The Tomb of Horrors (greyhawk) Read online




  The Tomb of Horrors

  ( Greyhawk )

  Keith Francis Strohm

  Keith Francis Strohm

  The Tomb of Horrors

  PROLOGUE

  He measured time in bursts of pain.

  This one pulled Kim from sleep with terrible insistence, like a lover who would not be sated. He tried to scream when the forge-heated blade licked across his stomach with its razor tongue, but he managed only a feeble gurgle. The joints in his shoulders had long-since popped from the weight of his body, and breathing was difficult. Thankfully, he could no longer feel the fiery kiss of the steel nails holding his wrists and ankles to the wall.

  Agony flared again. He felt the bruised muscles of his inner thigh shred beneath the blade’s touch, and this time he forced out a scream. Hedid not waste time begging for mercy. There would be none. He simply screamed until his throat bled.

  It wasn’t until the cloying scent of incense nearly chokedhim that he realized the pain had faded into a dull throbbing, an ever present caress. He must have lost consciousness. Soft voices raised themselves in a whispered chant. Though the harsh language was unknown to him, the urgent cadences were horrifyingly familiar. He felt lightheaded as the chant gradually grew louder. A filmy layer of gauze had wrapped itself around his thoughts; he shook his head in a vain attempt to clear it, though he knew there was no hope. He wanted to cry, but even this was denied him. The first thing that the black-cloaked bastards had done was pluck out his eyes-leaving him in darkness.

  But not alone.

  Something Else brooded silently in the darkness with him, a Presence that lurked in the vast wasteland of his nightmares. It watched him, waiting for the right moment. He could sense it growing stronger now, could feel it slide across some vast distance, drawn by the twisted words of the ancient chant and the intoxicating offering of his pain. He gasped once as It entered his mind.

  His last thoughts were of his wife and children, then the will of the god took him.

  The screams of the crucified seer shattered night’s dark silence. Caught and magnified by the broad hills of the Fellreev forest, the sound rang out across the monastery’s ancient grounds, an unholy call to prayer.

  Durgoth Shem answered.

  With a soft exhalation, the balding cleric gathered up the fragments of parchment lying in front of him, careful lest the already ancient and decaying vellum crumble beneath his touch. Needles of pain stung his fingers as they came into contact with the remains of the book. He grimaced but accepted the pain, as he accepted all of the Dark One’s gifts, with hope and something ofa deep hunger.

  The sensation intensified, and Durgoth nearly gasped at the force of it. He could feel the flesh of his fingertips blistering beneath the assault, and then, just as suddenly as it had occurred, the pain disappeared. He rose gingerly from his seat upon the floor. Knees stiff from long hours of meditation cracked and groaned. Durgoth regarded the tome with a thoughtful scowl as he placed it carefully behind two loose stones in the ruined wall. Purple runes splayed across a cracked leather cover he suspected had been fashioned from human skin. The ancient symbols writhed before his eyes, slithering and bending like serpents. Long accustomed to the dark book’s power,he concentrated until the runes settled into a familiar pattern.

  So much had happened since the day he had found the Minthexian Codex in the dank chambers hidden deep beneath the monastery. Before that, he had been nothing more than a fugitive, a once-proud Hierarch of the Horned Society whose power was shattered the night Iuz and his host of fiendish servitors breached the Society’s citadel and scattered its leaders tothe corners of Oerth. The memories of those years, spent living like an animal, an object of scorn and derision to all he met, still ate at the cleric.

  But power does call to power, and it was such a call that led Durgoth to the ruins of this monastery where, in its crumbling stone and rotten timber, he had unearthed the book and discovered a god of truly awesome power. Other, weaker men called the codex by its common name, The Book of Nine Shadows, but he knew that the roots of its true strength went beyond darkness to the heart of Nothingness itself. Long were the months that he wrestled with the secrets contained within the Minthexian Codex, until he had finally pierced its veil of mystery. Harnessing the power of its ancient rituals, the cleric built a place of refuge, a sanctuary from the predations of the Old One and his pet demons. In time, others came to the monastery’sdesecrated grounds, drawn by the power he had unearthed and the dark dreams of a god. Now, after the long tread of years, he was about to set in motion a plan that would shake the foundations of the multiverse. Not for the first time, he wondered if the screams of the gods would be more satisfying than the tormented cries of the mortals who worshiped them.

