DemiGodChapter 16 Betrayal
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The Great Pyramid
Day???:
Vorigan, the Vampyr Death Knight stepped through the portal and found himself in a place very similar to the Labyrinth entry, where he’d marked his name in the sand, and accepted the Rules. His Tasks, his rooms were solved; the Labyrinth finished. He stood by an identical doorway, with walls extending into the distance, like the corner of an infinitely-large room. Unlike the first time, this stone platform was only as big as the ones out in the desert, where he entered the Labyrinth. Beyond its small, square boundary was an endless sea of sand stretching out of sight, between the two diverging walls. The Topaz Dragon, Kyet’sol was already present; her sleek, predatory head hovering menacingly above him. Except for part of her neck, the rest of her body was buried beneath the dunes.
“Challenger, you have succeeded in your Tasks.” The dragon said, sounding eager to Blackwater’s Knight Commander. “And normally would now be eligible for me to offer you rewards. But first, we must discuss what would be the final reward: a gift of my power, or its protection.”
A tingling creeped down his limbs, but he ignored it to respond.
Vorigan bowed respectfully. “Great Topaz Dragon, Master of the Great Pyramid and Giver of Restoration and Healing, I greet you in solemn humility. Your words are concerning. I do not understand what you mean, nor what this is, that you put to me.”
The dragon’s head bobbed. “You do not, for you are the first to achieve the Call, in this world. You now face a choice, which must be decided before your rewards can proceed. Your decision must also be witnessed, by a person still living who has successfully completed my Challenge. If you cannot, or will not name such a person who is satisfactory to you, I will do so.”
Thousands of needles pricked him, all over. What is this?
He staggered, but held himself upright through force of will as the sensation grew. “I ... only know of one, or perhaps two people who might have completed the Challenge. Either of my companions, John the Nord with a Fey Ear, or Master Dulgan Ironhand Fireshaper would be acceptable.”
Kyet’sol’s head bobbed again. “John the Nord, as you call him is acceptable to myself as well. He shall be shown your choice, but restricted from discussing it without being in the presence of my mother, myself, or one of my sisters. You may not converse with him, so I shall keep his view hidden from your sight.”
For every moment that passed, his pain doubled. Whatever this Call did, reached beyond his natural defenses.
Vorigan braced both feet shoulder’s width apart. “I understand, Great Kyet’sol. What am I to choose?”
“I consulted with my sisters, Typhon and Amayru regarding you when the Call rang out.” Kyet’sol explained. “You first gained Necromantic power eight hundred and thirty-seven years ago, then Evolved your form five hundred and fifty-three years ago. You are now an Aristocratic-class Vampyr Death Knight; a warrior of the highest order whose form is at the pinnacle of its possible Evolution. Is this not so?”
Impatient irritation took hold. Long years spent disciplining himself were all that prevented him from retorting condescendingly. “You speak truly, Great One.”
“Then your choice is this,” Kyet’sol continued, “your nature as a Vampyr gives you the ability to heal yourself, at others’ expense only. Also, your mastery over Necromancy is now total, infusing your form with its Necromantic power and using others’ deaths to fuel your indefinitely long martial life. Were I to gift you with either aspect of my normal healing ability as your reward, it would corrupt and almost assuredly destroy you. If it did not, it would undoubtedly permanently weaken you severely. However, I can offer you an alternative to this: accept service with me, to serve as my Boon’s Death-Drinker, and I will transform your Death Knight form into a Banneret of Balance, one capable of holding both Necromantic and Mystic powers together.”
Vorigan sank slowly to a knee; no matter how forcefully he bent his will, his body refused to obey. The dragon offered him a bargain: she would give him power and respite from whatever afflicted him in exchange for his service. It was an intriguing one; a Vampyr serving the Topaz Dragon. He’d never heard of such a thing. But her words inspired no confidence in him. She did not know how powerfully this ‘Redemption’s Call’ gripped him.
He slow-motioned collapsed, forcing the words out. “I ... am intrigued ... by your offer ... to serve. But ... I fear that your ... promise to put ... the Call off ... will only leave me ... torn between ... both. I’m sorry ... Great Drag-on ... but I must ... accept my blood’s ... legacy.”
