Vurstha Reeka's weary hands ached as she pushed lightly on
the thick oak door. A dozen pair of eyes locked onto her frail frame
immediately as she shuffled across the room towards the tavern-keeper. "A
glass of warm ale, my good man." Her voice, colder than the harsh winter
air, cut through thick bubbly tavern laughter. The room fell silent and only
the crackling of burning firewood in the fireplace served to counter the
increasingly stifling hush. A burly mercenary nearest to Vurstha shifted uncomfortably
in his seat and fiddled with the hilt of his broadsword.
"And what will you be paying with for that?" The
tavern-keeper, a powerfully built dwarf, eyed Vurstha suspiciously. Strangers
in Dharkha were a rare sight and were not treated amicably, much less strangers
who wore tattered robes and walked unsteadily.
"This!" Vurstha hissed as she slammed a dented
golden coin onto the keeper's counter.
The tavern-keeper hesitated for a moment before he picked up
the coin and examined it closely. The flames in the fireplace cast strange
twisted shadows that danced on the tavern walls. The coin, old and abused as it
was, glittered unnaturally in the weak light and felt remarkably heavy. The
dwarf bit hard on the bent metal. It was real gold. Satisfied, he poured a
glass of frothy ale and put it in front of Vurstha. "Here's your
ale."
Vurstha took the glass and tasted a little of the dark
liquid that swirled within. She grimaced as the rancid Dharkish ale stung her
tongue and mouth. Closing her eyes, she sipped from the glass and felt the
liquid work its way down her throat, burning and healing at the same time.
Dharkish ale, well-known for its rejuvenating properties, was a favorite with
the rough and tough of Khanduras despite its sour tang.
The tavern slowly regained its life as the patrons resumed
their banter. This stranger did not appear to be dangerous. Vurstha paid no
attention to her surroundings, choosing instead to quickly finish her glass of
ale. Outside, frost had begun to form on the windows and the first signs of
winter were manifesting in the form of light snow-fall.
The flames in the fireplace wavered suddenly as though hit
by a draft. Vurstha froze and swallowed hard. Her enemies were closing in on
her. She had to leave, fast.
Summoning the last ounces of strength in her physically
exhausted body, she pushed herself to her feet and headed for the door. As her
withered hand closed on the knob, a blast of fire threw open the door and
smashed her against the back of the tavern. Three dark figures stepped through
the flames and into the tavern, apparently untouched by the fiery tongues that
lapped at their feet.
As Vurstha lay groaning in pain, chaos erupted about her as
the tavern patrons scrambled for cover. The tavern-keeper, anxious to protect
his establishment, took his trusty war-hammer and charged at the dark figures.
Before anyone could help him, the figure in the center grasped him by the neck
and lifted him off the ground. The war-hammer dropped onto the floor, its
hundred pound head breaking one of the floorboards as it landed.
The disarmed dwarf punched at the figure that his short arms
could not reach. Gradually, his futile efforts dwindled and his legs stopped
kicking in the air. It was as though the touch of the figure had sucked the
life out of him. The figure cast the lifeless body of the tavern-keeper aside
easily, like a child discarding a puppet he had gotten tired of playing with.
"Monsters!", Vurstha cursed as she picked herself
up, scowling as her face contorted with pain.
She reached into her robes and drew forth a silver amulet.
With her left hand, she traced a circular symbol in the air and hurled the
amulet at the figures. Even as the amulet flew towards them, the white metal
ignited and burned with a bluish flame.
"Ethra Domas Trivoli!" Her shrill voice deafened
those who still possessed their hearing after the initial explosion that had
blasted open the door and injured the sorceress. The flaming amulet flared and
exploded into a thousand shards of light that pierced the three figures. Like
darkness in the face of the rising sun, the three figures wilted and faded into
nothingness.
With the catastrophe momentarily averted, Vurstha saw
darkness envelope her vision as she collapsed into a heap onto the floor.
"So you awaken." A strong mellow voice washed over
Vurstha.
Blinking as she recovered her vision, the sorceress saw a
man bent over her, his wizened face breaking into a smile. "Wh-" she
started, but the pain that ran through her body like lightning stopped her short.
"Hold your breath, child." The man stroked her
hair. "I have negated the effects of the aging spell that was cast upon
you. You will be young again in just a while."
Vurstha looked at her hands that were changing before her
very eyes. The deep lines that stretched from the back of her hands to her
elbow slowly became faint and eventually disappeared. The colour of youth
returned to her skin and as she touched her face with her hands, she could feel
tautness where loose folds of skin were just a day ago. Relief swept through
her and she wiped away a tear that involuntarily ran down the side of her face.
"Thank you, whoever you are. How did you know that I
was under an aging spell?" The sorceress smiled as she sat up on the
make-shift bed of straw and wood.
"Easy, Thorada told me." The man replied.
Vurstha's smile vanished as quickly as it came.
"Thorada? The frightful One?"
The man nodded gravely. "He was the One who brought you
here. He ordered me to heal your wounds. It was He who told me your story."
The sorceress gasped. "Why...why should a God do that
for me?" Instinctively, she reached within her robes for her amulet. Her
fingers closed around a familiar star-shaped device.
