Read The Jewel of Turmish Online
Authors: Mel Odom
As he held the young wolf pup, Haarn knew he was going to lose it if he didn’t do something. Summoning his remaining energy, he prayed to Silvanus. The words of the prayer filled him, dulling the pain for a moment. He looked into the newborn wolf’s face, memorizing the blunted length of the pup’s muzzle.
“What’s wrong?” Druz asked.
“It’s dying,” Haarn said, never losing the thread of the spell.
A golden glow filled Haarn’s cupped hands as he shielded the pup. The glow reflected against his chest, showing the blood that streaked his body. His bare skin was pebbled in goosebumps from the cold and aches dawned deep within his bones as the spell took the last of his strength.
The golden glow from the druid’s hands seeped into
the small, still form he protected. Just before the glow died away, the wolf pup stirred. A moment later, as the cold ate into Haarn with redoubled fury, the pup opened its mouth and whined with hunger. Haarn turned to Druz, feeling the sickness seething in his own head, and offered her the wolf pup.
Showing care and concern, Druz plucked the pup from Haarn’s hands.
Without another word, knowing he couldn’t have moved even if he’d tried, the druid pitched over. He had a brief impression of cold mud over his face and body then felt nothing at all.
ŠŚ
The oval yellow beam of Tohl’s lantern raked the tomb’s ceiling then froze on the bizarre figure of Borran Kiosk clinging to the uneven stones there. The claws of his fingers and toes wedged into the space between the stones. A horrific grin split the mohrg’s cadaverous face. Blood covered Borran Kiosk’s body and spattered his cloak.
“Welcome,” the mohrg whispered in his thin, cold voice. “Welcome, and prepare to die.”
Effrim lunged forward with his warhammer, singing the praises of Eldath in his strong, clear voice.
Borran Kiosk scuttled away and the warhammer missed by inches. The long, grotesque purple tongue uncoiled from his obscene mouth and lanced at the young priest.
Tohl watched in numb horror as the tongue smashed through Effrim’s forehead and out the back of his skull. Chunks of white bone and bloody matter flew over Micahan, who stood as if dazed. Then the old priest slumped to the floor, his eyes locked wide and staring at nothing. Effrim’s corpse dropped only a moment later.
With a jerk of his head, Borran Kiosk tore his tongue free of Effrim’s body. Blood smeared his face and ran down his chin as the tongue recoiled. He smiled again,
cocking his head.
“The Vilhon Reach will die, dragged to its doom by those who have died already.”
Praying, Tohl raised Eldath’s symbol before him. The disk showed the graven image of a stream. He invoked his spell, one of the earliest he’d been taught to use against the undead. He felt the energy leave his body and saw Borran Kiosk wince.
“Foolish priest,” the monster crowed in triumph, “you cannot turn me with your piety and your faith. I am death incarnate, made whole by Malar’s strong hand. I will slake my thirst with your blood.”
Vhoror slammed into Tohl, causing him to stumble and struggle to stay on his feet. Borran Kiosk’s tongue missed its mark, slapping against the wall behind Tohl and shattering through stone.
“Move, you damned fool!” Vhoror roared.
He continued shoving against Tohl, striving to reach the doorway.
Knocked forward by Vhoror’s greater girth, Tohl staggered through the skulls, sending them flying in all directions. Tohl caught himself, his mind flying through the spells available to him.
“Move! Move!” Vhoror shouted, continuing to push him.
Tohl turned to the other priest, wanting to tell him that they’d stay alive if only they kept their heads. Before Tohl could speak, Vhoror’s head broke and came apart in crimson ruin, his features leaking down from his shattered skull. Borran Kiosk’s tongue emerged from the priest’s head like a caterpillar seeking escape from a too-tight cocoon.
A last, surprised gasp puffed from Vhoror’s lips as life left him. As quickly as it had thrust through the priest’s head, the tongue withdrew, leaving a gaping hole in its place.
Tohl’s stomach lurched as he realized how much of Vhoror’s blood was on him, and how it felt blazing hot against the chill of the wind and rain. Tohl stood his ground and prayed as he’d been taught, holding fast to
his faith. He dropped his mace to the stone floor, knowing it would do him little good against the mohrg. Raising the symbol of his goddess before him, he sat the lantern at his feet, and gestured with his free hand.
For a moment, Tohl thought the spell had failed, then the buzzing and chirping of insects filled his ears.