“You have spoken; so shall it be.” Kyet’sol thundered formally. “Redemption’s Call has been Heard and Answered.”
The dragon rose up, her entire body sliding out of the sand until she floated freely in the air. Her serpentine length undulated slowly, levitating with only her massive head and the spiked tip of her tail remaining stationary. That tail moved to her mouth, and a razor-sharp tooth tore a tiny hole in the very end. A single bead of milky-white fluid welled up from the wound, off-gassing a dark vapor into the warm, still air.
Kyet’sol extended it to Vorigan. “Taste my blood, Life-Drinker and face your Legacy.”
He raised a trembling finger to dip it in the liquid, but the dragon’s tail dodged aside.
“Taste. Not take.” She warned.
Vorigan braced both hands on his knee, and raised his head. His long, forked tongue punctured the droplet’s surface, spilling its contents down his throat in a rush. Dark vapor drifted from his nostrils as his body greedily absorbed the essence contained within. His platform shook as the entire world rang like the deepest bell ever constructed. Agony tore through him, an uncontrollable rush of alien, yet familiar power that burned away the dark feelings clouding his thoughts. He flopped to the ground like a fish out of water, and dark vapor began pouring from his gaping mouth, nose and ears.
“The agreement is fulfilled.” Kyet’sol boomed. “Open the Door to the Place not of this world, and the Time when the Bargain was struck.”
A fully-armored, winged warrior strode out from the portal. The new being calling himself ‘Sammeal the Seraphim’ addressed a dragon named Zhulang and referenced an ancient bargain between them. This new dragon’s voice responded, though it did not appear. The scene of their compact replayed, ending with Sammeal transformed into a blue-tined spirit.
Sammeal regarded Vorigan without emotion. “Fallen One, you have fulfilled our ancient agreement with the Great Dragon. As your blood carries the same power my own once did, I offer you a chance to redeem us all. Will you hear what is required of you, or do you reject my legacy?”
What is he talking about? What does this mean?
Sammeal’s voice turned frosty. “Leech, refusal to answer will be treated as a rejection.”
“I do not understand.” Vorigan pointed at the Seraphim. “You claim that you,” he turned his finger on himself, “are the same race that I am? How can this be?”
“Our history is lost, then?” Sammeal asked.
Vorigan professed his ignorance, and received an incredible story of these Seraphim being tricked and trapped in a place that sounded exactly like the Underworld that the Eldest Vampyr described. It ended with an implication that the Fallen members of Sammeal’s Race were the very first Vampyri. It was information unknown to the Vampyri of this world, but would explain some of their oldest legends. Still, his conversation with the ancient Seraphim, and the accusation that the Vampyri were “Fallen” descendants of that once-powerful race completely shattered Vorigan’s world-view.
Sammeal ended with how all this pertained to Vorigan himself, “We elected to form the dragon’s Compact. She goes by many names, but to us she was Zhulang, the Light in Darkness, penultimate Authority over the Network of Countless Worlds. She agreed to Test you, and if you pass the Test, she will accept you as our race’s sacrifice. She assured us that somehow doing so will open the way for our redemption.”
The way his blood still burned in his veins, and the pain when he resisted Redemption’s Call at first were evidence that this was no trick. No stratagem to cheat him out of a justly-earned reward. That, he could’ve handled. As one of the most dangerous, and heavily dragon-rewarded Vampyri, Vorigan knew more than most about the powerful beings who’d carved the world into pieces for each of them. For instance, he knew that they were bound by rules, just as surely as was each Challenger. For one of them to offer a bargain, with terms that included restraining an old, otherworldly accord was utterly unheard of. Vorigan’s mind was spinning; he didn’t know what to think.
“Sacrifice?” He asked. “What does that mean? The vision I saw said ‘servant’ not ‘sacrifice’.”
Sammeal shook his head. “Her words were: ‘they will belong wholly to me, to do with as I see fit’. She accepted our death as a surety and anchor for me to talk with you now, but I do not believe she craves any more of it. How you will offer to redeem us isn’t clear. That information you must find out.”
