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Authors: David Lee Stone

Ratastrophe Catastrophe

BOOK: Ratastrophe Catastrophe
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The Ratastrophe Catastrophe
The Illmoor Chronicles
David Lee Stone

For my mother,

Barbara Ann Stone

Contents

SELECTED DRAMATIS PERSONAE

PROLOGUE

ONE

TWO

THREE

FOUR

FIVE

SIX

SEVEN

EIGHT

NINE

TEN

ELEVEN

TWELVE

THIRTEEN

FOURTEEN

FIFTEEN

SIXTEEN

SEVENTEEN

EIGHTEEN

NINETEEN

TWENTY

TWENTY-ONE

TWENTY-TWO

TWENTY-THREE

TWENTY-FOUR

TWENTY-FIVE

TWENTY-SIX

TWENTY-SEVEN

TWENTY-EIGHT

TWENTY-NINE

THIRTY

THIRTY-ONE

THIRTY-TWO

THIRTY-THREE

THIRTY-FOUR

EPILOGUE

Preview:
The Yowler Foul-Up

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

SELECTED DRAMATIS PERSONAE
(ye cast of characters)

BARROWBIRD: a distant relative of the forest hornbill

BURNIE: Troglodyte councilor

CADRICK, TACITURN: Trade Minister

FINLAYZZON, GODRICK: Owner of Finlayzzon’s inn

FIREBRAND, CHAS: Owner of the Rotting Ferret tavern

FORESTALL, TAMBOR: Council Chairman, ex-sorcerer

FRANKLIN, VICTOR: Assassin

GOLDEAXE, GORDO: Dwarf mercenary

GREEN, MIFKINDLE: Assassin

GRIM, BERNARD: Ratcatcher

MARSHALL, PEGRAND: Manservant to the Duke of Dullitch

MICK: Mite

MODESET, VANDRE: Duke of Dullitch

PHELT, CEDRIC: Militiaman

PIDDLETON, TOMMY: A lame boy

QUARRY: Lord Chancellor of Dullitch

QUICKSTINT, JIMMY: Thief/herald; Tambor’s grandson

SANDS, QUARIS: Home Secretary and member of the council

SIDDLE, MALCOLM: Ratcatcher’s apprentice

SOAK, ROCHUS: Seer

STUMP: Adventurer

TEETHGRIT, GROAN: Barbarian mercenary

VICIOUS: Fox terrier

WUSTAPHA, PIER: Charmer

WUSTAPHA, MRS.: Farmer’s wife; mother of Diek

WUSTAPHA, PIER: Farmer; father of Diek

PROLOGUE

D
URING THE TRI-AGE (CIVILIZATION’S
third attempt at getting things right) there grew, on the swollen lip of the continent of Illmoor, a city quite unlike any in recorded history.

The rulers of Dullitch were imbecilic, and their incompetence gave rise to such diverse crimes as fraud and murder. Among the nobles, one vile family after another struggled for power, submitting their sons as prospective lords in order to strengthen their stake in the city. On the tenth day of every tenth year, a new duke was chosen, each invariably more corrupt and untrustworthy than the last—“A snake to lead snakes,” it was said. Under such leadership, which allowed a vile assortment of assassins and pickpockets to thrive and squirm beneath it, the city quickly earned a grim reputation. It became despised by many and generally avoided by travelers through the Gleaming Mountains, by which it was sheltered, like the treasure hoard of a particularly insecure dragon.

And what a horde Dullitch contained: humans, trolls, ogres, sprites, elves, pixies, dwarves, gnomes, giants, and greenskins. Remarkably, considering the sheer diversity of races, a lasting peace endured.

Still, a large, weather-beaten plaque swung back and forth on tired hinges above the city gates, proudly welcoming all and sundry to visit Dullitch. Though a local saying warned, “You haven’t lived until you’ve visited Dullitch and, after that, you won’t want to….”

The continent of Illmoor is riddled with magic. Not the empty, inept magic practiced by men who believe themselves to be members of the Ancient (now defunct) Order of Sorcerers. This is the original, undiluted magic from which the continent itself was constructed: a powerful and volatile force that has leaked out through the ages, rising up from the graves of long-dead warlocks.

Two types of magic coexist:
light
and
dark
.

Light magic finds its place in the air, giving rise to galloping unicorns, love charms, and fairy groves before it evaporates into the ether. It is a gentle and harmonious force, a force at one with nature. Though much sought after by amateur “sorcerers,” it proves practically impossible to harness; and those who do spend long hours in pursuit of mastering it are often said to be deranged.

Dark magic, on the other hand, seeks immediately to earth itself in the land it was once used to forge. Arising from the long-dead souls of great and terrible enchanters, it is an angry magic, an untamed source, a parasite yearning for a host.

And hosts are rare.

Trees suffice, for their roots go deep, but this is no way for dark magic to travel; when it lodges itself in trees, the results are straightforward, rather boring, and nobody gets hurt. No, what dark magic truly requires is susceptible minds. These are a delicacy and, although seldom encountered, are always relished. But dark magic is a reckless lodger; it cares little for the minds it invades.

A particularly powerful charge of dark magic appeared during the reign of Duke Modeset. Though it would affect the lives of several very different people, it arrived almost entirely unnoticed. In fact, only two pairs of eyes in the whole of Illmoor observed its passage.

These belonged to the mercenaries, Groan and Gordo, although their part in the story would not become apparent for some time. Long before they had the notion to set their steeds southward, the magic had found its mind.

A searing wave of energy infiltrated a land of fields and forests, seeking the warmth of a weak mind, homing in, until…

ONE

W
HOOSH

Diek Wustapha dropped his flute. The leather-bound book that had been resting on his lap tumbled to the floor and lay open, its pages flapping in the breeze.

