. We’ve made it this far…” He gave a weak smile. “What if there’s a dagger in there?”

  “Then I don’t want it, Los. I just want to go back. Before something happens or we go somewhere we’re not supposed to go.”

  “Too late.” With that Loster stepped into the shadows. He didn’t look behind him but he heard Barde give a whimper and then scuttle after him. The older boy’s presence was a comfort, even if he had lost his dirk.

  The shadows were so deep that it felt like Loster was being swallowed. The air was musty and held a rank smell: the layered scent of ancient putrescence. His nose rebelled whenever he had to breathe in. Barde’s footsteps were muffled and the narrow stone meant that it was hard to tell what direction the sounds were coming from. Yet Loster had no doubt that his older brother was behind him, if only because he too was afraid of being lost, alone and in the dark.