An incandescent column of white light flashed down, engulfing Vorigan. Then came the voice of Zhulang herself. The one Sammeal called the Light in Darkness, and Master of the Place Between Uncountable Worlds. Vorigan assumed Zhulang was this being’s name for Ky’ur, the Mother of Dragons. Her words struck to the very core of his being. For the first time in his bloody, long life the Knight Commander of Blackwater Necropolis felt true terror. Vampyri avoid doing many Challenges (if any), and though the Death Knight had faced three, nothing in his experience prepared him for the awe-inspiring power that radiated down upon him now.
“Commander Vorigan of Blackwater, Aristocratic Vampyr and Death Knight, you have Heard and Accepted Redemption’s Call.” Zhulang’s voice rang out. “Your Test begins here and now: do you agree to my Terms and Conditions, without knowing them, nor the Consequences for refusal in advance? Or do you reject my Test, and accept your punishment for refusal?”
He was caught now; there was no escaping the wave about to sweep over him. Even if it was one of his own making. Vampyri lead cold, cruel, and lonely lives. Lives reviled by most other sentient creatures in the world. Lives whose only purpose amounted to: don’t die. Destroy any who threaten you, but no more than that. Don’t draw the ire of other Races; stay in the shadows, and avoid becoming entangled in their short-lived squabbles. Vampyri shared no glory, no meaning, no sentiment beyond utter selfishness.
Now he knew why so few of his Race lived beyond a thousand years. It was tiresome to struggle so mightily, only to live another, identical day. Or year. Or decade. Time filled with hedonism, a distraction from the emptiness of their existence. Or pursuing ever greater power. No amount was ever enough to satisfy. Like the bloody life-force Vampyri consumed endlessly, the thirst for always more consumed anyone who followed it long enough.
It was time to see if something innately fulfilling existed. Vorigan was more than ready to embrace whatever commitment Zhulang demanded, if it meant possible success in that endeavor.
Vorigan spoke loudly. “I do accept them, Great One. I accede to whatever you require.”
“I am pleased by your ready answer.” Zhulang replied. “Remove all of your items, armor and clothing. You will enter your new life as my Paladin without encumbrance, for you are to be the first reborn Cherubim in this world.”
The light surrounding him flared so bright it seemed to shine right through him. Instinctively, his body wanted to curl up and seek a deep, dark place to hide. It took every bit of his millennium’s discipline to remain upright.
Valley of Hidden Matters
When it faded out, he found himself standing in a grassy meadow, under an enormous tree. One unlike any other he’d ever seen in his abnormally-long life. The plant’s branches extended above his head, shading the former Death Knight and a coffin-sized, perfectly rectangular stone altar. The tree’s trunk had grown into a pattern resembling the face of a dragon; the eyes of which were now glowing with a golden light. Sammeal’s ghost stood silently on the other side of the stone edifice, almost swallowed by the heavy fog shrouding anything beyond a few steps away.
Vorigan blinked at Sammeal’s expectant eye-brow raise. The Vampyr had to review Zhulang’s final pronouncement before he realized what was next. Moving quickly, he removed all his clothing, armor, weapons and equipment.
“Place them on the altar.” The tree said.
Vorigan looked over quickly enough to see the mouth move. After the previous interactions, he understood it to be Zhulang continuing to give him instructions. Once he’d obeyed, and stepped back the tree-dragon spoke again.
“Modsognir, please join us.” Zhulang boomed. “And bring the three items I asked for.”
There was a long, pregnant pause before a distant boom answered it. A few more minutes passed, until Vorigan could hear the sound of cursing and mumbling grow louder in that same direction. Eventually, a squat, muscular Dwarf stomped into view.
A female Dwarf.
As the Southern Dwarven Clandom bordered the Dead Swamp where Blackwater Necropolis sat beneath the earth, Vorigan was extremely familiar with Dwarfs. Dwarf culture, racial sub-types, clan names and histories, Dwarf politics, all were unavoidable if you were a known local figure.
Which the Knight Commander of Blackwater definitely qualified as. So, Vorigan knew all about why all Dwarves were male, and how the Race reproduced. He’d even met a few Dwarves during their ‘change’.