"Do not worry. He has not taken away your amulet. He
could not." The man uttered. "The magic in the amulet is too strong,
even for a God."
Vurstha narrowed her eyes as she appraised the man standing
before her. He was dressed in a simple white tunic, middle-aged, slightly
rotund and a crown of hair framed a balding top. A thick gold chain hung around
his neck and a large black opal sat in the center of the locket that dangled
from it.
"He knows the secret of my amulet?" Vurstha asked.
"Of course, He is, afterall, one of the Gods." The
man smiled contemptuously. "He saw what was going to happen to you and
sent me there to help you."
The sorceress swallowed and fingered her amulet. The cold
metal vibrated with power at her touch. "Who are you? And why is Thorada
so interested in me?" Her eyes followed the man as he waltzed across the
room to a chest sitting atop a vanity.
"I am Yipo, a priest of Thorada." The man
pondered. "As to why He is interested in you..." He paused for a
moment and opened the iron-wrought chest. From within, the priest took forth a
glowing green gem and returned to Vurstha's side. "Look into this gem. It
will tell you what He has planned for you."
There was darkness blacker than the soul of night. And a
silence that smothered like thick dense smoke. She was in a space that was
without walls, without floors and ceilings. Although it appeared that there was
nothing that held her up, she was not falling. It was a place in which logic
ceased to exist.
She was still but the place she was in moved. In the
distance, she could see two shapes approaching her. As they neared, she could
see that these were large misshapen blocks of blue gelatin-like substance that
glowed with its own unnatural light. Within each of these blocks, a black form
was trapped in suspended animation. She could not make out clearly the exact
features of the dark forms.
Behind the two gelatin blocks, a shape gradually came into
view. It was a large form, similar to the two trapped within the blocks, but
much bigger. Like a gargoyle, it had wings, massive appendages that extended
obscenely from its back. The back was facing her.
As the huge creature began turning towards her, she felt a
sense of terror building within her, a sense of fear that threatened to
overflow the banks of sanity. The creature was unknown yet familiar to her at
the same time. The curves of the body were alien to her, yet she could
recognise them. Her heart pounded so loudly in her own ears that she thought it
would just rip itself from her body and float away in the darkness.
As the creature finally faced her directly, her entire body
was quivering in horror. The creature was the embodiment of Terror, every
single ugly bulge sending dread through her psyche. It moved closer to her, its
unseeing eyes looking beyond her, into her. It raised its head, as though
sniffing the air. It lowered its head and looked straight at her. Its mouth, a
gaping orifice, curled in a grotesque smile. Then it opened and a ball of
crimson fire came from within and enveloped her completely, burning her flesh
and spirit, consuming her very essence.
Like the fires of hell, the crimson flames ate her flesh and
tore her bones apart.
She screamed. Vurstha opened her eyes. Her entire body was
drenched in cold sweat.
"You are back. Thorada was right. You are indeed
special. No mortal has ever returned from a visit to Diablo and his
brethen." Yipo muttered.
"Diablo?" The sorceress shuddered. "Is
that..."
Yipo nodded. "That winged creature you saw in the
sightless crystal was Diablo. The two blocks are the prisons that entrap his
brothers Mephisto and Baal. They are the Prime Evils of the realms. Powerful
demons that even the Gods fear."
"Demons." Vurstha grabbed her amulet. The cold
metal burned her palm. "Is Thorada afraid of them?"
The priest looked away. "He has his concerns. Diablo is
trying to free Mephisto and Baal from their eternal incarceration. Alone,
Diablo is nothing to the Gods, but Mephisto and Baal are ancient demons whose
powers are unfathomable. Together they have the power to eradicate the Gods and
rule Khanduras."
Vurstha shuddered once more. "Demons that can overthrow
the Gods?" She let go of the breath that she had been unconsciously
holding.
Yipo nodded once more. "These are powerful creatures
whose existence threaten the sanctity of the realms. The Gods have tried
destroying them, to no avail. No magic that they possess is capable of
destroying their essence."
The sorceress touched her amulet. It was humming, vibrating
with an intense energy. It was as if it were singing out to her. "So they
turn to me? Why me?"
"Not you." The priest pointed at her amulet.
"Your amulet. The Starfire amulet." He paused. "It is the only
magic in the realms that can even come close to destroying those demons."
"And I am the only one who can harness that
energy."
"Yes, because the energy is tied to your soul, as it
was tied to your mother's. The energy in your amulet is potent but virtually
untapped as of now. What you have used to quell those shades back in the tavern
is but just a tiny fraction of what it is capable of." Yipo shook his
head. "Once you master the use of your amulet, you will the power to
destroy even the..." He stopped suddenly.
"Gods?" Vurstha smirked.
"Blasphemy." Yipo scolded. "Don't even think
of doing that. You will need all the help they can give you to learn the use of
your amulet."
The sorceress smiled. "And so I will. How shall I find
the demons once I have mastered that art?"
Yipo pointed towards the eastern horizon where the sun had
begun to rise. "To the East. You will need to head towards the Eastern
Realms."
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