  Such idle speculation would have to wait, he realized, as the sweet song of the crucified seer’s pain surrounded him with its intoxicatingmelody. It was almost time. Placing the stones carefully to seal the codex’shiding place, the cleric bowed once, palms pressed together, and uttered the words to a prayer he had learned from his studies of the dark book. A blue glow circled round the area of the wall before him and then faded away. Satisfied that his mystic protections would hold, the cleric snubbed out the last thick bar of burning incense on the makeshift altar he had created for his private meditations and gathered his heavy black robes about him. With a sigh of anticipation, he turned to leave the room, only to find his way blocked by a shadowy figure.

  “It has begun, my lord,” the figure intoned in a raspy voice.

  Durgoth cursed silently as he recognized the familiar tones of Jhagren Syn. Hoping that the room’s dim light covered his startled reaction,he spoke harshly into the darkness, “Jhagren, I left strict instructions that Inot be disturbed until my meditations were complete.”

  “Yes, blessed one,” the man replied. The words were simple,almost uninflected, like most of the speech that came from this man. They neither betrayed guilt nor asked forgiveness, and like the speaker itself, they offered the cleric no key to unlock its secrets.

  Of all the people who had found their way to the dark monastery, Jhagren Syn stood apart. The others stayed for reasons Durgoth easily understood-they lusted for power, they craved the Dark One’s touch, and some,the cleric admitted, were simply mad, consumed by their own dark demons. Jhagren, however, was different. Though his skills and sharp mind quickly distinguished him as a man of true usefulness, the monk’s motives remained amystery, and Durgoth hated mysteries. For what he could not understand, he could not control.

  And what he could not control, he feared.

  As if sensing the dark cleric’s thoughts, Jhagren stepped out of the shadows.Flickering candlelight washed over his pockmarked face, revealing a thick nose and full mouth.

  “The god has come, blessed one,” the monk said. “Even now theseer speaks words of prophecy.”

  Ruddy, olive skin stood out even darker in the illumination, and to Durgoth’s sight, the deep red robes of the Scarlet Brotherhood flowedaround the man like a cloak of blood.

  The cleric nodded curtly, his frustration almost forgotten in light of his advisors message, and motioned for his companion to follow. The two walked across the monastery grounds in silence, surrounded by tumbled stone buildings and burnt timbers, the echo of history. Durgoth sniffed the chill winter air and surveyed the ruin. Centuries of dedicated prayer, lives lived and lost in service to an ideal, a holy cause, still offered no protection against death and decay. Only entropy, he thought with some satisfaction, held any constancy.

  When they finally arrived at the remains of the monastery’ssanctum, which stood lost and alone at the center of the ancient compound, the dark ceremony was in
full sway. Twelve black-robed figures knelt in a circle, silver-wrought censors cupped between both hands. Thick plumes of incense rose from them, swirling in dark clouds around the ragged gaps in the stone ceiling, and the air vibrated with the layered harmony of chant.

  But the cleric’s gaze was drawn to the crucified figure abovethe circle of cultists. Arms and feet spiked to the stone-worked wall, the seer raised his head and stared out of the wreckage of his eyes, no doubt fixed upon a glorious vision of the Dark One.

  Though Durgoth’s followers called him “Blessed One” out offear and respect, the cleric knew that it was this man, gazing upon the true face of divinity, who was truly blessed. Rescued by Durgoth’s followers fromwhat would have been a life of endless toil trying to eke a meager existence from the stony soil of a farm north of Redspan in the Bandit Kingdoms, the seer would now spend the remaining days of his existence as the holy prophet of an ancient god. Durgoth wondered if the man had finally accepted the grace that had been given to him.