This female Dwarf shared none of the typical physical characteristics from any of the three sub-types, nor from any ‘change’ Vorigan ever saw. Her ears were pointed, like a Fey, but a long, single-braided, blonde beard hung between her breasts. Breasts that, like everything else about her looked squared off. As though she was a roughly-fashioned child’s toy. Milky white, structure-less eyes surveyed the scene but landed on Vorigan’s belongings.
“Black Knight’s Cuirass.” She nodded to herself, disdaining any greeting. “The Last Scream; terrible, cruel weapon. Made you powerful against your enemies, did it?”
It took Vorigan a moment to realize that she expected an answer.
“It served me well.” He acknowledged.
She glanced up at the tree. “Time for something new, yeah?”
“Yes.” The tree-dragon answered. “A Paladin Cherubim’s chest armor, sword and shield are appropriate. You have something ‘adequate’?”
She smirked. “Maybe.” Vorigan got a side-eye. “Is it my choice, what he gets?”
“Do not test me, Master Creator.” The tree-dragon warned. “You know our Terms.”
She bared her teeth. “You know I do. Does he qualify for a set-bonus?”
“The sword and shield only.” The tree-dragon answered.
Now it was a Cheshire grin. “I have exactly the thing, then.”
She scraped every bit of his things into a sack which appeared in her hand. One that was far too small for the size. She winked at Vorigan and stomped back out of sight, the way she came.
“Lie down, my new Paladin.” The tree-dragon instructed. “On the altar. You need no clothing for this part.”
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Day 91-92 / Unknown / Day 140 continued: Shouldering their way through the crowd of standing death made Veronyka’s skin crawl and her stomach heave. The stench was awful, clogging her nose with its eye-watering pungency. Bits of desiccated skin, scraped off by the rough exterior on their armor, clung until scraped off by yet more decaying flesh. The wet smack of still-damp tissues hitting the ground, and liquid squishing as their boots crushed the bio-litter underfoot were enough to make...
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Day 91-92 / Day 140 continued: The ice melted, revealing a woman easily mistaken for Hrund’s twin, with pitch black hair instead. Eyes as clear and cold as the glacier above their heads regarded her expressionlessly. Her shield was round on top, but elongated below like an inverted teardrop, and had a large metal boss in the center. Her other hand carried a long spear, with an axe head sticking out at the base of the blade, and a spike sticking out the other side: a halberd. It was the first...
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Day 143: John couldn’t be sure from the distance he watched, but this dragon felt like it was the largest yet. If not the biggest, then definitely the scariest. Her head reminded him of the worgh, with sharp spines lining every contour. A ‘mane’ of more horns flared at the base of her skull, leading to a row of them dotting her spine. Her wings were folded, and every joint, including her legs was defined by a jutting tapered spike. Her scales were deep red, with shiny platinum and gold...
Day 149-153: Sergeant Major (Retired) Jeffrey Ellis jumped to his feet as Veronyka barged into the meeting. The unruly looking filthy men and women who’d been seated at the large table with him all stood quickly as well. Dead eyes and hopeless expressions greeted her entrance. It had taken her a week to fly across the Bay of Chaos and track the Ender population down. The high-altitude westward Jetstream sped her trip, but every Raider city she checked, starting at Final Harbor was deserted...
Day 153-158: Though John was unmistakably a prisoner, the Legionnaires never tied or locked him up. They appointed two minders, who rotated every day. This meant he couldn’t make friends, since it was never the same two repeated. But it did mean he could interrogate them, subtly of course. None seemed to be operating under any restrictions on their tongues, so he took full advantage. The unit who captured him occupied a full section of subterranean ‘apartments,’ which emptied out onto the...
Day 179: On the twenty-sixth day that John woke up in chains, he finally followed the formation out into open air. They’d diverted off the Great Road that morning, using a much rougher-hewn ramp to the surface. His head barely cleared the tunnel roof to find a road running straight and true sloping across broken foothills and out into farmland-rich plains. Off in the distance, he could see a wide levee-bordered river formed by the joining of several runoff streams trickling down from the...