“What is it, lad?”

The boy turned and looked up at his father, his smile was apprehensive. “I thought I heard something, Dad.”

“That’ll be the cattle cart,” said his father, quietly grateful that his son had stopped playing; Diek’s musical ability suggested possible employment in the torture trade.

Mr. Wustapha looked out over a broad expanse of west-country farmland, his brow creased. A few cows in the field opposite had wandered over to the gate and were mooching idly about.

“No, it was more like a feeling than a sound. I thought I
felt
something.”

“Well, that’ll be your dinner,” his father continued, reflecting on years of terror at the dinner table. Mrs. Wustapha was one of a long line of cooks on her mother’s side of the family. He hoped fervently she would be the last. “You know something, boy, when I first met your ma, she used to make puddings the like of which would turn your stomach inside out for days on end.”

“Yes, Dad. So you’ve told me. Repeatedly.”

“Fair enough. You’re reading again, I see?”

Diek nodded, sliding his flute under a rock with the heel of his boot. He snatched up the book. “It’s called
Ancient Royal Fables
.”

“Good lad,” said his father, patting the boy affectionately on the shoulder. “Have you got to the bit where Huud the Wise tells Prince Kellogg to go round up the sheep?”

“No, Dad.”

Diek looked up. His father was waiting patiently, a grin spreading across his broad face.

“I’ll go and round the sheep up now, Dad,” he said, with a knowing smile.

Diek got to his feet and set off toward the north field. His father watched him go.

Diek wasn’t a bad lad, he thought, at least, not in the conventional sense. He just dawdled from time to time, lacked direction. Perhaps he
should
take his brother’s advice and send Diek to Legrash for the summer, let him experience a bit of the real world. What harm could it do?

He stroked his chin thoughtfully, wondering exactly how much trouble a young boy could get into in a town like Legrash. A boy like Diek. Probably best not to speculate. He whistled a merry tune and headed off to see how his son was getting on with the sheep.

The magic sank into Diek’s mind like a stone plunging down a deep well. There it lay low, biding its time with patience born of millennia lingering in deep caverns, lurking in dormant hollows.

When the magic decided to surface, it did so with such reptilian guile that no human eye could detect the change. Diek Wustapha, however, was cursed with the ownership of a barrowbird with particularly keen sight.

The barrowbird is a curious creature indeed. One of the High Art’s darker throwbacks, it was rumored to have once been an ordinary scrawny relative of the forest hornbill. Legend holds that on the few occasions throughout history when the gods decided to visit Illmoor, they did so by inhabiting the minds of barrowbirds. On one such occasion, it is said that one particularly spiteful god decided to leave something behind: the curse known as
Vocalis Truthilium
, commonly translated as “I speak as I find.”

And the barrowbird did just that. In fact, it gave a new and terrible meaning to the phrase. No personal comment was beyond it. Despised as a species, its put-downs included such harsh observations as “You’ll never get a girlfriend unless you actually cut that ear off,” and the oft heard “If I had a figure like yours, love, I’d stay indoors for the duration.”

Now Diek’s own barrowbird was treating him to a baleful stare. “There’s somethin’ amiss with your right eyeball,” it chirped. “’S glowin’ like an ember, ain’t it?”

“Is it?”

Diek blinked and raised a hand to his head. He’d been propped against one corner of the pigpen all morning, watching the truffle hogs misbehaving. “Maybe I’m coming down with something,” he said, beginning to wander off around the side of the pen. “I
do
feel a bit odd.”

He reached for his flute and brought the instrument to his lips, but was interrupted before he was able to muster a tune.

“Could be fouleye,” the barrowbird squawked. “You hear of a lot of folk dyin’ from that.”


Dying?
It’s fatal?”

“Right as mustard. You ask anyone: ‘How’s your daughter, Milly?’ ‘Fouleye took her.’ ‘How’s your aunty Ethel?’ ‘Down with fouleye.’ One minute you can be runnin’ around in a field, the next you’re a goner. That’s usually the females, mind. I never heard of a male taken with it yet.”

“Okay, okay. It’s probably not that, then.”

Diek produced a single, shrill note from the flute, then stowed it away in his tunic. He didn’t feel much like playing today; his heart really wasn’t in it.

He sighed and closed his eyes tight, then tentatively opened them again. “Has it gone?” he asked.

“Has it, heck!” said the barrowbird. “Now they’re
both
alight! Well, stone me. You’re not standin’ on a lightnin’ rod or somethin’, are ya?”

Diek took a step back, then looked around. “I’m not standing on anything,” he said. “Besides, you noticed it when I was over there.”

The barrowbird put its head on one side. “Then, if I were you, I’d go and see the apothecary or, come to that, the village witch.”

“I need to do my chores. Besides, why would I want to see a witch?”

“Well, first there’s the eye thing, and then maybe you could find out why you’re suddenly such a magnet for the pigs.”

“Huh?”

Turning about on his heels, Diek noticed for the first time that all twelve of his father’s hogs had followed him along the length of the pen and were now squatting in a group just beyond the fence. Curious. Usually, they ignored him completely, unless he had scraps. “Th-that’s odd.”

“Odd ain’t the word, boy. ’F y’ask me, you’re up the creek without a shovel.”

“I think that’s supposed to be a ‘paddle,’ and I feel fine,
thank you
. Now, I’m going to see to the milking…
alone
.

The barrowbird hopped onto a nearby tree branch, and watched Diek skulk toward the milking shed. “Somethin’ amiss,” it muttered. “Somethin’ amiss, right enough.”

BOOK: Ratastrophe Catastrophe
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