《Never Die Twice 》Chapter 2: Ladies and Knights
Advertisement
A wise person once said that 'routine, in an intelligent man, is a sign of ambition.'
If so, Walter Tye was the most ambitious undead in the world. Unless disturbed or overseeing a crossroads deal like tonight, the necromancer followed a tight schedule.
He opened his magic item shop one hour before sunrise, although he mostly handled his suppliers before welcoming customers at dawn. Morning was the busiest part of the day since adventurers purchased supplies then to tackle the dungeon in the afternoon. Pressure remained strong until roughly two in the afternoon, after which customers became so scarce that it allowed Tye to focus on more unique tasks, such as assisting the blacksmith’s guild to create magical weapons, providing apothecary services to his community, or simply searching for hard to find material.
Since he didn’t need to eat mortal food nor drink, Tye always lied about eating only once in the evening, due to his busy workday; since he had carefully developed a reputation as a workaholic, nobody suspected the truth. He closed the shop at nightfall, then often went to the tavern to play Board &Conquest; more to fuel his gaming addiction than anything else.
When most people went to sleep, the necromancer returned home to work in his secret laboratory after touring the dungeon and overseeing Hagen’s progress with the excavation. He would emerge from his lair at dawn, to repeat the cycle.
Walter Tye was a mask that the necromancer had cultivated for two years, like a wallflower. He was part of the scenery. Nobody paid attention to him, for as far as anybody was concerned, he had always been there.
Leaving him free to spread his roots deep underground…
As he walked through the busy streets of Lyonesse in the afternoon, between the fortifications and the temple district, Tye politely nodded at citizens whom he recognized, a basket full of remedies in hands.
“If you go out at night on the last day of the month, the Ankou will come to take your soul.”
Tye briefly paused, glancing at a trio of children playing dice in a street corner. “That’s stupid,” one of the children said.
“It’s true!” protested a brown-haired kid whom Tye recognized as Emile, the eldest son of the leader of the craftsmen’s guild. “First you will hear a wail, then the sound of a coach approaching. That’s the Ankou’s coach, where he carries the dead of the year to Helheim. If you evade it for the night, you will live for another year, no matter what; but if he catches you, you die by the next morning, and your whole family too!”
“That makes no sense,” the girl laughed. “Mom said you only go to Helheim if you don’t worship any god and die without fighting!”
“Well, your mum doesn’t know anything. If the Ankou gets you, you always go to Helheim.”
Even if Tye hadn’t hunted for sacrifices in Lyonesse itself for a year, and had only fed on troublemakers no one missed back then, the rumors had survived. It had made moving around the countryside harder, as adventurers often sought the ‘death coach’ to kill its rider. Thankfully, if the kids were of any indication, most would remain misinformed.
Sending people to that dreary, gloomy Helheim was the last thing on Tye’s mind.
At the thought, his eyes wandered to the gigantic, distant trunk of the world tree Yggdrasil in the horizon, rising from the ground and reaching up all the way to the skies. The source of all life, and of the System that governed the Nine Worlds.
Advertisement
According to most scholars, the realm of Midgard was flat, a vast continent of land surrounded by waters and the primeval serpent which gave the realm its name. But Midgard was but one world among many, connected by the cosmic tree.
Its roots touched three worlds: the ever-burning Muspelheim, ruled by the Fire King Surtr, the enemy of the world; Niflheim, a cold hell inhabited by fiends; and the dark Helheim, the land of the ‘worthless dead.’
The branches, meanwhile, touched five other worlds. Svartalfheim, kingdom of the dwarves and the dark elves, always at war; Jotunheim, the land of the giants; Alfheim, a world of fairies and elves of light; Vanaheim, home of the Vanir gods, chaotic and wild; and finally Asgard, the supreme world of the civilized Aesir deities.
Only recently had a tenth world been found, one untouched by Yggdrasil: the mysterious Earth, from which the gods summoned ‘heroes’. The process mystified necromancers like Tye, who sought to master the cycle of souls.
Well, he had all the time in the world; or at least until its fated end.