Afternoon (Chronological coordinate set undetermined): Welcome back Traveler. You have a total of four previously-encountered portals that you may choose to exit using. This list excludes your Sanctioned portal, and one deemed too hazardous for your use at this time. You have also met the Traveler criteria for any other portals connected with your organization on World number 5. Please indicate which destination you desire. Veronyka sighed in relief. Her entry into the Network via the...
Day 193-200: John had a problem, and Dulgan was its source. Oh, the Dwarf was a fine traveling companion. After departing the camp, the Dwimar led them to a well-concealed entrance back underground. The Obsidian Peaks were honeycombed with passages and caves where far more Clans than John had figured made their homes. They zig-zagged their way between Dvergyr and Dwimar clan areas, never moving in a straight line. At first, Dulgan’s inquisitive nature charmed John while they walked. The...
Day 202: Their second night in the jungle was when things came apart. They’d traveled for two days, turning to head directly into the thickest, wettest, deadliest part after midday that first morning. The trees they walked between emitted a rotting musk, and their boots squelched deep into soft, clinging, stinky mud. Detouring around puddles eventually devolved into slogging across putrid, stagnant ponds. Anything deeper than their knees had to be avoided, and they lost count of how many...
Day 217: John and Dulgan were being followed. They were a day’s walk into the swamp, on a direct line toward the Hidden Ziggurat. Though he’d been occupied at the time, Vorigan sent his retainers to escort the duo back to their drop-off point via his boat. In addition, Jashul and the three Vampyri who comprised Cain’s embassy to the Dwarven clans traveled with them to the same landing spot. The four would cut across the north end of the swamp and enter the Onyxhart gate to begin their...
Day 219: “Head for that one! Run!” John shouted, pointing at the door to their right. The group veered to that side, picking up speed as they moved downhill. Jashul lagged behind the sprinting duo, and John’s longer legs carried him in the lead as they ran. The gap between all three widened as they closed with the two undead bracketing that opening. On the ledges above, the patrols congregated, staying on their level but clustering abreast of the group as the trio neared the ground-level...
Day 225: “That ... you ... you ... how? Goddamit!” John cursed, unable to explain. “Your Task was your own.” The Patriarch admonished. “Not for any other to know. As you have finished the most difficult part, you are eligible for all three rewards. Are you prepared to select them now?” John held up his other hand. “Just a moment.” He turned around and closed his eyes. Don’t kill him. Don’t even attack him. You have no idea what would happen if you did. Let it go. Something even the...
World number 6,626,070,041,034 Day 140: Welcome back Traveler, please note that your Visitor status remains defunct. You and your companion have met the Traveler criteria for World number 6,626,070,041,034. You both will now be transported to that destination. Sygraid’s massive form disappearing from the platform was the only indicator that he’d arrived. He looked around at the uniform, unfathomable darkness for a clue, and noticed that the flames on the portal arch were now a complete...
Day 236: John and Adam brought up the rear of their little procession as they began the second day of their trek into the Endless Sands, the morning after leaving Southern Oasis. Vorigan and Dulgan were in the lead, with the Vamp interrogating the Dwimar about his newfound enchanting abilities, as well as the subject generally. On John’s advice, the day before when purchasing supplies for the trek, they’d gotten several serviceable daggers for each person, which Dulgan agreed to enchant...
Day???: John dug a divot into the sand with his heel, then climbed back up onto the square stone platform. As a test, he walked through the ‘doorway,’ facing away from the Pyramid. Instantly he was turned around, and a glance at the hole in the ground showed he hadn’t moved to another spot. Okay, what do you think? He thought at Duin. And got no response. So he hopped down onto the sand. What do you think I should do? He asked again. Stand on the dust-cloud side of the platform and walk...
Day??? Adam was leaning in the open doorway when John walked up. “You solve it already?” John asked hopefully. Adam snorted. “I wish!” “Oh? What happened?” John wanted to know. Adam’s headshake was rueful. “You were right; it wasn’t that easy. After I pushed the octagon, there was a sound of lots of feet stomping around, and rock grinding like bricks rubbing together. While I was feeling my way over to the last button, I ran into a column that wasn’t there before. It was about a yard and...
