Demon Cycle 04 - The Skull Throne

“Are you refreshed from the road, my sons?” Shepherd Pether asked. “Thamos was telling us how your caravan traveled at night as well as day, slaying corespawn as you went. A most impressive feat.”

 

Gared’s shoulders lifted and fell. “Same as any other night, I guess. Killin’ demons is sweaty work, but it’s not like choppin’ a tree. Arlen Bales warded my axe himself. Don’t get tired when I swing it at a demon. Feel stronger with every hit.”

 

The men all grunted and nodded knowingly, but Rojer could see through the fa?ade. Odds were none of them had never even seen a demon up close, much less fought one.

 

“And you, Rojer?” Janson asked. “As I understand it, you gain no such advantage when you charm the corelings with your fiddle. Playing through the night must be taxing.”

 

“Calluses, my lord,” Rojer smiled, holding up his eight fingers. The men were too on guard to flinch, but he could see the shock in their eyes. His crippled hand was a harsh reminder of what lay beyond their wardwalls at night.

 

“As Gared says, we’re used to such things in the Hollow,” Rojer went on. “I think my fingers could limber a bit more with a spot of Succor …”

 

“Don’t bother,” Keerin said. “I’ve already tried. They all know better than to dice with a Jongleur.”

 

“The Duchess Mum raised no fools,” Janson said. Rhinebeck and his brothers looked his way and laughed, acting as if Keerin had not spoken at all.

 

The herald laughed along uncomfortably, desperate to find some bit of acceptance. In the moment of silence that followed, he pressed his suit. “I, too, have some experience with demons. Perhaps you’ve heard the tale of how I cut the arm from a rock demon?”

 

Something about that tickled Rojer’s memory, but that was all. The other men groaned.

 

“Not this ale story again,” Rhinebeck said.

 

“Must’ve been a little one,” Gared said. “Don’t look like you could reach the arm of a decent-sized rock. What’d you use? Axe? Pick mattock?”

 

Keerin smiled, seeming to come alive at the words. “Therein lies a great tale.” He swept a bow to Rhinebeck. “With Your Grace’s permission …”

 

The duke put his face in his hand. “Had to ask, ay Baron?” He swept the hand at Keerin. “Very well, Herald. Sing your song.” Keerin swept into the center of the room calling for attention while the duke signaled for more wine. He had a fine lute, and while he was unlikely to be counted among the great singers, neither was Rojer. Keerin’s voice was rich and clear, washing over the room as he cast his spell.

 

The night was dark

 

The ground was hard

 

Succor was leagues away

 

The cold wind stark

 

Cutting at our hearts

 

Only wards kept corelings at bay

 

“Help me!” we heard

 

A voice in need

 

The cry of a frightened child

 

“Run to us!” I called

 

“Our circle’s wide,

 

The only succor for miles!”

 

The boy cried out

 

“I can’t; I fell!”

 

His call echoed in the black

 

Catching his shout

 

I sought to help

 

But the Messenger held me back

 

“What good to die?”

 

He asked me, grim

 

“For death is all you’ll find

 

“No help you’ll provide

 

’Gainst coreling claws

 

Just more meat to grind”

 

I struck him hard

 

And grabbed his spear

 

Leaping across the wards

 

A frantic charge

 

Strength born of fear

 

Before the boy be cored

 

“Stay brave!” I cried

 

Running hard his way

 

“Keep your heart strong and true!

 

“If you can’t stride

 

To where it’s safe

 

I’ll bring the wards to you!”

 

I reached him quick

 

But not enough

 

Corelings gathered ’round

 

The demons thick

 

My work was rough

 

Scratching wards into the ground

 

A thunderous roar

 

Boomed in the night

 

A demon twenty feet tall

 

It towered fore

 

And ’gainst such might

 

My spear seemed puny and small

 

Horns like hard spears!

 

Claws like my arm!

 

A carapace hard and black!

 

An avalanche

 

Promising harm

 

The beast moved to the attack!

 

The boy screamed scared

 

And clutched my leg

 

Clawed as I drew the last ward!

 

The magic flared

 

Creator’s gift

 

The one force demons abhor!

 

Some will tell you

 

Only the sun

 

Can bring a rock demon harm

 

That night I learned

 

It could be done

 

As did the demon One Arm!

 

The last words struck Rojer, and suddenly he realized why the tale was so familiar. How many times had Arlen told of the one-armed rock demon that pursued him for years after he cut its arm off as a boy? What were the odds this tale happened twice on the road to Miln?