After a short walk, the necromancer reached the temple district. The lion’s share went to Odin’s cathedral, more fortress than a church, but every god had their own seat of worship, separated by canals; even Hel, the dreaded goddess of the underworld, held a patch of land where people buried the criminals, the oathbreakers, and the exiled. Respectable citizens had their corpses cremated.
The church of Balder, the god of beauty, art, and light, was not as impressive as the All-Father’s cathedral, but it certainly stood out for its beautiful architecture, a prism-like, small pyramid seemingly made of crystal with doors of silver. In truth, as the patron god of the city, his church dominated Lyonesse’s politics; and his priests were smart enough not to advertise it. Soft power at its finest.
Tye entered, finding himself walking through exposition rooms showcasing vivid paintings of ancient battles, marble statues of heroes, and other wonders created by the Avalon Kingdom’s greatest artists.
He found the curator and high priestess of Balder, Yseult Whitehand, painting in one of the rooms. Often said to be the most beautiful woman in Lyonesse, she had once been a vision of divinity, a fair maiden seemingly sculpted from silver, with platinum hair and sapphires for eyes. Her modest white silk dress only showcased the perfection of her features, of the face that made men kill one another for.
But even with his treatment, her illness had left marks. She had started to lose hair, revealing the emaciated skull underneath; while she hid it well through careful dressing, she had lost weight. Still, even diminished, an angel was an angel.
“Welcome, my friend,” she told him with a kind smile. “You are late. I was starting to wonder if you had met trouble on your way here.”
“I’m sorry, I was too busy dismembering a chicken for the evening,” Tye said.
“He didn’t run fast enough?” she giggled.
“No, he didn’t,” Tye said with a knowing, cruel smile. “How are you feeling, Milady?”
“Better than yesterday,” Yseult replied. “I no longer lose hair.”
“Good. That means your body is getting used to the treatment.” The earthlanders called her illness ‘cancer,’ and from what Tye had gathered, they hadn’t managed to cure it either. Most [Cure Disease] or [Purge] spells removed foreign bodies, like viruses or bacterias who had yet to develop resistance to magic; but when illness came from the body’s lifeforce itself, they had little effect.
Advertisement
Tye himself would have permanently cured that woman of everything with [Blood Magic] long ago, if the kingdom didn’t outlaw this school of magic. Since other spellcasters could identify traces of his spells, the necromancer instead started working on an alchemical remedy. He knew of an alchemical beverage called [Panacea], which could cure every illness, but he needed ingredients he couldn’t access yet. So he had to settle with delivering his patient less effective elixirs.
The necromancer treated that woman partly out of gratitude for helping him settle in Lyonesse when he first arrived, and mostly for the sake of his research. In his drive to find the ultimate cure for death, Tye had to understand life. If he could cure an illness born of life’s own unchecked growth… these results could help him with a breakthrough.
Tye glanced at the painting, the portrait of a handsome, youthful knight with chestnut hair and noble eyes. His armor seemed woven with flowers, and he carried a harp alongside his sword. “This is the famous Tristan?”
“He will visit me this summer,” the maiden beamed with happiness. “After his introduction ceremony to the Royal Knights.”
The most powerful, highest-leveled champions of the realm; although not all of them were knights, nor even knightly. Tye wondered where that one ranked on the scale. “I am almost finished with your landscape painting,” Yseult told him. “I will have it delivered to your house by the turn of the moon.”
“Take your time,” Tye said before his sharp hearing picked up the sound of two newcomers entering the temple. “Your paintings are lovely, Milady, but I do not help you against payment.”
“I know, but I wish to express my gratitude somehow.”
The steps grew closer, Tye turning around as Yseult did. A strong, powerfully built old man with a grey beard and piercing eyes walked into sight, backed by a freckled, redheaded boy in his teenage years. While the warrior wore thick armor and top-notch equipment, the younger boy, probably the squire wore leather armor too big for him and a bow.
“Ser Sigurd,” Yseult recognized the bigger man, although Tye couldn’t remember that man's name for the unlife of him. “What a joy to see you again, dear knight.”
“You have grown ravishing, milady,” the man said while politely neglecting to mention her illness, before frowning at the sight of Tye.
“Greetings,” the squire shyly bowed to Tye and Yseult. The necromancer couldn’t recognize his accent; probably an earthlander. The older warrior kept his eyes firmly on the alchemist as if struggling to remember him.