Borran Kiosk dropped from the ceiling, intent on the two priests remaining in the room, but the mohrg’s baleful glare took in Tohl as well, letting him know he hadn’t been forgotten. The monstrous tongue cleaved Daraghin’s chest, tearing like a blade through cloth.
Thousands of flying insects filled the tomb. They flew toward Borran Kiosk and clustered upon him.
To Tohl, it was like watching moss grow on a rock, only measured in the space of heartbeats. In less time than it took to draw a panicked breath, the insects covered Borran Kiosk like a layer of wriggling skin. Other insects formed a cloud around him, but even more continued to pile onto his body.
Borran Kiosk screamed, but the sound wasn’t filled with pain as Tohl had hoped. Rage fueled the inarticulate roars. Still, the mohrg seemed trapped as the clusters of insects filled the room.
An arm thrust through the flying cloud, and it took Tohl a moment to realize that it was human.
“Brother Tohl!” Bowdiek called. “Eldath’s mercy, help me!”
Seizing the lantern again, Tohl ran forward and yanked the other priest from the embrace of the flying insects. Tohl felt something crunch beneath his feet. When he looked down, he saw that the stone floor was covered with beetles and other crawling insects.
Bowdiek coughed and wheezed, and Tohl guessed that the man had swallowed some of the insects. Glow-bugs, locusts, and flying beetles littered his hair and body, but when Bowdiek was out of the room where Borran Kiosk was, they left him and streaked for the mohrg.
“Come on,” Tohl said. “The spell won’t last for long.”
He tugged Bowdiek’s arm and got them both moving toward the next door. Bowdiek slammed against the wall near the doorway. Thinking for a moment that the priest had misjudged his step, Tohl turned to Bowdiek and grabbed his shoulder, prepared to pull him onto the correct path.
Bowdiek’s face pressed against the tomb wall, blanched white in pain and fright. His mouth worked but no words came out, then a gout of blood covered his lower face.
Lifting the lantern, Tohl saw that Borran Kiosk’s obscene tongue had ripped through Bowdiek’s lower back so hard that it had penetrated the tomb’s stone wall. Bowdiek couldn’t movehe was pinned. Pain flared through Bowdiek’s eyes, then they turned up until only the whites showed.
Tohl felt Bowdiek’s corpse shiver as Borran Kiosk’s tongue tensed and shifted. Glancing over his shoulder, Tohl spotted the mohrg tearing free of the insect-infested room, pulled by his tongue, which was still anchored to the wall, and to Bowdiek.
Borran Kiosk gibbered and raked insects from his eye hollows. Other insects crusted his mouth and the remains of his nose.
“Still here, priest?” Borran Kiosk mocked as he drew himself toward Bowdiek’s twitching corpse. “Your friend is still hanging around.”
The mohrg stood only a few feet away. He yanked his head back and his tongue popped free of both the wall and the corpse then snapped back into his blood-drenched jaws.
Bowdiek dropped to the floor.
Tohl turned and ran. He fled through the hallways, listening to the bony slap of Borran Kiosk’s skeletal feet against the stone floor.
The doorway to the graveyard appeared ahead. Tohl pushed off the last passageway wall with his free hand, still carrying the bobbing lantern with his other, struggling to keep his bearings even though the wick’s flame flickered. In a dozen more strides, he was through the final
door and out into the graveyard.
Eldath’s blessing, but he was old. Tohl knew that, but the wheezing breaths that seared like hot irons through his lungs branded that truth into him. His knees felt like they were coming apart, but he kept them moving. Before he could stop himself, he glanced oyer his shoulder.
The mohrg ran with surprising speed, and the cloud of insects pursued him, though they were beginning to thin. The spell should have lasted longer, but it was fading. Tohl wondered if the magical nature of the mohrg had altered the spell in some way.
Tohl wished he was in another dream, but just as he had known he was dreaming before, he knew he wasn’t now.
He tripped. Something caught his foot and he went sprawling. The wet ground coated him and he smacked up against a leaning headstone whose letters had long since worn away.
The splat of bony feet cleaving the graveyard mud drew Tohl’s attention, sounding almost as fast and as loud as his heart hammering in his chest. He clawed his way to his knees and looked back the way he’d come.
Borran Kiosk ran through the rain showing no sign of exertion. The hideous creature moved with the fluid grace of a great cat.