 

Keerin ended with a flourish, and there was applause throughout the drawing room, but the sound was noticeably absent from Jasin’s corner, and the duke’s circle.

 

Rojer’s claps were loud and slow, designed to echo off the room’s high-vaulted ceiling. They continued when the rest of the applause had died away, drawing all eyes to him.

 

“A fine tale,” Rojer congratulated loudly. “Though I knew a man who told it differently.”

 

“Oh?” Keerin asked imperiously, knowing a challenge when he heard it. “And who might that be?”

 

“Arlen Bales,” Rojer said, and there was chatter throughout the room at the name.

 

He looked at Keerin with mock incredulity as the color drained from the man’s face. “You realize, of course, that the boy in your song grew to be none other than the Warded Man, himself?”

 

“Don’t remember a Jongleur in that story,” Gared said, and there was more chatter at that. “You want to hear a true story?” He slapped Rojer on the back, knocking him forward a step. “Rojer, play The Battle of Cutter’s Hollow!”

 

Thamos put his face in his hand. Rojer turned, bowing to Rhinebeck as Keerin had. “Your Grace, I need not …”

 

“It’s already being played in every alehouse from here to Miln,” Rhinebeck said with a wave. “Might as well hear it from the source.”

 

Rojer swallowed, but he took out his fiddle and began to play.

 

Cutter’s Hollow lost its center

 

When the flux came to stay

 

Killed great Herb Gatherer Bruna

 

Her ’prentice far away

 

Not a one would run and hide,

 

They all did stand and follow

 

Killing demons in the night

 

The Warded Man came to the Hollow

 

In Fort Angiers far to the north

 

Leesha got ill tiding

 

Her mentor dead, her father sick

 

Hollow a week’s riding

 

Not a one would run and hide,

 

They all did stand and follow

 

Killing demons in the night

 

The Warded Man came to the Hollow

 

No guide she found through naked night

 

Just Jongleur travel wards

 

That could not hold the bandits back

 

As it did coreling hordes

 

Not a one would run and hide,

 

They all did stand and follow

 

Killing demons in the night

 

The Warded Man came to the Hollow

 

Left for dead no horse or succor

 

Corelings roving in bands

 

They met a man with tattooed flesh

 

Killed demons with bare hands

 

Not a one would run and hide,

 

They all did stand and follow

 

Killing demons in the night

 

The Warded Man came to the Hollow

 

The Hollow razed when they arrived

 

Not a ward left intact

 

And half the folk who called it home

 

Lay dead or on their backs

 

Not a one would run and hide,

 

They all did stand and follow

 

Killing demons in the night

 

The Warded Man came to the Hollow

 

Warded Man spat on despair

 

Said follow me and fight

 

We’ll see the dawn if we all stand

 

Side by side in the night

 

Not a one would run and hide,

 

They all did stand and follow

 

Killing demons in the night

 

The Warded Man came to the Hollow

 

All night they fought with axe and spear

 

Butcher’s knife and shield

 

While Leesha brought those too weak to

 

The Holy House to heal

 

Not a one would run and hide,

 

They all did stand and follow

 

Killing demons in the night

 

The Warded Man came to the Hollow

 

Hollowers kept their loved ones safe

 

Though night was long and hard

 

There’s reason why the battlefield’s

 

Called the Corelings’ Graveyard

 

Not a one would run and hide,

 

They all did stand and follow

 

Killing demons in the night

 

The Warded Man came to the Hollow

 

If someone asks why at sunset

 

Demons all get shivers

 

Hollowers say with honest word

 

It’s ’cuz we’re all Deliverers

 

Not a one would run and hide,

 

They all did stand and follow

 

Killing demons in the night

 

The Warded Man came to the Hollow

 

Keerin seemed to shrink as the song went on. Gared roared the refrain along with Rojer, and others in the room took up the song. By the end, the Milnese herald’s haughty look was gone.

 

The applause was louder at the end of Rojer’s song, with Gared leading the crowd with piercing whistles and his booming claps and cheers. Thamos joined him, and even his brothers clapped politely, save for Shepherd Pether, who merely sipped his wine.

 

But from Jasin’s corner, there was silence until the rest died down, and then he, too, began a slow clap, walking toward the center of the room.

 

“Your Grace—” he began.

 

“Not now, Jasin,” Rhinebeck cut him off with a wave. “I think we’ve had enough of singing for one night.”

 

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