“Why the gaze?” Tye asked. “Have we met?”
“No, it can’t be,” the man shook his head. “Can’t be you, unless you haven't aged in thirty years.”
While Tye kept a blank, pallid face, his mind froze. He furiously tried to remember if this man could have crossed his path. Where, when?
“I see that you have taken an apprentice,” Lady Yseult smiled at the man’s squire. “What is your name?”
“P-Percy,” the boy said sheepishly. “Percy Greenfield.”
“The princess Gwenhyfar and the latest promotion of the Royal Academy will soon arrive in your fair city,” Sigurd spoke, all business. “She will visit the temples and the highest institutions, bless everyone… the usual.”
Since the increasing rate of Convergences and the arrival of earthlanders to fight them, the kingdom of Avalon had the brilliant idea to create an institution to manage both. A school which would train the heroes of tomorrow, teaching them magic, combat, leadership, and how to fit into the ruling structure. An organization which only allowed the best of the best, or earthlanders, into its walls, and prepare them to defeat the Five Calamities.
“I will gladly show Her Highness the wonders of Lyonesse,” replied the priestess of Balder, before turning to Tye. “My friend Tye here is a genius [Alchemist]. I am certain the new hopes of our nation will enjoy discussing with him.”
“Oh, you’re an [Alchemist]?” Percy asked him, curious.
“I’m just a shopkeeper,” Tye replied, more bothered by the older warrior than his squire. “I don’t feel well in the spotlight.”
“I see,” the older knight said, his voice betraying no emotion. “Maybe I will buy supplies at your place.”
“You said you were a knight?” Tye fished for information. “A Royal Knight?”
“For thirty years,” the squire boasted for his master, while Sigurd kept a stoic face.
“I retired,” the man said, “Now I’m just an adventurer on a job.”
Royal Knights, thirty years…
Ah yes, the Purge of the Pale Serpents. How could Tye forget that mess? The necromancer must have sighted this Sigurd among the kingdom’s soldiers, as they stormed his order’s Citadel, killed his lich master, and forced him to run for his life. That went so far back, he still needed to breathe back then.
While Sigurd seemingly dropped the matter, Tye wasn’t stupid enough to believe him. Even if the knight truly shrugged him off, a mere word to his fellow Knights could bring heroes to the necromancer’s door.
Should he skip town? No. That would certainly bring suspicion upon him, Hagen hadn’t unearthed enough material yet, and he had grown too fond of Lyonesse to leave. Yseult would probably die without his treatment, and while he could always raise her as an undead, he wouldn’t deprive her of the life she seemed to cherish so much.
He would simply stage an accident. Mercenaries lived short, brutal lives after all. For now, Tye decided to send minions to keep an eye on the former knight until the right opportunity presented itself.
He had more pressing business for tonight.
Driving his black coach, pulled by skeletal horses and guided by a flock of fearsome crows, Tye stopped at the appointed crossroads. His ‘secret suppliers’ awaited him among the trees. The new moon was high in the skies, covering the Forest of Brocéliande in shadows.
For this kind of meeting, Tye had switched clothes for something more impressive to mortals: a crimson cowled cloak, velvet gloves, boots, and most importantly, a silver mask covering his whole face except for his crimson eyes. Demonic runes inscribed on its surface shone with a fiery light, giving the necromancer a fearsome aura.
A mere stage trick, but one he had found useful for business.
Tye glanced at the four men waiting for him, recognizing his usual supplier, the balding, overweight merchant Patrick, and three new crooks with swords. One of them, a snake-eyed swordsman, appraised Tye with a calculating look.
“You’re the client?” he asked, as Tye climbed down his vehicle. Patrick confirmed with a nod. “Who’s inside the coach?”
“You do not want to meet my passengers,” the necromancer replied, his [Mask of the Forsaken] changing his voice into the echo of a legion. “You have the merchandise?”
The man presented him with the prize. A grimoire was as large as a recipe book, with a screaming, grinning face for cover. Together, the teeth had arranged to spell the title: “Mimir’s Testament.”
Its cover seemed made of human skin.