Day??? “Well, that was ... interesting.” John said to Adam as he approached from the floor’s entry spot. The SEAL was leaning against the opposite side of the corridor by the now blank door that had borne Dulgan’s name. “Can you ... talk about it?” Adam asked. John shook his head. “I got a headache last time, so let’s go do yours.” “I wonder.” Adam mused. “Do you think all three of the hidden doors are on this level?” “Let’s keep an eye out.” John suggested. Back in the SEAL’s...
Day??? John stepped through the portal and found himself in a place very similar to the Labyrinth entry, where he’d written his name in the sand, and accepted the Rules. Same doorway with walls extending into the distance, like the first and third base lines on a baseball diamond. Unlike the other however, his stone platform this time was only as big as the ones out in the desert, that he’d looped through three times to enter. Beyond its small, square boundary was an endless sea of sand...
Day 251: As Adam and Master Chief Chatman walked out of the planning meeting for Adam’s upcoming trip to the portal stone in South America, Adam signaled the older man with his chin. “Want to grab a quick bite before we split?” He asked, overly casually. “ ... Yes, let’s.” Chatman replied, after figuring out what Adam really wanted. Chatman put the sound dampener between them while they ate. “Is it just me,” Adam inquired, “or is there definitely something going on that I’m not privy...
Day 258/259: John and company were most of the way to the double-peak Ariel indicated as their navigation landmark when a massive wind and rain storm rolled in from the north. Within minutes, visibility in the air dropped to a yard or two, and the gusts were so rough that they decided to land and continue on foot. The group spent that night miserably trying to camp on the best rocky hill they could find. The rain stopped before dawn, but if anything the wind picked up with the sun’s rise....
Day 259/260: “Ho there, we see you!” The voice floated down from the darkness above. The sound carried an echoing quality indicating that the speaker was using a megaphone, or something like it. None of the four were surprised, given how high the walls of Gluboskal were. After separating from the Wardens: Ililyan and Sygraid, plus Rhys the other four companions flew up and around the double-peaked mountain, Gananora Heralis which Dulgan informed them was the backbone of the city’s...
Day 261: Right before the group departed Dadem’s house, Veronyka took a minute to leave Hal a message before bringing up the rear. A very young Dvergyr, Hotric Oakfall worked as the house doorman slash receptionist slash butler. He promised to pass along Veronyka’s words when Hal returned, and to keep an eye out for any unusual interest in their group. That Dulgan and Thedus had a longstanding relationship was apparent to all, as the two chatted continuously during their hike out of the...
Day 261: With herculean effort, John staggered upright, and brushed off the debris coating his arms and helmet. He searched frantically through the too-slowly-dissipating dust cloud for his friends. After tripping twice on the churned-up slope, he stumbled onto both, crumpled into a pile and covered with a thick layer of earth. Heart in his throat, he pulled the pair apart and laid them side by side on a slightly less-torn patch of ground. Uncapping his canteen, he splashed water over...
Day 262/263: “What the hell’s an Arcane Magi?” John wondered. Duin’s unmissable mixture of excitement and trepidation was palpable. “As I said, tha’s tween you’n th’ other one.” Dulgan insisted. “Then why doesn’t he want me to let you leave?” John wondered. Dulgan blinked in surprise. “He doesn’o’? I dunno. Le’s ask.” Repeat my words, so the Magi can hear them as well. Duin instructed. “Before the Arrival, there was a powerful, and secretive organization of Dwarves called the Dark...
Day 263: “See ‘em how?” Dulgan pressed. John’s hands motioned aimlessly. “Like they’re really here. In this room with us right now. There. There, and there.” He pointed. Dulgan walked over to one spot he’d indicated. Vafthundryr shifted, so they wouldn’t ‘collide’. “Here?” The Dwimar asked. “He moved.” John’s finger indicated. Dulgan peered in the direction curiously. “I see nothin’. Wha’ do they loo’ like?” John kept his finger indicating Vafthundryr. “A Frost Giant, Vafthundryr is...