Fear deluged Tohl in one final wave. Galvanized into action, he reared back and threw the lantern as hard as he could.
The lantern flipped end over end then smashed against the mohrg. The glass fuel reservoir shattered against the undead creature’s chest. Oil ran over the bared bone and remnants of flesh. Despite the downpour, the fluid ran over Borran Kiosk’s body and the fiery wick stuck to his chest. The oil caught fire and blue and yellow flames raced over the mohrg.
Tohl watched in horror as Borran Kiosk never broke stride. The horrid, fleshless face and the death’s-head grin was the last thing he saw. He had a brief impression
of the grinning jaws splitting open and the purple tongue exploding outward, then it felt like a dwarven warhammer slammed into his head, and he was dead before he could draw a last breath.
ŚŠŚ
“Merciful Tymora,” Druz Talimsir called as she looked at Haarn lying naked and unconscious in the mud, “give me the strength to endure.”
The newborn wolf pups squirmed in the blanket. Their mewling cries reached her ears and sparked a tenderness that confused her and made her angry.
Lightning sizzled across the sky, followed almost at once by the hollow boom of thunder that rolled across the mountaintop. The sound made Druz realize again how far she was from anything familiar, and she had to do something about the unconscious man lying in the mud.
The wolves still lounging in the tree line continued watching her. Druz couldn’t help but wonder how long it would take before they rushed her. Even armed and as skilled as she was, she knew she wouldn’t last long before they overcame her. Her only chance was to run or climb a tree before they dragged her down, but she knew she couldn’t leave the druid unguarded. The wolves would kill him for executing their leader, and they probably had no love for Druz, who had killed the pregnant bitch.
Beneath her breath, she damned the druid. He had to have known he wasn’t going to be strong enough to climb down the mountain. Instead of healing a motherless wolf pup, he should have healed himself.
She started to put the blanket-wrapped wolf pups aside. Plaintive yips sounded from the struggling newborns. She stopped and pulled the blanket back in close to her, feeling the warmth of the pups and the way they moved against her.
Druz couldn’t abandon them. If she had known for sure that the wolf pack would take care of them she might have left them there, but she didn’t know that. All she
knew was that Haarn had risked his life to save them.
She felt trapped as she eyed the restless wolves and cuddled the blanket to her. Glancing around the mountaintop, she tried to find some place she could use as shelter, thinking she could put the wolf pups there and return for the druid.
The bear yawned as it towered above her. Druz feared the bear might grow bored and wander away, leaving them defenseless against the wolves. Reaching to her side, she took hold of her sword hilt.
The bear swayed for a moment then dropped to all fours. The bear nudged the unconscious druid with his muzzle. Haarn didn’t respond. Growing more restless, fur dripping from the downpour, the bear pushed at Haarn with a paw.
Druz watched with growing concern. The bear’s shiny black claws could slice a man to ribbons.
Moving with gentle care, the bear shoved one of his front legs under the unconscious druid and lifted him with no apparent effort. The bear stood to his full height again, cradling the man as if he were a babe. When he had his burden secure, the bear gazed at Druz, gave a low growl, and started walking away.
Not wanting to he left alone with the waiting wolves, Druz got to her feet, surprised at how her muscles ached from the climb up the mountain. She gathered Haarn’s gear, carried the wolf pups in the blanket in one hand and Haarn’s gear in the other, and stepped through the mud after the bear.
Halfway down the mountain, battling with treacherous footing, Druz followed the bear as it turned to the right of the narrow game trail. She didn’t see the cave beside the trail until the bear hunkered down and walked through it.
Hesitant, Druz stood outside for a moment. The bear growled to her from inside, and the resulting short-lived echo around the beast’s voice let her know how small the cave was. Despite her best efforts, the blanket containing the wolf pups had grown wetter and the newborn
litter was in danger of getting soaked. Holding onto the blanket of pups and Haarn’s gear, she strode into the cave.
Lightning flashed outside, giving Druz a momentary glimpse of the bear and the druid against the back wall of the cave. The animal sat down next to the man, pressing his bulk against Haarn to share his warmth. The bear turned his broad head and ministered to Haarn’s wounds with his tongue.
Druz dropped Haarn’s gear and slid her own sword free of its sheath as another streak of lightning ripped through the sky and revealed the wolf pack outside the cave. They waited in the tree line opposite the game trail.