  A torrent of words spilled out from the seer’s bloody mouth,capturing Durgoth’s attention. He recognized the flowing lilt of AncientSuloise. Though he could not understand the old tongue, he noted with satisfaction that Jhagren’s young apprentice, himself already familiar with thevagaries of that almost dead language, sat beneath the seer, soft-boned face held tightly in concentration as he painstakingly copied each word. Durgoth watched as the boy pushed back a strand of blond hair, head cocked slightly to the side.

  Adrys. He recalled the boy’s name after a moment. A brightlad, if a bit too devoted to his master, yet still useful. Though the boy did not quite move with the practiced ease and calm deadliness of Jhagren, Durgoth had witnessed the novice training. Adrys would prove a versatile weapon with the right encouragement. He reminded himself to reward the boy well when all of this was over.

  His thoughts were interrupted as Adrys let out a shout in another unfamiliar tongue. This time, it was Jhagren who responded, firing what were obviously questions to his excited student. After a moment, the monk bowed low and made his way to Durgoth.

  “Blessed one,” he said, with more intensity than the clerichad ever heard him use, “the final quatrain is in place. We now have thelocation of the key’s resting place.”

  At first, Durgoth simply stared blankly at his advisor, unable to register what he had said. As the monk’s words sunk in, however, hisheart raced.

  “Jhagren,” he almost shouted in his excitement, “cut the seerdown when he has finished, but make sure he does not die. I have another use for him. And then summon everyone into the main hall. We have much to do.”

  The cleric smiled as he watched his followers complete the rite and scramble to obey Jhagren, who walked among the cultists like a predator stalking prey. Soon, Durgoth thought, he would avenge years of humiliation. Once they had retrieved the key, his ultimate plan would come to fruition At last, Tharizdun would be free.

  Part 1

  “Terror is a holy gift…”

  — The Book of Nine Shadows

  1

  Kaerion thought it might be different this time.

  But it never was.

  The walls were white, the pure white of marble cut from mines in the Cairn Hills. Elaborate stonework decorated the walls and recesses of the temple, relieving the simple, austere lines of its basic design. Statues of strong-jawed men and women, shields held forward, swords raised, gazed proudly back at him. Everything here bespoke strength and courage, forthright commitment in the face of adversity.

  From a distance, the soaring lilt of a warm soprano cut across the silent temple, caressing each note, spinning a gossamer web of sound. He recognized the hymn, one of his favorites. He had chosen it for his own Dedication.

  In came the procession, a line of gray-robed figures, hoods drawn, heads bowed, their stately gait carrying them forward as if they were floating. The boy walked at their head. Clad in a simple white tunic, his serene face broken by the hint of a smile, he marched toward the simple stone altar in the center of the chamber with wide-eyed innocence.

  Kaerion wanted to step forward, armed with the knowledge of what was to come, and carry the boy away, but some force held him back. He tried to shout a warning, but the sound of a rich-voiced alto singing a harmonic line swallowed his voice as soon as he had opened his mouth. He looked around desperately for someone to help him, but could not find a single ally.

  That’s when the screaming began.

  In a single, dizzying moment, the beautifully rendered hymn shattered into painful dissonance. Kaerion clapped dirt-crusted hands over his ears, desperate to escape the cacophony. Slowly, the screams faded, yet he could hear another voice, distant and faint but growing louder. He closed his eyes, trying to ignore the scent of blood that had begun to pollute the air, and strained to make out what this new voice was saying. It came to him slowly-

  “Kaerion, get your gods-blasted ass out of that bed!”

  The nightmare shattered as a boot connected hard with his side. Kaerion groaned, his already full bladder protesting the abuse, and swatted feebly at his attacker. His stomach twisted fiercely, nearly disgorging last nights gristly mutton. Only sheer force of will and a tongue swollen to twice its normal size spared him that indignity.

  Another groan escaped his lips, this time in response to the throbbing in his head, which had quickly outstripped the pain in his side. Rubbing scarred hands across eyes nearly crusted shut, he forced himself to gaze upon the visage of the demon that had ripped him from sleep.