Because the whole book was.
“Can you imagine how many corpses it took to fashion this book?” Tye asked, instantly recognizing the book as the original. “The miles of human skin? The sheer impracticality of the craftsmanship?”
“The money first,” the leader said. Unlike Patrick, who had arranged the meeting and done business with Tye for years, this one didn’t know him enough to trust yet.
Tye grabbed a purse attached to his belt and tossed it to Patrick. The merchant nodded and then opened it, his fellows greedily glancing at the alchemically-created rubies inside. “They are worth eighty thousand gold coins,” the necromancer said. “Twenty thousand each.”
Patrick counted the payment, before nodding at his colleagues. “Good,” the trio’s leader said, but didn’t hand Tye the book. “Now, we can discuss the finder’s fee.”
“The finder’s fee?” the necromancer repeated, frowning behind his mask.
“We suffered significant expenses in obtaining this book. Avoiding knights isn’t cheap.”
“I paid the price Patrick asked for.”
“We didn’t agree to this, Narbon,” said the merchant, apparently as surprised as Tye himself.
“Because you don’t know how business works,” the man replied, before giving the necromancer a crooked smile. “Since this is our first deal, I will give you a discount.”
“And if I refuse?” the necromancer asked.
The man put a hand on his swords, as did the two others. “Then no book.”
“[Spellsight],” Tye whispered in response, seeing the three men appear with colored auras. They had cast protective spells on themselves before the meeting, conveniently keeping Patrick in the dark. They also wielded impressive equipment, such as a [Mystical Sword of Demonslaying].
If they had confronted the average dark wizard, they might have seemed intimidating.
But at level fifty-three with elite classes, the necromancer was in another league entirely. “Does he speak for all of you?” Tye asked. “If you don’t agree with him and rather do a fair deal, please take a step backward in protestation.”
Only Patrick did so, Narbon’s smile turning colder. “No cut for you then,” he said.
“Indeed,” Tye replied. “[Death X].”
The three men dropped dead without a sound. Patrick alone survived and recoiled in horror as the corpses suddenly hit the ground.
Much to Tye’s frustration, he didn’t even get a new level out of it.
“Patrick, I believe in keeping one’s word,” the necromancer said. “Or else, how can we make plans for the future? Existence should be ordered, like undeath. A state without the messy unpredictability of life, nor the sudden interruption of this temporary inconvenience we call death. And I swear it when my work will be finished, death won’t even be that anymore.”
He knew he was rambling and that the merchant was too terrified to truly listen, but Tye liked the sound of his own voice.
“All of this to say, you should select your associates better next time,” the necromancer said, before looting his book from the dead’s hands. “When you meet someone with a coach pulled by dead horses to overcharge him a book made from human skin, it’s not business. It’s natural selection.”
“Y-yes, sir,” Patrick said.
“You can keep the change,” Tye said, letting the merchant flee with his rubies.
Advertisement
-
In Serial293 Chapters
Becoming God of a Dystopian World
'Welcome to the New Era'Waking up in an unfamiliar world, Zhao Luo realized the changes in his body.In this distorted world, the lands that Zhao Luo once knew of, have changed into mountain ranges and every range has a Sect while the sect leader has all the power and control over the surrounding mountains.Zhao Luo’s simple life as a traveler had already ended the moment he was trapped in a sleeping capsule.Now his goal is to become the strongest and reign supreme in this new world to achieve his ultimate goal of becoming a God. • Zhao Luo’s potential attracts the attention of a mysterious old man.«Master, you are an Emperor, Emperor of Gods?»Becoming the Disciple of this old man turned out to be a blessing for him. • Receiving his master’s most treasured books lets him meet even more incredible personalities.«What? The egos of the Ancient Emperas are overseeing my growth?» • Continuing on the path to rise to the top in the Xin Sect, Zhao Luo finds a Fist Technique.«Oh, he trained for 78 years to master this? But It only took me 4 days ^.^»Zhao Luo’s journey will bring him to the top as he crushes down his enemies, and make friends with unusual characters, each with a background of his own.«She is mine.»Going against one of the three Royal families, just for the sake of his beloved, this journey is filled with everything you need.