  A harsh, angular elven face stared back at him, arched brows raised even higher-in anger or amusement, it was always difficult to tell. Theelf raised a gloved fist, obviously prepared to strike again, but Kaerion held up one arm in entreaty, wondering when the gnomes would finish their incessant hammering inside his skull.

  “Peace, Gerwyth,” he mumbled, “or so help me I’ll throw yourbony elven carcass right out the window.”

  A ghost of a smile cracked the elf’s imposing facade, drawingthe alien features in starker relief. Delicate cheekbones rose even higher, accenting the angular lines of his face. Long blond hair, pulled back from a high forehead by a silver circlet, flowed around the curved expanse of ears, only to fall into a jumbled cataract around shoulders covered by a dark green cloak. Beneath the folds of the cloak, metal studs glinted softly in the candlelight.

  “Damn it, Kaerion, this is serious.” All trace of levity fledfrom the elf’s face. “We’re in trouble again, and I’ll be hung and quartered ifI’m going to die because you can’t get your ale-sotted wits about you.”

  “What now?” Kaerion asked, rising unsteadily to his feet. Theroom spun viciously, but he managed to catch himself before he fell by grabbing on to the stone wall to his left. His hair stank of tabac, and the sour reek of his sweat filled the small room. It nearly made him vomit, but he mastered his rebellious stomach once again, instead releasing only a single noisy belch.

  “Gods’ blood, Kaer!” the elf shouted. “How long are you goingto go on doing this to yourself?”

  Kaerion ignored the question-as he always did. He was far toosober to think about the circumstances that had brought him to this place. All he really wanted to do was find a dark corner and drink his throbbing headache into quiescence.

  “You said we’re in trouble,” he replied, with considerablymore aplomb than he felt. “What kind of trouble?” He thought perhaps reasoningwith his old friend might reduce the likelihood that he would continue to shout.

  “Do you remember the merchant who needed caravan guards tohelp transfer his assets from Hammensend to Woodwych?”

  Kaerion nodded. The greedy bastard had hired thugs to steal valuables from certain families and then tried to sell them back to these families for twice their value. It was a good thing they hadn’t made it back toHammensend, he thought wistfully, or that pile of filth would have had to deal with him.

  “You mean Master Hemon, the thief who-”

  “I mean the m
erchant who hired us to protect his interests,” the elfinterrupted. “The one connected to half of the crime lords in this city.” Hepaused, obviously looking for some sign that his companion understood where he was heading.

  Kaerion opened his mouth to protest, but was cut off with a sharp gesture.

  “Gods! Did you have to take it upon yourself to‘redistribute’ those gold nobles?” Gerwyth asked.

  Kaerion felt his own temper rise, and the pounding in his skull intensified. “It wasn’t really his money, anyway,” he said through grittedteeth.

  Five years they’d traveled together across the roads andbyways of the southern Flanaess and Gerwyth still didn’t understand. Even aftereverything that had happened to him, after he’d proven his own guilt andcowardice a dozen times, there were still a few things that mattered.

  Like getting stinking drunk, another part of his mind thought, instead of standing here arguing like an old married couple.

  “Yes, well,” the elf responded, with all the grace of aspurned fishwife. “Now he’s taken the money that is his and placed a bounty onour heads. I was down by the docks when I found out. It seems that there are quite a few people who won’t mind sharing the reward, and they are apparentlygoing to try and collect soon. We’ve got to leave Woodwych for a bit. If wehurry, we can start our journey as soon as the gates open. I have a purse set up for us in Rel Mord. It’s a big enough city that we can lay low until we meet ourcontact.”

  “Contact?” Kaerion questioned sarcastically. “Who are weworking for now, the Circle of Eight?” Truth be told, he didn’t feel much likeworking for anyone and had told his friend that on occasions too numerous to count. “I’m not taking on any more work, Gerwyth,” he stated flatly.

  The elf’s eyes flashed emerald green. Nearly a decade offamiliarity allowed Kaerion to read his friends moods. When his almond-shaped eyes took on that color, it meant the ranger was at his most dangerous.