8 1132 -
In Serial11 Chapters
Sins of the Fathers (A Dungeon Story)
Extract from the histories of Hogenbach, written by the grand historian and self-proclaimed drunkard Gregor Meinzt. "Ah Hogenbach, a crumbling shithole of a kingdom situated in the arse end of nowhere. A land of rolling hills, cold winters and home to a population of short and bitter people. A terrible land. Yet it is here that the greatest calamity of the modern realm took place. It was here that the writhing dungeon was born. Some call Viktor Grieswald a hero, others curse the name. And yet fewer still know him for what he truly was. His was a sad existence, made to shoulder the burdens of an entire realm. He helped, he harmed and he left a trail of destruction in his wake, he will always be my friend. But know this, whatever your opinion on the man, nay the monster is, one thing is true. The world will never be the same after his presence, we made sure of that." AN: Alright, this is a dark fantasy dungeon story without the use of reincarnated characters or a system. Yes, I tagged it litRPG as it uses game elements, no these do not include a status screen. Read onwards if you dare.
8 116 -
In Serial12 Chapters
Soul of the Academy.exe
Adam Geoffrey is a programmer for a minor software company by day, and an avid Time Management Strategy gamer by evening. His life is tolerable, but he wishes he could find a way to make a living with his true talent in management, rather than coding.Then, he gets an offer from an unlikely and suspicious source...
8 183 -
In Serial40 Chapters
Children Of Gaia
Emerging from a dystopian future a generational space station heads away from Earth in search of a new home. Gaia Station is run by the charismatic AI sharing the same name. Expeditions take place as the smaller, faster Titan class ships seek out and verify the viability of new potential worlds. By chance, four childhood friends find themselves all on the same Titan bound for a new world; where unprecedented discoveries and dangers await them.This is my first work, which I began notes for in 2014. Currently working on revisions. Happy reading. Cover by SharadhamanjuFeatured on the Andromeda Action/Adventure reading list of BeyondSolAwards:Hosted by zanthenewt1st place in the "Blue Rose Awards," January 2019, for Science fiction.1st place in the "Blue Rose Awards," January 2019, for New Tales.Hosted by psycholicious12nd place in "The Golden Awards," 2019, for Science Fiction.A Review: Written by tlryder for "Solace Magazine||3" by Imperfetto_Tesoro //my.w.tt/lVNIvymki4
8 128 -
In Serial8 Chapters
Mortal
Mortality. That which we are and that we struggle to overcome. Mortality molds us, makes us who we are. From courage to cowardice, it effects all our actions. And hence some try to escape its grasp, to be free of chains. Our tale follows such people forgetting which they'll remain. Chapter updates around once every 2 days
8 163 -
In Serial39 Chapters
" BLACK Out "
•¬کاپل: چانبک | کایسو | هونهان•¬ژانر: رمنس | انگست | اکشن•¬خلاصه: بکهیون نقاش معروفی که دست روزگار خیلی اتفاقی پای مردی مرموز رو به زندگیش باز می کنه، کسی که بر خلاف ظاهر آروم و گرمش از دنیای بی رحمی میاد . دنیایی که به شکل عجیبی به گذشته ی بک گره خورده .دو کیونگ سو دانشجوی با استعداد ی که دست بر غذا معروف ترین وکیل دادگستری توکیو پدرش محسوب میشه، پدری که با ذکاوتش سرکرده ی یاکوزا رو به دست عدالت می سپره غافل از اینکه با این کار پسرش رو به راحتی تقدیم به رئیس بعدی مافیا، یعنی کیم کای میکنه .اوه سهون که به روانی بی کله ی دنیای مافیا شهرت داره، پسری که تو عالم رفاقت فقط دو نفر براش مهم هستن و تو عالم عشق، دکتر همیشه سرد و سرکش به اسم لوهان . یک نصیحت: اگه آدم صبوری نیستی و از غافل گیری خوشت نمیاد _ اگه دوست داری در گیر کلیشه های روابط بشی _ و مفهوم عشق برای تو شبیه به تصور عام از شهوت هست ... بهت پیشنهاد می کنم این فیک رو نخونی >.<>═ ∘♡༉∘ ═#BellaG💫
8 178
